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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Britling Sees It Through, by H. G. Wells
+
+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: Mr. Britling Sees It Through
+
+Author: H. G. Wells
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2004 [EBook #14060]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Eric Eldred, Sandra Bannatyne and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH
+
+BY H.G. WELLS
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY H.G. WELLS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+MATCHING'S EASY AT EASE
+
+ I MR. DIRECK VISITS MR. BRITLING
+ II MR. BRITLING CONTINUES HIS EXPOSITION
+III THE ENTERTAINMENT OF MR. DIRECK REACHES A CLIMAX
+ IV MR. BRITLING IN SOLILOQUY
+ V THE COMING OF THE DAY
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+MATCHING'S EASY AT WAR
+
+ I ONLOOKERS
+ II TAKING PART
+III MALIGNITY
+ IV IN THE WEB OF THE INEFFECTIVE
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+THE TESTAMENT OF MATCHING'S EASY
+
+ I MRS. TEDDY GOES FOR A WALK
+ II MR. BRITLING WRITES UNTIL SUNRISE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+MATCHING'S EASY AT EASE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FIRST
+
+MR. DIRECK VISITS MR. BRITLING
+
+
+Section 1
+
+It was the sixth day of Mr. Direck's first visit to England, and he was
+at his acutest perception of differences. He found England in every way
+gratifying and satisfactory, and more of a contrast with things American
+than he had ever dared to hope.
+
+He had promised himself this visit for many years, but being of a sunny
+rather than energetic temperament--though he firmly believed himself
+to be a reservoir of clear-sighted American energy--he had allowed all
+sorts of things, and more particularly the uncertainties of Miss Mamie
+Nelson, to keep him back. But now there were no more uncertainties about
+Miss Mamie Nelson, and Mr. Direck had come over to England just to
+convince himself and everybody else that there were other interests
+in life for him than Mamie....
+
+And also, he wanted to see the old country from which his maternal
+grandmother had sprung. Wasn't there even now in his bedroom in New York
+a water-colour of Market Saffron church, where the dear old lady had
+been confirmed? And generally he wanted to see Europe. As an interesting
+side show to the excursion he hoped, in his capacity of the rather
+underworked and rather over-salaried secretary of the Massachusetts
+Society for the Study of Contemporary Thought, to discuss certain
+agreeable possibilities with Mr. Britling, who lived at Matching's Easy.
+
+Mr. Direck was a type of man not uncommon in America. He was very much
+after the fashion of that clean and pleasant-looking person one sees in
+the advertisements in American magazines, that agreeable person who
+smiles and says, "Good, it's the Fizgig Brand," or "Yes, it's a Wilkins,
+and that's the Best," or "My shirt-front never rucks; it's a Chesson."
+But now he was saying, still with the same firm smile, "Good. It's
+English." He was pleased by every unlikeness to things American, by
+every item he could hail as characteristic; in the train to London he
+had laughed aloud with pleasure at the chequer-board of little fields
+upon the hills of Cheshire, he had chuckled to find himself in a
+compartment without a corridor; he had tipped the polite yet kindly
+guard magnificently, after doubting for a moment whether he ought to tip
+him at all, and he had gone about his hotel in London saying "Lordy!
+Lordy! My _word!_" in a kind of ecstasy, verifying the delightful
+absence of telephone, of steam-heat, of any dependent bathroom. At
+breakfast the waiter (out of Dickens it seemed) had refused to know what
+"cereals" were, and had given him his egg in a china egg-cup such as you
+see in the pictures in _Punch_. The Thames, when he sallied out to see
+it, had been too good to be true, the smallest thing in rivers he had
+ever seen, and he had had to restrain himself from affecting a marked
+accent and accosting some passer-by with the question, "Say! But is this
+little wet ditch here the Historical River Thames?"
+
+In America, it must be explained, Mr. Direck spoke a very good and
+careful English indeed, but he now found the utmost difficulty in
+controlling his impulse to use a high-pitched nasal drone and indulge in
+dry "Americanisms" and poker metaphors upon all occasions. When people
+asked him questions he wanted to say "Yep" or "Sure," words he would no
+more have used in America than he could have used a bowie knife. But he
+had a sense of rôle. He wanted to be visibly and audibly America
+eye-witnessing. He wanted to be just exactly what he supposed an
+Englishman would expect him to be. At any rate, his clothes had been
+made by a strongly American New York tailor, and upon the strength of
+them a taxi-man had assumed politely but firmly that the shillings on
+his taximeter were dollars, an incident that helped greatly to sustain
+the effect of Mr. Direck, in Mr. Direck's mind, as something standing
+out with an almost representative clearness against the English
+scene.... So much so that the taxi-man got the dollars....
+
+Because all the time he had been coming over he had dreaded that it
+wasn't true, that England was a legend, that London would turn out to be
+just another thundering great New York, and the English exactly like New
+Englanders....
+
+
+Section 2
+
+And now here he was on the branch line of the little old Great Eastern
+Railway, on his way to Matching's Easy in Essex, and he was suddenly in
+the heart of Washington Irving's England.
+
+Washington Irving's England! Indeed it was. He couldn't sit still and
+just peep at it, he had to stand up in the little compartment and stick
+his large, firm-featured, kindly countenance out of the window as if he
+greeted it. The country under the June sunshine was neat and bright as
+an old-world garden, with little fields of corn surrounded by dog-rose
+hedges, and woods and small rushy pastures of an infinite tidiness. He
+had seen a real deer park, it had rather tumbledown iron gates between
+its shield-surmounted pillars, and in the distance, beyond all question,
+was Bracebridge Hall nestling among great trees. He had seen thatched
+and timbered cottages, and half-a-dozen inns with creaking signs. He had
+seen a fat vicar driving himself along a grassy lane in a governess cart
+drawn by a fat grey pony. It wasn't like any reality he had ever known.
+It was like travelling in literature.
+
+Mr. Britling's address was the Dower House, and it was, Mr. Britling's
+note had explained, on the farther edge of the park at Claverings.
+Claverings! The very name for some stately home of England....
+
+And yet this was only forty-two miles from London. Surely it brought
+things within the suburban range. If Matching's Easy were in America,
+commuters would live there. But in supposing that, Mr. Direck displayed
+his ignorance of a fact of the greatest importance to all who would
+understand England. There is a gap in the suburbs of London. The suburbs
+of London stretch west and south and even west by north, but to the
+north-eastward there are no suburbs; instead there is Essex. Essex is
+not a suburban county; it is a characteristic and individualised county
+which wins the heart. Between dear Essex and the centre of things lie
+two great barriers, the East End of London and Epping Forest. Before a
+train could get to any villadom with a cargo of season-ticket holders it
+would have to circle about this rescued woodland and travel for twenty
+unprofitable miles, and so once you are away from the main Great Eastern
+lines Essex still lives in the peace of the eighteenth century, and
+London, the modern Babylon, is, like the stars, just a light in the
+nocturnal sky. In Matching's Easy, as Mr. Britling presently explained
+to Mr. Direck, there are half-a-dozen old people who have never set eyes
+on London in their lives--and do not want to.
+
+"Aye-ya!"
+
+"Fussin' about thea."
+
+"Mr. Robinson, 'e went to Lon', 'e did. That's 'ow 'e 'urt 'is fut."
+
+Mr. Direck had learnt at the main-line junction that he had to tell the
+guard to stop the train for Matching's Easy; it only stopped "by
+request"; the thing was getting better and better; and when Mr. Direck
+seized his grip and got out of the train there was just one little old
+Essex station-master and porter and signalman and everything, holding a
+red flag in his hand and talking to Mr. Britling about the cultivation
+of the sweet peas which glorified the station. And there was the Mr.
+Britling who was the only item of business and the greatest expectation
+in Mr. Direck's European journey, and he was quite unlike the portraits
+Mr. Direck had seen and quite unmistakably Mr. Britling all the same,
+since there was nobody else upon the platform, and he was advancing with
+a gesture of welcome.
+
+"Did you ever see such peas, Mr. Dick?" said Mr. Britling by way of
+introduction.
+
+"My _word_," said Mr. Direck in a good old Farmer Hayseed kind of voice.
+
+"Aye-ya!" said the station-master in singularly strident tones. "It be a
+rare year for sweet peas," and then he slammed the door of the carriage
+in a leisurely manner and did dismissive things with his flag, while the
+two gentlemen took stock, as people say, of one another.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+Except in the doubtful instance of Miss Mamie Nelson, Mr. Direck's habit
+was good fortune. Pleasant things came to him. Such was his position as
+the salaried secretary of this society of thoughtful Massachusetts
+business men to which allusion has been made. Its purpose was to bring
+itself expeditiously into touch with the best thought of the age.
+
+Too busily occupied with practical realities to follow the thought of
+the age through all its divagations and into all its recesses, these
+Massachusetts business men had had to consider methods of access more
+quintessential and nuclear. And they had decided not to hunt out the
+best thought in its merely germinating stages, but to wait until it had
+emerged and flowered to some trustworthy recognition, and then, rather
+than toil through recondite and possibly already reconsidered books and
+writings generally, to offer an impressive fee to the emerged new
+thinker, and to invite him to come to them and to lecture to them and to
+have a conference with them, and to tell them simply, competently and
+completely at first hand just all that he was about. To come, in fact,
+and be himself--in a highly concentrated form. In this way a number of
+interesting Europeans had been given very pleasant excursions to
+America, and the society had been able to form very definite opinions
+upon their teaching. And Mr. Britling was one of the representative
+thinkers upon which this society had decided to inform itself. It was to
+broach this invitation and to offer him the impressive honorarium by
+which the society honoured not only its guests but itself, that Mr.
+Direck had now come to Matching's Easy. He had already sent Mr. Britling
+a letter of introduction, not indeed intimating his precise purpose, but
+mentioning merely a desire to know him, and the letter had been so
+happily phrased and its writer had left such a memory of pleasant
+hospitality on Mr. Britling's mind during Mr. Britling's former visit to
+New York, that it had immediately produced for Mr. Direck an invitation
+not merely to come and see him but to come and stay over the week-end.
+
+And here they were shaking hands.
+
+Mr. Britling did not look at all as Mr. Direck had expected him to look.
+He had expected an Englishman in a country costume of golfing tweeds,
+like the Englishman in country costume one sees in American illustrated
+stories. Drooping out of the country costume of golfing tweeds he had
+expected to see the mildly unhappy face, pensive even to its drooping
+moustache, with which Mr. Britling's publisher had for some faulty and
+unfortunate reason familiarised the American public. Instead of this,
+Mr. Britling was in a miscellaneous costume, and mildness was the last
+quality one could attribute to him. His moustache, his hair, his
+eyebrows bristled; his flaming freckled face seemed about to bristle
+too. His little hazel eyes came out with a "ping" and looked at Mr.
+Direck. Mr. Britling was one of a large but still remarkable class of
+people who seem at the mere approach of photography to change their
+hair, their clothes, their moral natures. No photographer had ever
+caught a hint of his essential Britlingness and bristlingness. Only the
+camera could ever induce Mr. Britling to brush his hair, and for the
+camera alone did he reserve that expression of submissive martyrdom Mr.
+Direck knew. And Mr. Direck was altogether unprepared for a certain
+casualness of costume that sometimes overtook Mr. Britling. He was
+wearing now a very old blue flannel blazer, no hat, and a pair of
+knickerbockers, not tweed breeches but tweed knickerbockers of a
+remarkable bagginess, and made of one of those virtuous socialistic
+homespun tweeds that drag out into woolly knots and strings wherever
+there is attrition. His stockings were worsted and wrinkled, and on his
+feet were those extraordinary slippers of bright-coloured bast-like
+interwoven material one buys in the north of France. These were purple
+with a touch of green. He had, in fact, thought of the necessity of
+meeting Mr. Direck at the station at the very last moment, and had come
+away from his study in the clothes that had happened to him when he got
+up. His face wore the amiable expression of a wire-haired terrier
+disposed to be friendly, and it struck Mr. Direck that for a man of his
+real intellectual distinction Mr. Britling was unusually short.
+
+For there can be no denying that Mr. Britling was, in a sense,
+distinguished. The hero and subject of this novel was at its very
+beginning a distinguished man. He was in the _Who's Who_ of two
+continents. In the last few years he had grown with some rapidity into a
+writer recognised and welcomed by the more cultivated sections of the
+American public, and even known to a select circle of British readers.
+To his American discoverers he had first appeared as an essayist, a
+serious essayist who wrote about aesthetics and Oriental thought and
+national character and poets and painting. He had come through America
+some years ago as one of those Kahn scholars, those promising writers
+and intelligent men endowed by Auguste Kahn of Paris, who go about the
+world nowadays in comfort and consideration as the travelling guests of
+that original philanthropist--to acquire the international spirit.
+Previously he had been a critic of art and literature and a writer of
+thoughtful third leaders in the London _Times_. He had begun with a
+Pembroke fellowship and a prize poem. He had returned from his world
+tour to his reflective yet original corner of _The Times_ and to the
+production of books about national relationships and social psychology,
+that had brought him rapidly into prominence.
+
+His was a naturally irritable mind, which gave him point and passion;
+and moreover he had a certain obstinate originality and a generous
+disposition. So that he was always lively, sometimes spacious, and never
+vile. He loved to write and talk. He talked about everything, he had
+ideas about everything; he could no more help having ideas about
+everything than a dog can resist smelling at your heels. He sniffed at
+the heels of reality. Lots of people found him interesting and
+stimulating, a few found him seriously exasperating. He had ideas in the
+utmost profusion about races and empires and social order and political
+institutions and gardens and automobiles and the future of India and
+China and aesthetics and America and the education of mankind in
+general.... And all that sort of thing....
+
+Mr. Direck had read a very great deal of all this expressed
+opiniativeness of Mr. Britling: he found it entertaining and stimulating
+stuff, and it was with genuine enthusiasm that he had come over to
+encounter the man himself. On his way across the Atlantic and during
+the intervening days, he had rehearsed this meeting in varying keys, but
+always on the supposition that Mr. Britling was a large, quiet,
+thoughtful sort of man, a man who would, as it were, sit in attentive
+rows like a public meeting and listen. So Mr. Direck had prepared quite
+a number of pleasant and attractive openings, and now he felt was the
+moment for some one of these various simple, memorable utterances. But
+in none of these forecasts had he reckoned with either the spontaneous
+activities of Mr. Britling or with the station-master of Matching's
+Easy. Oblivious of any conversational necessities between Mr. Direck and
+Mr. Britling, this official now took charge of Mr. Direck's grip-sack,
+and, falling into line with the two gentlemen as they walked towards the
+exit gate, resumed what was evidently an interrupted discourse upon
+sweet peas, originally addressed to Mr. Britling.
+
+He was a small, elderly man with a determined-looking face and a sea
+voice, and it was clear he overestimated the distance of his hearers.
+
+"Mr. Darling what's head gardener up at Claverings, _'e_ can't get sweet
+peas like that, try _'ow_ 'e will. Tried everything 'e 'as. Sand
+ballast, 'e's tried. Seeds same as me. 'E came along 'ere only the other
+day, 'e did, and 'e says to me, 'e says, 'darned 'f I can see why a
+station-master should beat a professional gardener at 'is own game,' 'e
+says, 'but you do. And in your orf time, too, so's to speak,' 'e says.
+'I've tried sile,' 'e says--"
+
+"Your first visit to England?" asked Mr. Britling of his guest.
+
+"Absolutely," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"I says to 'im, 'there's one thing you 'aven't tried,' I says," the
+station-master continued, raising his voice by a Herculean feat still
+higher.
+
+"I've got a little car outside here," said Mr. Britling. "I'm a couple
+of miles from the station."
+
+"I says to 'im, I says, ''ave you tried the vibritation of the trains?'
+I says. 'That's what you 'aven't tried, Mr. Darling. That's what you
+_can't_ try,' I says. 'But you rest assured that that's the secret of my
+sweet peas,' I says, 'nothing less and nothing more than the vibritation
+of the trains.'"
+
+Mr. Direck's mind was a little confused by the double nature of the
+conversation and by the fact that Mr. Britling spoke of a car when
+he meant an automobile. He handed his ticket mechanically to the
+station-master, who continued to repeat and endorse his anecdote at the
+top of his voice as Mr. Britling disposed himself and his guest in the
+automobile.
+
+"You know you 'aven't 'urt that mud-guard, sir, not the slightest bit
+that matters," shouted the station-master. "I've been a looking at
+it--er. It's my fence that's suffered most. And that's only strained
+the post a lil' bit. Shall I put your bag in behind, sir?"
+
+Mr. Direck assented, and then, after a momentary hesitation, rewarded
+the station-master's services.
+
+"Ready?" asked Mr. Britling.
+
+"That's all right sir," the station-master reverberated.
+
+With a rather wide curve Mr. Britling steered his way out of the station
+into the highroad.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+And now it seemed was the time for Mr. Direck to make his meditated
+speeches. But an unexpected complication was to defeat this intention.
+Mr. Direck perceived almost at once that Mr. Britling was probably
+driving an automobile for the first or second or at the extremest the
+third time in his life.
+
+The thing became evident when he struggled to get into the high gear--an
+attempt that stopped the engine, and it was even more startlingly so
+when Mr. Britling narrowly missed a collision with a baker's cart at a
+corner. "I pressed the accelerator," he explained afterwards, "instead
+of the brake. One does at first. I missed him by less than a foot."
+The estimate was a generous one. And after that Mr. Direck became
+too anxious not to distract his host's thoughts to persist with his
+conversational openings. An attentive silence came upon both gentlemen
+that was broken presently by a sudden outcry from Mr. Britling and a
+great noise of tormented gears. "Damn!" cried Mr. Britling, and "How
+the _devil_?"
+
+Mr. Direck perceived that his host was trying to turn the car into a
+very beautiful gateway, with gate-houses on either side. Then it was
+manifest that Mr. Britling had abandoned this idea, and then they came
+to a stop a dozen yards or so along the main road. "Missed it," said Mr.
+Britling, and took his hands off the steering wheel and blew stormily,
+and then whistled some bars of a fretful air, and became still.
+
+"Do we go through these ancient gates?" asked Mr. Direck.
+
+Mr. Britling looked over his right shoulder and considered problems of
+curvature and distance. "I think," he said, "I will go round outside the
+park. It will take us a little longer, but it will be simpler than
+backing and manoeuvring here now.... These electric starters are
+remarkably convenient things. Otherwise now I should have to get down
+and wind up the engine."
+
+After that came a corner, the rounding of which seemed to present few
+difficulties until suddenly Mr. Britling cried out, "Eh! _eh_! EH! Oh,
+_damn_!"
+
+Then the two gentlemen were sitting side by side in a rather sloping car
+that had ascended the bank and buried its nose in a hedge of dog-rose
+and honeysuckle, from which two missel thrushes, a blackbird and a
+number of sparrows had made a hurried escape....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+"Perhaps," said Mr. Britling without assurance, and after a little
+peaceful pause, "I can reverse out of this."
+
+He seemed to feel some explanation was due to Mr. Direck. "You see,
+at first--it's perfectly simple--one steers _round_ a corner and then
+one doesn't put the wheels straight again, and so one keeps on going
+round--more than one meant to. It's the bicycle habit; the bicycle
+rights itself. One expects a car to do the same thing. It was my fault.
+The book explains all this question clearly, but just at the moment
+I forgot."
+
+He reflected and experimented in a way that made the engine scold
+and fuss....
+
+"You see, she won't budge for the reverse.... She's--embedded.... Do you
+mind getting out and turning the wheel back? Then if I reverse, perhaps
+we'll get a move on...."
+
+Mr. Direck descended, and there were considerable efforts.
+
+"If you'd just grip the spokes. Yes, so.... One, Two, Three!... No!
+Well, let's just sit here until somebody comes along to help us. Oh!
+Somebody will come all right. Won't you get up again?"
+
+And after a reflective moment Mr. Direck resumed his seat beside
+Mr. Britling....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+The two gentlemen smiled at each other to dispel any suspicion of
+discontent.
+
+"My driving leaves something to be desired," said Mr. Britling with
+an air of frank impartiality. "But I have only just got this car for
+myself--after some years of hired cars--the sort of lazy arrangement
+where people supply car, driver, petrol, tyres, insurance and everything
+at so much a month. It bored me abominably. I can't imagine now how
+I stood it for so long. They sent me down a succession of compact,
+scornful boys who used to go fast when I wanted to go slow, and slow
+when I wanted to go fast, and who used to take every corner on the
+wrong side at top speed, and charge dogs and hens for the sport of it,
+and all sorts of things like that. They would not even let me choose my
+roads. I should have got myself a car long ago, and driven it, if it
+wasn't for that infernal business with a handle one had to do when the
+engine stopped. But here, you see, is a reasonably cheap car with an
+electric starter--American, I need scarcely say. And here I am--going
+at my own pace."
+
+Mr. Direck glanced for a moment at the pretty disorder of the hedge in
+which they were embedded, and smiled and admitted that it was certainly
+much more agreeable.
+
+Before he had finished saying as much Mr. Britling was talking again.
+
+He had a quick and rather jerky way of speaking; he seemed to fire out a
+thought directly it came into his mind, and he seemed to have a loaded
+magazine of thoughts in his head. He spoke almost exactly twice as fast
+as Mr. Direck, clipping his words much more, using much compacter
+sentences, and generally cutting his corners, and this put Mr. Direck
+off his game.
+
+That rapid attack while the transatlantic interlocutor is deploying is
+indeed a not infrequent defect of conversations between Englishmen and
+Americans. It is a source of many misunderstandings. The two conceptions
+of conversation differ fundamentally. The English are much less disposed
+to listen than the American; they have not quite the same sense of
+conversational give and take, and at first they are apt to reduce their
+visitors to the rôle of auditors wondering when their turn will begin.
+Their turn never does begin. Mr. Direck sat deeply in his slanting seat
+with a half face to his celebrated host and said "Yep" and "Sure" and
+"That _is_ so," in the dry grave tones that he believed an Englishman
+would naturally expect him to use, realising this only very gradually.
+
+Mr. Britling, from his praise of the enterprise that had at last brought
+a car he could drive within his reach, went on to that favourite topic
+of all intelligent Englishmen, the adverse criticism of things British.
+He pointed out that the central position of the brake and gear levers in
+his automobile made it extremely easy for the American manufacturer to
+turn it out either as a left-handed or a right-handed car, and so adapt
+it either to the Continental or to the British rule of the road. No
+English cars were so adaptable. We British suffered much from our
+insular rule of the road, just as we suffered much from our insular
+weights and measures. But we took a perverse pride in such
+disadvantages. The irruption of American cars into England was a recent
+phenomenon, it was another triumph for the tremendous organising ability
+of the American mind. They were doing with the automobile what they had
+done with clocks and watches and rifles, they had standardised and
+machined wholesale, while the British were still making the things one
+by one. It was an extraordinary thing that England, which was the
+originator of the industrial system and the original developer of the
+division of labour, should have so fallen away from systematic
+manufacturing. He believed this was largely due to the influence of
+Oxford and the Established Church....
+
+At this point Mr. Direck was moved by an anecdote. "It will help to
+illustrate what you are saying, Mr. Britling, about systematic
+organisation if I tell you a little incident that happened to a friend
+of mine in Toledo, where they are setting up a big plant with a view to
+capturing the entire American and European market in the class of the
+thousand-dollar car--"
+
+"There's no end of such little incidents," said Mr. Britling, cutting in
+without apparent effort. "You see, we get it on both sides. Our
+manufacturer class was, of course, originally an insurgent class. It was
+a class of distended craftsmen. It had the craftsman's natural
+enterprise and natural radicalism. As soon as it prospered and sent its
+boys to Oxford it was lost. Our manufacturing class was assimilated in
+no time to the conservative classes, whose education has always had a
+mandarin quality--very, very little of it, and very cold and choice. In
+America you have so far had no real conservative class at all. Fortunate
+continent! You cast out your Tories, and you were left with nothing but
+Whigs and Radicals. But our peculiar bad luck has been to get a sort of
+revolutionary who is a Tory mandarin too. Ruskin and Morris, for
+example, were as reactionary and anti-scientific as the dukes and the
+bishops. Machine haters. Science haters. Rule of Thumbites to the bone.
+So are our current Socialists. They've filled this country with the idea
+that the ideal automobile ought to be made entirely by the hand labour
+of traditional craftsmen, quite individually, out of beaten copper,
+wrought iron and seasoned oak. All this electric-starter business and
+this electric lighting outfit I have here, is perfectly hateful to the
+English mind.... It isn't that we are simply backward in these things,
+we are antagonistic. The British mind has never really tolerated
+electricity; at least, not that sort of electricity that runs through
+wires. Too slippery and glib for it. Associates it with Italians and
+fluency generally, with Volta, Galvani, Marconi and so on. The proper
+British electricity is that high-grade useless long-sparking stuff you
+get by turning round a glass machine; stuff we used to call frictional
+electricity. Keep it in Leyden jars.... At Claverings here they still
+refuse to have electric bells. There was a row when the Solomonsons, who
+were tenants here for a time, tried to put them in...."
+
+Mr. Direck had followed this cascade of remarks with a patient smile and
+a slowly nodding head. "What you say," he said, "forms a very marked
+contrast indeed with the sort of thing that goes on in America. This
+friend of mine I was speaking of, the one who is connected with an
+automobile factory in Toledo--"
+
+"Of course," Mr. Britling burst out again, "even conservatism isn't an
+ultimate thing. After all, we and your enterprising friend at Toledo,
+are very much the same blood. The conservatism, I mean, isn't racial.
+And our earlier energy shows it isn't in the air or in the soil. England
+has become unenterprising and sluggish because England has been so
+prosperous and comfortable...."
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Direck. "My friend of whom I was telling you, was a
+man named Robinson, which indicates pretty clearly that he was of
+genuine English stock, and, if I may say so, quite of your build and
+complexion; racially, I should say, he was, well--very much what you
+are...."
+
+
+Section 7
+
+This rally of Mr. Direck's mind was suddenly interrupted.
+
+Mr. Britling stood up, and putting both hands to the sides of his mouth,
+shouted "Yi-ah! Aye-ya! Thea!" at unseen hearers.
+
+After shouting again, several times, it became manifest that he had
+attracted the attention of two willing but deliberate labouring men.
+They emerged slowly, first as attentive heads, from the landscape. With
+their assistance the car was restored to the road again. Mr. Direck
+assisted manfully, and noted the respect that was given to Mr. Britling
+and the shillings that fell to the men, with an intelligent detachment.
+They touched their hats, they called Mr. Britling "Sir." They examined
+the car distantly but kindly. "Ain't 'urt 'e, not a bit 'e ain't, not
+really," said one encouragingly. And indeed except for a slight
+crumpling of the mud-guard and the detachment of the wire of one of the
+headlights the automobile was uninjured. Mr. Britling resumed his seat;
+Mr. Direck gravely and in silence got up beside him. They started with
+the usual convulsion, as though something had pricked the vehicle
+unexpectedly and shamefully behind. And from this point Mr. Britling,
+driving with meticulous care, got home without further mishap, excepting
+only that he scraped off some of the metal edge of his footboard
+against the gate-post of his very agreeable garden.
+
+His family welcomed his safe return, visitor and all, with undisguised
+relief and admiration. A small boy appeared at the corner of the house,
+and then disappeared hastily again. "Daddy's got back all right at
+last," they heard him shouting to unseen hearers.
+
+
+Section 8
+
+Mr. Direck, though he was a little incommoded by the suppression of his
+story about Robinson--for when he had begun a thing he liked to finish
+it--found Mr. Britling's household at once thoroughly British, quite
+un-American and a little difficult to follow. It had a quality that at
+first he could not define at all. Compared with anything he had ever
+seen in his life before it struck him as being--he found the word at
+last--sketchy. For instance, he was introduced to nobody except his
+hostess, and she was indicated to him by a mere wave of Mr. Britling's
+hand. "That's Edith," he said, and returned at once to his car to put it
+away. Mrs. Britling was a tall, freckled woman with pretty bright brown
+hair and preoccupied brown eyes. She welcomed him with a handshake, and
+then a wonderful English parlourmaid--she at least was according to
+expectations--took his grip-sack and guided him to his room. "Lunch,
+sir," she said, "is outside," and closed the door and left him to that
+and a towel-covered can of hot water.
+
+It was a square-looking old red-brick house he had come to, very
+handsome in a simple Georgian fashion, with a broad lawn before it and
+great blue cedar trees, and a drive that came frankly up to the front
+door and then went off with Mr. Britling and the car round to unknown
+regions at the back. The centre of the house was a big airy hall,
+oak-panelled, warmed in winter only by one large fireplace and abounding
+in doors which he knew opened into the square separate rooms that
+England favours. Bookshelves and stuffed birds comforted the landing
+outside his bedroom. He descended to find the hall occupied by a small
+bright bristling boy in white flannel shirt and knickerbockers and bare
+legs and feet. He stood before the vacant open fireplace in an attitude
+that Mr. Direck knew instantly was also Mr. Britling's. "Lunch is in the
+garden," the Britling scion proclaimed, "and I've got to fetch you. And,
+I say! is it true? Are you American?"
+
+"Why surely," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"Well, I know some American," said the boy. "I learnt it."
+
+"Tell me some," said Mr. Direck, smiling still more amiably.
+
+"Oh! Well--God darn you! Ouch, Gee-whizz! Soak him, Maud! It's up to
+you, Duke...."
+
+"Now where did you learn all that?" asked Mr. Direck recovering.
+
+"Out of the Sunday Supplement," said the youthful Britling.
+
+"Why! Then you know all about Buster Brown," said Mr. Direck. "He's
+Fine--eh?"
+
+The Britling child hated Buster Brown. He regarded Buster Brown as a
+totally unnecessary infant. He detested the way he wore his hair and the
+peculiar cut of his knickerbockers and--him. He thought Buster Brown the
+one drop of paraffin in the otherwise delicious feast of the Sunday
+Supplement. But he was a diplomatic child.
+
+"I think I like Happy Hooligan better," he said. "And dat ole Maud."
+
+He reflected with joyful eyes, Buster clean forgotten. "Every week," he
+said, "she kicks some one."
+
+It came to Mr. Direck as a very pleasant discovery that a British infant
+could find a common ground with the small people at home in these
+characteristically American jests. He had never dreamt that the fine
+wine of Maud and Buster could travel.
+
+"Maud's a treat," said the youthful Britling, relapsing into his native
+tongue.
+
+Mr. Britling appeared coming to meet them. He was now in a grey flannel
+suit--he must have jumped into it--and altogether very much tidier....
+
+
+Section 9
+
+The long narrow table under the big sycamores between the house and the
+adapted barn that Mr. Direck learnt was used for "dancing and all that
+sort of thing," was covered with a blue linen diaper cloth, and that too
+surprised him. This was his first meal in a private household in
+England, and for obscure reasons he had expected something very stiff
+and formal with "spotless napery." He had also expected a very stiff and
+capable service by implacable parlourmaids, and the whole thing indeed
+highly genteel. But two cheerful women servants appeared from what was
+presumably the kitchen direction, wheeling a curious wicker erection,
+which his small guide informed him was called Aunt Clatter--manifestly
+deservedly--and which bore on its shelves the substance of the meal. And
+while the maids at this migratory sideboard carved and opened bottles
+and so forth, the small boy and a slightly larger brother, assisted a
+little by two young men of no very defined position and relationship,
+served the company. Mrs. Britling sat at the head of the table, and
+conversed with Mr. Direck by means of hostess questions and imperfectly
+accepted answers while she kept a watchful eye on the proceedings.
+
+The composition of the company was a matter for some perplexity to Mr.
+Direck. Mr. and Mrs. Britling were at either end of the table, that was
+plain enough. It was also fairly plain that the two barefooted boys were
+little Britlings. But beyond this was a cloud of uncertainty. There was
+a youth of perhaps seventeen, much darker than Britling but with nose
+and freckles rather like his, who might be an early son or a stepson; he
+was shock-headed and with that look about his arms and legs that
+suggests overnight growth; and there was an unmistakable young German,
+very pink, with close-cropped fair hair, glasses and a panama hat, who
+was probably the tutor of the younger boys. (Mr. Direck also was wearing
+his hat, his mind had been filled with an exaggerated idea of the
+treacheries of the English climate before he left New York. Every one
+else was hatless.) Finally, before one reached the limits of the
+explicable there was a pleasant young man with a lot of dark hair and
+very fine dark blue eyes, whom everybody called "Teddy." For him, Mr.
+Direck hazarded "secretary."
+
+But in addition to these normal and understandable presences, there was
+an entirely mysterious pretty young woman in blue linen who sat and
+smiled next to Mr. Britling, and there was a rather kindred-looking girl
+with darker hair on the right of Mr. Direck who impressed him at the
+very outset as being still prettier, and--he didn't quite place her at
+first--somehow familiar to him; there was a large irrelevant middle-aged
+lady in black with a gold chain and a large nose, between Teddy and the
+tutor; there was a tall middle-aged man with an intelligent face, who
+might be a casual guest; there was an Indian young gentleman faultlessly
+dressed up to his brown soft linen collar and cuffs, and thereafter an
+uncontrolled outbreak of fine bronze modelling and abundant fuzzy hair;
+and there was a very erect and attentive baby of a year or less, sitting
+up in a perambulator and gesticulating cheerfully to everybody. This
+baby it was that most troubled the orderly mind of Mr. Direck. The
+research for its paternity made his conversation with Mrs. Britling
+almost as disconnected and absent-minded as her conversation with him.
+It almost certainly wasn't Mrs. Britling's. The girl next to him or the
+girl next to Mr. Britling or the lady in black might any of them be
+married, but if so where was the spouse? It seemed improbable that they
+would wheel out a foundling to lunch....
+
+Realising at last that the problem of relationship must be left to solve
+itself if he did not want to dissipate and consume his mind entirely,
+Mr. Direck turned to his hostess, who was enjoying a brief lull in her
+administrative duties, and told her what a memorable thing the meeting
+of Mr. Britling in his own home would be in his life, and how very
+highly America was coming to esteem Mr. Britling and his essays. He
+found that with a slight change of person, one of his premeditated
+openings was entirely serviceable here. And he went on to observe that
+it was novel and entertaining to find Mr. Britling driving his own
+automobile and to note that it was an automobile of American
+manufacture. In America they had standardised and systematised the
+making of such things as automobiles to an extent that would, he
+thought, be almost startling to Europeans. It was certainly startling to
+the European manufacturers. In illustration of that he might tell a
+little story of a friend of his called Robinson--a man who curiously
+enough in general build and appearance was very reminiscent indeed of
+Mr. Britling. He had been telling Mr. Britling as much on his way here
+from the station. His friend was concerned with several others in one of
+the biggest attacks that had ever been made upon what one might describe
+in general terms as the thousand-dollar light automobile market. What
+they said practically was this: This market is a jig-saw puzzle waiting
+to be put together and made one. We are going to do it. But that was
+easier to figure out than to do. At the very outset of this attack he
+and his associates found themselves up against an unexpected and very
+difficult proposition....
+
+At first Mrs. Britling had listened to Mr. Direck with an almost
+undivided attention, but as he had developed his opening the feast upon
+the blue linen table had passed on to a fresh phase that demanded more
+and more of her directive intelligence. The two little boys appeared
+suddenly at her elbows. "Shall we take the plates and get the
+strawberries, Mummy?" they asked simultaneously. Then one of the neat
+maids in the background had to be called up and instructed in
+undertones, and Mr. Direck saw that for the present Robinson's
+illuminating experience was not for her ears. A little baffled, but
+quite understanding how things were, he turned to his neighbour on his
+left....
+
+The girl really had an extraordinarily pretty smile, and there was
+something in her soft bright brown eye--like the movement of some quick
+little bird. And--she was like somebody he knew! Indeed she was. She was
+quite ready to be spoken to.
+
+"I was telling Mrs. Britling," said Mr. Direck, "what a very great
+privilege I esteem it to meet Mr. Britling in this highly familiar way."
+
+"You've not met him before?"
+
+"I missed him by twenty-four hours when he came through Boston on the
+last occasion. Just twenty-four hours. It was a matter of very great
+regret to me."
+
+"I wish I'd been paid to travel round the world."
+
+"You must write things like Mr. Britling and then Mr. Kahn will send
+you."
+
+"Don't you think if I promised well?"
+
+"You'd have to write some promissory notes, I think--just to convince
+him it was all right."
+
+The young lady reflected on Mr. Britling's good fortune.
+
+"He saw India. He saw Japan. He had weeks in Egypt. And he went right
+across America."
+
+Mr. Direck had already begun on the liner to adapt himself to the
+hopping inconsecutiveness of English conversation. He made now what he
+felt was quite a good hop, and he dropped his voice to a confidential
+undertone. (It was probably Adam in his first conversation with Eve, who
+discovered the pleasantness of dropping into a confidential undertone
+beside a pretty ear with a pretty wave of hair above it.)
+
+"It was in India, I presume," murmured Mr. Direck, "that Mr. Britling
+made the acquaintance of the coloured gentleman?"
+
+"Coloured gentleman!" She gave a swift glance down the table as though
+she expected to see something purple with yellow spots. "Oh, that is one
+of Mr. Lawrence Carmine's young men!" she explained even more
+confidentially and with an air of discussing the silver bowl of roses
+before him. "He's a great authority on Indian literature, he belongs to
+a society for making things pleasant for Indian students in London, and
+he has them down."
+
+"And Mr. Lawrence Carmine?" he pursued.
+
+Even more intimately and confidentially she indicated Mr. Carmine, as it
+seemed by a motion of her eyelash.
+
+Mr. Direck prepared to be even more _sotto-voce_ and to plumb a much
+profounder mystery. His eye rested on the perambulator; he leant a
+little nearer to the ear.... But the strawberries interrupted him.
+
+"Strawberries!" said the young lady, and directed his regard to his left
+shoulder by a little movement of her head.
+
+He found one of the boys with a high-piled plate ready to serve him.
+
+And then Mrs. Britling resumed her conversation with him. She was so
+ignorant, she said, of things American, that she did not even know if
+they had strawberries there. At any rate, here they were at the crest of
+the season, and in a very good year. And in the rose season too. It was
+one of the dearest vanities of English people to think their apples and
+their roses and their strawberries the best in the world.
+
+"And their complexions," said Mr. Direck, over the pyramid of fruit,
+quite manifestly intending a compliment. So that was all right.... But
+the girl on the left of him was speaking across the table to the German
+tutor, and did not hear what he had said. So that even if it wasn't
+very neat it didn't matter....
+
+Then he remembered that she was like that old daguerreotype of a cousin
+of his grandmother's that he had fallen in love with when he was a boy.
+It was her smile. Of course! Of course!... And he'd sort of adored that
+portrait.... He felt a curious disposition to tell her as much....
+
+"What makes this visit even more interesting if possible to me," he said
+to Mrs. Britling, "than it would otherwise be, is that this Essex
+country is the country in which my maternal grandmother was raised, and
+also long way back my mother's father's people. My mother's father's
+people were very early New England people indeed.... Well, no. If I said
+_Mayflower_ it wouldn't be true. But it would approximate. They were
+Essex Hinkinsons. That's what they were. I must be a good third of me at
+least Essex. My grandmother was an Essex Corner, I must confess I've had
+some thought--"
+
+"Corner?" said the young lady at his elbow sharply.
+
+"I was telling Mrs. Britling I had some thought--"
+
+"But about those Essex relatives of yours?"
+
+"Well, of finding if they were still about in these parts.... Say! I
+haven't dropped a brick, have I?"
+
+He looked from one face to another.
+
+"_She's_ a Corner," said Mrs. Britling.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Direck, and hesitated for a moment. It was so
+delightful that one couldn't go on being just discreet. The atmosphere
+was free and friendly. His intonation disarmed offence. And he gave the
+young lady the full benefit of a quite expressive eye. "I'm very pleased
+to meet you, Cousin Corner. How are the old folks at home?"
+
+
+Section 10
+
+The bright interest of this consulship helped Mr. Direck more than
+anything to get the better of his Robinson-anecdote crave, and when
+presently he found his dialogue with Mr. Britling resumed, he turned at
+once to this remarkable discovery of his long lost and indeed hitherto
+unsuspected relative. "It's an American sort of thing to do, I suppose,"
+he said apologetically, "but I almost thought of going on, on Monday, to
+Market Saffron, which was the locality of the Hinkinsons, and just
+looking about at the tombstones in the churchyard for a day or so."
+
+"Very probably," said Mr. Britling, "you'd find something about them in
+the parish registers. Lots of our registers go back three hundred years
+or more. I'll drive you over in my lil' old car."
+
+"Oh! I wouldn't put you to that trouble," said Mr. Direck hastily.
+
+"It's no trouble. I like the driving. What I have had of it. And while
+we're at it, we'll come back by Harborough High Oak and look up the
+Corner pedigree. They're all over that district still. And the road's
+not really difficult; it's only a bit up and down and roundabout."
+
+"I couldn't think, Mr. Britling, of putting you to that much trouble."
+
+"It's no trouble. I want a day off, and I'm dying to take Gladys--"
+
+"Gladys?" said Mr. Direck with sudden hope.
+
+"That's my name for the lil' car. I'm dying to take her for something
+like a decent run. I've only had her out four times altogether, and I've
+not got her up yet to forty miles. Which I'm told she ought to do
+easily. We'll consider that settled."
+
+For the moment Mr. Direck couldn't think of any further excuse. But it
+was very clear in his mind that something must happen; he wished he knew
+of somebody who could send a recall telegram from London, to prevent him
+committing himself to the casual destinies of Mr. Britling's car again.
+And then another interest became uppermost in his mind.
+
+"You'd hardly believe me," he said, "if I told you that that Miss Corner
+of yours has a quite extraordinary resemblance to a miniature I've got
+away there in America of a cousin of my maternal grandmother's. She
+seems a very pleasant young lady."
+
+But Mr. Britling supplied no further information about Miss Corner.
+
+"It must be very interesting," he said, "to come over here and pick up
+these American families of yours on the monuments and tombstones. You
+know, of course, that district south of Evesham where every other church
+monument bears the stars and stripes, the arms of departed Washingtons.
+I doubt though if you'll still find the name about there. Nor will you
+find many Hinkinsons in Market Saffron. But lots of this country here
+has five or six hundred-year-old families still flourishing. That's why
+Essex is so much more genuinely Old England than Surrey, say, or Kent.
+Round here you'll find Corners and Fairlies, and then you get Capels,
+and then away down towards Dunmow and Braintree Maynards and Byngs. And
+there are oaks and hornbeams in the park about Claverings that have
+echoed to the howling of wolves and the clank of men in armour. All the
+old farms here are moated--because of the wolves. Claverings itself is
+Tudor, and rather fine too. And the cottages still wear thatch...."
+
+He reflected. "Now if you went south of London instead of northward it's
+all different. You're in a different period, a different society. You're
+in London suburbs right down to the sea. You'll find no genuine estates
+left, not of our deep-rooted familiar sort. You'll find millionaires and
+that sort of people, sitting in the old places. Surrey is full of rich
+stockbrokers, company-promoters, bookies, judges, newspaper proprietors.
+Sort of people who fence the paths across their parks. They do something
+to the old places--I don't know what they do--but instantly the
+countryside becomes a villadom. And little sub-estates and red-brick
+villas and art cottages spring up. And a kind of new, hard neatness. And
+pneumatic tyre and automobile spirit advertisements, great glaring
+boards by the roadside. And all the poor people are inspected and rushed
+about until they forget who their grandfathers were. They become villa
+parasites and odd-job men, and grow basely rich and buy gramophones.
+This Essex and yonder Surrey are as different as Russia and Germany. But
+for one American who comes to look at Essex, twenty go to Godalming and
+Guildford and Dorking and Lewes and Canterbury. Those Surrey people are
+not properly English at all. They are strenuous. You have to get on or
+get out. They drill their gardeners, lecture very fast on agricultural
+efficiency, and have miniature rifle ranges in every village. It's a
+county of new notice-boards and barbed-wire fences; there's always a
+policeman round the corner. They dress for dinner. They dress for
+everything. If a man gets up in the night to look for a burglar he puts
+on the correct costume--or doesn't go. They've got a special scientific
+system for urging on their tramps. And they lock up their churches on a
+week-day. Half their soil is hard chalk or a rationalistic sand, only
+suitable for bunkers and villa foundations. And they play golf in a
+large, expensive, thorough way because it's the thing to do.... Now here
+in Essex we're as lax as the eighteenth century. We hunt in any old
+clothes. Our soil is a rich succulent clay; it becomes semi-fluid in
+winter--when we go about in waders shooting duck. All our fingerposts
+have been twisted round by facetious men years ago. And we pool our
+breeds of hens and pigs. Our roses and oaks are wonderful; that alone
+shows that this is the real England. If I wanted to play golf--which I
+don't, being a decent Essex man--I should have to motor ten miles into
+Hertfordshire. And for rheumatics and longevity Surrey can't touch us. I
+want you to be clear on these points, because they really will affect
+your impressions of this place.... This country is a part of the real
+England--England outside London and outside manufactures. It's one with
+Wessex and Mercia or old Yorkshire--or for the matter of that with Meath
+or Lothian. And it's the essential England still...."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+It detracted a little from Mr. Direck's appreciation of this flow of
+information that it was taking them away from the rest of the company.
+He wanted to see more of his new-found cousin, and what the baby and the
+Bengali gentleman--whom manifestly one mustn't call "coloured"--and the
+large-nosed lady and all the other inexplicables would get up to.
+Instead of which Mr. Britling was leading him off alone with an air of
+showing him round the premises, and talking too rapidly and variously
+for a question to be got in edgeways, much less any broaching of the
+matter that Mr. Direck had come over to settle.
+
+There was quite a lot of rose garden, it made the air delicious, and it
+was full of great tumbling bushes of roses and of neglected standards,
+and it had a long pergola of creepers and trailers and a great arbour,
+and underneath over the beds everywhere, contrary to all the rules, the
+blossom of a multitude of pansies and stock and little trailing plants
+swarmed and crowded and scrimmaged and drilled and fought great massed
+attacks. And then Mr. Britling talked their way round a red-walled
+vegetable garden with an abundance of fruit trees, and through a door
+into a terraced square that had once been a farmyard, outside the
+converted barn. The barn doors had been replaced by a door-pierced
+window of glass, and in the middle of the square space a deep tank had
+been made, full of rainwater, in which Mr. Britling remarked casually
+that "everybody" bathed when the weather was hot. Thyme and rosemary and
+suchlike sweet-scented things grew on the terrace about the tank, and
+ten trimmed little trees of _Arbor vitae_ stood sentinel. Mr. Direck was
+tantalisingly aware that beyond some lilac bushes were his new-found
+cousin and the kindred young woman in blue playing tennis with the
+Indian and another young man, while whenever it was necessary the
+large-nosed lady crossed the stage and brooded soothingly over the
+perambulator. And Mr. Britling, choosing a seat from which Mr. Direck
+just couldn't look comfortably through the green branches at the flying
+glimpses of pink and blue and white and brown, continued to talk about
+England and America in relation to each other and everything else under
+the sun.
+
+Presently through a distant gate the two small boys were momentarily
+visible wheeling small but serviceable bicycles, followed after a little
+interval by the German tutor. Then an enormous grey cat came slowly
+across the garden court, and sat down to listen respectfully to Mr.
+Britling. The afternoon sky was an intense blue, with little puff-balls
+of cloud lined out across it.
+
+Occasionally, from chance remarks of Mr. Britling's, Mr. Direck was led
+to infer that his first impressions as an American visitor were being
+related to his host, but as a matter of fact he was permitted to relate
+nothing; Mr. Britling did all the talking. He sat beside his guest and
+spirted and played ideas and reflections like a happy fountain in the
+sunshine.
+
+Mr. Direck sat comfortably, and smoked with quiet appreciation the one
+after-lunch cigar he allowed himself. At any rate, if he himself felt
+rather word-bound, the fountain was nimble and entertaining. He listened
+in a general sort of way to the talk, it was quite impossible to follow
+it thoughtfully throughout all its chinks and turnings, while his eyes
+wandered about the garden and went ever and again to the flitting
+tennis-players beyond the green. It was all very gay and comfortable and
+complete; it was various and delightful without being in the least
+_opulent_; that was one of the little secrets America had to learn. It
+didn't look as though it had been made or bought or cost anything, it
+looked as though it had happened rather luckily....
+
+Mr. Britling's talk became like a wide stream flowing through Mr.
+Direck's mind, bearing along momentary impressions and observations,
+drifting memories of all the crowded English sights and sounds of the
+last five days, filmy imaginations about ancestral names and pretty
+cousins, scraps of those prepared conversational openings on Mr.
+Britling's standing in America, the explanation about the lecture club,
+the still incompletely forgotten purport of the Robinson anecdote....
+
+"Nobody planned the British estate system, nobody planned the British
+aristocratic system, nobody planned the confounded constitution, it came
+about, it was like layer after layer wrapping round an agate, but you
+see it came about so happily in a way, it so suited the climate and the
+temperament of our people and our island, it was on the whole so cosy,
+that our people settled down into it, you can't help settling down into
+it, they had already settled down by the days of Queen Anne, and Heaven
+knows if we shall ever really get away again. We're like that little
+shell the _Lingula_, that is found in the oldest rocks and lives to-day:
+it fitted its easy conditions, and it has never modified since. Why
+should it? It excretes all its disturbing forces. Our younger sons go
+away and found colonial empires. Our surplus cottage children emigrate
+to Australia and Canada or migrate into the towns. It doesn't alter
+_this_...."
+
+
+Section 12
+
+Mr. Direck's eye had come to rest upon the barn, and its expression
+changed slowly from lazy appreciation to a brightening intelligence.
+Suddenly he resolved to say something. He resolved to say it so firmly
+that he determined to say it even if Mr. Britling went on talking all
+the time.
+
+"I suppose, Mr. Britling," he said, "this barn here dates from the days
+of Queen Anne."
+
+"The walls of the yard here are probably earlier: probably monastic.
+That grey patch in the corner, for example. The barn itself is
+Georgian."
+
+"And here it is still. And this farmyard, here it is still."
+
+Mr. Britling was for flying off again, but Mr. Direck would not listen;
+he held on like a man who keeps his grip on a lasso.
+
+"There's one thing I would like to remark about your barn, Mr. Britling,
+and I might, while I am at it, say the same thing about your farmyard."
+
+Mr. Britling was held. "What's that?" he asked.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Direck, "the point that strikes me most about all this
+is that that barn isn't a barn any longer, and that this farmyard isn't
+a farmyard. There isn't any wheat or chaff or anything of that sort in
+the barn, and there never will be again: there's just a pianola and a
+dancing floor, and if a cow came into this farmyard everybody in the
+place would be shooing it out again. They'd regard it as a most
+unnatural object."
+
+He had a pleasant sense of talking at last. He kept right on. He was
+moved to a sweeping generalisation.
+
+"You were so good as to ask me, Mr. Britling, a little while ago, what
+my first impression of England was. Well, Mr. Britling, my first
+impression of England that seems to me to matter in the least is this:
+that it looks and feels more like the traditional Old England than any
+one could possibly have believed, and that in reality it is less like
+the traditional Old England than any one would ever possibly have
+imagined."
+
+He was carried on even further. He made a tremendous literary epigram.
+"I thought," he said, "when I looked out of the train this morning that
+I had come to the England of Washington Irving. I find it is not even
+the England of Mrs. Humphry Ward."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE SECOND
+
+MR. BRITLING CONTINUES HIS EXPOSITION
+
+
+Section 1
+
+Mr. Direck found little reason to revise his dictum in the subsequent
+experiences of the afternoon. Indeed the afternoon and the next day were
+steadily consistent in confirming what a very good dictum it had been.
+The scenery was the traditional scenery of England, and all the people
+seemed quicker, more irresponsible, more chaotic, than any one could
+have anticipated, and entirely inexplicable by any recognised code of
+English relationships....
+
+"You think that John Bull is dead and a strange generation is wearing
+his clothes," said Mr. Britling. "I think you'll find very soon it's the
+old John Bull. Perhaps not Mrs. Humphry Ward's John Bull, or Mrs. Henry
+Wood's John Bull but true essentially to Shakespeare, Fielding, Dickens,
+Meredith...."
+
+"I suppose," he added, "there are changes. There's a new generation
+grown up...."
+
+He looked at his barn and the swimming pool. "It's a good point of yours
+about the barn," he said. "What you say reminds me of that very jolly
+thing of Kipling's about the old mill-wheel that began by grinding corn
+and ended by driving dynamos....
+
+"Only I admit that barn doesn't exactly drive a dynamo....
+
+"To be frank, it's just a pleasure barn....
+
+"The country can afford it...."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+He left it at that for the time, but throughout the afternoon Mr. Direck
+had the gratification of seeing his thought floating round and round in
+the back-waters of Mr. Britling's mental current. If it didn't itself
+get into the stream again its reflection at any rate appeared and
+reappeared. He was taken about with great assiduity throughout the
+afternoon, and he got no more than occasional glimpses of the rest of
+the Dower House circle until six o'clock in the evening.
+
+Meanwhile the fountains of Mr. Britling's active and encyclopćdic mind
+played steadily.
+
+He was inordinately proud of England, and he abused her incessantly. He
+wanted to state England to Mr. Direck as the amiable summation of a
+grotesque assembly of faults. That was the view into which the comforts
+and prosperities of his middle age had brought him from a radicalism
+that had in its earlier stages been angry and bitter. And for Mr.
+Britling England was "here." Essex was the county he knew. He took Mr.
+Direck out from his walled garden by a little door into a trim paddock
+with two white goals. "We play hockey here on Sundays," he said in a way
+that gave Mr. Direck no hint of the practically compulsory participation
+of every visitor to Matching's Easy in this violent and dangerous
+exercise, and thence they passed by a rich deep lane and into a high
+road that ran along the edge of the deer park of Claverings. "We will
+call in on Claverings later," said Mr. Britling. "Lady Homartyn has some
+people there for the week-end, and you ought to see the sort of thing it
+is and the sort of people they are. She wanted us to lunch there
+to-morrow, but I didn't accept that because of our afternoon hockey."
+
+Mr. Direck received this reason uncritically.
+
+The village reminded Mr. Direck of Abbey's pictures. There was an inn
+with a sign standing out in the road, a painted sign of the Clavering
+Arms; it had a water trough (such as Mr. Weller senior ducked the
+dissenter in) and a green painted table outside its inviting door. There
+were also a general shop and a number of very pleasant cottages, each
+marked with the Mainstay crest. All this was grouped about a green with
+real geese drilling thereon. Mr. Britling conducted his visitor (through
+a lych gate) into the church-yard, and there they found mossy,
+tumble-down tombstones, one with a skull and cross-bones upon it, that
+went back to the later seventeenth century. In the aisle of the church
+were three huge hatchments, and there was a side chapel devoted to the
+Mainstay family and the Barons Homartyn, with a series of monuments that
+began with painted Tudor effigies and came down to a vast stained glass
+window of the vilest commercial Victorian. There were also medićval
+brasses of parish priests, and a marble crusader and his lady of some
+extinguished family which had ruled Matching's Easy before the Mainstays
+came. And as the two gentlemen emerged from the church they ran against
+the perfect vicar, Mr. Dimple, ample and genial, with an embracing laugh
+and an enveloping voice. "Come to see the old country," he said to Mr.
+Direck. "So Good of you Americans to do that! So Good of you...."
+
+There was some amiable sparring between the worthy man and Mr. Britling
+about bringing Mr. Direck to church on Sunday morning. "He's terribly
+Lax," said Mr. Dimple to Mr. Direck, smiling radiantly. "Terribly Lax.
+But then nowadays Everybody _is_ so Lax. And he's very Good to my Coal
+Club; I don't know what we should do without him. So I just admonish
+him. And if he doesn't go to church, well, anyhow he doesn't go anywhere
+else. He may be a poor churchman, but anyhow he's not a dissenter...."
+
+"In England, you see," Mr. Britling remarked, after they had parted from
+the reverend gentleman, "we have domesticated everything. We have even
+domesticated God."
+
+For awhile Mr. Britling showed Mr. Direck English lanes, and then came
+back along narrow white paths across small fields of rising wheat, to
+the village and a little gate that led into the park.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Direck, "what you say about domestication does seem to
+me to be very true indeed. Why! even those clouds up there look as
+though they had a shepherd and were grazing."
+
+"Ready for shearing almost," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Indeed," said Mr. Direck, raising his voice a little, "I've seen
+scarcely anything in England that wasn't domesticated, unless it was
+some of your back streets in London."
+
+Mr. Britling seemed to reflect for a moment. "They're an excrescence,"
+he said....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+The park had a trim wildness like nature in an old Italian picture;
+dappled fallow deer grouped close at hand and looked at the two men
+fearlessly; the path dropped through oak trees and some stunted bracken
+to a little loitering stream, that paused ever and again to play at
+ponds and waterfalls and bear a fleet of water-lily leaves; and then
+their way curved round in an indolent sweep towards the cedars and
+shrubberies of the great house. The house looked low and extensive to an
+American eye, and its red-brick chimneys rose like infantry in open
+order along its extended line. There was a glimpse of flower-bright
+garden and terraces to the right as they came round the corner to the
+front of the house through a path cut in the laurel bushes.
+
+Mr. Britling had a moment of exposition as they approached the entrance.
+
+"I expect we shall find Philbert from the Home Office--or is it the
+Local Government Board?--and Sir Thomas Loot, the Treasury man. There
+may be some other people of that sort, the people we call the Governing
+Class. Wives also. And I rather fancy the Countess of Frensham is
+coming, she's strong on the Irish Question, and Lady Venetia
+Trumpington, who they say is a beauty--I've never seen her. It's Lady
+Homartyn's way to expect me to come in--not that I'm an important item
+at these week-end social feasts--but she likes to see me on the
+table--to be nibbled at if any one wants to do so--like the olives and
+the salted almonds. And she always asks me to lunch on Sunday and I
+always refuse--because of the hockey. So you see I put in an appearance
+on the Saturday afternoon...."
+
+They had reached the big doorway.
+
+It opened into a large cool hall adorned with the heads of hippopotami
+and rhinoceroses and a stuffed lion, and furnished chiefly with a vast
+table on which hats and sticks and newspapers were littered. A
+manservant with a subdued, semi-confidential manner, conveyed to Mr.
+Britling that her ladyship was on the terrace, and took the hats and
+sticks that were handed to him and led the way through the house. They
+emerged upon a broad terrace looking out under great cedar trees upon
+flower beds and stone urns and tennis lawns and yew hedges that dipped
+to give a view of distant hills. On the terrace were grouped perhaps a
+dozen people for the most part holding teacups, they sat in deck chairs
+and folding seats about a little table that bore the tea-things. Lady
+Homartyn came forward to welcome the newcomers.
+
+Mr. Direck was introduced as a travelling American gratified to see a
+typical English country house, and Lady Homartyn in an habituated way
+ran over the points of her Tudor specimen. Mr. Direck was not accustomed
+to titled people, and was suddenly in doubt whether you called a
+baroness "My Lady" or "Your Ladyship," so he wisely avoided any form of
+address until he had a lead from Mr. Britling. Mr. Britling presently
+called her "Lady Homartyn." She took Mr. Direck and sat him down beside
+a lady whose name he didn't catch, but who had had a lot to do with the
+British Embassy at Washington, and then she handed Mr. Britling over to
+the Rt. Honble. George Philbert, who was anxious to discuss certain
+points in the latest book of essays. The conversation of the lady from
+Washington was intelligent but not exacting, and Mr. Direck was able to
+give a certain amount of attention to the general effect of the scene.
+
+He was a little disappointed to find that the servants didn't wear
+livery. In American magazine pictures and in American cinematograph
+films of English stories and in the houses of very rich Americans living
+in England, they do so. And the Mansion House is misleading; he had met
+a compatriot who had recently dined at the Mansion House, and who had
+described "flunkeys" in hair-powder and cloth of gold--like Thackeray's
+Jeames Yellowplush. But here the only servants were two slim, discreet
+and attentive young gentlemen in black coats with a gentle piety in
+their manner instead of pride. And he was a little disappointed too by a
+certain lack of splendour in the company. The ladies affected him as
+being ill-dressed; there was none of the hard snap, the "_There!_ and
+what do you say to it?" about them of the well-dressed American woman,
+and the men too were not so much tailored as unobtrusively and yet
+grammatically clothed.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+He was still only in the fragmentary stage of conversation when
+everything was thrown into commotion by the important arrival of Lady
+Frensham, and there was a general reshuffling of places. Lady Frensham
+had arrived from London by automobile; she appeared in veils and
+swathings and a tremendous dust cloak, with a sort of nephew in her
+train who had driven the car. She was manifestly a constitutionally
+triumphant woman. A certain afternoon lassitude vanished in the swirl
+of her arrival. Mr. Philbert removed wrappings and handed them to the
+manservant.
+
+"I lunched with Sir Edward Carson to-day, my dear," she told Lady
+Homartyn, and rolled a belligerent eye at Philbert.
+
+"And is he as obdurate as ever?" asked Sir Thomas.
+
+"Obdurate! It's Redmond who's obdurate," cried Lady Frensham. "What do
+you say, Mr. Britling?"
+
+"A plague on both your parties," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"You can't keep out of things like that," said Lady Frensham with the
+utmost gusto, "when the country's on the very verge of civil war.... You
+people who try to pretend there isn't a grave crisis when there is one,
+will be more accountable than any one--when the civil war does come. It
+won't spare you. Mark my words!"
+
+The party became a circle.
+
+Mr. Direck found himself the interested auditor of a real English
+country-house week-end political conversation. This at any rate was like
+the England of which Mrs. Humphry Ward's novels had informed him, but
+yet not exactly like it. Perhaps that was due to the fact that for the
+most part these novels dealt with the England of the 'nineties, and
+things had lost a little in dignity since those days. But at any rate
+here were political figures and titled people, and they were talking
+about the "country."...
+
+Was it possible that people of this sort did "run" the country, after
+all?... When he had read Mrs. Humphry Ward in America he had always
+accepted this theory of the story quite easily, but now that he saw and
+heard them--!
+
+But all governments and rulers and ruling classes when you look at them
+closely are incredible....
+
+"I don't believe the country is on the verge of civil war," said Mr.
+Britling.
+
+"Facts!" cried Lady Frensham, and seemed to wipe away delusions with a
+rapid gesture of her hands.
+
+"You're interested in Ireland, Mr. Dirks?" asked Lady Homartyn.
+
+"We see it first when we come over," said Mr. Direck rather neatly, and
+after that he was free to attend to the general discussion.
+
+Lady Frensham, it was manifest, was one of that energetic body of
+aristocratic ladies who were taking up an irreconcilable attitude
+against Home Rule "in any shape or form" at that time. They were rapidly
+turning British politics into a system of bitter personal feuds in which
+all sense of imperial welfare was lost. A wild ambition to emulate the
+extremest suffragettes seems to have seized upon them. They insulted,
+they denounced, they refused every invitation lest they should meet that
+"traitor" the Prime Minister, they imitated the party hatreds of a
+fiercer age, and even now the moderate and politic Philbert found
+himself treated as an invisible object. They were supported by the
+extremer section of the Tory press, and the most extraordinary writers
+were set up to froth like lunatics against the government as "traitors,"
+as men who "insulted the King"; the _Morning Post_ and the
+lighter-witted side of the Unionist press generally poured out a torrent
+of partisan nonsense it is now almost incredible to recall. Lady
+Frensham, bridling over Lady Homartyn's party, and for a time leaving
+Mr. Britling, hurried on to tell of the newest developments of the great
+feud. She had a wonderful description of Lady Londonderry sitting
+opposite "that old rascal, the Prime Minister," at a performance of
+Mozart's _Zauberflöte_.
+
+"If looks could kill!" cried Lady Frensham with tremendous gusto.
+
+"Sir Edward is quite firm that Ulster means to fight. They have
+machine-guns--ammunition. And I am sure the army is with us...."
+
+"Where did they get those machine-guns and ammunition?" asked Mr.
+Britling suddenly.
+
+"Ah! that's a secret," cried Lady Frensham.
+
+"Um," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"You see," said Lady Frensham; "it _will_ be civil war! And yet you
+writing people who have influence do nothing to prevent it!"
+
+"What are we to do, Lady Frensham?"
+
+"Tell people how serious it is."
+
+"You mean, tell the Irish Nationalists to lie down and be walked over.
+They won't be...."
+
+"We'll see about that," cried Lady Frensham, "we'll see about that!"
+
+She was a large and dignified person with a kind of figure-head nobility
+of carriage, but Mr. Direck was suddenly reminded of a girl cousin of
+his who had been expelled from college for some particularly elaborate
+and aimless rioting....
+
+"May I say something to you, Lady Frensham," said Mr. Britling, "that
+you have just said to me? Do you realise that this Carsonite campaign is
+dragging these islands within a measurable distance of civil war?"
+
+"It's the fault of your Lloyd George and his government. It's the fault
+of your Socialists and sentimentalists. You've made the mischief and you
+have to deal with it."
+
+"Yes. But do you really figure to yourself what a civil war may mean for
+the empire? Surely there are other things in the world besides this
+quarrel between the 'loyalists' of Ulster and the Liberal government;
+there are other interests in this big empire than party advantages? Yon
+think you are going to frighten this Home Rule government into some
+ridiculous sort of collapse that will bring in the Tories at the next
+election. Well, suppose you don't manage that. Suppose instead that you
+really do contrive to bring about a civil war. Very few people here or
+in Ireland want it--I was over there not a month ago--but when men have
+loaded guns in their hands they sometimes go off. And then people see
+red. Few people realise what an incurable sore opens when fighting
+begins. Suppose part of the army revolts and we get some extraordinary
+and demoralising fighting over there. India watches these things. Bengal
+may imitate Ireland. At that distance rebellion and treason are
+rebellion and treason whether they are coloured orange or green. And
+then suppose the Germans see fit to attack us!"
+
+Lady Frensham had a woman's elusiveness. "Your Redmondites would welcome
+them with open arms."
+
+"It isn't the Redmondites who invite them now, anyhow," said Mr.
+Britling, springing his mine. "The other day one of your 'loyalists,'
+Andrews, was talking in the _Morning Post_ of preferring conquest by
+Germany to Home Rule; Craig has been at the same game; Major Crawford,
+the man who ran the German Mausers last April, boasted that he would
+transfer his allegiance to the German Emperor rather than see Redmond in
+power."
+
+"Rhetoric!" said Lady Frensham. "Rhetoric!"
+
+"But one of your Ulster papers has openly boasted that arrangements have
+been made for a 'powerful Continental monarch' to help an Ulster
+rebellion."
+
+"Which paper?" snatched Lady Frensham.
+
+Mr. Britling hesitated.
+
+Mr. Philbert supplied the name. "I saw it. It was the _Irish
+Churchman_."
+
+"You two have got your case up very well," said Lady Frensham. "I didn't
+know Mr. Britling was a party man."
+
+"The Nationalists have been circulating copies," said Philbert.
+"Naturally."
+
+"They make it look worse than mere newspaper talk and speeches," Mr.
+Britling pressed. "Carson, it seems, was lunching with the German
+Emperor last autumn. A fine fuss you'd make if Redmond did that. All
+this gun-running, too, is German gun-running."
+
+"What does it matter if it is?" said Lady Frensham, allowing a
+belligerent eye to rest for the first time on Philbert. "You drove us to
+it. One thing we are resolved upon at any cost. Johnny Redmond may rule
+England if he likes; he shan't rule Ireland...."
+
+Mr. Britling shrugged his shoulders, and his face betrayed despair.
+
+"My one consolation," he said, "in this storm is a talk I had last month
+with a young Irishwoman in Meath. She was a young person of twelve, and
+she took a fancy to me--I think because I went with her in an alleged
+dangerous canoe she was forbidden to navigate alone. All day the eternal
+Irish Question had banged about over her observant head. When we were
+out on the water she suddenly decided to set me right upon a disregarded
+essential. 'You English,' she said, 'are just a bit disposed to take all
+this trouble seriously. Don't you fret yourself about it... Half the
+time we're just laffing at you. You'd best leave us all alone....'"
+
+And then he went off at a tangent from his own anecdote.
+
+"But look at this miserable spectacle!" he cried. "Here is a chance of
+getting something like a reconciliation of the old feud of English and
+Irish, and something like a settlement of these ancient distresses, and
+there seems no power, no conscience, no sanity in any of us, sufficient
+to save it from this cantankerous bitterness, this sheer wicked mischief
+of mutual exasperation.... Just when Ireland is getting a gleam of
+prosperity.... A murrain on both your parties!"
+
+"I see, Mr. Britling, you'd hand us all over to Jim Larkin!"
+
+"I'd hand you all over to Sir Horace Plunkett--"
+
+"That doctrinaire dairyman!" cried Lady Frensham, with an air of quite
+conclusive repartee. "You're hopeless, Mr. Britling. You're hopeless."
+
+And Lady Homartyn, seeing that the phase of mere personal verdicts drew
+near, created a diversion by giving Lady Frensham a second cup of tea,
+and fluttering like a cooling fan about the heated brows of the
+disputants. She suggested tennis....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Mr. Britling was still flushed and ruffled as he and his guest returned
+towards the Dower House. He criticised England himself unmercifully, but
+he hated to think that in any respect she fell short of perfection; even
+her defects he liked to imagine were just a subtler kind of power and
+wisdom. And Lady Frensham had stuck her voice and her gestures through
+all these amiable illusions. He was like a lover who calls his lady a
+foolish rogue, and is startled to find that facts and strangers do
+literally agree with him.
+
+But it was so difficult to resolve Lady Frensham and the Irish squabble
+generally into anything better than idiotic mischief, that for a time he
+was unusually silent--wrestling with the problem, and Mr. Direck got the
+conversational initiative.
+
+"To an American mind it's a little--startling," said Mr. Direck, "to
+hear ladies expressing such vigorous political opinions."
+
+"I don't mind that," said Mr. Britling. "Women over here go into
+politics and into public-houses--I don't see why they shouldn't. If such
+things are good enough for men they are good enough for women; we
+haven't your sort of chivalry. But it's the peculiar malignant silliness
+of this sort of Toryism that's so discreditable. It's discreditable.
+There's no good in denying it. Those people you have heard and seen are
+a not unfair sample of our governing class--of a certain section of our
+governing class--as it is to-day. Not at all unfair. And you see how
+amazingly they haven't got hold of anything. There was a time when they
+could be politic.... Hidden away they have politic instincts even
+now.... But it makes me sick to think of this Irish business. Because,
+you know, it's true--we _are_ drifting towards civil war there."
+
+"You are of that opinion?" said Mr. Direck.
+
+"Well, isn't it so? Here's all this Ulster gun-running--you heard how
+she talked of it? Isn't it enough to drive the south into open
+revolt?..."
+
+"Is there very much, do you think, in the suggestion that some of this
+Ulster trouble is a German intrigue? You and Mr. Philbert were saying
+things--"
+
+"I don't know," said Mr. Britling shortly.
+
+"I don't know," he repeated. "But it isn't because I don't think our
+Unionists and their opponents aren't foolish enough for anything of the
+sort. It's only because I don't believe that the Germans are so stupid
+as to do such things.... Why should they?...
+
+"It makes me--expressionless with anger," said Mr. Britling after a
+pause, reverting to his main annoyance. "They won't consider any
+compromise. It's sheer love of quarrelling.... Those people there think
+that nothing can possibly happen. They are like children in a nursery
+playing at rebellion. Unscathed and heedless. Until there is death at
+their feet they will never realise they are playing with loaded
+guns...."
+
+For a time he said no more; and listened perfunctorily while Mr. Direck
+tried to indicate the feeling in New England towards the Irish Question
+and the many difficult propositions an American politician has to face
+in that respect. And when Mr. Britling took up the thread of speech
+again it had little or no relation to Mr. Direck's observations.
+
+"The psychology of all this recent insubordination and violence
+is--curious. Exasperating too.... I don't quite grasp it.... It's the
+same thing whether you look at the suffrage business or the labour
+people or at this Irish muddle. People may be too safe. You see we live
+at the end of a series of secure generations in which none of the great
+things of life have changed materially. We've grown up with no sense of
+danger--that is to say, with no sense of responsibility. None of us,
+none of us--for though I talk my actions belie me--really believe that
+life can change very fundamentally any more forever. All this",--Mr.
+Britling waved his arm comprehensively--"looks as though it was bound to
+go on steadily forever. It seems incredible that the system could be
+smashed. It seems incredible that anything we can do will ever smash the
+system. Lady Homartyn, for example, is incapable of believing that she
+won't always be able to have week-end parties at Claverings, and that
+the letters and the tea won't come to her bedside in the morning. Or if
+her imagination goes to the point of supposing that some day _she_ won't
+be there to receive the tea, it means merely that she supposes somebody
+else will be. Her pleasant butler may fear to lose his 'situation,' but
+nothing on earth could make him imagine a time when there will not be a
+'situation' for him to lose. Old Asquith thinks that we always have got
+along, and that we always shall get along by being quietly artful and
+saying, 'Wait and see.' And it's just because we are all convinced that
+we are so safe against a general breakdown that we are able to be so
+recklessly violent in our special cases. Why shouldn't women have the
+vote? they argue. What does it matter? And bang goes a bomb in
+Westminster Abbey. Why shouldn't Ulster create an impossible position?
+And off trots some demented Carsonite to Germany to play at treason on
+some half word of the German Emperor's and buy half a million rifles....
+
+"Exactly like children being very, very naughty....
+
+"And," said Mr. Britling with a gesture to round off his discourse, "we
+do go on. We shall go on--until there is a spark right into the
+magazine. We have lost any belief we ever had that fundamental things
+happen. We are everlasting children in an everlasting nursery...."
+
+And immediately he broke out again.
+
+"The truth of the matter is that hardly any one has ever yet mastered
+the fact that the world is round. The world is round--like an orange.
+The thing is told us--like any old scandal--at school. For all
+practical purposes we forget it. Practically we all live in a world as
+flat as a pancake. Where time never ends and nothing changes. Who really
+believes in any world outside the circle of the horizon? Here we are and
+visibly nothing is changing. And so we go on to--nothing will ever
+change. It just goes on--in space, in time. If we could realise that
+round world beyond, then indeed we should go circumspectly.... If the
+world were like a whispering gallery, what whispers might we not hear
+now--from India, from Africa, from Germany, warnings from the past,
+intimations of the future....
+
+"We shouldn't heed them...."
+
+
+Section 6
+
+And indeed at the very moment when Mr. Britling was saying these words,
+in Sarajevo in Bosnia, where the hour was somewhat later, men whispered
+together, and one held nervously to a black parcel that had been given
+him and nodded as they repeated his instructions, a black parcel with
+certain unstable chemicals and a curious arrangement of detonators
+therein, a black parcel destined ultimately to shatter nearly every
+landmark of Mr. Britling's and Lady Frensham's cosmogony....
+
+
+Section 7
+
+When Mr. Direck and Mr. Britling returned to the Dower House the guest
+was handed over to Mrs. Britling and Mr. Britling vanished, to reappear
+at supper time, for the Britlings had a supper in the evening instead of
+dinner. When Mr. Britling did reappear every trace of his vexation with
+the levities of British politics and the British ruling class had
+vanished altogether, and he was no longer thinking of all that might be
+happening in Germany or India....
+
+While he was out of the way Mr. Direck extended his acquaintance with
+the Britling household. He was taken round the garden and shown the
+roses by Mrs. Britling, and beyond the rose garden in a little arbour
+they came upon Miss Corner reading a book. She looked very grave and
+pretty reading a book. Mr. Direck came to a pause in front of her, and
+Mrs. Britling stopped beside him. The young lady looked up and smiled.
+
+"The last new novel?" asked Mr. Direck pleasantly.
+
+"Campanella's 'City of the Sun.'"
+
+"My word! but isn't that stiff reading?"
+
+"You haven't read it," said Miss Corner.
+
+"It's a dry old book anyhow."
+
+"It's no good pretending you have," she said, and there Mr. Direck felt
+the conversation had to end.
+
+"That's a very pleasant young lady to have about," he said to Mrs.
+Britling as they went on towards the barn court.
+
+"She's all at loose ends," said Mrs. Britling. "And she reads like
+a--Whatever does read? One drinks like a fish. One eats like a wolf."
+
+They found the German tutor in a little court playing Badminton with the
+two younger boys. He was a plump young man with glasses and compact
+gestures; the game progressed chiefly by misses and the score was
+counted in German. He won thoughtfully and chiefly through the ardour of
+the younger brother, whose enthusiastic returns invariably went out.
+Instantly the boys attacked Mrs. Britling with a concerted enthusiasm.
+"Mummy! Is it to be dressing-up supper?"
+
+Mrs. Britling considered, and it was manifest that Mr. Direck was
+material to her answer.
+
+"We wrap ourselves up in curtains and bright things instead of
+dressing," she explained. "We have a sort of wardrobe of fancy dresses.
+Do you mind?"
+
+Mr. Direck was delighted.
+
+And this being settled, the two small boys went off with their mother
+upon some special decorative project they had conceived and Mr. Direck
+was left for a time to Herr Heinrich.
+
+Herr Heinrich suggested a stroll in the rose garden, and as Mr. Direck
+had not hitherto been shown the rose garden by Herr Heinrich, he agreed.
+Sooner or later everybody, it was evident, had got to show him that rose
+garden.
+
+"And how do you like living in an English household?" said Mr. Direck,
+getting to business at once. "It's interesting to an American to see
+this English establishment, and it must be still more interesting to a
+German."
+
+"I find it very different from Pomerania," said Herr Heinrich. "In some
+respects it is more agreeable, in others less so. It is a pleasant life
+but it is not a serious life.
+
+"At any time," continued Herr Heinrich, "some one may say, 'Let us do
+this thing,' or 'Let us do that thing,' and then everything is
+disarranged.
+
+"People walk into the house without ceremony. There is much kindness but
+no politeness. Mr. Britling will go away for three or four days, and
+when he returns and I come forward to greet him and bow, he will walk
+right past me, or he will say just like this, 'How do, Heinrich?'"
+
+"Are you interested in Mr. Britling's writings?" Mr. Direck asked.
+
+"There again I am puzzled. His work is known even in Germany. His
+articles are reprinted in German and Austrian reviews. You would expect
+him to have a certain authority of manner. You would expect there to be
+discussion at the table upon questions of philosophy and aesthetics....
+It is not so. When I ask him questions it is often that they are not
+seriously answered. Sometimes it is as if he did not like the questions
+I askt of him. Yesterday I askt of him did he agree or did he not agree
+with Mr. Bernard Shaw. He just said--I wrote it down in my memoranda--he
+said: 'Oh! Mixt Pickles.' What can one understand of that?--Mixt
+Pickles!"...
+
+The young man's sedulous blue eyes looked out of his pink face through
+his glasses at Mr. Direck, anxious for any light he could offer upon the
+atmospheric vagueness of this England.
+
+He was, he explained, a student of philology preparing for his
+doctorate. He had not yet done his year of military service. He was
+studying the dialects of East Anglia--
+
+"You go about among the people?" Mr. Direck inquired.
+
+"No, I do not do that. But I ask Mr. Carmine and Mrs. Britling and the
+boys many questions. And sometimes I talk to the gardener."
+
+He explained how he would prepare his thesis and how it would be
+accepted, and the nature of his army service and the various stages by
+which he would subsequently ascend in the orderly professorial life to
+which he was destined. He confessed a certain lack of interest in
+philology, but, he said, "it is what I have to do." And so he was going
+to do it all his life through. For his own part he was interested in
+ideas of universal citizenship, in Esperanto and Ido and universal
+languages and such-like attacks upon the barriers between man and man.
+But the authorities at home did not favour cosmopolitan ideas, and so he
+was relinquishing them. "Here, it is as if there were no authorities,"
+he said with a touch of envy.
+
+Mr. Direck induced him to expand that idea.
+
+Herr Heinrich made Mr. Britling his instance. If Mr. Britling were a
+German he would certainly have some sort of title, a definite position,
+responsibility. Here he was not even called Herr Doktor. He said what he
+liked. Nobody rewarded him; nobody reprimanded him. When Herr Heinrich
+asked him of his position, whether he was above or below Mr. Bernard
+Shaw or Mr. Arnold White or Mr. Garvin or any other publicist, he made
+jokes. Nobody here seemed to have a title and nobody seemed to have a
+definite place. There was Mr. Lawrence Carmine; he was a student of
+Oriental questions; he had to do with some public institution in London
+that welcomed Indian students; he was a Geheimrath--
+
+"Eh?" said Mr. Direck.
+
+"It is--what do they call it? the Essex County Council." But nobody took
+any notice of that. And when Mr. Philbert, who was a minister in the
+government, came to lunch he was just like any one else. It was only
+after he had gone that Herr Heinrich had learnt by chance that he was a
+minister and "Right Honourable...."
+
+"In Germany everything is definite. Every man knows his place, has his
+papers, is instructed what to do...."
+
+"Yet," said Mr. Direck, with his eyes on the glowing roses, the neat
+arbour, the long line of the red wall of the vegetable garden and a
+distant gleam of cornfield, "it all looks orderly enough."
+
+"It is as if it had been put in order ages ago," said Herr Heinrich.
+
+"And was just going on by habit," said Mr. Direck, taking up the idea.
+
+Their comparisons were interrupted by the appearance of "Teddy," the
+secretary, and the Indian young gentleman, damp and genial, as they
+explained, "from the boats." It seemed that "down below" somewhere was a
+pond with a punt and an island and a toy dinghy. And while they
+discussed swimming and boating, Mr. Carmine appeared from the direction
+of the park conversing gravely with the elder son. They had been for a
+walk and a talk together. There were proposals for a Badminton foursome.
+Mr. Direck emerged from the general interchange with Mr. Lawrence
+Carmine, and then strolled through the rose garden to see the sunset
+from the end. Mr. Direck took the opportunity to verify his impression
+that the elder son was the present Mrs. Britling's stepson, and he also
+contrived by a sudden admiration for a distant row of evening primroses
+to deflect their path past the arbour in which the evening light must
+now be getting a little too soft for Miss Corner's book.
+
+Miss Corner was drawn into the sunset party. She talked to Mr. Carmine
+and displayed, Mr. Direck thought, great originality of mind. She said
+"The City of the Sun" was like the cities the boys sometimes made on the
+playroom floor. She said it was the dearest little city, and gave some
+amusing particulars. She described the painted walls that made the tour
+of the Civitas Solis a liberal education. She asked Mr. Carmine, who was
+an authority on Oriental literature, why there were no Indian nor
+Chinese Utopias.
+
+Now it had never occurred to Mr. Direck to ask why there were no Indian
+nor Chinese Utopias, and even Mr. Carmine seemed surprised to discover
+this deficiency.
+
+"The primitive patriarchal village _is_ Utopia to India and China," said
+Mr. Carmine, when they had a little digested the inquiry. "Or at any
+rate it is their social ideal. They want no Utopias."
+
+"Utopias came with cities," he said, considering the question. "And the
+first cities, as distinguished from courts and autocratic capitals, came
+with ships. India and China belong to an earlier age. Ships, trade,
+disorder, strange relationships, unofficial literature, criticism--and
+then this idea of some novel remaking of society...."
+
+
+Section 8
+
+Then Mr. Direck fell into the hands of Hugh, the eldest son, and
+anticipating the inevitable, said that he liked to walk in the rose
+garden. So they walked in the rose garden.
+
+"Do you read Utopias?" said Mr. Direck, cutting any preface, in the
+English manner.
+
+"Oh, _rather_!" said Hugh, and became at once friendly and confidential.
+
+"We all do," he explained. "In England everybody talks of change and
+nothing ever changes."
+
+"I found Miss Corner reading--what was it? the Sun People?--some old
+classical Italian work."
+
+"Campanella," said Hugh, without betraying the slightest interest in
+Miss Corner. "Nothing changes in England, because the people who want to
+change things change their minds before they change anything else. I've
+been in London talking for the last half-year. Studying art they call
+it. Before that I was a science student, and I want to be one again.
+Don't you think, Sir, there's something about science--it's steadier
+than anything else in the world?"
+
+Mr. Direck thought that the moral truths of human nature were steadier
+than science, and they had one of those little discussions of real life
+that begin about a difference inadequately apprehended, and do not so
+much end as are abandoned. Hugh struck him as being more speculative and
+detached than any American college youth of his age that he knew--but
+that might not be a national difference but only the Britling strain. He
+seemed to have read more and more independently, and to be doing less.
+And he was rather more restrained and self-possessed.
+
+Before Mr. Direck could begin a proper inquiry into the young man's work
+and outlook, he had got the conversation upon America. He wanted
+tremendously to see America. "The dad says in one of his books that over
+here we are being and that over there you are beginning. It must be
+tremendously stimulating to think that your country is still being
+made...."
+
+Mr. Direck thought that an interesting point of view. "Unless something
+tumbles down here, we never think of altering it," the young man
+remarked. "And even then we just shore it up."
+
+His remarks had the effect of floating off from some busy mill of
+thought within him. Hitherto Mr. Direck had been inclined to think this
+silent observant youth, with his hands in his pockets and his shoulders
+a little humped, as probably shy and adolescently ineffective. But the
+head was manifestly quite busy....
+
+"Miss Corner," he began, taking the first thing that came into his head,
+and then he remembered that he had already made the remark he was going
+to make not five minutes ago.
+
+"What form of art," he asked, "are you contemplating in your studies at
+the present time in London?"....
+
+Before this question could be dealt with at all adequately, the two
+small boys became active in the garden beating in everybody to
+"dress-up" before supper. The secretary, Teddy, came in a fatherly way
+to look after Mr. Direck and see to his draperies.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+Mr. Direck gave his very best attention to this business of draping
+himself, for he had not the slightest intention of appearing ridiculous
+in the eyes of Miss Corner. Teddy came with an armful of stuff that he
+thought "might do."
+
+"What'll I come as?" asked Mr. Direck.
+
+"We don't wear costumes," said Teddy. "We just put on all the brightest
+things we fancy. If it's any costume at all, it's Futurist."
+
+"And surely why shouldn't one?" asked Mr. Direck, greatly struck by this
+idea. "Why should we always be tied by the fashions and periods of the
+past?"
+
+He rejected a rather Mephistopheles-like costume of crimson and a scheme
+for a brigand-like ensemble based upon what was evidently an old bolero
+of Mrs. Britling's, and after some reflection he accepted some black
+silk tights. His legs were not legs to be ashamed of. Over this he tried
+various brilliant wrappings from the Dower House _armoire_, and chose at
+last, after some hesitation in the direction of a piece of gold and
+purple brocade, a big square of green silk curtain stuff adorned with
+golden pheasants and other large and dignified ornaments; this he wore
+toga fashion over his light silken under-vest--Teddy had insisted on the
+abandonment of his shirt "if you want to dance at all"--and fastened
+with a large green glass-jewelled brooch. From this his head and neck
+projected, he felt, with a tolerable dignity. Teddy suggested a fillet
+of green ribbon, and this Mr. Direck tried, but after prolonged
+reflection before the glass rejected. He was still weighing the effect
+of this fillet upon the mind of Miss Corner when Teddy left him to make
+his own modest preparations. Teddy's departure gave him a chance for
+profile studies by means of an arrangement of the long mirror and the
+table looking-glass that he had been too shy to attempt in the presence
+of the secretary. The general effect was quite satisfactory.
+
+"Wa-a-a-l," he said with a quaver of laughter, "now who'd have thought
+it?" and smiled a consciously American smile at himself before going
+down.
+
+The company was assembling in the panelled hall, and made a brilliant
+show in the light of the acetylene candles against the dark background.
+Mr. Britling in a black velvet cloak and black silk tights was a deeper
+shade among the shadows; the high lights were Miss Corner and her
+sister, in glittering garments of peacock green and silver that gave a
+snake-like quality to their lithe bodies. They were talking to the
+German tutor, who had become a sort of cotton Cossack, a spectacled
+Cossack in buff and bright green. Mrs. Britling was dignified and
+beautiful in a purple djibbah, and her stepson had become a handsome
+still figure of black and crimson. Teddy had contrived something
+elaborate and effective in the Egyptian style, with a fish-basket and a
+cuirass of that thin matting one finds behind washstands; the small boys
+were brigands, with immensely baggy breeches and cummerbunds in which
+they had stuck a selection of paper-knives and toy pistols and similar
+weapons. Mr. Carmine and his young man had come provided with real
+Indian costumes; the feeling of the company was that Mr. Carmine was a
+mullah. The aunt-like lady with the noble nose stood out amidst these
+levities in a black silk costume with a gold chain. She refused, it
+seemed, to make herself absurd, though she encouraged the others to
+extravagance by nods and enigmatical smiles. Nevertheless she had put
+pink ribbons in her cap. A family of father, golden-haired mother, and
+two young daughters, sympathetically attired, had just arrived, and were
+discarding their outer wrappings with the assistance of host and
+hostess.
+
+It was all just exactly what Mr. Direck had never expected in England,
+and equally unexpected was the supper on a long candle-lit table without
+a cloth. No servants were present, but on a sideboard stood a cold
+salmon and cold joints and kalter aufschnitt and kartoffel salat, and a
+variety of other comestibles, and many bottles of beer and wine and
+whisky. One helped oneself and anybody else one could, and Mr. Direck
+did his best to be very attentive to Mrs. Britling and Miss Corner, and
+was greatly assisted by the latter.
+
+Everybody seemed unusually gay and bright-eyed. Mr. Direck found
+something exhilarating and oddly exciting in all this unusual bright
+costume and in this easy mutual service; it made everybody seem franker
+and simpler. Even Mr. Britling had revealed a sturdy handsomeness that
+had not been apparent to Mr. Direck before, and young Britling left no
+doubts now about his good looks. Mr. Direck forgot his mission and his
+position, and indeed things generally, in an irrational satisfaction
+that his golden pheasants harmonised with the glitter of the warm and
+smiling girl beside him. And he sat down beside her--"You sit anywhere,"
+said Mrs. Britling--with far less compunction than in his ordinary
+costume he would have felt for so direct a confession of preference. And
+there was something in her eyes, it was quite indefinable and yet very
+satisfying, that told him that now he escaped from the stern square
+imperatives of his patriotic tailor in New York she had made a
+discovery of him.
+
+Everybody chattered gaily, though Mr. Direck would have found it
+difficult to recall afterwards what it was they chattered about, except
+that somehow he acquired the valuable knowledge that Miss Corner was
+called Cecily, and her sister Letty, and then--so far old Essex custom
+held--the masculine section was left for a few minutes for some
+imaginary drinking, and a lighting of cigars and cigarettes, after which
+everybody went through interwoven moonlight and afterglow to the barn.
+Mr. Britling sat down to a pianola in the corner and began the familiar
+cadences of "Whistling Rufus."
+
+"You dance?" said Miss Cecily Corner.
+
+"I've never been much of a dancing man," said Mr. Direck. "What sort of
+dance is this?"
+
+"Just anything. A two-step."
+
+Mr. Direck hesitated and regretted a well-spent youth, and then Hugh
+came prancing forward with outstretched hands and swept her away.
+
+Just for an instant Mr. Direck felt that this young man was a trifle
+superfluous....
+
+But it was very amusing dancing.
+
+It wasn't any sort of taught formal dancing. It was a spontaneous retort
+to the leaping American music that Mr. Britling footed out. You kept
+time, and for the rest you did as your nature prompted. If you had a
+partner you joined hands, you fluttered to and from one another, you
+paced down the long floor together, you involved yourselves in romantic
+pursuits and repulsions with other couples. There was no objection to
+your dancing alone. Teddy, for example, danced alone in order to develop
+certain Egyptian gestures that were germinating in his brain. There was
+no objection to your joining hands in a cheerful serpent....
+
+Mr. Direck hung on to Cissie and her partner. They danced very well
+together; they seemed to like and understand each other. It was natural
+of course for two young people like that, thrown very much together, to
+develop an affection for one another.... Still, she was older by three
+or four years.
+
+It seemed unreasonable that the boy anyhow shouldn't be in love with
+her....
+
+It seemed unreasonable that any one shouldn't be in love with her....
+
+Then Mr. Direck remarked that Cissie was watching Teddy's manoeuvres
+over her partner's shoulder with real affection and admiration....
+
+But then most refreshingly she picked up Mr. Direck's gaze and gave him
+the slightest of smiles. She hadn't forgotten him.
+
+The music stopped with an effect of shock, and all the bobbing, whirling
+figures became walking glories.
+
+"Now that's not difficult, is it?" said Miss Corner, glowing happily.
+
+"Not when you do it," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"I can't imagine an American not dancing a two-step. You must do the
+next with me. Listen! It's 'Away Down Indiana' ... ah! I knew you
+could."
+
+Mr. Direck, too, understood now that he could, and they went off holding
+hands rather after the fashion of two skaters.
+
+"My word!" said Mr. Direck. "To think I'd be dancing."
+
+But he said no more because he needed his breath.
+
+He liked it, and he had another attempt with one of the visitor
+daughters, who danced rather more formally, and then Teddy took the
+pianola and Mr. Direck was astonished by the spectacle of an eminent
+British thinker in a whirl of black velvet and extremely active black
+legs engaged in a kind of Apache dance in pursuit of the visitor wife.
+In which Mr. Lawrence Carmine suddenly mingled.
+
+"In Germany," said Herr Heinrich, "we do not dance like this. It could
+not be considered seemly. But it is very pleasant."
+
+And then there was a waltz, and Herr Heinrich bowed to and took the
+visitor wife round three times, and returned her very punctually and
+exactly to the point whence he had taken her, and the Indian young
+gentleman (who must not be called "coloured") waltzed very well with
+Cecily. Mr. Direck tried to take a tolerant European view of this brown
+and white combination. But he secured her as soon as possible from this
+Asiatic entanglement, and danced with her again, and then he danced with
+her again.
+
+"Come and look at the moonlight," cried Mrs. Britling.
+
+And presently Mr. Direck found himself strolling through the rose garden
+with Cecily. She had the sweetest moonlight face, her white shining robe
+made her a thing of moonlight altogether. If Mr. Direck had not been in
+love with her before he was now altogether in love. Mamie Nelson, whose
+freakish unkindness had been rankling like a poisoned thorn in his heart
+all the way from Massachusetts, suddenly became Ancient History.
+
+A tremendous desire for eloquence arose in Mr. Direck's soul, a desire
+so tremendous that no conceivable phrase he could imagine satisfied it.
+So he remained tongue-tied. And Cecily was tongue-tied, too. The scent
+of the roses just tinted the clear sweetness of the air they breathed.
+
+Mr. Direck's mood was an immense solemnity, like a dark ocean beneath
+the vast dome of the sky, and something quivered in every fibre of his
+being, like moonlit ripples on the sea. He felt at the same time a
+portentous stillness and an immense enterprise....
+
+Then suddenly the pianola, pounding a cake walk, burst out into ribald
+invitation....
+
+"Come back to dance!" cried Cecily, like one from whom a spell has just
+been broken. And Mr. Direck, snatching at a vanishing scrap of
+everything he had not said, remarked, "I shall never forget this
+evening."
+
+She did not seem to hear that.
+
+They danced together again. And then Mr. Direck danced with the visitor
+lady, whose name he had never heard. And then he danced with Mrs.
+Britling, and then he danced with Letty. And then it seemed time for him
+to look for Miss Cecily again.
+
+And so the cheerful evening passed until they were within a quarter of
+an hour of Sunday morning. Mrs. Britling went to exert a restraining
+influence upon the pianola.
+
+"Oh! one dance more!" cried Cissie Corner.
+
+"Oh! one dance more!" cried Letty.
+
+"One dance more," Mr. Direck supported, and then things really _had_ to
+end.
+
+There was a rapid putting out of candles and a stowing away of things by
+Teddy and the sons, two chauffeurs appeared from the region of the
+kitchen and brought Mr. Lawrence Carmine's car and the visitor family's
+car to the front door, and everybody drifted gaily through the moonlight
+and the big trees to the front of the house. And Mr. Direck saw the
+perambulator waiting--the mysterious perambulator--a little in the dark
+beyond the front door.
+
+The visitor family and Mr. Carmine and his young Indian departed. "Come
+to hockey!" shouted Mr. Britling to each departing car-load, and Mr.
+Carmine receding answered: "I'll bring three!"
+
+Then Mr. Direck, in accordance with a habit that had been growing on him
+throughout the evening, looked around for Miss Cissie Corner and failed
+to find her. And then behold she was descending the staircase with the
+mysterious baby in her arms. She held up a warning finger, and then
+glanced at her sleeping burthen. She looked like a silvery Madonna. And
+Mr. Direck remembered that he was still in doubt about that baby....
+
+Teddy, who was back in his flannels, seized upon the perambulator. There
+was much careful baby stowing on the part of Cecily; she displayed an
+infinitely maternal solicitude. Letty was away changing; she reappeared
+jauntily taking leave, disregarding the baby absolutely, and Teddy
+departed bigamously, wheeling the perambulator between the two sisters
+into the hazes of the moonlight. There was much crying of good nights.
+Mr. Direck's curiosities narrowed down to a point of great intensity....
+
+Of course, Mr. Britling's circle must be a very "Advanced" circle....
+
+
+Section 10
+
+Mr. Direck found he had taken leave of the rest of the company, and
+drifted into a little parlour with Mr. Britling and certain glasses and
+siphons and a whisky decanter on a tray....
+
+"It is a very curious thing," said Mr. Direck, "that in England I find
+myself more disposed to take stimulants and that I no longer have the
+need for iced water that one feels at home. I ascribe it to a greater
+humidity in the air. One is less dried and one is less braced. One is no
+longer pursued by a thirst, but one needs something to buck one up a
+little. Thank you. That is enough."
+
+Mr. Direck took his glass of whisky and soda from Mr. Britling's hand.
+
+Mr. Britling seated himself in an armchair by the fireplace and threw
+one leg carelessly over the arm. In his black velvet cloak and cap, and
+his black silk tights, he was very like a minor character, a court
+chamberlain for example, in some cloak and rapier drama. "I find this
+week-end dancing and kicking about wonderfully wholesome," he said.
+"That and our Sunday hockey. One starts the new week clear and bright
+about the mind. Friday is always my worst working day."
+
+Mr. Direck leant against the table, wrapped in his golden pheasants, and
+appreciated the point.
+
+"Your young people dance very cheerfully," he said.
+
+"We all dance very cheerfully," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Then this Miss Corner," said Mr. Direck, "she is the sister, I presume,
+is she? of that pleasant young lady who is married--she is married,
+isn't she?--to the young man you call Teddy."
+
+"I should have explained these young people. They're the sort of young
+people we are producing over here now in quite enormous quantity. They
+are the sort of equivalent of the Russian Intelligentsia, an
+irresponsible middle class with ideas. Teddy, you know, is my secretary.
+He's the son, I believe, of a Kilburn solicitor. He was recommended to
+me by Datcher of _The Times_. He came down here and lived in lodgings
+for a time. Then suddenly appeared the young lady."
+
+"Miss Corner's sister?"
+
+"Exactly. The village was a little startled. The cottager who had let
+the rooms came to me privately. Teddy is rather touchy on the point of
+his personal independence, he considers any demand for explanations as
+an insult, and probably all he had said to the old lady was, 'This is
+Letty--come to share my rooms.' I put the matter to him very gently.
+'Oh, yes,' he said, rather in the manner of some one who has overlooked
+a trifle. 'I got married to her in the Christmas holidays. May I bring
+her along to see Mrs. Britling?' We induced him to go into a little
+cottage I rent. The wife was the daughter of a Colchester journalist and
+printer. I don't know if you talked to her."
+
+"I've talked to the sister rather."
+
+"Well, they're both idea'd. They're highly educated in the sense that
+they do really think for themselves. Almost fiercely. So does Teddy. If
+he thinks he hasn't thought anything he thinks for himself, he goes off
+and thinks it different. The sister is a teacher who wants to take the
+B.A. degree in London University. Meanwhile she pays the penalty of her
+sex."
+
+"Meaning--?" asked Mr. Direck, startled.
+
+"Oh! that she puts in a great deal too much of her time upon housework
+and minding her sister's baby."
+
+"She's a very interesting and charming young lady indeed," said Mr.
+Direck. "With a sort of Western college freedom of mind--and something
+about her that isn't American at all."
+
+Mr. Britling was following the train of his own thoughts.
+
+"My household has some amusing contrasts," he said. "I don't know if you
+have talked to that German.
+
+"He's always asking questions. And you tell him any old thing and he
+goes and writes it down in his room upstairs, and afterwards asks you
+another like it in order to perplex himself by the variety of your
+answers. He regards the whole world with a methodical distrust. He wants
+to document it and pin it down. He suspects it only too justly of
+disorderly impulses, and a capacity for self-contradiction. He is the
+most extraordinary contrast to Teddy, whose confidence in the universe
+amounts almost to effrontery. Teddy carries our national laxness to a
+foolhardy extent. He is capable of leaving his watch in the middle of
+Claverings Park and expecting to find it a month later--being carefully
+taken care of by a squirrel, I suppose--when he happens to want it. He's
+rather like a squirrel himself--without the habit of hoarding. He is
+incapable of asking a question about anything; he would be quite sure it
+was all right anyhow. He would feel that asking questions betrayed a
+want of confidence--was a sort of incivility. But my German, if you
+notice,--his normal expression is one of grave solicitude. He is like a
+conscientious ticket-collector among his impressions. And did you notice
+how beautifully my pianola rolls are all numbered and catalogued? He did
+that. He set to work and did it as soon as he got here, just as a good
+cat when you bring it into the house sets to work and catches mice.
+Previously the pianola music was chaos. You took what God sent you.
+
+"And he _looks_ like a German," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"He certainly does that," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"He has the fair type of complexion, the rather full habit of body, the
+temperamental disposition, but in addition that close-cropped head, it
+is almost as if it were shaved, the plumpness, the glasses--those are
+things that are made. And the way he carries himself. And the way he
+thinks. His meticulousness. When he arrived he was delightful, he was
+wearing a student's corps cap and a rucksack, he carried a violin; he
+seemed to have come out of a book. No one would ever dare to invent so
+German a German for a book. Now, a young Frenchman or a young Italian or
+a young Russian coming here might look like a foreigner, but he wouldn't
+have the distinctive national stamp a German has. He wouldn't be plainly
+French or Italian or Russian. Other peoples are not made; they are
+neither made nor created but proceeding--out of a thousand indefinable
+causes. The Germans are a triumph of directive will. I had to remark the
+other day that when my boys talked German they shouted. 'But when one
+talks German one _must_ shout,' said Herr Heinrich. 'It is taught so in
+the schools.' And it is. They teach them to shout and to throw out their
+chests. Just as they teach them to read notice-boards and not think
+about politics. Their very ribs are not their own. My Herr Heinrich is
+comparatively a liberal thinker. He asked me the other day, 'But why
+should I give myself up to philology? But then,' he reflected, 'it is
+what I have to do.'"
+
+Mr. Britling seemed to have finished, and then just as Mr. Direck was
+planning a way of getting the talk back by way of Teddy to Miss Corner,
+he snuggled more deeply into his chair, reflected and broke out again.
+
+"This contrast between Heinrich's carefulness and Teddy's
+easy-goingness, come to look at it, is I suppose one of the most
+fundamental in the world. It reaches to everything. It mixes up with
+education, statecraft, morals. Will you make or will you take? Those are
+the two extreme courses in all such things. I suppose the answer of
+wisdom to that is, like all wise answers, a compromise. I suppose one
+must accept and then make all one can of it.... Have you talked at all
+to my eldest son?"
+
+"He's a very interesting young man indeed," said Mr. Direck. "I should
+venture to say there's a very great deal in him. I was most impressed by
+the few words I had with him."
+
+"There, for example, is one of my perplexities," said Mr. Britling.
+
+Mr. Direck waited for some further light on this sudden transition.
+
+"Ah! your troubles in life haven't begun yet. Wait till you're a father.
+That cuts to the bone. You have the most delicate thing in the world in
+hand, a young kindred mind. You feel responsible for it, you know you
+are responsible for it; and you lose touch with it. You can't get at it.
+Nowadays we've lost the old tradition of fatherhood by divine right--and
+we haven't got a new one. I've tried not to be a cramping ruler, a
+director, a domestic tyrant to that lad--and in effect it's meant his
+going his own way.... I don't dominate. I hoped to advise. But you see
+he loves my respect and good opinion. Too much. When things go well I
+know of them. When the world goes dark for him, then he keeps his
+trouble from me. Just when I would so eagerly go into it with him....
+There's something the matter now, something--it may be grave. I feel he
+wants to tell me. And there it is!--it seems I am the last person to
+whom he can humiliate himself by a confession of blundering, or
+weakness.... Something I should just laugh at and say, 'That's in the
+blood of all of us, dear Spit of myself. Let's see what's to be
+done.'..."
+
+He paused and then went on, finding in the unfamiliarity and
+transitoriness of his visitor a freedom he might have failed to find in
+a close friend.
+
+"I am frightened at times at all I don't know about in that boy's mind.
+I know nothing of his religiosities. He's my son and he must have
+religiosities. I know nothing of his ideas or of his knowledge about sex
+and all that side of life. I do not know of the things he finds
+beautiful. I can guess at times; that's all; when he betrays himself....
+You see, you don't know really what love is until you have children. One
+doesn't love women. Indeed you don't! One gives and gets; it's a trade.
+One may have tremendous excitements and expectations and overwhelming
+desires. That's all very well in its way. But the love of children is an
+exquisite tenderness: it rends the heart. It's a thing of God. And I lie
+awake at nights and stretch out my hands in the darkness to this
+lad--who will never know--until his sons come in their time...."
+
+He made one of his quick turns again.
+
+"And that's where our English way makes for distresses. Mr. Prussian
+respects and fears his father; respects authorities, attends, obeys
+and--_his father has a hold upon him_. But I said to myself at the
+outset, 'No, whatever happens, I will not usurp the place of God. I will
+not be the Priest-Patriarch of my children. They shall grow and I will
+grow beside them, helping but not cramping or overshadowing.' They grow
+more. But they blunder more. Life ceases to be a discipline and becomes
+an experiment...."
+
+"That's very true," said Mr. Direck, to whom it seemed the time was ripe
+to say something. "This is the problem of America perhaps even more than
+of England. Though I have not had the parental experience you have
+undergone.... I can see very clearly that a son is a very serious
+proposition."
+
+"The old system of life was organisation. That is where Germany is still
+the most ancient of European states. It's a reversion to a tribal cult.
+It's atavistic.... To organise or discipline, or mould characters or
+press authority, is to assume that you have reached finality in your
+general philosophy. It implies an assured end. Heinrich has his assured
+end, his philological professorship or thereabouts as a part of the
+Germanic machine. And that too has its assured end in German national
+assertion. Here, we have none of those convictions. We know we haven't
+finality, and so we are open and apologetic and receptive, rather than
+wilful.... You see all organisation, with its implication of finality,
+is death. We feel that. The Germans don't. What you organise you kill.
+Organised morals or organised religion or organised thought are dead
+morals and dead religion and dead thought. Yet some organisation you
+must have. Organisation is like killing cattle. If you do not kill some
+the herd is just waste. But you musn't kill all or you kill the herd.
+The unkilled cattle are the herd, the continuation; the unorganised side
+of life is the real life. The reality of life is adventure, not
+performance. What isn't adventure isn't life. What can be ruled about
+can be machined. But priests and schoolmasters and bureaucrats get hold
+of life and try to make it _all_ rules, _all_ etiquette and regulation
+and correctitude.... And parents and the love of parents make for the
+same thing. It is all very well to experiment for oneself, but when one
+sees these dear things of one's own, so young and inexperienced and so
+capable of every sort of gallant foolishness, walking along the narrow
+plank, going down into dark jungles, ah! then it makes one want to wrap
+them in laws and foresight and fence them about with 'Verboten' boards
+in all the conceivable aspects...."
+
+"In America of course we do set a certain store upon youthful
+self-reliance," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"As we do here. It's in your blood and our blood. It's the instinct of
+the English and the Irish anyhow to suspect government and take the
+risks of the chancy way.... And manifestly the Russians, if you read
+their novelists, have the same twist in them.... When we get this young
+Prussian here, he's a marvel to us. He really believes in Law. He
+_likes_ to obey. That seems a sort of joke to us. It's curious how
+foreign these Germans are--to all the rest of the world. Because of
+their docility. Scratch the Russian and you get the Tartar. Educate the
+Russian or the American or the Englishman or the Irishman or Frenchman
+or any real northern European except the German, and you get the
+Anarchist, that is to say the man who dreams of order without
+organisation--of something beyond organisation....
+
+"It's one o'clock," said Mr. Britling abruptly, perceiving a shade of
+fatigue upon the face of his hearer and realising that his thoughts had
+taken him too far, "and Sunday. Let's go to bed."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+For a time Mr. Direck could not sleep. His mind had been too excited by
+this incessant day with all its novelties and all its provocations to
+comparison. The whole complicated spectacle grouped itself, with a
+naturalness and a complete want of logic that all who have been young
+will understand, about Cecily Corner.
+
+She had to be in the picture, and so she came in as though she were the
+central figure, as though she were the quintessential England. There she
+was, the type, the blood, the likeness, of no end of Massachusetts
+families, the very same stuff indeed, and yet she was different....
+
+For a time his thoughts hovered ineffectively about certain details of
+her ear and cheek, and one may doubt if his interest in these things was
+entirely international....
+
+Then he found himself under way with an exposition of certain points to
+Mr. Britling. In the security of his bed he could imagine that he was
+talking very slowly and carefully while Mr. Britling listened; already
+he was more than half way to dreamland or he could not have supposed
+anything so incredible.
+
+"There's a curious sort of difference," he was saying. "It is difficult
+to define, but on the whole I might express it by saying that such a
+gathering as this if it was in America would be drawn with harder lines,
+would show its bones more and have everything more emphatic. And just to
+take one illustrative point: in America in such a gathering as this
+there would be bound to be several jokes going on as it were, running
+jokes and running criticisms, from day to day and from week to week....
+There would be jokes about your writing and your influence and jokes
+about Miss Corner's advanced reading.... You see, in America we pay much
+more attention to personal character. Here people, I notice, are not
+talked to about their personal characters at all, and many of them do
+not seem to be aware and do not seem to mind what personal characters
+they have....
+
+"And another thing I find noteworthy is the way in which what I might
+call mature people seem to go on having a good time instead of standing
+by and applauding the young people having a good time.... And the young
+people do not seem to have set out to have a good time at all.... Now in
+America, a charming girl like Miss Corner would be distinctly more aware
+of herself and her vitality than she is here, distinctly more. Her
+peculiarly charming sidelong look, if I might make so free with
+her--would have been called attention to. It's a perfectly beautiful
+look, the sort of look some great artist would have loved to make
+immortal. It's a look I shall find it hard to forget.... But she doesn't
+seem to be aware in the least of it. In America she would be aware of
+it. She would be distinctly aware of it. She would have been _made_
+aware of it. She would have been advised of it. It would be looked for
+and she would know it was looked for. She would _give_ it as a singer
+gives her most popular song. Mamie Nelson, for example, used to give a
+peculiar little throw back of the chin and a laugh.... It was talked
+about. People came to see it....
+
+"Of course Mamie Nelson was a very brilliant girl indeed. I suppose in
+England you would say we spoilt her. I suppose we did spoil her...."
+
+It came into Mr. Direck's head that for a whole day he had scarcely
+given a thought to Mamie Nelson. And now he was thinking of her--calmly.
+Why shouldn't one think of Mamie Nelson calmly?
+
+She was a proud imperious thing. There was something Southern in her.
+Very dark blue eyes she had, much darker than Miss Corner's....
+
+But how tortuous she had been behind that outward pride of hers! For
+four years she had let him think he was the only man who really mattered
+in the world, and all the time quite clearly and definitely she had
+deceived him. She had made a fool of him and she had made a fool of the
+others perhaps--just to have her retinue and play the queen in her
+world. And at last humiliation, bitter humiliation, and Mamie with her
+chin in the air and her bright triumphant smile looking down on him.
+
+Hadn't he, she asked, had the privilege of loving her?
+
+She took herself at the value they had set upon her.
+
+Well--somehow--that wasn't right....
+
+All the way across the Atlantic Mr. Direck had been trying to forget her
+downward glance with the chin up, during that last encounter--and other
+aspects of the same humiliation. The years he had spent upon her! The
+time! Always relying upon her assurance of a special preference for him.
+He tried to think he was suffering from the pangs of unrequited love,
+and to conceal from himself just how bitterly his pride and vanity had
+been rent by her ultimate rejection. There had been a time when she had
+given him reason to laugh in his sleeve at Booth Wilmington.
+
+Perhaps Booth Wilmington had also had reason for laughing in his
+sleeve....
+
+Had she even loved Booth Wilmington? Or had she just snatched at him?...
+
+Wasn't he, Direck, as good a man as Booth Wilmington anyhow?...
+
+For some moments the old sting of jealousy rankled again. He recalled
+the flaring rivalry that had ended in his defeat, the competition of
+gifts and treats.... A thing so open that all Carrierville knew of it,
+discussed it, took sides.... And over it all Mamie with her flashing
+smile had sailed like a processional goddess....
+
+Why, they had made jokes about him in the newspapers!
+
+One couldn't imagine such a contest in Matching's Easy. Yet surely even
+in Matching's Easy there are lovers.
+
+Is it something in the air, something in the climate that makes things
+harder and clearer in America?...
+
+Cissie--why shouldn't one call her Cissie in one's private thoughts
+anyhow?--would never be as hard and clear as Mamie. She had English
+eyes--merciful eyes....
+
+That was the word--_merciful_!
+
+The English light, the English air, are merciful....
+
+Merciful....
+
+They tolerate old things and slow things and imperfect apprehensions.
+They aren't always getting at you....
+
+They don't laugh at you.... At least--they laugh differently....
+
+Was England the tolerant country? With its kind eyes and its wary
+sidelong look. Toleration. In which everything mellowed and nothing was
+destroyed. A soft country. A country with a passion for imperfection. A
+padded country....
+
+England--all stuffed with soft feathers ... under one's ear. A
+pillow--with soft, kind Corners ... Beautiful rounded Corners.... Dear,
+dear Corners. Cissie Corners. Corners. Could there be a better family?
+
+Massachusetts--but in heaven....
+
+Harps playing two-steps, and kind angels wrapped in moonlight.
+
+ Very softly I and you,
+ One turn, two turn, three turn, too.
+ Off we go!....
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE THIRD
+
+THE ENTERTAINMENT OF MR. DIRECK REACHES A CLIMAX
+
+
+Section 1
+
+Breakfast was in the open air, and a sunny, easy-going feast. Then the
+small boys laid hands on Mr. Direck and showed him the pond and the
+boats, while Mr. Britling strolled about the lawn with Hugh, talking
+rather intently. And when Mr. Direck returned from the boats in a state
+of greatly enhanced popularity he found Mr. Britling conversing over his
+garden railings to what was altogether a new type of Britisher in Mr.
+Direck's experience. It was a tall, lean, sun-bitten youngish man of
+forty perhaps, in brown tweeds, looking more like the Englishman of the
+American illustrations than anything Mr. Direck had met hitherto. Indeed
+he came very near to a complete realisation of that ideal except that
+there was a sort of intensity about him, and that his clipped moustache
+had the restrained stiffness of a wiry-haired terrier. This gentleman
+Mr. Direck learnt was Colonel Rendezvous. He spoke in clear short
+sentences, they had an effect of being punched out, and he was refusing
+to come into the garden and talk.
+
+"Have to do my fourteen miles before lunch," he said. "You haven't seen
+Manning about, have you?"
+
+"He isn't here," said Mr. Britling, and it seemed to Mr. Direck that
+there was the faintest ambiguity in this reply.
+
+"Have to go alone, then," said Colonel Rendezvous. "They told me that he
+had started to come here."
+
+"I shall motor over to Bramley High Oak for your Boy Scout festival,"
+said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Going to have three thousand of 'em," said the Colonel. "Good show."
+
+His steely eyes seemed to search the cover of Mr. Britling's garden for
+the missing Manning, and then he decided to give him up. "I must be
+going," he said. "So long. Come up!"
+
+A well-disciplined dog came to heel, and the lean figure had given Mr.
+Direck a semi-military salutation and gone upon its way. It marched with
+a long elastic stride; it never looked back.
+
+"Manning," said Mr. Britling, "is probably hiding up in my rose garden."
+
+"Curiously enough, I guessed from your manner that that might be the
+case," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"Yes. Manning is a London journalist. He has a little cottage about a
+mile over there"--Mr. Britling pointed vaguely--"and he comes down for
+the week-ends. And Rendezvous has found out he isn't fit. And everybody
+ought to be fit. That is the beginning and end of life for Rendezvous.
+Fitness. An almost mineral quality, an insatiable activity of body,
+great mental simplicity. So he takes possession of poor old Manning and
+trots him for that fourteen miles--at four miles an hour. Manning goes
+through all the agonies of death and damnation, he half dissolves, he
+pants and drags for the first eight or ten miles, and then I must admit
+he rather justifies Rendezvous' theory. He is to be found in the
+afternoon in a hammock suffering from blistered feet, but otherwise
+unusually well. But if he can escape it, he does. He hides."
+
+"But if he doesn't want to go with Rendezvous, why does he?" said Mr.
+Direck.
+
+"Well, Rendezvous is accustomed to the command of men. And Manning's
+only way of refusing things is on printed forms. Which he doesn't bring
+down to Matching's Easy. Ah! behold!"
+
+Far away across the lawn between two blue cedars there appeared a
+leisurely form in grey flannels and a loose tie, advancing with manifest
+circumspection.
+
+"He's gone," cried Britling.
+
+The leisurely form, obviously amiable, obviously a little out of
+condition, became more confident, drew nearer.
+
+"I'm sorry to have missed him," he said cheerfully. "I thought he might
+come this way. It's going to be a very warm day indeed. Let us sit about
+somewhere and talk.
+
+"Of course," he said, turning to Direck, "Rendezvous is the life and
+soul of the country."
+
+They strolled towards a place of seats and hammocks between the big
+trees and the rose garden, and the talk turned for a time upon
+Rendezvous. "They have the tidiest garden in Essex," said Manning. "It's
+not Mrs. Rendezvous' fault that it is so. Mrs. Rendezvous, as a matter
+of fact, has a taste for the picturesque. She just puts the things about
+in groups in the beds. She wants them, she says, to grow anyhow. She
+desires a romantic disorder. But she never gets it. When he walks down
+the path all the plants dress instinctively.... And there's a tree near
+their gate; it used to be a willow. You can ask any old man in the
+village. But ever since Rendezvous took the place it's been trying to
+present arms. With the most extraordinary results. I was passing the
+other day with old Windershin. 'You see that there old poplar,' he said.
+'It's a willow,' said I. 'No,' he said, 'it did used to be a willow
+before Colonel Rendezvous he came. But now it's a poplar.'... And, by
+Jove, it is a poplar!"...
+
+The conversation thus opened by Manning centred for a time upon Colonel
+Rendezvous. He was presented as a monster of energy and self-discipline;
+as the determined foe of every form of looseness, slackness, and
+easy-goingness.
+
+"He's done wonderful work for the local Boy Scout movement," said
+Manning.
+
+"It's Kitchenerism," said Britling.
+
+"It's the army side of the efficiency stunt," said Manning.
+
+There followed a digression upon the Boy Scout movement, and Mr. Direck
+made comparisons with the propaganda of Seton Thompson in America.
+"Colonel Teddyism," said Manning. "It's a sort of reaction against
+everything being too easy and too safe."
+
+"It's got its anti-decadent side," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"If there is such a thing as decadence," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"If there wasn't such a thing as decadence," said Manning, "we
+journalists would have had to invent it."...
+
+"There is something tragical in all this--what shall I call
+it?--Kitchenerism," Mr. Britling reflected "Here you have it rushing
+about and keeping itself--screwed up, and trying desperately to keep the
+country screwed up. And all because there may be a war some day somehow
+with Germany. Provided Germany _is_ insane. It's that war, like some
+sort of bee in Rendezvous' brains, that is driving him along the road
+now to Market Saffron--he always keeps to the roads because they are
+severer--through all the dust and sunshine. When he might be here
+gossiping....
+
+"And you know, I don't see that war coming," said Mr. Britling. "I
+believe Rendezvous sweats in vain. I can't believe in that war. It has
+held off for forty years. It may hold off forever."
+
+He nodded his head towards the German tutor, who had come into view
+across the lawn, talking profoundly with Mr. Britling's eldest son.
+
+"Look at that pleasant person. There he is--_Echt Deutsch_--if anything
+ever was. Look at my son there! Do you see the two of them engaged in
+mortal combat? The thing's too ridiculous. The world grows sane. They
+may fight in the Balkans still; in many ways the Balkan States are in
+the very rear of civilisation; but to imagine decent countries like this
+or Germany going back to bloodshed! No.... When I see Rendezvous
+keeping it up and keeping it up, I begin to see just how poor Germany
+must be keeping it up. I begin to realise how sick Germany must be
+getting of the high road and the dust and heat and the everlasting drill
+and restraint.... My heart goes out to the South Germans. Old Manning
+here always reminds me of Austria. Think of Germany coming like
+Rendezvous on a Sunday morning, and looking stiffly over Austria's
+fence. 'Come for a good hard walk, man. Keep Fit....'"
+
+"But suppose this Balkan trouble becomes acute," said Manning.
+
+"It hasn't; it won't. Even if it did we should keep out of it."
+
+"But suppose Russia grappled Austria and Germany flung herself suddenly
+upon France--perhaps taking Belgium on the way."
+
+"Oh!--we should fight. Of course we should fight. Could any one but a
+congenital idiot suppose we shouldn't fight? They know we should fight.
+They aren't altogether idiots in Germany. But the thing's absurd. Why
+_should_ Germany attack France? It's as if Manning here took a hatchet
+suddenly and assailed Edith.... It's just the dream of their military
+journalists. It's such schoolboy nonsense. Isn't that a beautiful pillar
+rose? Edith only put it in last year.... I hate all this talk of wars
+and rumours of wars.... It's worried all my life. And it gets worse and
+it gets emptier every year...."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+Now just at that moment there was a loud report....
+
+But neither Mr. Britling nor Mr. Manning nor Mr. Direck was interrupted
+or incommoded in the slightest degree by that report. Because it was too
+far off over the curve of this round world to be either heard or seen at
+Matching's Easy. Nevertheless it was a very loud report. It occurred at
+an open space by a river that ran through a cramped Oriental city, a
+city spiked with white minarets and girt about by bare hills under a
+blazing afternoon sky. It came from a black parcel that the Archduke
+Francis Ferdinand of Austria, with great presence of mind, had just
+flung out from the open hood of his automobile, where, tossed from the
+side of the quay, it had descended a few seconds before. It exploded as
+it touched the cobbled road just under the front of the second vehicle
+in the procession, and it blew to pieces the front of the automobile and
+injured the aide-de-camp who was in it and several of the spectators.
+Its thrower was immediately gripped by the bystanders. The procession
+stopped. There was a tremendous commotion amongst that brightly-costumed
+crowd, a hot excitement in vivid contrast to the Sabbath calm of
+Matching's Easy....
+
+Mr. Britling, to whom the explosion was altogether inaudible, continued
+his dissertation upon the common-sense of the world and the practical
+security of our Western peace.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+Lunch was an open-air feast again. Three visitors had dropped in; they
+had motored down from London piled up on a motor-cycle and a side-car; a
+brother and two sisters they seemed to be, and they had apparently
+reduced hilariousness to a principle. The rumours of coming hockey that
+had been floating on the outskirts of Mr. Direck's consciousness ever
+since his arrival, thickened and multiplied.... It crept into his mind
+that he was expected to play....
+
+He decided he would not play. He took various people into his
+confidence. He told Mr. Britling, and Mr. Britling said, "We'll make you
+full back, where you'll get a hit now and then and not have very much to
+do. All you have to remember is to hit with the flat side of your stick
+and not raise it above your shoulders." He told Teddy, and Teddy said,
+"I strongly advise you to dress as thinly as you can consistently with
+decency, and put your collar and tie in your pocket before the game
+begins. Hockey is properly a winter game." He told the maiden aunt-like
+lady with the prominent nose, and she said almost enviously, "Every one
+here is asked to play except me. I assuage the perambulator. I suppose
+one mustn't be envious. I don't see why I shouldn't play. I'm not so old
+as all that." He told Hugh, and Hugh warned him to be careful not to get
+hold of one of the sprung sticks. He considered whether it wouldn't be
+wiser to go to his own room and lock himself in, or stroll off for a
+walk through Claverings Park. But then he would miss Miss Corner, who
+was certain, it seemed, to come up for hockey. On the other hand, if he
+did not miss her he might make himself ridiculous in her eyes, and
+efface the effect of the green silk stuff with the golden pheasants.
+
+He determined to stay behind until she arrived, and explain to her that
+he was not going to play. He didn't somehow want her to think he wasn't
+perfectly fit to play.
+
+Mr. Carmine arrived in an automobile with two Indians and a gentleman
+who had been a prospector in Alaska, the family who had danced overnight
+at the Dower House reappeared, and then Mrs. Teddy, very detached with a
+special hockey stick, and Miss Corner wheeling the perambulator. Then
+came further arrivals. At the earliest opportunity Mr. Direck secured
+the attention of Miss Corner, and lost his interest in any one else.
+
+"I can't play this hockey," said Mr. Direck. "I feel strange about it.
+It isn't an American game. Now if it were baseball--!"
+
+He left her to suppose him uncommonly hot stuff at baseball.
+
+"If you're on my side," said Cecily, "mind you pass to me."
+
+It became evident to Mr. Direck that he was going to play this hockey
+after all.
+
+"Well," he said, "if I've got to play hockey, I guess I've got to play
+hockey. But can't I just get a bit of practice somewhere before the game
+begins?"
+
+So Miss Corner went off to get two sticks and a ball and came back to
+instruct Mr. Direck. She said he had a good eye. The two small boys
+scenting play in the air got sticks and joined them. The overnight
+visitor's wife appeared from the house in abbreviated skirts, and
+wearing formidable shin-guards. With her abundant fair hair, which was
+already breaking loose, so to speak, to join the fray, she looked like a
+short stout dismounted Valkyr. Her gaze was clear and firm.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+Hockey as it was played at the Dower House at Matching's Easy before the
+war, was a game combining danger, physical exercise and kindliness in a
+very high degree. Except for the infant in the perambulator and the
+outwardly calm but inwardly resentful aunt, who wheeled the child up and
+down in a position of maximum danger just behind the unnetted goal,
+every one was involved. Quite able-bodied people acquainted with the
+game played forward, the less well-informed played a defensive game
+behind the forward line, elderly, infirm, and bulky persons were used
+chiefly as obstacles in goal. Several players wore padded leg-guards,
+and all players were assumed to have them and expected to behave
+accordingly.
+
+Proceedings began with an invidious ceremony called picking up. This was
+heralded by Mr. Britling, clad in the diaphanous flannels and bearing a
+hockey stick, advancing with loud shouts to the centre of the hockey
+field. "Pick up! Pick up!" echoed the young Britlings.
+
+Mr. Direck became aware of a tall, drooping man with long hair and long
+digressive legs in still longer white flannel trousers, and a face that
+was somehow familiar. He was talking with affectionate intimacy to
+Manning, and suddenly Mr. Direck remembered that it was in Manning's
+weekly paper, _The Sectarian_, in which a bitter caricaturist enlivened
+a biting text, that he had become familiar with the features of
+Manning's companion. It was Raeburn, Raeburn the insidious, Raeburn the
+completest product of the party system.... Well, that was the English
+way. "Come for the pick up!" cried the youngest Britling, seizing upon
+Mr. Direck's elbow. It appeared that Mr. Britling and the overnight
+dinner guest--Mr. Direck never learnt his name--were picking up.
+
+Names were shouted. "I'll take Cecily!" Mr. Direck heard Mr. Britling
+say quite early. The opposing sides as they were picked fell into two
+groups. There seemed to be difficulties about some of the names. Mr.
+Britling, pointing to the more powerful looking of the Indian gentlemen,
+said, "_You_, Sir."
+
+"I'm going to speculate on Mr. Dinks," said Mr. Britling's opponent.
+
+Mr. Direck gathered that Mr. Dinks was to be his hockey name.
+
+"You're on _our_ side," said Mrs. Teddy. "I think you'll have to play
+forward, outer right, and keep a sharp eye on Cissie."
+
+"I'll do what I can," said Mr. Direck.
+
+His captain presently confirmed this appointment.
+
+His stick was really a sort of club and the ball was a firm hard cricket
+ball.... He resolved to be very gentle with Cecily, and see that she
+didn't get hurt.
+
+The sides took their places for the game, and a kind of order became
+apparent to Mr. Direck. In the centre stood Mr. Britling and the
+opposing captain, and the ball lay between them. They were preparing to
+"bully off" and start the game. In a line with each of them were four
+other forwards. They all looked spirited and intent young people, and
+Mr. Direck wished he had had more exercise to justify his own alert
+appearance. Behind each centre forward hovered one of the Britling boys.
+Then on each side came a vaguer row of three backs, persons of gentler
+disposition or maturer years. They included Mr. Raeburn, who was
+considered to have great natural abilities for hockey but little
+experience. Mr. Raeburn was behind Mr. Direck. Mrs. Britling was the
+centre back. Then in a corner of Mr. Direck's side was a small girl of
+six or seven, and in the half-circle about the goal a lady in a motoring
+dust coat and a very short little man whom Mr. Direck had not previously
+remarked. Mr. Lawrence Carmine, stripped to the braces, which were
+richly ornamented with Oriental embroidery, kept goal for our team.
+
+The centre forwards went through a rapid little ceremony. They smote
+their sticks on the ground, and then hit the sticks together. "One,"
+said Mr. Britling. The operation was repeated. "Two," ... "Three."
+
+Smack, Mr. Britling had got it and the ball had gone to the shorter and
+sturdier of the younger Britlings, who had been standing behind Mr.
+Direck's captain. Crack, and it was away to Teddy; smack, and it was
+coming right at Direck.
+
+"Lordy!" he said, and prepared to smite it.
+
+Then something swift and blue had flashed before him, intercepted the
+ball and shot it past him. This was Cecily Corner, and she and Teddy
+were running abreast like the wind towards Mr. Raeburn.
+
+"Hey!" cried Mr. Raeburn, "stop!" and advanced, as it seemed to Mr.
+Direck, with unseemly and threatening gestures towards Cissie.
+
+But before Mr. Direck could adjust his mind to this new phase of
+affairs, Cecily had passed the right honourable gentleman with the same
+mysterious ease with which she had flashed by Mr. Direck, and was
+bearing down upon the miscellaneous Landwehr which formed the "backs" of
+Mr. Direck's side.
+
+"_You_ rabbit!" cried Mr. Raeburn, and became extraordinarily active in
+pursuit, administering great lengths of arm and leg with a centralised
+efficiency he had not hitherto displayed.
+
+Running hard to the help of Mr. Raeburn was the youngest Britling boy, a
+beautiful contrast. It was like a puff ball supporting and assisting a
+conger eel. In front of Mr. Direck the little stout man was being alert.
+Teddy was supporting the attack near the middle of the field, crying
+"Centre!" while Mr. Britling, very round and resolute, was bouncing
+straight towards the threatened goal. But Mrs. Teddy, running as swiftly
+as her sister, was between Teddy and the ball. Whack! the little short
+man's stick had clashed with Cecily's. Confused things happened with
+sticks and feet, and the little short man appeared to be trying to cut
+down Cecily as one cuts down a tree, she tried to pass the ball to her
+centre forward--too late, and then Mrs. Teddy had intercepted it, and
+was flickering back towards Mr. Britling's goal in a rush in which Mr.
+Direck perceived it was his duty to join.
+
+Yes, he had to follow up Mrs. Teddy and pick up the ball if he had a
+chance and send it in to her or the captain or across to the left
+forwards, as circumstances might decide. It was perfectly clear.
+
+Then came his moment. The little formidably padded lady who had dined at
+the Dower House overnight, made a gallant attack upon Mrs. Teddy. Out of
+the confusion of this clash the ball spun into Mr. Direck's radius.
+Where should he smite and how? A moment of reflection was natural.
+
+But now the easy-fitting discipline of the Dower House style of hockey
+became apparent. Mr. Direck had last observed the tall young Indian
+gentleman, full of vitality and anxious for destruction, far away in the
+distance on the opposing right wing. But now, regardless of the more
+formal methods of the game, this young man had resolved, without further
+delay and at any cost, to hit the ball hard, and he was travelling like
+some Asiatic typhoon with an extreme velocity across the remonstrances
+of Mr. Britling and the general order of his side. Mr. Direck became
+aware of him just before his impact. There was a sort of collision from
+which Mr. Direck emerged with a feeling that one side of his face was
+permanently flattened, but still gallantly resolved to hit the
+comparatively lethargic ball. He and the staggered but resolute Indian
+clashed sticks again. And Mr. Direck had the best of it. Years of
+experience couldn't have produced a better pass to the captain....
+
+"Good pass!"
+
+Apparently from one of the London visitors.
+
+But this was _some_ game!
+
+The ball executed some rapid movements to and fro across the field. Our
+side was pressing hard. There was a violent convergence of miscellaneous
+backs and suchlike irregulars upon the threatened goal. Mr. Britling's
+dozen was rapidly losing its disciplined order. One of the sidecar
+ladies and the gallant Indian had shifted their activities to the
+defensive back, and with them was a spectacled gentleman waving his
+stick, high above all recognised rules. Mr. Direck's captain and both
+Britling boys hurried to join the fray. Mr. Britling, who seemed to Mr.
+Direck to be for a captain rather too demagogic, also ran back to rally
+his forces by loud cries. "Pass outwardly!" was the burthen of his
+contribution.
+
+The struggle about the Britling goal ceased to be a game and became
+something between a fight and a social gathering. Mr. Britling's
+goal-keeper could be heard shouting, "I can't see the ball! _Lift your
+feet!_" The crowded conflict lurched towards the goal posts. "My shin!"
+cried Mr. Manning. "No, you _don't!_"
+
+Whack, but again whack!
+
+Whack! "Ah! _would_ you?" Whack.
+
+"Goal!" cried the side-car gentleman.
+
+"Goal!" cried the Britling boys....
+
+Mr. Manning, as goal-keeper, went to recover the ball, but one of the
+Britling boys politely anticipated him.
+
+The crowd became inactive, and then began to drift back to loosely
+conceived positions.
+
+"It's no good swarming into goal like that," Mr. Britling, with a faint
+asperity in his voice, explained to his followers. "We've got to keep
+open and not _crowd_ each other."
+
+Then he went confidentially to the energetic young Indian to make some
+restrictive explanation of his activities.
+
+Mr. Direck strolled back towards Cecily. He was very warm and a little
+blown, but not, he felt, disgraced. He was winning.
+
+"You'll have to take your coat off," she said.
+
+It was a good idea.
+
+It had occurred to several people and the boundary line was already
+dotted with hastily discarded jackets and wraps and so forth. But the
+lady in the motoring dust coat was buttoning it to the chin.
+
+"One goal love," said the minor Britling boy.
+
+"We haven't begun yet, Sunny," said Cecily.
+
+"Sonny! That's American," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"No. We call him Sunny Jim," said Cecily. "They're bullying off again."
+
+"Sunny Jim's American too," said Mr. Direck, returning to his place....
+
+The struggle was resumed. And soon it became clear that the first goal
+was no earnest of the quality of the struggle. Teddy and Cecily formed a
+terribly efficient combination. Against their brilliant rushes,
+supported in a vehement but effective manner by the Indian to their
+right and guided by loud shoutings from Mr. Britling (centre), Mr.
+Direck and the side-car lady and Mr. Raeburn struggled in vain. One
+swift advance was only checked by the dust cloak, its folds held the
+ball until help arrived; another was countered by a tremendous swipe of
+Mr. Raeburn's that sent the ball within an inch of the youngest
+Britling's head and right across the field; the third resulted in a
+swift pass from Cecily to the elder Britling son away on her right, and
+he shot the goal neatly and swiftly through the lattice of Mr. Lawrence
+Carmine's defensive movements. And after that very rapidly came another
+goal for Mr. Britling's side and then another.
+
+Then Mr. Britling cried out that it was "Half Time," and explained to
+Mr. Direck that whenever one side got to three goals they considered it
+was half time and had five minutes' rest and changed sides. Everybody
+was very hot and happy, except the lady in the dust cloak who was
+perfectly cool. In everybody's eyes shone the light of battle, and not a
+shadow disturbed the brightness of the afternoon for Mr. Direck except a
+certain unspoken anxiety about Mr. Raeburn's trousers.
+
+You see Mr. Direck had never seen Mr. Raeburn before, and knew nothing
+about his trousers.
+
+They appeared to be coming down.
+
+To begin with they had been rather loose over the feet and turned up,
+and as the game progressed, fold after fold of concertina-ed flannel
+gathered about his ankles. Every now and then Mr. Raeburn would seize
+the opportunity of some respite from the game to turn up a fresh six
+inches or so of this accumulation. Naturally Mr. Direck expected this
+policy to end unhappily. He did not know that the flannel trousers of
+Mr. Raeburn were like a river, that they could come down forever and
+still remain inexhaustible....
+
+He had visions of this scene of happy innocence being suddenly blasted
+by a monstrous disaster....
+
+Apart from this worry Mr. Direck was as happy as any one there!
+
+Perhaps these apprehensions affected his game. At any rate he did
+nothing that pleased him in the second half, Cecily danced all over him
+and round and about him, and in the course of ten minutes her side had
+won the two remaining goals with a score of Five-One; and five goals is
+"game" by the standards of Matching's Easy.
+
+And then with the very slightest of delays these insatiable people
+picked up again. Mr. Direck slipped away and returned in a white silk
+shirt, tennis trousers and a belt. This time he and Cecily were on the
+same side, the Cecily-Teddy combination was broken, and he it seemed was
+to take the place of the redoubtable Teddy on the left wing with her.
+
+This time the sides were better chosen and played a long, obstinate,
+even game. One-One. One-Two. One-Three. (Half Time.) Two-Three. Three
+all. Four-Three. Four all....
+
+By this time Mr. Direck was beginning to master the simple strategy of
+the sport. He was also beginning to master the fact that Cecily was the
+quickest, nimblest, most indefatigable player on the field. He scouted
+for her and passed to her. He developed tacit understandings with her.
+Ideas of protecting her had gone to the four winds of Heaven. Against
+them Teddy and a sidecar girl with Raeburn in support made a memorable
+struggle. Teddy was as quick as a cat. "Four-Three" looked like winning,
+but then Teddy and the tall Indian and Mrs. Teddy pulled square. They
+almost repeated this feat and won, but Mr. Manning saved the situation
+with an immense oblique hit that sent the ball to Mr. Direck. He ran
+with the ball up to Raeburn and then dodged and passed to Cecily. There
+was a lively struggle to the left; the ball was hit out by Mr. Raeburn
+and thrown in by a young Britling; lost by the forwards and rescued by
+the padded lady. Forward again! This time will do it!
+
+Cecily away to the left had worked round Mr. Raeburn once more. Teddy,
+realising that things were serious, was tearing back to attack her.
+
+Mr. Direck supported with silent intentness. "Centre!" cried Mr.
+Britling. "Cen-tre!"
+
+"Mr. Direck!" came her voice, full of confidence. (Of such moments is
+the heroic life.) The ball shot behind the hurtling Teddy. Mr. Direck
+stopped it with his foot, a trick he had just learnt from the eldest
+Britling son. He was neither slow nor hasty. He was in the half-circle,
+and the way to the goal was barred only by the dust-cloak lady and Mr.
+Lawrence Carmine. He made as if to shoot to Mr. Carmine's left and then
+smacked the ball, with the swiftness of a serpent's stroke, to his
+right.
+
+He'd done it! Mr. Carmine's stick and feet were a yard away.
+
+Then hard on this wild triumph came a flash of horror. One can't see
+everything. His eye following the ball's trajectory....
+
+Directly in its line of flight was the perambulator.
+
+The ball missed the legs of the lady with the noble nose by a kind of
+miracle, hit and glanced off the wheel of the perambulator, and went
+spinning into a border of antirrhinums.
+
+"Good!" cried Cecily. "Splendid shot!"
+
+He'd shot a goal. He'd done it well. The perambulator it seemed didn't
+matter. Though apparently the impact had awakened the baby. In the
+margin of his consciousness was the figure of Mr. Britling remarking:
+"Aunty. You really mustn't wheel the perambulator--_just_ there."
+
+"I thought," said the aunt, indicating the goal posts by a facial
+movement, "that those two sticks would be a sort of protection.... Aah!
+_Did_ they then?"
+
+Never mind that.
+
+"That's _game!_" said one of the junior Britlings to Mr. Direck with a
+note of high appreciation, and the whole party, relaxing and crumpling
+like a lowered flag, moved towards the house and tea.
+
+
+Section 5
+
+"We'll play some more after tea," said Cecily. "It will be cooler then."
+
+"My word, I'm beginning to like it," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"You're going to play very well," she said.
+
+And such is the magic of a game that Mr. Direck was humbly proud and
+grateful for her praise, and trotted along by the side of this creature
+who had revealed herself so swift and resolute and decisive, full to
+overflowing of the mere pleasure of just trotting along by her side. And
+after tea, which was a large confused affair, enlivened by wonderful and
+entirely untruthful reminiscences of the afternoon by Mr. Raeburn, they
+played again, with fewer inefficients and greater skill and swiftness,
+and Mr. Direck did such quick and intelligent things that everybody
+declared that he was a hockey player straight from heaven. The dusk,
+which at last made the position of the ball too speculative for play,
+came all too soon for him. He had played in six games, and he knew he
+would be as stiff as a Dutch doll in the morning. But he was very, very
+happy.
+
+The rest of the Sunday evening was essentially a sequel to the hockey.
+
+Mr. Direck changed again, and after using some embrocation that Mrs.
+Britling recommended very strongly, came down in a black jacket and a
+cheerfully ample black tie. He had a sense of physical well-being such
+as he had not experienced since he came aboard the liner at New York.
+The curious thing was that it was not quite the same sense of physical
+well-being that one had in America. That is bright and clear and a
+little dry, this was--humid. His mind quivered contentedly, like sunset
+midges over a lake--it had no hard bright flashes--and his body wanted
+to sit about. His sense of intimacy with Cecily increased each time he
+looked at her. When she met his eyes she smiled. He'd caught her style
+now, he felt; he attempted no more compliments and was frankly her
+pupil at hockey and Badminton. After supper Mr. Britling renewed his
+suggestion of an automobile excursion on the Monday.
+
+"There's nothing to take you back to London," said Mr. Britling, "and we
+could just hunt about the district with the little old car and see
+everything you want to see...."
+
+Mr. Direck did not hesitate three seconds. He thought of Gladys; he
+thought of Miss Cecily Corner.
+
+"Well, indeed," he said, "if it isn't burthening you, if I'm not being
+any sort of inconvenience here for another night, I'd be really very
+glad indeed of the opportunity of going around and seeing all these
+ancient places...."
+
+
+Section 6
+
+The newspapers came next morning at nine, and were full of the Sarajevo
+Murders. Mr. Direck got the _Daily Chronicle_ and found quite animated
+headlines for a British paper.
+
+"Who's this Archduke," he asked, "anyhow? And where is this Bosnia? I
+thought it was a part of Turkey."
+
+"It's in Austria," said Teddy.
+
+"It's in the middle ages," said Mr. Britling. "What an odd, pertinaceous
+business it seems to have been. First one bomb, then another; then
+finally the man with the pistol. While we were strolling about the rose
+garden. It's like something out of 'The Prisoner of Zenda.'"
+
+"Please," said Herr Heinrich.
+
+Mr. Britling assumed an attentive expression.
+
+"Will not this generally affect European politics?"
+
+"I don't know. Perhaps it will."
+
+"It says in the paper that Serbia has sent those bombs to Sarajevo."
+
+"It's like another world," said Mr. Britling, over his paper.
+"Assassination as a political method. Can you imagine anything of the
+sort happening nowadays west of the Adriatic? Imagine some one
+assassinating the American Vice-President, and the bombs being at once
+ascribed to the arsenal at Toronto!... We take our politics more sadly
+in the West.... Won't you have another egg, Direck?"
+
+"Please! Might this not lead to a war?"
+
+"I don't think so. Austria may threaten Serbia, but she doesn't want to
+provoke a conflict with Russia. It would be going too near the powder
+magazine. But it's all an extraordinary business."
+
+"But if she did?" Herr Heinrich persisted.
+
+"She won't.... Some years ago I used to believe in the inevitable
+European war," Mr. Britling explained to Mr. Direck, "but it's been
+threatened so long that at last I've lost all belief in it. The Powers
+wrangle and threaten. They're far too cautious and civilised to let the
+guns go off. If there was going to be a war it would have happened two
+years ago when the Balkan League fell upon Turkey. Or when Bulgaria
+attacked Serbia...."
+
+Herr Heinrich reflected, and received these conclusions with an
+expression of respectful edification.
+
+"I am naturally anxious," he said, "because I am taking tickets for my
+holidays at an Esperanto Conference at Boulogne."
+
+
+Section 7
+
+"There is only one way to master such a thing as driving an automobile,"
+said Mr. Britling outside his front door, as he took his place in the
+driver's seat, "and that is to resolve that from the first you will take
+no risks. Be slow if you like. Stop and think when you are in doubt. But
+do nothing rashly, permit no mistakes."
+
+It seemed to Mr. Direck as he took his seat beside his host that this
+was admirable doctrine.
+
+They started out of the gates with an extreme deliberation. Indeed twice
+they stopped dead in the act of turning into the road, and the engine
+had to be restarted.
+
+"You will laugh at me," said Mr. Britling; "but I'm resolved to have no
+blunders this time."
+
+"I don't laugh at you. It's excellent," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"It's the right way," said Mr. Britling. "Care--oh damn! I've stopped
+the engine again. Ugh!--ah!--_so!_--Care, I was saying--and calm."
+
+"Don't think I want to hurry you," said Mr. Direck. "I don't...."
+
+They passed through the tillage at a slow, agreeable pace, tooting
+loudly at every corner, and whenever a pedestrian was approached. Mr.
+Direck was reminded that he had still to broach the lecture project to
+Mr. Britling. So much had happened--
+
+The car halted abruptly and the engine stopped.
+
+"I thought that confounded hen was thinking of crossing the road," said
+Mr. Britling. "Instead of which she's gone through the hedge. She
+certainly looked this way.... Perhaps I'm a little fussy this
+morning.... I'll warm up to the work presently."
+
+"I'm convinced you can't be too careful," said Mr. Direck. "And this
+sort of thing enables one to see the country better...."
+
+Beyond the village Mr. Britling seemed to gather confidence. The pace
+quickened. But whenever other traffic or any indication of a side way
+appeared discretion returned. Mr. Britling stalked his sign posts,
+crawling towards them on the belly of the lowest gear; he drove all the
+morning like a man who is flushing ambuscades. And yet accident overtook
+him. For God demands more from us than mere righteousness.
+
+He cut through the hills to Market Saffron along a lane-road with which
+he was unfamiliar. It began to go up hill. He explained to Mr. Direck
+how admirably his engine would climb hills on the top gear.
+
+They took a curve and the hill grew steeper, and Mr. Direck opened the
+throttle.
+
+They rounded another corner, and still more steeply the hill rose before
+them.
+
+The engine began to make a chinking sound, and the car lost pace. And
+then Mr. Britling saw a pleading little white board with the inscription
+"Concealed Turning." For the moment he thought a turning might be
+concealed anywhere. He threw out his clutch and clapped on his brake.
+Then he repented of what he had done. But the engine, after three
+Herculean throbs, ceased to work. Mr. Britling with a convulsive clutch
+at his steering wheel set the electric hooter snarling, while one foot
+released the clutch again and the other, on the accelerator, sought in
+vain for help. Mr. Direck felt they were going back, back, in spite of
+all this vocalisation. He clutched at the emergency brake. But he was
+too late to avoid misfortune. With a feeling like sitting gently in
+butter, the car sank down sideways and stopped with two wheels in the
+ditch.
+
+Mr. Britling said they were in the ditch--said it with quite unnecessary
+violence....
+
+This time two cart horses and a retinue of five men were necessary to
+restore Gladys to her self-respect....
+
+After that they drove on to Market Saffron, and got there in time for
+lunch, and after lunch Mr. Direck explored the church and the churchyard
+and the parish register....
+
+After lunch Mr. Britling became more cheerful about his driving. The
+road from Market Saffron to Blandish, whence one turns off to Matching's
+Easy, is the London and Norwich high road; it is an old Roman Stane
+Street and very straightforward and honest in its stretches. You can see
+the cross roads half a mile away, and the low hedges give you no chance
+of a surprise. Everybody is cheered by such a road, and everybody drives
+more confidently and quickly, and Mr. Britling particularly was
+heartened by it and gradually let out Gladys from the almost excessive
+restriction that had hitherto marked the day. "On a road like this
+nothing can happen," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Unless you broke an axle or burst a tyre," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"My man at Matching's Easy is most careful in his inspection," said Mr.
+Britling, putting the accelerator well down and watching the speed
+indicator creep from forty to forty-five. "He went over the car not a
+week ago. And it's not one month old--in use that is."
+
+Yet something did happen.
+
+It was as they swept by the picturesque walls under the big old trees
+that encircle Brandismead Park. It was nothing but a slight
+miscalculation of distances. Ahead of them and well to the left, rode a
+postman on a bicycle; towards them, with that curious effect of
+implacable fury peculiar to motor cycles, came a motor cyclist. First
+Mr. Britling thought that he would not pass between these two, then he
+decided that he would hurry up and do so, then he reverted to his former
+decision, and then it seemed to him that he was going so fast that he
+must inevitably run down the postman. His instinct not to do that pulled
+the car sharply across the path of the motor cyclist. "Oh, my God!"
+cried Mr. Britling. "My God!" twisted his wheel over and distributed his
+feet among his levers dementedly.
+
+He had an imperfectly formed idea of getting across right in front of
+the motor cyclist, and then they were going down the brief grassy slope
+between the road and the wall, straight at the wall, and still at a good
+speed. The motor cyclist smacked against something and vanished from the
+problem. The wall seemed to rush up at them and then--collapse. There
+was a tremendous concussion. Mr. Direck gripped at his friend the
+emergency brake, but had only time to touch it before his head hit
+against the frame of the glass wind-screen, and a curtain fell upon
+everything....
+
+He opened his eyes upon a broken wall, a crumpled motor car, and an
+undamaged motor cyclist in the aviator's cap and thin oilskin overalls
+dear to motor cyclists. Mr. Direck stared and then, still stunned and
+puzzled, tried to raise himself. He became aware of acute pain.
+
+"Don't move for a bit," said the motor cyclist. "Your arm and side are
+rather hurt, I think...."
+
+
+Section 8
+
+In the course of the next twelve hours Mr. Direck was to make a
+discovery that was less common in the days before the war than it has
+been since. He discovered that even pain and injury may be vividly
+interesting and gratifying.
+
+If any one had told him he was going to be stunned for five or six
+minutes, cut about the brow and face and have a bone in his wrist put
+out, and that as a consequence he would find himself pleased and
+exhilarated, he would have treated the prophecy with ridicule; but here
+he was lying stiffly on his back with his wrist bandaged to his side and
+smiling into the darkness even more brightly than he had smiled at the
+Essex landscape two days before. The fact is pain hurts or irritates,
+but in itself it does not make a healthily constituted man miserable.
+The expectation of pain, the certainty of injury may make one hopeless
+enough, the reality rouses our resistance. Nobody wants a broken bone or
+a delicate wrist, but very few people are very much depressed by getting
+one. People can be much more depressed by smoking a hundred cigarettes
+in three days or losing one per cent. of their capital.
+
+And everybody had been most delightful to Mr. Direck.
+
+He had had the monopoly of damage. Mr. Britling, holding on to the
+steering wheel, had not even been thrown out. "Unless I'm internally
+injured," he said, "I'm not hurt at all. My liver perhaps--bruised a
+little...."
+
+Gladys had been abandoned in the ditch, and they had been very kindly
+brought home by a passing automobile. Cecily had been at the Dower
+House at the moment of the rueful arrival. She had seen how an American
+can carry injuries. She had made sympathy and helpfulness more
+delightful by expressed admiration.
+
+"She's a natural born nurse," said Mr. Direck, and then rather in the
+tone of one who addressed a public meeting: "But this sort of thing
+brings out all the good there is in a woman."
+
+He had been quite explicit to them and more particularly to her, when
+they told him he must stay at the Dower House until his arm was cured.
+He had looked the application straight into her pretty eyes.
+
+"If I'm to stay right here just as a consequence of that little shake
+up, may be for a couple of weeks, may be three, and if you're coming to
+do a bit of a talk to me ever and again, then I tell you I don't call
+this a misfortune. It isn't a misfortune. It's right down sheer good
+luck...."
+
+And now he lay as straight as a mummy, with his soul filled with
+radiance of complete mental peace. After months of distress and
+confusion, he'd got straight again. He was in the middle of a real good
+story, bright and clean. He knew just exactly what he wanted.
+
+"After all," he said, "it's true. There's ideals. _She's_ an ideal. Why,
+I loved her before ever I set eyes on Mamie. I loved her before I was
+put into pants. That old portrait, there it was pointing my destiny....
+It's affinity.... It's natural selection....
+
+"Well, I don't know what she thinks of me yet, but I do know very well
+what she's _got_ to think of me. She's got to think all the world of
+me--if I break every limb of my body making her do it.
+
+"I'd a sort of feeling it was right to go in that old automobile.
+
+"Say what you like, there's a Guidance...."
+
+He smiled confidentially at the darkness as if they shared a secret.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FOURTH
+
+MR. BRITLING IN SOLILOQUY
+
+
+Section 1
+
+Very different from the painful contentment of the bruised and broken
+Mr. Direck was the state of mind of his unwounded host. He too was
+sleepless, but sleepless without exaltation. The day had been too much
+for him altogether; his head, to borrow an admirable American
+expression, was "busy."
+
+How busy it was, a whole chapter will be needed to describe....
+
+The impression Mr. Britling had made upon Mr. Direck was one of
+indefatigable happiness. But there were times when Mr. Britling was
+called upon to pay for his general cheerful activity in lump sums of
+bitter sorrow. There were nights--and especially after seasons of
+exceptional excitement and nervous activity--when the reckoning would be
+presented and Mr. Britling would welter prostrate and groaning under a
+stormy sky of unhappiness--active insatiable unhappiness--a beating with
+rods.
+
+The sorrows of the sanguine temperament are brief but furious; the world
+knows little of them. The world has no need to reckon with them. They
+cause no suicides and few crimes. They hurry past, smiting at their
+victim as they go. None the less they are misery. Mr. Britling in these
+moods did not perhaps experience the grey and hopeless desolations of
+the melancholic nor the red damnation of the choleric, but he saw a
+world that bristled with misfortune and error, with poisonous thorns and
+traps and swampy places and incurable blunderings. An almost
+insupportable remorse for being Mr. Britling would pursue
+him--justifying itself upon a hundred counts....
+
+And for being such a Britling!...
+
+Why--he revived again that bitter question of a thousand and one unhappy
+nights--why was he such a fool? Such a hasty fool? Why couldn't he look
+before he leapt? Why did he take risks? Why was he always so ready to
+act upon the supposition that all was bound to go well? (He might as
+well have asked why he had quick brown eyes.)
+
+Why, for instance, hadn't he adhered to the resolution of the early
+morning? He had begun with an extremity of caution....
+
+It was a characteristic of these moods of Mr. Britling that they
+produced a physical restlessness. He kept on turning over and then
+turning over again, and sitting up and lying back, like a martyr on a
+gridiron....
+
+This was just the latest instance of a life-long trouble. Will there
+ever be a sort of man whose thoughts are quick and his acts slow? Then
+indeed we shall have a formidable being. Mr. Britling's thoughts were
+quick and sanguine and his actions even more eager than his thoughts.
+Already while he was a young man Mr. Britling had found his acts elbow
+their way through the hurry of his ideas and precipitate humiliations.
+Long before his reasons were marshalled, his resolutions were formed. He
+had attempted a thousand remonstrances with himself; he had sought to
+remedy the defects in his own character by written inscriptions in his
+bedroom and memoranda inside his watch case. "Keep steady!" was one of
+them. "Keep the End in View." And, "Go steadfastly, coherently,
+continuously; only so can you go where you will." In distrusting all
+impulse, scrutinising all imagination, he was persuaded lay his one
+prospect of escape from the surprise of countless miseries. Otherwise he
+danced among glass bombs and barbed wire.
+
+There had been a time when he could exhort himself to such fundamental
+charge and go through phases of the severest discipline. Always at last
+to be taken by surprise from some unexpected quarter. At last he had
+ceased to hope for any triumph so radical. He had been content to
+believe that in recent years age and a gathering habit of wisdom had
+somewhat slowed his leaping purpose. That if he hadn't overcome he had
+at least to a certain extent minimised it. But this last folly was
+surely the worst. To charge through this patient world with--how much
+did the car weigh? A ton certainly and perhaps more--reckless of every
+risk. Not only to himself but others. At this thought, he clutched the
+steering wheel again. Once more he saw the bent back of the endangered
+cyclist, once more he felt rather than saw the seething approach of the
+motor bicycle, and then through a long instant he drove helplessly at
+the wall....
+
+Hell perhaps is only one such incident, indefinitely prolonged....
+
+Anything might have been there in front of him. And indeed now, out of
+the dreamland to which he could not escape something had come, something
+that screamed sharply....
+
+"Good God!" he cried, "if I had hit a child! I might have hit a child!"
+The hypothesis flashed into being with the thought, tried to escape and
+was caught. It was characteristic of Mr. Britling's nocturnal
+imagination that he should individualise this child quite sharply as
+rather plain and slender, with reddish hair, staring eyes, and its ribs
+crushed in a vivid and dreadful manner, pinned against the wall, mixed
+up with some bricks, only to be extracted, oh! _horribly_.
+
+But this was not fair! He had hurt no child! He had merely pitched out
+Mr. Direck and broken his arm....
+
+It wasn't his merit that the child hadn't been there!
+
+The child might have been there!
+
+Mere luck.
+
+He lay staring in despair--as an involuntary God might stare at many a
+thing in this amazing universe--staring at the little victim his
+imagination had called into being only to destroy....
+
+
+Section 2
+
+If he had not crushed a child other people had. Such things happened.
+Vicariously at any rate he had crushed many children....
+
+Why are children ever crushed?
+
+And suddenly all the pain and destruction and remorse of all the
+accidents in the world descended upon Mr. Britling.
+
+No longer did he ask why am I such a fool, but why are we all such
+fools? He became Man on the automobile of civilisation, crushing his
+thousands daily in his headlong and yet aimless career....
+
+That was a trick of Mr. Britling's mind. It had this tendency to spread
+outward from himself to generalised issues. Many minds are like that
+nowadays. He was not so completely individualised as people are supposed
+to be individualised--in our law, in our stories, in our moral
+judgments. He had a vicarious factor. He could slip from concentrated
+reproaches to the liveliest remorse for himself as The Automobilist in
+General, or for himself as England, or for himself as Man. From remorse
+for smashing his guest and his automobile he could pass by what was for
+him the most imperceptible of transitions to remorse for every accident
+that has ever happened through the error of an automobilist since
+automobiles began. All that long succession of blunderers became Mr.
+Britling. Or rather Mr. Britling became all that vast succession of
+blunderers.
+
+These fluctuating lapses from individuation made Mr. Britling a
+perplexity to many who judged only by the old personal standards. At
+times he seemed a monster of cantankerous self-righteousness, whom
+nobody could please or satisfy, but indeed when he was most pitiless
+about the faults of his race or nation he was really reproaching
+himself, and when he seemed more egotistical and introspective and
+self-centred he was really ransacking himself for a clue to that same
+confusion of purposes that waste the hope and strength of humanity. And
+now through the busy distresses of the night it would have perplexed a
+watching angel to have drawn the line and shown when Mr. Britling, was
+grieving for his own loss and humiliation and when he was grieving for
+these common human weaknesses of which he had so large a share.
+
+And this double refraction of his mind by which a concentrated and
+individualised Britling did but present a larger impersonal Britling
+beneath, carried with it a duplication of his conscience and sense of
+responsibility. To his personal conscience he was answerable for his
+private honour and his debts and the Dower House he had made and so on,
+but to his impersonal conscience he was answerable for the whole world.
+The world from the latter point of view was his egg. He had a
+subconscious delusion that he had laid it. He had a subconscious
+suspicion that he had let it cool and that it was addled. He had an
+urgency to incubate it. The variety and interest of his talk was largely
+due to that persuasion, it was a perpetual attempt to spread his mental
+feathers over the task before him....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+After this much of explanation it is possible to go on to the task which
+originally brought Mr. Direck to Matching's Easy, the task that
+Massachusetts society had sent him upon, the task of organising the
+mental unveiling of Mr. Britling. Mr. Direck saw Mr. Britling only in
+the daylight, and with an increasing distraction of the attention
+towards Miss Cecily Corner. We may see him rather _more_ clearly in the
+darkness, without any distraction except his own.
+
+Now the smashing of Gladys was not only the source of a series of
+reproaches and remorses directly arising out of the smash; it had also a
+wide system of collateral consequences, which were also banging and
+blundering their way through the Britling mind. It was extraordinarily
+inconvenient in quite another direction that the automobile should be
+destroyed. It upset certain plans of Mr. Britling's in a direction
+growing right out from all the Dower House world in which Mr. Direck
+supposed him to be completely set and rooted. There were certain matters
+from which Mr. Britling had been averting his mind most strenuously
+throughout the week-end. Now, there was no averting his mind any more.
+
+Mr. Britling was entangled in a love affair. It was, to be exact, and
+disregarding minor affinities, his eighth love affair. And the new
+automobile, so soon as he could drive it efficiently, was to have played
+quite a solvent and conclusive part in certain entangled complications
+of this relationship.
+
+A man of lively imagination and quick impulses naturally has love
+affairs as he drives himself through life, just as he naturally has
+accidents if he drives an automobile.
+
+And the peculiar relations that existed between Mr. Britling and Mrs.
+Britling tended inevitably to make these love affairs troublesome,
+undignified and futile. Especially when they were viewed from the point
+of view of insomnia.
+
+Mr. Britling's first marriage had been a passionately happy one. His
+second was by comparison a marriage in neutral tint. There is much to be
+said for that extreme Catholic theory which would make marriage not
+merely lifelong but eternal. Certainly Mr. Britling would have been a
+finer if not a happier creature if his sentimental existence could have
+died with his first wife or continued only in his love for their son. He
+had married in the glow of youth, he had had two years of clean and
+simple loving, helping, quarrelling and the happy ending of quarrels.
+Something went out of him into all that, which could not be renewed
+again. In his first extremity of grief he knew that perfectly well--and
+then afterwards he forgot it. While there is life there is imagination,
+which makes and forgets and goes on.
+
+He met Edith under circumstances that did not in any way recall his lost
+Mary. He met her, as people say, "socially"; Mary, on the other hand,
+had been a girl at Newnham while he was a fellow of Pembroke, and there
+had been something of accident and something of furtiveness in their
+lucky discovery of each other. There had been a flush in it; there was
+dash in it. But Edith he saw and chose and had to woo. There was no
+rushing together; there was solicitation and assent. Edith was a
+Bachelor of Science of London University and several things like that,
+and she looked upon the universe under her broad forehead and
+broad-waving brown hair with quiet watchful eyes that had nothing
+whatever to hide, a thing so incredible to Mr. Britling that he had
+loved and married her very largely for the serenity of her mystery. And
+for a time after their marriage he sailed over those brown depths
+plumbing furiously.
+
+Of course he did not make his former passion for Mary at all clear to
+her. Indeed, while he was winning Edith it was by no means clear to
+himself. He was making a new emotional drama, and consciously and
+subconsciously he dismissed a hundred reminiscences that sought to
+invade the new experience, and which would have been out of key with it.
+And without any deliberate intention to that effect he created an
+atmosphere between himself and Edith in which any discussion of Mary was
+reduced to a minimum, and in which Hugh was accepted rather than
+explained. He contrived to believe that she understood all sorts of
+unsayable things; he invented miracles of quite uncongenial mute
+mutuality....
+
+It was over the chess-board that they first began to discover their
+extensive difficulties of sympathy. Mr. Britling's play was
+characterised by a superficial brilliance, much generosity and extreme
+unsoundness; he always moved directly his opponent had done so--and then
+reflected on the situation. His reflection was commonly much wiser than
+his moves. Mrs. Britling was, as it were, a natural antagonist to her
+husband; she was as calm as he was irritable. She was never in a hurry
+to move, and never disposed to make a concession. Quietly, steadfastly,
+by caution and deliberation, without splendour, without error, she had
+beaten him at chess until it led to such dreadful fits of anger that he
+had to renounce the game altogether. After every such occasion he would
+be at great pains to explain that he had merely been angry with himself.
+Nevertheless he felt, and would not let himself think (while she
+concluded from incidental heated phrases), that that was not the
+complete truth about the outbreak.
+
+Slowly they got through the concealments of that specious explanation.
+Temperamentally they were incompatible.
+
+They were profoundly incompatible. In all things she was defensive. She
+never came out; never once had she surprised him halfway upon the road
+to her. He had to go all the way to her and knock and ring, and then she
+answered faithfully. She never surprised him even by unkindness. If he
+had a cut finger she would bind it up very skilfully and healingly, but
+unless he told her she never discovered he had a cut finger. He was
+amazed she did not know of it before it happened. He piped and she did
+not dance. That became the formula of his grievance. For several unhappy
+years she thwarted him and disappointed him, while he filled her with
+dumb inexplicable distresses. He had been at first so gay an activity,
+and then he was shattered; fragments of him were still as gay and
+attractive as ever, but between were outbreaks of anger, of hostility,
+of something very like malignity. Only very slowly did they realise the
+truth of their relationship and admit to themselves that the fine bud
+of love between them had failed to flower, and only after long years
+were they able to delimit boundaries where they had imagined union, and
+to become--allies. If it had been reasonably possible for them to part
+without mutual injury and recrimination they would have done so, but two
+children presently held them, and gradually they had to work out the
+broad mutual toleration of their later relations. If there was no love
+and delight between them there was a real habitual affection and much
+mutual help. She was proud of his steady progress to distinction, proud
+of each intimation of respect he won; she admired and respected his
+work; she recognised that he had some magic, of liveliness and
+unexpectedness that was precious and enviable. So far as she could help
+him she did. And even when he knew that there was nothing behind it,
+that it was indeed little more than an imaginative inertness, he could
+still admire and respect her steady dignity and her consistent
+honourableness. Her practical capacity was for him a matter for
+continual self-congratulation. He marked the bright order of her
+household, her flowering borders, the prosperous high-born roses of her
+garden with a wondering appreciation. He had never been able to keep
+anything in order. He relied more and more upon her. He showed his
+respect for her by a scrupulous attention to her dignity, and his
+confidence by a franker and franker emotional neglect. Because she
+expressed so little he succeeded in supposing she felt little, and since
+nothing had come out of the brown depths of her eyes he saw fit at last
+to suppose no plumb-line would ever find anything there. He pursued his
+interests; he reached out to this and that; he travelled; she made it a
+matter of conscience to let him go unhampered; she felt, she
+thought--unrecorded; he did, and he expressed and re-expressed and
+over-expressed, and started this and that with quick irrepressible
+activity, and so there had accumulated about them the various items of
+the life to whose more ostensible accidents Mr. Direck was now for an
+indefinite period joined.
+
+It was in the nature of Mr. Britling to incur things; it was in the
+nature of Mrs. Britling to establish them. Mr. Britling had taken the
+Dower House on impulse, and she had made it a delightful home. He had
+discovered the disorderly delights of mixed Sunday hockey one week-end
+at Pontings that had promised to be dull, and she had made it an
+institution.... He had come to her with his orphan boy and a memory of a
+passionate first loss that sometimes, and more particularly at first, he
+seemed to have forgotten altogether, and at other times was only too
+evidently lamenting with every fibre of his being. She had taken the
+utmost care of the relics of her duskily pretty predecessor that she
+found in unexpected abundance in Mr. Britling's possession, and she had
+done her duty by her sometimes rather incomprehensible stepson. She
+never allowed herself to examine the state of her heart towards this
+youngster; it is possible that she did not perceive the necessity for
+any such examination....
+
+So she went through life, outwardly serene and dignified, one of a great
+company of rather fastidious, rather unenterprising women who have
+turned for their happiness to secondary things, to those fair inanimate
+things of household and garden which do not turn again and rend one, to
+aestheticisms and delicacies, to order and seemliness. Moreover she
+found great satisfaction in the health and welfare, the growth and
+animation of her own two little boys. And no one knew, and perhaps even
+she had contrived to forget, the phases of astonishment and
+disillusionment, of doubt and bitterness and secret tears, that spread
+out through the years in which she had slowly realised that this
+strange, fitful, animated man who had come to her, vowing himself hers,
+asking for her so urgently and persuasively, was ceasing, had ceased, to
+love her, that his heart had escaped her, that she had missed it; she
+never dreamt that she had hurt it, and that after its first urgent,
+tumultuous, incomprehensible search for her it had hidden itself
+bitterly away....
+
+
+Section 4
+
+The mysterious processes of nature that had produced Mr. Britling had
+implanted in him an obstinate persuasion that somewhere in the world,
+from some human being, it was still possible to find the utmost
+satisfaction for every need and craving. He could imagine as existing,
+as waiting for him, he knew not where, a completeness of understanding,
+a perfection of response, that would reach all the gamut of his feelings
+and sensations from the most poetical to the most entirely physical, a
+beauty of relationship so transfiguring that not only would she--it went
+without saying that this completion was a woman--be perfectly beautiful
+in its light but, what was manifestly more incredible, that he too would
+be perfectly beautiful and quite at his ease.... In her presence there
+could be no self-reproaches, no lapses, no limitations, nothing but
+happiness and the happiest activities.... To such a persuasion half the
+imaginative people in the world succumb as readily and naturally as
+ducklings take to water. They do not doubt its truth any more than a
+thirsty camel doubts that presently it will come to a spring.
+
+This persuasion is as foolish as though a camel hoped that some day it
+would drink from such a spring that it would never thirst again. For the
+most part Mr. Britling ignored its presence in his mind, and resisted
+the impulses it started. But at odd times, and more particularly in the
+afternoon and while travelling and in between books, Mr. Britling so far
+succumbed to this strange expectation of a wonder round the corner that
+he slipped the anchors of his humour and self-contempt and joined the
+great cruising brotherhood of the Pilgrims of Love....
+
+In fact--though he himself had never made a reckoning of it--he had
+been upon eight separate cruises. He was now upon the eighth....
+
+Between these various excursions--they took him round and about the
+world, so to speak, they cast him away on tropical beaches, they left
+him dismasted on desolate seas, they involved the most startling
+interventions and the most inconvenient consequences--there were
+interludes of penetrating philosophy. For some years the suspicion had
+been growing up in Mr. Britling's mind that in planting this persuasion
+in his being, the mysterious processes of Nature had been, perhaps for
+some purely biological purpose, pulling, as people say, his leg, that
+there were not these perfect responses, that loving a woman is a thing
+one does thoroughly once for all--or so--and afterwards recalls
+regrettably in a series of vain repetitions, and that the career of the
+Pilgrim of Love, so soon as you strip off its credulous glamour, is
+either the most pitiful or the most vulgar and vile of perversions from
+the proper conduct of life. But this suspicion had not as yet grown to
+prohibitive dimensions with him, it was not sufficient to resist the
+seasons of high tide, the sudden promise of the salt-edged breeze, the
+invitation of the hovering sea-bird; and he was now concealing beneath
+the lively surface of activities with which Mr. Direck was now familiar,
+a very extensive system of distresses arising out of the latest, the
+eighth of these digressional adventures....
+
+Mr. Britling had got into it very much as he had got into the ditch on
+the morning before his smash. He hadn't thought the affair out and he
+hadn't looked carefully enough. And it kept on developing in just the
+ways he would rather that it didn't.
+
+The seventh affair had been very disconcerting. He had made a fool of
+himself with quite a young girl; he blushed to think how young; it
+hadn't gone very far, but it had made his nocturnal reflections so
+disagreeable that he had--by no means for the first time--definitely
+and forever given up these foolish dreams of love. And when Mrs.
+Harrowdean swam into his circle, she seemed just exactly what was wanted
+to keep his imagination out of mischief. She came bearing flattery to
+the pitch of adoration. She was the brightest and cleverest of young
+widows. She wrote quite admirably criticism in the _Scrutator_ and the
+_Sectarian_, and occasionally poetry in the _Right Review_--when she
+felt disposed to do so. She had an intermittent vein of high spirits
+that was almost better than humour and made her quickly popular with
+most of the people she met, and she was only twenty miles away in her
+pretty house and her absurd little jolly park.
+
+There was something, she said, in his thought and work that was like
+walking in mountains. She came to him because she wanted to clamber
+about the peaks and glens of his mind.
+
+It was natural to reply that he wasn't by any means the serene mountain
+elevation she thought him, except perhaps for a kind of loneliness....
+
+She was a great reader of eighteenth century memoirs, and some she
+conveyed to him. Her mental quality was all in the vein of the
+friendships of Rousseau and Voltaire, and pleasantly and trippingly she
+led him along the primrose path of an intellectual liaison. She came
+first to Matching's Easy, where she was sweet and bright and vividly
+interested and a great contrast to Mrs. Britling, and then he and she
+met in London, and went off together with a fine sense of adventure for
+a day at Richmond, and then he took some work with him to her house and
+stayed there....
+
+Then she went away into Scotland for a time and he wanted her again
+tremendously and clamoured for her eloquently, and then it was apparent
+and admitted between them that they were admirably in love, oh!
+immensely in love.
+
+The transitions from emotional mountaineering to ardent intimacies were
+so rapid and impulsive that each phase obliterated its predecessor, and
+it was only with a vague perplexity that Mr. Britling found himself
+transferred from the rôle of a mountainous objective for pretty little
+pilgrims to that of a sedulous lover in pursuit of the happiness of one
+of the most uncertain, intricate, and entrancing of feminine
+personalities. This was not at all his idea of the proper relations
+between men and women, but Mrs. Harrowdean had a way of challenging his
+gallantry. She made him run about for her; she did not demand but she
+commanded presents and treats and surprises; she even developed a
+certain jealousy in him. His work began to suffer from interruptions.
+Yet they had glowing and entertaining moments together that could temper
+his rebellious thoughts with the threat of irreparable loss. "One must
+love, and all things in life are imperfect," was how Mr. Britling
+expressed his reasons for submission. And she had a hold upon him too in
+a certain facile pitifulness. She was little; she could be stung
+sometimes by the slightest touch and then her blue eyes would be bright
+with tears.
+
+Those possible tears could weigh at times even more than those possible
+lost embraces.
+
+And there was Oliver.
+
+Oliver was a person Mr. Britling had never seen. He grew into the scheme
+of things by insensible gradations. He was a government official in
+London; he was, she said, extraordinarily dull, he was lacking
+altogether in Mr. Britling's charm and interest, but he was faithful and
+tender and true. And considerably younger than Mr. Britling. He asked
+nothing but to love. He offered honourable marriage. And when one's
+heart was swelling unendurably one could weep in safety on his patient
+shoulder. This patient shoulder of Oliver's ultimately became Mr.
+Britling's most exasperating rival.
+
+She liked to vex him with Oliver. She liked to vex him generally. Indeed
+in this by no means abnormal love affair, there was a very strong
+antagonism. She seemed to resent the attraction Mr. Britling had for
+her and the emotions and pleasure she had with him. She seemed under the
+sway of an instinctive desire to make him play heavily for her, in time,
+in emotion, in self-respect. It was intolerable to her that he could
+take her easily and happily. That would be taking her cheaply. She
+valued his gifts by the bother they cost him, and was determined that
+the path of true love should not, if she could help it, run smooth. Mr.
+Britling on the other hand was of the school of polite and happy lovers.
+He thought it outrageous to dispute and contradict, and he thought that
+making love was a cheerful, comfortable thing to be done in a state of
+high good humour and intense mutual appreciation. This levity offended
+the lady's pride. She drew unfavourable contrasts with Oliver. If Oliver
+lacked charm he certainly did not lack emotion. He desired sacrifice, it
+seemed, almost more than satisfactions. Oliver was a person of the most
+exemplary miserableness; he would weep copiously and frequently. She
+could always make him weep when she wanted to do so. By holding out
+hopes and then dashing them if by no other expedient. Why did Mr.
+Britling never weep? She wept.
+
+Some base streak of competitiveness in Mr. Britling's nature made it
+seem impossible that he should relinquish the lady to Oliver. Besides,
+then, what would he do with his dull days, his afternoons, his need for
+a properly demonstrated affection?
+
+So Mr. Britling trod the path of his eighth digression, rather
+overworked in the matter of flowers and the selection of small
+jewellery, stalked by the invisible and indefatigable Oliver, haunted
+into an unwilling industry of attentions--attentions on the model of the
+professional lover of the French novels--by the memory and expectation
+of tearful scenes. "Then you don't love me! And it's all spoilt. I've
+risked talk and my reputation.... I was a fool ever to dream of making
+love beautifully...."
+
+Exactly like running your car into a soft wet ditch when you cannot get
+out and you cannot get on. And your work and your interests waiting and
+waiting for you!...
+
+The car itself was an outcome of the affair. It was Mrs. Harrowdean's
+idea, she thought chiefly of pleasant expeditions to friendly inns in
+remote parts of the country, inns with a flavour of tacit complicity,
+but it fell in very pleasantly with Mr. Britling's private resentment at
+the extraordinary inconvenience of the railway communications between
+Matching's Easy and her station at Pyecrafts, which involved a journey
+to Liverpool Street and a long wait at a junction. And now the car was
+smashed up--just when he had acquired skill enough to take it over to
+Pyecrafts without shame, and on Tuesday or Wednesday at latest he would
+have to depart in the old way by the London train....
+
+Only the most superficial mind would assert nowadays that man is a
+reasonable creature. Man is an unreasonable creature, and it was
+entirely unreasonable and human for Mr. Britling during his nocturnal
+self-reproaches to mix up his secret resentment at his infatuation for
+Mrs. Harrowdean with his ill-advised attack upon the wall of Brandismead
+Park. He ought never to have bought that car; he ought never to have
+been so ready to meet Mrs. Harrowdean more than halfway.
+
+What exacerbated his feeling about Mrs. Harrowdean was a new line she
+had recently taken with regard to Mrs. Britling. From her first rash
+assumption that Mr. Britling was indifferent to his wife, she had come
+to realise that on the contrary he was in some ways extremely tender
+about his wife. This struck her as an outrageous disloyalty. Instead of
+appreciating a paradox she resented an infidelity. She smouldered with
+perplexed resentment for some days, and then astonished her lover by a
+series of dissertations of a hostile and devastating nature upon the
+lady of the Dower House.
+
+He tried to imagine he hadn't heard all that he had heard, but Mrs.
+Harrowdean had a nimble pen and nimbler afterthoughts, and once her mind
+had got to work upon the topic she developed her offensive in
+half-a-dozen brilliant letters.... On the other hand she professed a
+steadily increasing passion for Mr. Britling. And to profess
+passion for Mr. Britling was to put him under a sense of profound
+obligation--because indeed he was a modest man. He found himself in an
+emotional quandary.
+
+You see, if Mrs. Harrowdean had left Mrs. Britling alone everything
+would have been quite tolerable. He considered Mrs. Harrowdean a
+charming human being, and altogether better than he deserved. Ever so
+much better. She was all initiative and response and that sort of thing.
+And she was so discreet. She had her own reputation to think about, and
+one or two of her predecessors--God rest the ashes of those fires!--had
+not been so discreet. Yet one could not have this sort of thing going on
+behind Edith's back. All sorts of things one might have going on behind
+Edith's back, but not this writing and saying of perfectly beastly
+things about Edith. Nothing could alter the fact that Edith was his
+honour....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Throughout the week-end Mr. Britling had kept this trouble well battened
+down. He had written to Mrs. Harrowdean a brief ambiguous note saying,
+"I am thinking over all that you have said," and after that he had
+scarcely thought about her at all. Or at least he had always contrived
+to be much more vividly thinking about something else. But now in these
+night silences the suppressed trouble burst hatches and rose about him.
+
+What a mess he had made of the whole scheme of his emotional life! There
+had been a time when he had started out as gaily with his passions and
+his honour as he had started out with Gladys to go to Market Saffron.
+He had as little taste for complications as he had for ditches. And now
+his passions and his honour were in a worse case even than poor muddy
+smashed up Gladys as the cart-horses towed her off, for she at any rate
+might be repaired. But he--he was a terribly patched fabric of
+explanations now. Not indeed that he had ever stooped to explanations.
+But there he was! Far away, like a star seen down the length of a
+tunnel, was that first sad story of a love as clean as starlight. It had
+been all over by eight-and-twenty and he could find it in his heart to
+grieve that he had ever given a thought to love again. He should have
+lived a decent widower.... Then Edith had come into his life, Edith that
+honest and unconscious defaulter. And there again he should have stuck
+to his disappointment. He had stuck to it--nine days out of every ten.
+It's the tenth day, it's the odd seductive moment, it's the instant of
+confident pride--and there is your sanguine temperament in the ditch.
+
+He began to recapitulate items in the catalogue of his escapades, and
+the details of his automobile misadventures mixed themselves up with the
+story of his heart steering. For example there was that tremendous
+Siddons affair. He had been taking the corner of a girlish friendship
+and he had taken it altogether too far. What a frightful mess that had
+been! When once one is off the road anything may happen, from a crumpled
+mud-guard to the car on the top of you. And there was his forty miles an
+hour spurt with the great and gifted Delphine Marquise--for whom he was
+to have written a play and been a perfect Annunzio. Until Willersley
+appeared--very like the motor-cyclist--buzzing in the opposite
+direction. And then had ensued angers, humiliations....
+
+Had every man this sort of crowded catalogue? Was every
+forty-five-year-old memory a dark tunnel receding from the star of
+youth? It is surely a pity that life cannot end at thirty. It comes to
+one clean and in perfect order....
+
+Is experience worth having?
+
+What a clean, straight thing the spirit of youth is. It is like a bright
+new spear. It is like a finely tempered sword. The figure of his boy
+took possession of his mind, his boy who looked out on the world with
+his mother's dark eyes, the slender son of that whole-hearted first
+love. He was a being at once fine and simple, an intimate mystery. Must
+he in his turn get dented and wrinkled and tarnished?
+
+The boy was in trouble. What was the trouble?
+
+Was it some form of the same trouble that had so tangled and tainted and
+scarred the private pride of his father? And how was it possible for Mr.
+Britling, disfigured by heedless misadventures, embarrassed by
+complications and concealments, to help this honest youngster out of his
+perplexities? He imagined possible forms of these perplexities.
+Graceless forms. Ugly forms. Such forms as only the nocturnal
+imagination would have dared present....
+
+Oh, why had he been such a Britling? Why was he still such a Britling?
+
+Mr. Britling sat up in his bed and beat at the bedclothes with his
+fists. He uttered uncompleted vows, "From this hour forth ... from this
+hour forth...."
+
+He must do something, he felt. At any rate he had his experiences. He
+could warn. He could explain away. Perhaps he might help to extricate,
+if things had got to that pitch.
+
+Should he write to his son? For a time he revolved a long, tactful
+letter in his mind. But that was impossible. Suppose the trouble was
+something quite different? It would have to be a letter in the most
+general terms....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+It was in the doubly refracting nature of Mr. Britling's mind that while
+he was deploring his inefficiency in regard to his son, he was also
+deploring the ineffectiveness of all his generation of parents. Quite
+insensibly his mind passed over to the generalised point of view.
+
+In his talks with Mr. Direck, Mr. Britling could present England as a
+great and amiable spectacle of carelessness and relaxation, but was it
+indeed an amiable spectacle? The point that Mr. Direck had made about
+the barn rankled in his thoughts. His barn was a barn no longer, his
+farmyard held no cattle; he was just living laxly in the buildings that
+ancient needs had made, he was living on the accumulated prosperity of
+former times, the spendthrift heir of toiling generations. Not only was
+he a pampered, undisciplined sort of human being; he was living in a
+pampered, undisciplined sort of community. The two things went
+together.... This confounded Irish business, one could laugh at it in
+the daylight, but was it indeed a thing to laugh at? We were drifting
+lazily towards a real disaster. We had a government that seemed guided
+by the principles of Mr. Micawber, and adopted for its watchword "Wait
+and see." For months now this trouble had grown more threatening.
+Suppose presently that civil war broke out in Ireland! Suppose presently
+that these irritated, mishandled suffragettes did some desperate
+irreconcilable thing, assassinated for example! The bomb in Westminster
+Abbey the other day might have killed a dozen people.... Suppose the
+smouldering criticism of British rule in India and Egypt were fanned by
+administrative indiscretions into a flame....
+
+And then suppose Germany had made trouble....
+
+Usually Mr. Britling kept his mind off Germany. In the daytime he
+pretended Germany meant nothing to England. He hated alarmists. He hated
+disagreeable possibilities. He declared the idea of a whole vast nation
+waiting to strike at us incredible. Why should they? You cannot have
+seventy million lunatics.... But in the darkness of the night one cannot
+dismiss things in this way. Suppose, after all, their army was more
+than a parade, their navy more than a protest?
+
+We might be caught--It was only in the vast melancholia of such
+occasions that Mr. Britling would admit such possibilities, but we might
+be caught by some sudden declaration of war.... And how should we face
+it?
+
+He recalled the afternoon's talk at Claverings and such samples of our
+governmental machinery as he chanced to number among his personal
+acquaintance. Suppose suddenly the enemy struck! With Raeburn and his
+friends to defend us! Or if the shock tumbled them out of power, then
+with these vituperative Tories, these spiteful advocates of weak
+tyrannies and privileged pretences in the place of them. There was no
+leadership in England. In the lucid darkness he knew that with a
+terrible certitude. He had a horrible vision of things disastrously
+muffled; of Lady Frensham and her _Morning Post_ friends first
+garrulously and maliciously "patriotic," screaming her way with
+incalculable mischiefs through the storm, and finally discovering that
+the Germans were the real aristocrats and organising our national
+capitulation on that understanding. He knew from talk he had heard that
+the navy was weak in mines and torpedoes, unprovided with the great
+monitors needed for a war with Germany; torn by doctrinaire feuds;
+nevertheless the sea power was our only defence. In the whole country we
+might muster a military miscellany of perhaps three hundred thousand
+men. And he had no faith in their equipment, in their direction. General
+French, the one man who had his entire confidence, had been forced to
+resign through some lawyer's misunderstanding about the Irish
+difficulty. He did not believe any plans existed for such a war as
+Germany might force upon us, any calculation, any foresight of the thing
+at all.
+
+Why had we no foresight? Why had we this wilful blindness to
+disagreeable possibilities? Why did we lie so open to the unexpected
+crisis? Just what he said of himself he said also of his country. It was
+curious to remember that. To realise how closely Dower House could play
+the microcosm to the whole Empire....
+
+It became relevant to the trend of his thoughts that his son had through
+his mother a strong strain of the dark Irish in his composition.
+
+How we had wasted Ireland! The rich values that lay in Ireland, the
+gallantry and gifts, the possible friendliness, all these things were
+being left to the Ulster politicians and the Tory women to poison and
+spoil, just as we left India to the traditions of the chattering army
+women and the repressive instincts of our mandarins. We were too lazy,
+we were too negligent. We passed our indolent days leaving everything to
+somebody else. Was this the incurable British, just as it was the
+incurable Britling, quality?
+
+Was the whole prosperity of the British, the far-flung empire, the
+securities, the busy order, just their good luck? It was a question he
+had asked a hundred times of his national as of his personal self. No
+doubt luck had favoured him. He was prosperous, and he was still only at
+the livelier end of middle age. But was there not also a personal
+factor, a meritorious factor? Luck had favoured the British with a
+well-placed island, a hardening climate, accessible minerals, but then
+too was there not also a national virtue? Once he had believed in that,
+in a certain gallantry, a noble levity, an underlying sound sense. The
+last ten years of politics had made him doubt that profoundly. He clung
+to it still, but without confidence. In the night that dear persuasion
+left him altogether.... As for himself he had a certain brightness and
+liveliness of mind, but the year of his fellowship had been a soft year,
+he had got on to _The Times_ through something very like a
+misapprehension, and it was the chances of a dinner and a duchess that
+had given him the opportunity of the Kahn show. He'd dropped into good
+things that suited him. That at any rate was the essence of it. And
+these lucky chances had been no incentive to further effort. Because
+things had gone easily and rapidly with him he had developed indolence
+into a philosophy. Here he was just over forty, and explaining to the
+world, explaining all through the week-end to this American--until even
+God could endure it no longer and the smash stopped him--how excellent
+was the backwardness of Essex and English go-as-you-please, and how
+through good temper it made in some mysterious way for all that was
+desirable. A fat English doctrine. _Punch_ has preached it for forty
+years.
+
+But this wasn't what he had always been. He thought of the strenuous
+intentions of his youth, before he had got into this turmoil of amorous
+experiences, while he was still out there with the clean star of youth.
+As Hugh was....
+
+In those days he had had no amiable doctrine of compromise. He had
+truckled to no "domesticated God," but talked of the "pitiless truth";
+he had tolerated no easy-going pseudo-aristocratic social system, but
+dreamt of such a democracy "mewing its mighty youth" as the world had
+never seen. He had thought that his brains were to do their share in
+building up this great national _imago_, winged, divine, out of the
+clumsy, crawling, snobbish, comfort-loving caterpillar of Victorian
+England. With such dreams his life had started, and the light of them,
+perhaps, had helped him to his rapid success. And then his wife had
+died, and he had married again and become somehow more interested in his
+income, and then the rather expensive first of the eight experiences had
+drained off so much of his imaginative energy, and the second had
+drained off so much, and there had been quarrels and feuds, and the way
+had been lost, and the days had passed. He hadn't failed. Indeed he
+counted as a success among his generation. He alone, in the night
+watches, could gauge the quality of that success. He was widely known,
+reputably known; he prospered. Much had come, oh! by a mysterious luck,
+but everything was doomed by his invincible defects. Beneath that
+hollow, enviable show there ached waste. Waste, waste, waste--his heart,
+his imagination, his wife, his son, his country--his automobile....
+
+Then there flashed into his mind a last straw of disagreeable
+realisation.
+
+He hadn't as yet insured his automobile! He had meant to do so. The
+papers were on his writing-desk.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+On these black nights, when the personal Mr. Britling would lie awake
+thinking how unsatisfactorily Mr. Britling was going on, and when the
+impersonal Mr. Britling would be thinking how unsatisfactorily his
+universe was going on, the whole mental process had a likeness to some
+complex piece of orchestral music wherein the organ deplored the
+melancholy destinies of the race while the piccolo lamented the secret
+trouble of Mrs. Harrowdean; the big drum thundered at the Irish
+politicians, and all the violins bewailed the intellectual laxity of the
+university system. Meanwhile the trumpets prophesied wars and disasters,
+the cymbals ever and again inserted a clashing jar about the fatal delay
+in the automobile insurance, while the triangle broke into a plangent
+solo on the topic of a certain rotten gate-post he always forgot in the
+daytime, and how in consequence the cows from the glebe farm got into
+the garden and ate Mrs. Britling's carnations.
+
+Time after time he had promised to see to that gate-post....
+
+The organ _motif_ battled its way to complete predominance. The lesser
+themes were drowned or absorbed. Mr. Britling returned from the rôle of
+an incompetent automobilist to the rôle of a soul naked in space and
+time wrestling with giant questions. These cosmic solicitudes, it may
+be, are the last penalty of irreligion. Was Huxley right, and was all
+humanity, even as Mr. Britling, a careless, fitful thing, playing a
+tragically hopeless game, thinking too slightly, moving too quickly,
+against a relentless antagonist?
+
+Or is the whole thing just witless, accidentally cruel perhaps, but not
+malignant? Or is it wise, and merely refusing to pamper us? Is there
+somewhere in the immensities some responsive kindliness, some faint hope
+of toleration and assistance, something sensibly on our side against
+death and mechanical cruelty? If so, it certainly refuses to pamper
+us.... But if the whole thing is cruel, perhaps also it is witless and
+will-less? One cannot imagine the ruler of everything a devil--that
+would be silly. So if at the worst it is inanimate then anyhow we have
+our poor wills and our poor wits to pit against it. And manifestly then,
+the good of life, the significance of any life that is not mere
+receptivity, lies in the disciplined and clarified will and the
+sharpened and tempered mind. And what for the last twenty years--for all
+his lectures and writings--had he been doing to marshal the will and
+harden the mind which were his weapons against the Dark? He was ready
+enough to blame others--dons, politicians, public apathy, but what was
+he himself doing?
+
+What was he doing now?
+
+Lying in bed!
+
+His son was drifting to ruin, his country was going to the devil, the
+house was a hospital of people wounded by his carelessness, the country
+roads choked with his smashed (and uninsured) automobiles, the cows were
+probably lined up along the borders and munching Edith's carnations at
+this very moment, his pocketbook and bureau were stuffed with venomous
+insults about her--and he was just lying in bed!
+
+Suddenly Mr. Britling threw back his bedclothes and felt for the matches
+on his bedside table.
+
+Indeed this was by no means the first time that his brain had become a
+whirring torment in his skull. Previous experiences had led to the most
+careful provision for exactly such states. Over the end of the bed hung
+a light, warm pyjama suit of llama-wool, and at the feet of it were two
+tall boots of the same material that buckled to the middle of his calf.
+So protected, Mr. Britling proceeded to make himself tea. A Primus stove
+stood ready inside the fender of his fireplace, and on it was a brightly
+polished brass kettle filled with water; a little table carried a
+tea-caddy, a tea-pot, a lemon and a glass. Mr. Britling lit the stove
+and then strolled to his desk. He was going to write certain "Plain
+Words about Ireland." He lit his study lamp and meditated beside it
+until a sound of water boiling called him to his tea-making.
+
+He returned to his desk stirring the lemon in his glass of tea. He would
+write the plain common sense of this Irish situation. He would put
+things so plainly that this squabbling folly would _have_ to cease. It
+should be done austerely, with a sort of ironical directness. There
+should be no abuse, no bitterness, only a deep passion of sanity.
+
+What is the good of grieving over a smashed automobile?
+
+He sipped his tea and made a few notes on his writing pad. His face in
+the light of his shaded reading lamp had lost its distraught expression,
+his hand fingered his familiar fountain pen....
+
+
+Section 8
+
+The next morning Mr. Britling came into Mr. Direck's room. He was pink
+from his morning bath, he was wearing a cheerful green-and-blue silk
+dressing gown, he had shaved already, he showed no trace of his
+nocturnal vigil. In the bathroom he had whistled like a bird. "Had a
+good night?" he said. "That's famous. So did I. And the wrist and arm
+didn't even ache enough to keep you awake?"
+
+"I thought I heard you talking and walking about," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"I got up for a little bit and worked. I often do that. I hope I didn't
+disturb you. Just for an hour or so. It's so delightfully quiet in the
+night...."
+
+He went to the window and blinked at the garden outside. His two younger
+sons appeared on their bicycles returning from some early expedition. He
+waved a hand of greeting. It was one of those summer mornings when
+attenuated mist seems to fill the very air with sunshine dust.
+
+"This is the sunniest morning bedroom in the house," he said. "It's
+south-east."
+
+The sunlight slashed into the masses of the blue cedar outside with a
+score of golden spears.
+
+"The Dayspring from on High," he said.... "I thought of rather a useful
+pamphlet in the night.
+
+"I've been thinking about your luggage at that hotel," he went on,
+turning to his guest again. "You'll have to write and get it packed up
+and sent down here--
+
+"No," he said, "we won't let you go until you can hit out with that arm
+and fell a man. Listen!"
+
+Mr. Direck could not distinguish any definite sound.
+
+"The smell of frying rashers, I mean," said Mr. Britling. "It's the
+clarion of the morn in every proper English home....
+
+"You'd like a rasher, coffee?
+
+"It's good to work in the night, and it's good to wake in the morning,"
+said Mr. Britling, rubbing his hands together. "I suppose I wrote nearly
+two thousand words. So quiet one is, so concentrated. And as soon as I
+have had my breakfast I shall go on with it again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FIFTH
+
+THE COMING OF THE DAY
+
+
+Section 1
+
+It was quite characteristic of the state of mind of England in the
+summer of 1914 that Mr. Britling should be mightily concerned about the
+conflict in Ireland, and almost deliberately negligent of the
+possibility of a war with Germany.
+
+The armament of Germany, the hostility of Germany, the consistent
+assertion of Germany, the world-wide clash of British and German
+interests, had been facts in the consciousness of Englishmen for more
+than a quarter of a century. A whole generation had been born and
+brought up in the threat of this German war. A threat that goes on for
+too long ceases to have the effect of a threat, and this overhanging
+possibility had become a fixed and scarcely disturbing feature of the
+British situation. It kept the navy sedulous and Colonel Rendezvous
+uneasy; it stimulated a small and not very influential section of the
+press to a series of reminders that bored Mr. Britling acutely, it was
+the excuse for an agitation that made national service ridiculous, and
+quite subconsciously it affected his attitude to a hundred things. For
+example, it was a factor in his very keen indignation at the Tory levity
+in Ireland, in his disgust with many things that irritated or estranged
+Indian feeling. It bored him; there it was, a danger, and there was no
+denying it, and yet he believed firmly that it was a mine that would
+never be fired, an avalanche that would never fall. It was a nuisance, a
+stupidity, that kept Europe drilling and wasted enormous sums on
+unavoidable preparations; it hung up everything like a noisy argument in
+a drawing-room, but that human weakness and folly would ever let the
+mine actually explode he did not believe. He had been in France in 1911,
+he had seen how close things had come then to a conflict, and the fact
+that they had not come to a conflict had enormously strengthened his
+natural disposition to believe that at bottom Germany was sane and her
+militarism a bluff.
+
+But the Irish difficulty was a different thing. There, he felt, was need
+for the liveliest exertions. A few obstinate people in influential
+positions were manifestly pushing things to an outrageous point....
+
+He wrote through the morning--and as the morning progressed the judicial
+calm of his opening intentions warmed to a certain regrettable vigour of
+phrasing about our politicians, about our political ladies, and our
+hand-to-mouth press....
+
+He came down to lunch in a frayed, exhausted condition, and was much
+afflicted by a series of questions from Herr Heinrich. For it was an
+incurable characteristic of Herr Heinrich that he asked questions; the
+greater part of his conversation took the form of question and answer,
+and his thirst for information was as marked as his belief that German
+should not simply be spoken but spoken "out loud." He invariably
+prefaced his inquiries with the word "Please," and he insisted upon
+ascribing an omniscience to his employer that it was extremely irksome
+to justify after a strenuous morning of enthusiastic literary effort. He
+now took the opportunity of a lull in the solicitudes and
+congratulations that had followed Mr. Direck's appearance--and Mr.
+Direck was so little shattered by his misadventure that with the
+assistance of the kindly Teddy he had got up and dressed and come down
+to lunch--to put the matter that had been occupying his mind all the
+morning, even to the detriment of the lessons of the Masters Britling.
+
+"Please!" he said, going a deeper shade of pink and partly turning to
+Mr. Britling.
+
+A look of resignation came into Mr. Britling's eyes. "Yes?" he said.
+
+"I do not think it will be wise to take my ticket for the Esperanto
+Conference at Boulogne. Because I think it is probable to be war between
+Austria and Servia, and that Russia may make war on Austria."
+
+"That may happen. But I think it improbable."
+
+"If Russia makes war on Austria, Germany will make war on Russia, will
+she not?"
+
+"Not if she is wise," said Mr. Britling, "because that would bring in
+France."
+
+"That is why I ask. If Germany goes to war with France I should have to
+go to Germany to do my service. It will be a great inconvenience to me."
+
+"I don't imagine Germany will do anything so frantic as to attack
+Russia. That would not only bring in France but ourselves."
+
+"England?"
+
+"Of course. We can't afford to see France go under. The thing is as
+plain as daylight. So plain that it cannot possibly happen....
+Cannot.... Unless Germany wants a universal war."
+
+"Thank you," said Herr Heinrich, looking obedient rather than reassured.
+
+"I suppose now," said Mr. Direck after a pause, "that there isn't any
+strong party in Germany that wants a war. That young Crown Prince, for
+example."
+
+"They keep him in order," said Mr. Britling a little irritably. "They
+keep him in order....
+
+"I used to be an alarmist about Germany," said Mr. Britling, "but I have
+come to feel more and more confidence in the sound common sense of the
+mass of the German population, and in the Emperor too if it comes to
+that. He is--if Herr Heinrich will permit me to agree with his own
+German comic papers--sometimes a little theatrical, sometimes a little
+egotistical, but in his operatic, boldly coloured way he means peace. I
+am convinced he means peace...."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+After lunch Mr. Britling had a brilliant idea for the ease and comfort
+of Mr. Direck.
+
+It seemed as though Mr. Direck would be unable to write any letters
+until his wrist had mended. Teddy tried him with a typewriter, but Mr.
+Direck was very awkward with his left hand, and then Mr. Britling
+suddenly remembered a little peculiarity he had which it was possible
+that Mr. Direck might share unconsciously, and that was his gift of
+looking-glass writing with his left hand. Mr. Britling had found out
+quite by chance in his schoolboy days that while his right hand had been
+laboriously learning to write, his left hand, all unsuspected, had been
+picking up the same lesson, and that by taking a pencil in his left hand
+and writing from right to left, without watching what he was writing,
+and then examining the scrawl in a mirror, he could reproduce his own
+handwriting in exact reverse. About three people out of five have this
+often quite unsuspected ability. He demonstrated his gift, and then Miss
+Cecily Corner, who had dropped in in a casual sort of way to ask about
+Mr. Direck, tried it, and then Mr. Direck tried it. And they could all
+do it. And then Teddy brought a sheet of copying carbon, and so Mr.
+Direck, by using the carbon reversed under his paper, was restored to
+the world of correspondence again.
+
+They sat round a little table under the cedar trees amusing themselves
+with these experiments, and after that Cecily and Mr. Britling and the
+two small boys entertained themselves by drawing pigs with their eyes
+shut, and then Mr. Britling and Teddy played hard at Badminton until it
+was time for tea. And Cecily sat by Mr. Direck and took an interest in
+his accident, and he told her about summer holidays in the Adirondacks
+and how he loved to travel. She said she would love to travel. He said
+that so soon as he was better he would go on to Paris and then into
+Germany. He was extraordinarily curious about this Germany and its
+tremendous militarism. He'd far rather see it than Italy, which was, he
+thought, just all art and ancient history. His turn was for modern
+problems. Though of course he didn't intend to leave out Italy while he
+was at it. And then their talk was scattered, and there was great
+excitement because Herr Heinrich had lost his squirrel.
+
+He appeared coming out of the house into the sunshine, and so distraught
+that he had forgotten the protection of his hat. He was very pink and
+deeply moved.
+
+"But what shall I do without him?" he cried. "He has gone!"
+
+The squirrel, Mr. Direck gathered, had been bought by Mrs. Britling for
+the boys some month or so ago; it had been christened "Bill" and adored
+and then neglected, until Herr Heinrich took it over. It had filled a
+place in his ample heart that the none too demonstrative affection of
+the Britling household had left empty. He abandoned his pursuit of
+philology almost entirely for the cherishing and adoration of this busy,
+nimble little creature. He carried it off to his own room, where it ran
+loose and took the greatest liberties with him and his apartment. It was
+an extraordinarily bold and savage little beast even for a squirrel, but
+Herr Heinrich had set his heart and his very large and patient will upon
+the establishment of sentimental relations. He believed that ultimately
+Bill would let himself be stroked, that he would make Bill love him and
+understand him, and that his would be the only hand that Bill would ever
+suffer to touch him. In the meanwhile even the untamed Bill was
+wonderful to watch. One could watch him forever. His front paws were
+like hands, like a musician's hands, very long and narrow. "He would be
+a musician if he could only make his fingers go apart, because when I
+play my violin he listens. He is attentive."
+
+The entire household became interested in Herr Heinrich's attacks upon
+Bill's affection. They watched his fingers with particular interest
+because it was upon those that Bill vented his failures to respond to
+the stroking advances.
+
+"To-day I have stroked him once and he has bitten me three times," Herr
+Heinrich reported. "Soon I will stroke him three times and he shall not
+bite me at all.... Also yesterday he climbed up me and sat on my
+shoulder, and suddenly bit my ear. It was not hard he bit, but sudden.
+
+"He does not mean to bite," said Herr Heinrich. "Because when he has bit
+me he is sorry. He is ashamed.
+
+"You can see he is ashamed."
+
+Assisted by the two small boys, Herr Heinrich presently got a huge bough
+of oak and brought it into his room, converting the entire apartment
+into the likeness of an aviary. "For this," said Herr Heinrich, looking
+grave and diplomatic through his glasses, "Billy will be very grateful.
+And it will give him confidence with me. It will make him feel we are in
+the forest together."
+
+Mrs. Britling came to console her husband in the matter.
+
+"It is not right that the bedroom should be filled with trees. All sorts
+of dust and litter came in with it."
+
+"If it amuses him," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"But it makes work for the servants."
+
+"Do they complain?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Things will adjust themselves. And it is amusing that he should do such
+a thing...."
+
+And now Billy had disappeared, and Herr Heinrich was on the verge of
+tears. It was so ungrateful of Billy. Without a word.
+
+"They leave my window open," he complained to Mr. Direck. "Often I have
+askit them not to. And of course he did not understand. He has out
+climbit by the ivy. Anything may have happened to him. Anything. He is
+not used to going out alone. He is too young.
+
+"Perhaps if I call--"
+
+And suddenly he had gone off round the house crying: "Beelee! Beelee!
+Here is an almond for you! An almond, Beelee!"
+
+"Makes me want to get up and help," said Mr. Direck. "It's a tragedy."
+
+Everybody else was helping. Even the gardener and his boy knocked off
+work and explored the upper recesses of various possible trees.
+
+"He is too young," said Herr Heinrich, drifting back.... And then
+presently: "If he heard my voice I am sure he would show himself. But he
+does not show himself."
+
+It was clear he feared the worst....
+
+At supper Billy was the sole topic of conversation, and condolence was
+in the air. The impression that on the whole he had displayed rather a
+brutal character was combated by Herr Heinrich, who held that a certain
+brusqueness was Billy's only fault, and told anecdotes, almost sacred
+anecdotes, of the little creature's tenderer, nobler side. "When I feed
+him always he says, 'Thank you,'" said Herr Heinrich. "He never fails."
+He betrayed darker thoughts. "When I went round by the barn there was a
+cat that sat and looked at me out of a laurel bush," he said. "I do not
+like cats."
+
+Mr. Lawrence Carmine, who had dropped in, was suddenly reminded of that
+lugubrious old ballad, "The Mistletoe Bough," and recited large worn
+fragments of it impressively. It tells of how a beautiful girl hid away
+in a chest during a Christmas game of hide-and-seek, and how she was
+found, a dried vestige, years afterwards. It took a very powerful hold
+upon Herr Heinrich's imagination. "Let us now," he said, "make an
+examination of every box and cupboard and drawer. Marking each as we
+go...."
+
+When Mr. Britling went to bed that night, after a long gossip with
+Carmine about the Bramo Samaj and modern developments of Indian thought
+generally, the squirrel was still undiscovered.
+
+The worthy modern thinker undressed slowly, blew out his candle and got
+into bed. Still meditating deeply upon the God of the Tagores, he thrust
+his right hand under his pillow according to his usual practice, and
+encountered something soft and warm and active. He shot out of bed
+convulsively, lit his candle, and lifted his pillow discreetly.
+
+He discovered the missing Billy looking crumpled and annoyed.
+
+For some moments there was a lively struggle before Billy was gripped.
+He chattered furiously and bit Mr. Britling twice. Then Mr. Britling was
+out in the passage with the wriggling lump of warm fur in his hand, and
+paddling along in the darkness to the door of Herr Heinrich. He opened
+it softly.
+
+A startled white figure sat up in bed sharply.
+
+"Billy," said Mr. Britling by way of explanation, dropped his capture on
+the carpet, and shut the door on the touching reunion.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+A day was to come when Mr. Britling was to go over the history of that
+sunny July with incredulous minuteness, trying to trace the real
+succession of events that led from the startling crime at Sarajevo to
+Europe's last swift rush into war. In a sense it was untraceable; in a
+sense it was so obvious that he was amazed the whole world had not
+watched the coming of disaster. The plain fact of the case was that
+there was no direct connection; the Sarajevo murders were dropped for
+two whole weeks out of the general consciousness, they went out of the
+papers, they ceased to be discussed; then they were picked up again and
+used as an excuse for war. Germany, armed so as to be a threat to all
+the world, weary at last of her mighty vigil, watching the course of
+events, decided that her moment had come, and snatched the dead archduke
+out of his grave again to serve her tremendous ambition.
+
+It may well have seemed to the belligerent German patriot that all her
+possible foes were confused, divided within themselves, at an extremity
+of distraction and impotence. The British Isles seemed slipping steadily
+into civil war. Threat was met by counter-threat, violent fool competed
+with violent fool for the admiration of the world, the National
+Volunteers armed against the Ulster men; everything moved on with a kind
+of mechanical precision from parade and meeting towards the fatal
+gun-running of Howth and the first bloodshed in Dublin streets. That
+wretched affray, far more than any other single thing, must have
+stiffened Germany in the course she had chosen. There can be no doubt of
+it; the mischief makers of Ireland set the final confirmation upon the
+European war. In England itself there was a summer fever of strikes;
+Liverpool was choked by a dockers' strike, the East Anglian agricultural
+labourers were in revolt, and the building trade throughout the country
+was on the verge of a lockout. Russia seemed to be in the crisis of a
+social revolution. From Baku to St. Petersburg there were
+insurrectionary movements in the towns, and on the 23rd--the very day of
+the Austrian ultimatum--Cossacks were storming barbed wire entanglements
+in the streets of the capital. The London Stock Exchange was in a state
+of panic disorganisation because of a vast mysterious selling of
+securities from abroad. And France, France it seemed was lost to all
+other consideration in the enthralling confrontations and denunciations
+of the Caillaux murder trial, the trial of the wife of her ex-prime
+Minister for the murder of a blackmailing journalist. It was a case full
+of the vulgarest sexual violence. Before so piquant a spectacle France
+it seemed could have no time nor attention for the revelation of M.
+Humbert, the Reporter of the Army Committee, proclaiming that the
+artillery was short of ammunition, that her infantry had boots "thirty
+years old" and not enough of those....
+
+Such were the appearances of things. Can it be wondered if it seemed to
+the German mind that the moment for the triumphant assertion of the
+German predominance in the world had come? A day or so before the Dublin
+shooting, the murder of Sarajevo had been dragged again into the
+foreground of the world's affairs by an ultimatum from Austria to Serbia
+of the extremest violence. From the hour when the ultimatum was
+discharged the way to Armageddon lay wide and unavoidable before the
+feet of Europe. After the Dublin conflict there was no turning back. For
+a week Europe was occupied by proceedings that were little more than the
+recital of a formula. Austria could not withdraw her unqualified threats
+without admitting error and defeat, Russia could not desert Serbia
+without disgrace, Germany stood behind Austria, France was bound to
+Russia by a long confederacy of mutual support, and it was impossible
+for England to witness the destruction of France or the further
+strengthening of a loud and threatening rival. It may be that Germany
+counted on Russia giving way to her, it may be she counted on the
+indecisions and feeble perplexities of England, both these possibilities
+were in the reckoning, but chiefly she counted on war. She counted on
+war, and since no nation in all the world had ever been so fully
+prepared in every way for war as she was, she also counted on victory.
+
+One writes "Germany." That is how one writes of nations, as though they
+had single brains and single purposes. But indeed while Mr. Britling lay
+awake and thought of his son and Lady Frensham and his smashed
+automobile and Mrs. Harrowdean's trick of abusive letter-writing and of
+God and evil and a thousand perplexities, a multitude of other brains
+must also have been busy, lying also in beds or sitting in studies or
+watching in guard-rooms or chatting belatedly in cafés or smoking-rooms
+or pacing the bridges of battleships or walking along in city or
+country, upon this huge possibility the crime of Sarajevo had just
+opened, and of the state of the world in relation to such possibilities.
+Few women, one guesses, heeded what was happening, and of the men, the
+men whose decision to launch that implacable threat turned the destinies
+of the world to war, there is no reason to believe that a single one of
+them had anything approaching the imaginative power needed to understand
+fully what it was they were doing. We have looked for an hour or so into
+the seething pot of Mr. Britling's brain and marked its multiple
+strands, its inconsistencies, its irrational transitions. It was but a
+specimen. Nearly every brain of the select few that counted in this
+cardinal determination of the world's destinies, had its streak of
+personal motive, its absurd and petty impulses and deflections. One man
+decided to say _this_ because if he said _that_ he would contradict
+something he had said and printed four or five days ago; another took a
+certain line because so he saw his best opportunity of putting a rival
+into a perplexity. It would be strange if one could reach out now and
+recover the states of mind of two such beings as the German Kaiser and
+his eldest son as Europe stumbled towards her fate through the long days
+and warm, close nights of that July. Here was the occasion for which so
+much of their lives had been but the large pretentious preparation,
+coming right into their hands to use or forgo, here was the opportunity
+that would put them into the very forefront of history forever; this
+journalist emperor with the paralysed arm, this common-fibred, sly,
+lascivious son. It is impossible that they did not dream of glory over
+all the world, of triumphant processions, of a world-throne that would
+outshine Caesar's, of a godlike elevation, of acting Divus Caesar while
+yet alive. And being what they were they must have imagined spectators,
+and the young man, who was after all a young man of particularly poor
+quality, imagined no doubt certain women onlookers, certain humiliated
+and astonished friends, and thought of the clothes he would wear and
+the gestures he would make. The nickname his English cousins had given
+this heir to all the glories was the "White Rabbit." He was the backbone
+of the war party at court. And presently he stole bric-ŕ-brac. That will
+help posterity to the proper values of things in 1914. And the Teutonic
+generals and admirals and strategists with their patient and perfect
+plans, who were so confident of victory, each within a busy skull must
+have enacted anticipatory dreams of his personal success and marshalled
+his willing and unwilling admirers. Readers of histories and memoirs as
+most of this class of men are, they must have composed little eulogistic
+descriptions of the part themselves were to play in the opening drama,
+imagined pleasing vindications and interesting documents. Some of them
+perhaps saw difficulties, but few foresaw failure. For all this set of
+brains the thing came as a choice to take or reject; they could make war
+or prevent it. And they chose war.
+
+It is doubtful if any one outside the directing intelligence of Germany
+and Austria saw anything so plain. The initiative was with Germany. The
+Russian brains and the French brains and the British brains, the few
+that were really coming round to look at this problem squarely, had a
+far less simple set of problems and profounder uncertainties. To Mr.
+Britling's mind the Round Table Conference at Buckingham Palace was
+typical of the disunion and indecision that lasted up to the very
+outbreak of hostilities. The solemn violence of Sir Edward Carson was
+intensely antipathetic to Mr. Britling, and in his retrospective
+inquiries he pictured to himself that dark figure with its dropping
+under-lip, seated, heavy and obstinate, at that discussion, still
+implacable though the King had but just departed after a little speech
+that was packed with veiled intimations of imminent danger...
+
+Mr. Britling had no mercy in his mind for the treason of obstinate
+egotism and for persistence in a mistaken course. His own temperamental
+weaknesses lay in such different directions. He was always ready to
+leave one trail for another; he was always open to conviction, trusting
+to the essentials of his character for an ultimate consistency. He hated
+Carson in those days as a Scotch terrier might hate a bloodhound, as
+something at once more effective and impressive, and exasperatingly,
+infinitely less intelligent.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+Thus--a vivid fact as yet only in a few hundred skulls or so--the vast
+catastrophe of the Great War gathered behind the idle, dispersed and
+confused spectacle of an indifferent world, very much as the storms and
+rains of late September gathered behind the glow and lassitudes of
+August, and with scarcely more of set human intention. For the greater
+part of mankind the European international situation was at most
+something in the papers, no more important than the political
+disturbances in South Africa, where the Herzogites were curiously
+uneasy, or the possible trouble between Turkey and Greece. The things
+that really interested people in England during the last months of peace
+were boxing and the summer sales. A brilliant young Frenchman,
+Carpentier, who had knocked out Bombardier Wells, came over again to
+defeat Gunboat Smith, and did so to the infinite delight of France and
+the whole Latin world, amidst the generous applause of Anglo-Saxondom.
+And there was also a British triumph over the Americans at polo, and a
+lively and cultured newspaper discussion about a proper motto for the
+arms of the London County Council. The trial of Madame Caillaux filled
+the papers with animated reports and vivid pictures; Gregori Rasputin
+was stabbed and became the subject of much lively gossip about the
+Russian Court; and Ulivi, the Italian impostor who claimed he could
+explode mines by means of an "ultra-red" ray, was exposed and fled with
+a lady, very amusingly. For a few days all the work at Woolwich Arsenal
+was held up because a certain Mr. Entwhistle, having refused to erect a
+machine on a concrete bed laid down by non-unionists, was rather
+uncivilly dismissed, and the Irish trouble pounded along its tiresome
+mischievous way. People gave a divided attention to these various
+topics, and went about their individual businesses.
+
+And at Dower House they went about their businesses. Mr. Direck's arm
+healed rapidly; Cecily Corner and he talked of their objects in life and
+Utopias and the books of Mr. Britling, and he got down from a London
+bookseller Baedeker's guides for Holland and Belgium, South Germany and
+Italy; Herr Heinrich after some doubt sent in his application form and
+his preliminary deposit for the Esperanto Conference at Boulogne, and
+Billy consented to be stroked three times but continued to bite with
+great vigour and promptitude. And the trouble about Hugh, Mr. Britling's
+eldest son, resolved itself into nothing of any vital importance, and
+settled itself very easily.
+
+
+Section 5
+
+After Hugh had cleared things up and gone back to London Mr. Britling
+was inclined to think that such a thing as apprehension was a sin
+against the general fairness and integrity of life.
+
+Of all things in the world Hugh was the one that could most easily rouse
+Mr. Britling's unhappy aptitude for distressing imaginations. Hugh was
+nearer by far to his heart and nerves than any other creature. In the
+last few years Mr. Britling, by the light of a variety of emotional
+excursions in other directions, had been discovering this. Whatever Mr.
+Britling discovered he talked about; he had evolved from his realisation
+of this tenderness, which was without an effort so much tenderer than
+all the subtle and tremendous feelings he had attempted in
+his--excursions, the theory that he had expounded to Mr. Direck that it
+is only through our children that we are able to achieve disinterested
+love, real love. But that left unexplained that far more intimate
+emotional hold of Hugh than of his very jolly little step-brothers. That
+was a fact into which Mr. Britling rather sedulously wouldn't look....
+
+Mr. Britling was probably much franker and more open-eyed with himself
+and the universe than a great number of intelligent people, and yet
+there were quite a number of aspects of his relations with his wife,
+with people about him, with his country and God and the nature of
+things, upon which he turned his back with an attentive persistence. But
+a back too resolutely turned may be as indicative as a pointing finger,
+and in this retrogressive way, and tacitly even so far as his formal
+thoughts, his unspoken comments, went, Mr. Britling knew that he loved
+his son because he had lavished the most hope and the most imagination
+upon him, because he was the one living continuation of that dear life
+with Mary, so lovingly stormy at the time, so fine now in memory, that
+had really possessed the whole heart of Mr. Britling. The boy had been
+the joy and marvel of the young parents; it was incredible to them that
+there had ever been a creature so delicate and sweet, and they brought
+considerable imagination and humour to the detailed study of his minute
+personality and to the forecasting of his future. Mr. Britling's mind
+blossomed with wonderful schemes for his education. All that mental
+growth no doubt contributed greatly to Mr. Britling's peculiar
+affection, and with it there interwove still tenderer and subtler
+elements, for the boy had a score of Mary's traits. But there were other
+things still more conspicuously ignored. One silent factor in the slow
+widening of the breach between Edith and Mr. Britling was her cool
+estimate of her stepson. She was steadfastly kind to this shock-headed,
+untidy little dreamer, he was extremely well cared for in her hands, she
+liked him and she was amused by him--it is difficult to imagine what
+more Mr. Britling could have expected--but it was as plain as daylight
+that she felt that this was not the child she would have cared to have
+borne. It was quite preposterous and perfectly natural that this should
+seem to Mr. Britling to be unfair to Hugh.
+
+Edith's home was more prosperous than Mary's; she brought her own money
+to it; the bringing up of her children was a far more efficient business
+than Mary's instinctive proceedings. Hugh had very nearly died in his
+first year of life; some summer infection had snatched at him; that had
+tied him to his father's heart by a knot of fear; but no infection had
+ever come near Edith's own nursery. And it was Hugh that Mr. Britling
+had seen, small and green-faced and pitiful under an anaesthetic for
+some necessary small operation to his adenoids. His younger children had
+never stabbed to Mr. Britling's heart with any such pitifulness; they
+were not so thin-skinned as their elder brother, not so assailable by
+the little animosities of dust and germ. And out of such things as this
+evolved a shapeless cloud of championship for Hugh. Jealousies and
+suspicions are latent in every human relationship. We go about the
+affairs of life pretending magnificently that they are not so,
+pretending to the generosities we desire. And in all step-relationships
+jealousy and suspicion are not merely latent, they stir.
+
+It was Mr. Britling's case for Hugh that he was something exceptional,
+something exceptionally good, and that the peculiar need there was to
+take care of him was due to a delicacy of nerve and fibre that was
+ultimately a virtue. The boy was quick, quick to hear, quick to move,
+very accurate in his swift way, he talked unusually soon, he began to
+sketch at an early age with an incurable roughness and a remarkable
+expressiveness. That he was sometimes ungainly, often untidy, that he
+would become so mentally preoccupied as to be uncivil to people about
+him, that he caught any malaise that was going, was all a part of that.
+The sense of Mrs. Britling's unexpressed criticisms, the implied
+contrasts with the very jolly, very uninspired younger family, kept up
+a nervous desire in Mr. Britling for evidences and manifestations of
+Hugh's quality. Not always with happy results; it caused much mutual
+irritation, but not enough to prevent the growth of a real response on
+Hugh's part to his father's solicitude. The youngster knew and felt that
+his father was his father just as certainly as he felt that Mrs.
+Britling was not his mother. To his father he brought his successes and
+to his father he appealed.
+
+But he brought his successes more readily than he brought his troubles.
+So far as he himself was concerned he was disposed to take a humorous
+view of the things that went wrong and didn't come off with him, but as
+a "Tremendous Set-Down for the Proud Parent" they resisted humorous
+treatment....
+
+Now the trouble that he had been hesitating to bring before his father
+was concerned with that very grave interest of the young, his Object in
+Life. It had nothing to do with those erotic disturbances that had
+distressed his father's imagination. Whatever was going on below the
+surface of Hugh's smiling or thoughtful presence in that respect had
+still to come to the surface and find expression. But he was bothered
+very much by divergent strands in his own intellectual composition. Two
+sets of interests pulled at him, one--it will seem a dry interest to
+many readers, but for Hugh it glittered and fascinated--was
+crystallography and molecular physics; the other was caricature. Both
+aptitudes sprang no doubt from the same exceptional sensitiveness to
+form. As a schoolboy he exercised both very happily, but now he was
+getting to the age of specialisation, and he was fluctuating very much
+between science and art. After a spell of scientific study he would come
+upon a fatigue period and find nothing in life but absurdities and a
+lark that one could represent very amusingly; after a bout of funny
+drawings his mind went back to his light and crystals and films like a
+Magdalen repenting in a church. After his public school he had refused
+Cambridge and gone to University College, London, to work under the
+great and inspiring Professor Cardinal; simultaneously Cardinal had been
+arranging to go to Cambridge, and Hugh had scarcely embarked upon his
+London work when Cardinal was succeeded by the dull, conscientious and
+depressing Pelkingham, at whose touch crystals became as puddings,
+bubble films like cotton sheets, transparency vanished from the world,
+and X rays dwarfed and died. And Hugh degenerated immediately into a
+scoffing trifler who wished to give up science for art.
+
+He gave up science for art after grave consultation with his father, and
+the real trouble that had been fretting him, it seemed, was that now he
+repented and wanted to follow Cardinal to Cambridge, and--a year
+lost--go on with science again. He felt it was a discreditable
+fluctuation; he knew it would be a considerable expense; and so he took
+two weeks before he could screw himself up to broaching the matter.
+
+"So _that_ is all," said Mr. Britling, immensely relieved.
+
+"My dear Parent, you didn't think I had backed a bill or forged a
+cheque?"
+
+"I thought you might have married a chorus girl or something of that
+sort," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Or bought a large cream-coloured motor-car for her on the instalment
+system, which she'd smashed up. No, that sort of thing comes later....
+I'll just put myself down on the waiting list of one of those bits of
+delight in the Cambridge tobacco shops--and go on with my studies for a
+year or two...."
+
+
+Section 6
+
+Though Mr. Britling's anxiety about his son was dispelled, his mind
+remained curiously apprehensive throughout July. He had a feeling that
+things were not going well with the world, a feeling he tried in vain to
+dispel by various distractions. Perhaps some subtler subconscious
+analysis of the situation was working out probabilities that his
+conscious self would not face. And when presently he bicycled off to
+Mrs. Harrowdean for flattery, amusement, and comfort generally, he found
+her by no means the exalting confirmation of everything he wished to
+believe about himself and the universe, that had been her delightful
+rôle in the early stages of their romantic friendship. She maintained
+her hostility to Edith; she seemed bent on making things impossible. And
+yet there were one or two phases of the old sustaining intimacies.
+
+They walked across her absurd little park to the summer-house with the
+view on the afternoon of his arrival, and they discussed the Irish
+pamphlet which was now nearly finished.
+
+"Of course," she said, "it will be a wonderful pamphlet."
+
+There was a reservation in her voice that made him wait.
+
+"But I suppose all sorts of people could write an Irish pamphlet. Nobody
+but you could write 'The Silent Places.' Oh, _why_ don't you finish that
+great beautiful thing, and leave all this world of reality and
+newspapers, all these Crude, Vulgar, Quarrelsome, Jarring things to
+other people? You have the magic gift, you might be a poet, you can take
+us out of all these horrid things that are, away to Beautyland, and you
+are just content to be a critic and a disputer. It's your surroundings.
+It's your sordid realities. It's that Practicality at your elbow. You
+ought never to see a newspaper. You ought never to have an American come
+within ten miles of you. You ought to live on bowls of milk drunk in
+valleys of asphodel."
+
+Mr. Britling, who liked this sort of thing in a way, and yet at the same
+time felt ridiculously distended and altogether preposterous while it
+was going on, answered feebly and self-consciously.
+
+"There was your letter in the _Nation_ the other day," she said. "Why
+_do_ you get drawn into arguments? I wanted to rush into the _Nation_
+and pick you up and wipe the anger off you, and carry you out of it
+all--into some quiet beautiful place."
+
+"But one _has_ to answer these people," said Mr. Britling, rolling along
+by the side of her like a full moon beside Venus, and quite artlessly
+falling in with the tone of her.
+
+She repeated lines from "The Silent Places" from memory. She threw quite
+wonderful emotion into her voice. She made the words glow. And he had
+only shown her the thing once....
+
+Was he indeed burying a marvellous gift under the dust of current
+affairs? When at last in the warm evening light they strolled back from
+the summer-house to dinner he had definitely promised her that he would
+take up and finish "The Silent Places."... And think over the Irish
+pamphlet again before he published it....
+
+Pyecrafts was like a crystal casket of finer soil withdrawn from the
+tarred highways of the earth....
+
+And yet the very next day this angel enemy of controversies broke out in
+the most abominable way about Edith, and he had to tell her more plainly
+than he had done hitherto, that he could not tolerate that sort of
+thing. He wouldn't have Edith guyed. He wouldn't have Edith made to seem
+base. And at that there was much trouble between them, and tears and
+talk of Oliver....
+
+Mr. Britling found himself unable to get on either with "The Silent
+Places" or the pamphlet, and he was very unhappy....
+
+Afterwards she repented very touchingly, and said that if only he would
+love her she would swallow a thousand Ediths. He waived a certain
+disrespect in the idea of her swallowing Edith, and they had a beautiful
+reconciliation and talked of exalted things, and in the evening he
+worked quite well upon "The Silent Places" and thought of half-a-dozen
+quite wonderful lines, and in the course of the next day he returned to
+Dower House and Mr. Direck and considerable piles of correspondence and
+the completion of the Irish pamphlet.
+
+But he was restless. He was more restless in his house than he had ever
+been. He could not understand it. Everything about him was just as it
+had always been, and yet it was unsatisfactory, and it seemed more
+unstable than anything had ever seemed before. He was bored by the
+solemn development of the Irish dispute; he was irritated by the
+smouldering threat of the Balkans; he was irritated by the suffragettes
+and by a string of irrational little strikes; by the general absence of
+any main plot as it were to hold all these wranglings and trivialities
+together.... At the Dower House the most unpleasant thoughts would come
+to him. He even had doubts whether in "The Silent Places," he had been
+plagiarising, more or less unconsciously, from Henry James's "Great Good
+Place."...
+
+On the twenty-first of July Gladys came back repaired and looking none
+the worse for her misadventure. Next day he drove her very carefully
+over to Pyecrafts, hoping to drug his uneasiness with the pretence of a
+grand passion and the praises of "The Silent Places," that beautiful
+work of art that was so free from any taint of application, and alas! he
+found Mrs. Harrowdean in an evil mood. He had been away from her for ten
+days--ten whole days. No doubt Edith had manoeuvred to keep him. She
+hadn't! _Hadn't_ she? How was he, poor simple soul! to tell that she
+hadn't? That was the prelude to a stormy afternoon.
+
+The burthen of Mrs. Harrowdean was that she was wasting her life, that
+she was wasting the poor, good, patient Oliver's life, that for the sake
+of friendship she was braving the worst imputations and that he treated
+her cavalierly, came when he wished to do so, stayed away heartlessly,
+never thought she needed _little_ treats, _little_ attentions, _little_
+presents. Did he think she could settle down to her poor work, such as
+it was, in neglect and loneliness? He forgot women were dear little
+tender things, and had to be made happy and _kept_ happy. Oliver might
+not be clever and attractive but he did at least in his clumsy way
+understand and try and do his duty....
+
+Towards the end of the second hour of such complaints the spirit of Mr.
+Britling rose in revolt. He lifted up his voice against her, he charged
+his voice with indignant sorrow and declared that he had come over to
+Pyecrafts with no thought in his mind but sweet and loving thoughts,
+that he had but waited for Gladys to be ready before he came, that he
+had brought over the manuscript of "The Silent Places" with him to
+polish and finish up, that "for days and days" he had been longing to do
+this in the atmosphere of the dear old summer-house with its distant
+view of the dear old sea, and that now all that was impossible, that
+Mrs. Harrowdean had made it impossible and that indeed she was rapidly
+making everything impossible....
+
+And having delivered himself of this judgment Mr. Britling, a little
+surprised at the rapid vigour of his anger, once he had let it loose,
+came suddenly to an end of his words, made a renunciatory gesture with
+his arms, and as if struck with the idea, rushed out of her room and out
+of the house to where Gladys stood waiting. He got into her and started
+her up, and after some trouble with the gear due to the violence of his
+emotion, he turned her round and departed with her--crushing the corner
+of a small bed of snapdragon as he turned--and dove her with a sulky
+sedulousness back to the Dower House and newspapers and correspondence
+and irritations, and that gnawing and irrational sense of a hollow and
+aimless quality in the world that he had hoped Mrs. Harrowdean would
+assuage. And the further he went from Mrs. Harrowdean the harsher and
+unjuster it seemed to him that he had been to her.
+
+But he went on because he did not see how he could very well go back.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Mr. Direck's broken wrist healed sooner than he desired. From the first
+he had protested that it was the sort of thing that one can carry about
+in a sling, that he was quite capable of travelling about and taking
+care of himself in hotels, that he was only staying on at Matching's
+Easy because he just loved to stay on and wallow in Mrs. Britling's
+kindness and Mr. Britling's company. While as a matter of fact he
+wallowed as much as he could in the freshness and friendliness of Miss
+Cecily Corner, and for more than a third of this period Mr. Britling was
+away from home altogether.
+
+Mr. Direck, it should be clear by this time, was a man of more than
+European simplicity and directness, and his intentions towards the young
+lady were as simple and direct and altogether honest as such intentions
+can be. It is the American conception of gallantry more than any other
+people's, to let the lady call the tune in these affairs; the man's
+place is to be protective, propitiatory, accommodating and clever, and
+the lady's to be difficult but delightful until he catches her and
+houses her splendidly and gives her a surprising lot of pocket-money,
+and goes about his business; and upon these assumptions Mr. Direck went
+to work. But quite early it was manifest to him that Cecily did not
+recognise his assumptions. She was embarrassed when he got down one or
+two little presents of chocolates and flowers for her from London--the
+Britling boys were much more appreciative--she wouldn't let him contrive
+costly little expeditions for her, and she protested against compliments
+and declared she would stay away when he paid them. And she was not
+contented by his general sentiments about life, but asked the most
+direct questions about his occupation and his activities. His chief
+occupation was being the well provided heir of a capable lawyer, and
+his activities in the light of her inquiries struck him as being light
+and a trifle amateurish, qualities he had never felt as any drawback
+about them before. So that he had to rely rather upon aspirations and
+the possibility, under proper inspiration, of a more actively
+serviceable life in future.
+
+"There's a feeling in the States," he said, "that we've had rather a
+tendency to overdo work, and that there is scope for a leisure class to
+develop the refinement and the wider meanings of life."
+
+"But a leisure class doesn't mean a class that does nothing," said
+Cecily. "It only means a class that isn't busy in business."
+
+"You're too hard on me," said Mr. Direck with that quiet smile of his.
+
+And then by way of putting her on the defensive he asked her what she
+thought a man in his position ought to do.
+
+"_Something_," she said, and in the expansion of this vague demand they
+touched on a number of things. She said that she was a Socialist, and
+there was still in Mr. Direck's composition a streak of the
+old-fashioned American prejudice against the word. He associated
+Socialists with Anarchists and deported aliens. It was manifest too that
+she was deeply read in the essays and dissertations of Mr. Britling. She
+thought everybody, man or woman, ought to be chiefly engaged in doing
+something definite for the world at large. ("There's my secretaryship of
+the Massachusetts Modern Thought Society, anyhow," said Mr. Direck.) And
+she herself wanted to be doing something--it was just because she did
+not know what it was she ought to be doing that she was reading so
+extensively and voraciously. She wanted to lose herself in something.
+Deep in the being of Mr. Direck was the conviction that what she ought
+to be doing was making love in a rapturously egotistical manner, and
+enjoying every scrap of her own delightful self and her own delightful
+vitality--while she had it, but for the purposes of their conversation
+he did not care to put it any more definitely than to say that he
+thought we owed it to ourselves to develop our personalities. Upon which
+she joined issue with great vigour.
+
+"That is just what Mr. Britling says about you in his 'American
+Impressions,'" she said. "He says that America overdoes the development
+of personalities altogether, that whatever else is wrong about America
+that is where America is most clearly wrong. I read that this morning,
+and directly I read it I thought, 'Yes, that's exactly it! Mr. Direck is
+overdoing the development of personalities.'"
+
+"Me!"
+
+"Yes. I like talking to you and I don't like talking to you. And I see
+now it is because you keep on talking of my Personality and your
+Personality. That makes me uncomfortable. It's like having some one
+following me about with a limelight. And in a sort of way I do like it.
+I like it and I'm flattered by it, and then I go off and dislike it,
+dislike the effect of it. I find myself trying to be what you have told
+me I am--sort of acting myself. I want to glance at looking-glasses to
+see if I am keeping it up. It's just exactly what Mr. Britling says in
+his book about American women. They act themselves, he says; they get a
+kind of story and explanation about themselves and they are always
+trying to make it perfectly plain and clear to every one. Well, when you
+do that you can't think nicely of other things."
+
+"We like a clear light on people," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"We don't. I suppose we're shadier," said Cecily.
+
+"You're certainly much more in half-tones," said Mr. Direck. "And I
+confess it's the half-tones get hold of me. But still you haven't told
+me, Miss Cissie, what you think I ought to do with myself. Here I am,
+you see, very much at your disposal. What sort of business do you think
+it's my duty to go in for?"
+
+"That's for some one with more experience than I have, to tell you. You
+should ask Mr. Britling."
+
+"I'd rather have it from you."
+
+"I don't even know for myself," she said.
+
+"So why shouldn't we start to find out together?" he asked.
+
+It was her tantalising habit to ignore all such tentatives.
+
+"One can't help the feeling that one is in the world for something more
+than oneself," she said....
+
+
+Section 8
+
+Soon Mr. Direck could measure the time that was left to him at the Dower
+House no longer by days but by hours. His luggage was mostly packed, his
+tickets to Rotterdam, Cologne, Munich, Dresden, Vienna, were all in
+order. And things were still very indefinite between him and Cecily. But
+God has not made Americans clean-shaven and firm-featured for nothing,
+and he determined that matters must be brought to some sort of
+definition before he embarked upon travels that were rapidly losing
+their attractiveness in this concentration of his attention....
+
+A considerable nervousness betrayed itself in his voice and manner when
+at last he carried out his determination.
+
+"There's just a lil' thing," he said to her, taking advantage of a
+moment when they were together after lunch, "that I'd value now more
+than anything else in the world."
+
+She answered by a lifted eyebrow and a glance that had not so much
+inquiry in it as she intended.
+
+"If we could just take a lil' walk together for a bit. Round by
+Claverings Park and all that. See the deer again and the old trees. Sort
+of scenery I'd like to remember when I'm away from it."
+
+He was a little short of breath, and there was a quite disproportionate
+gravity about her moment for consideration.
+
+"Yes," she said with a cheerful acquiescence that came a couple of bars
+too late. "Let's. It will be jolly."
+
+"These fine English afternoons are wonderful afternoons," he remarked
+after a moment or so of silence. "Not quite the splendid blaze we get in
+our summer, but--sort of glowing."
+
+"It's been very fine all the time you've been here," she said....
+
+After which exchanges they went along the lane, into the road by the
+park fencing, and so to the little gate that lets one into the park,
+without another word.
+
+The idea took hold of Mr. Direck's mind that until they got through the
+park gate it would be quite out of order to say anything. The lane and
+the road and the stile and the gate were all so much preliminary stuff
+to be got through before one could get to business. But after the little
+white gate the way was clear, the park opened out and one could get
+ahead without bothering about the steering. And Mr. Direck had, he felt,
+been diplomatically involved in lanes and by-ways long enough.
+
+"Well," he said as he rejoined her after very carefully closing the
+gate. "What I really wanted was an opportunity of just mentioning
+something that happens to be of interest to you--if it does happen to
+interest you.... I suppose I'd better put the thing as simply as
+possible.... Practically.... I'm just right over the head and all in
+love with you.... I thought I'd like to tell you...."
+
+Immense silences.
+
+"Of course I won't pretend there haven't been others," Mr. Direck
+suddenly resumed. "There have. One particularly. But I can assure you
+I've never felt the depth and height or anything like the sort of Quiet
+Clear Conviction.... And now I'm just telling you these things, Miss
+Corner, I don't know whether it will interest you if I tell you that
+you're really and truly the very first love I ever had as well as my
+last. I've had sent over--I got it only yesterday--this lil' photograph
+of a miniature portrait of one of my ancestor's relations--a Corner just
+as you are. It's here...."
+
+He had considerable difficulties with his pockets and papers. Cecily,
+mute and flushed and inconvenienced by a preposterous and unaccountable
+impulse to weep, took the picture he handed her.
+
+"When I was a lil' fellow of fifteen," said Mr. Direck in the tone of
+one producing a melancholy but conclusive piece of evidence, "I
+_worshipped_ that miniature. It seemed to me--the loveliest person....
+And--it's just you...."
+
+He too was preposterously moved.
+
+It seemed a long time before Cecily had anything to say, and then what
+she had to say she said in a softened, indistinct voice. "You're very
+kind," she said, and kept hold of the little photograph.
+
+They had halted for the photograph. Now they walked on again.
+
+"I thought I'd like to tell you," said Mr. Direck and became
+tremendously silent.
+
+Cecily found him incredibly difficult to answer. She tried to make
+herself light and offhand, and to be very frank with him.
+
+"Of course," she said, "I knew--I felt somehow--you meant to say
+something of this sort to me--when you asked me to come with you--"
+
+"Well?" he said.
+
+"And I've been trying to make my poor brain think of something to say to
+you."
+
+She paused and contemplated her difficulties....
+
+"Couldn't you perhaps say something of the same kind--such as I've been
+trying to say?" said Mr. Direck presently, with a note of earnest
+helpfulness. "I'd be very glad if you could."
+
+"Not exactly," said Cecily, more careful than ever.
+
+"Meaning?"
+
+"I think you know that you are the best of friends. I think you are,
+oh--a Perfect Dear."
+
+"Well--that's all right--so far."
+
+"That _is_ as far."
+
+"You don't know whether you love me? That's what you mean to say."
+
+"No.... I feel somehow it isn't that.... Yet...."
+
+"There's nobody else by any chance?"
+
+"No." Cecily weighed things. "You needn't trouble about that."
+
+"Only ... only you don't know."
+
+Cecily made a movement of assent.
+
+"It's no good pretending I haven't thought about you," she said.
+
+"Well, anyhow I've done my best to give you the idea," said Mr. Direck.
+"I seem now to have been doing that pretty nearly all the time."
+
+"Only what should we do?"
+
+Mr. Direck felt this question was singularly artless. "Why!--we'd
+marry," he said. "And all that sort of thing."
+
+"Letty has married--and all that sort of thing," said Cecily, fixing her
+eye on him very firmly because she was colouring brightly. "And it
+doesn't leave Letty very much--forrader."
+
+"Well now, they have a good time, don't they? I'd have thought they have
+a lovely time!"
+
+"They've had a lovely time. And Teddy is the dearest husband. And they
+have a sweet little house and a most amusing baby. And they play hockey
+every Sunday. And Teddy does his work. And every week is like every
+other week. It is just heavenly. Just always the same heavenly. Every
+Sunday there is a fresh week of heavenly beginning. And this, you see,
+isn't heaven; it is earth. And they don't know it but they are getting
+bored. I have been watching them, and they are getting dreadfully bored.
+It's heart-breaking to watch, because they are almost my dearest people.
+Teddy used to be making perpetual jokes about the house and the baby and
+his work and Letty, and now--he's made all the possible jokes. It's only
+now and then he gets a fresh one. It's like spring flowers and
+then--summer. And Letty sits about and doesn't sing. They want something
+new to happen.... And there's Mr. and Mrs. Britling. They love each
+other. Much more than Mrs. Britling dreams, or Mr. Britling for the
+matter of that. Once upon a time things were heavenly for them too, I
+suppose. Until suddenly it began to happen to them that nothing new ever
+happened...."
+
+"Well," said Mr. Direck, "people can travel."
+
+"But that isn't _real_ happening," said Cecily.
+
+"It keeps one interested."
+
+"But real happening is doing something."
+
+"You come back to that," said Mr. Direck. "I never met any one before
+who'd quite got that spirit as you have it. I wouldn't alter it. It's
+part of you. It's part of this place. It's what Mr. Britling always
+seems to be saying and never quite knowing he's said it. It's just as
+though all the things that are going on weren't the things that ought to
+be going on--but something else quite different. Somehow one falls into
+it. It's as if your daily life didn't matter, as if politics didn't
+matter, as if the King and the social round and business and all those
+things weren't anything really, and as though you felt there was
+something else--out of sight--round the corner--that you ought to be
+getting at. Well, I admit, that's got hold of me too. And it's all mixed
+up with my idea of you. I don't see that there's really a contradiction
+in it at all. I'm in love with you, all my heart's in love with you,
+what's the good of being shy about it? I'd just die for your littlest
+wish right here now, it's just as though I'd got love in my veins
+instead of blood, but that's not taking me away from that other thing.
+It's bringing me round to that other thing. I feel as if without you I
+wasn't up to anything at all, but _with_ you--We'd not go settling down
+in a cottage or just touring about with a Baedeker Guide or anything of
+that kind. Not for long anyhow. We'd naturally settle down side by side
+and _do_ ..."
+
+"But what should we do?" asked Cecily.
+
+There came a hiatus in their talk.
+
+Mr. Direck took a deep breath.
+
+"You see that old felled tree there. I was sitting on it the day before
+yesterday and thinking of you. Will you come there and sit with me on
+it? When you sit on it you get a view, oh! a perfectly lovely English
+view, just a bit of the house and those clumps of trees and the valley
+away there with the lily pond. I'd love to have you in my memory of
+it...."
+
+They sat down, and Mr. Direck opened his case. He was shy and clumsy
+about opening it, because he had been thinking dreadfully hard about it,
+and he hated to seem heavy or profound or anything but artless and
+spontaneous to Cecily. And he felt even when he did open his case that
+the effect of it was platitudinous and disappointing. Yet when he had
+thought it out it had seemed very profound and altogether living.
+
+"You see one doesn't want to use terms that have been used in a thousand
+different senses in any way that isn't a perfectly unambiguous sense,
+and at the same time one doesn't want to seem to be canting about things
+or pitching anything a note or two higher than it ought legitimately to
+go, but it seems to me that this sort of something that Mr. Britling is
+always asking for in his essays and writings and things, and what you
+are looking for just as much and which seems so important to you that
+even love itself is a secondary kind of thing until you can square the
+two together, is nothing more nor less than Religion--I don't mean this
+Religion or that Religion but just Religion itself, a Big, Solemn,
+Comprehensive Idea that holds you and me and all the world together in
+one great, grand universal scheme. And though it isn't quite the sort of
+idea of love-making that's been popular--well, in places like
+Carrierville--for some time, it's the right idea; it's got to be
+followed out if we don't want love-making to be a sort of idle,
+troublesome game of treats and flatteries that is sure as anything to
+lead right away to disappointments and foolishness and unfaithfulness
+and--just Hell. What you are driving at, according to my interpretation,
+is that marriage has got to be a religious marriage or else you are
+splitting up life, that religion and love are most of life and all the
+power there is in it, and that they can't afford to be harnessed in two
+different directions.... I never had these ideas until I came here and
+met you, but they come up now in my mind as though they had always been
+there.... And that's why you don't want to marry in a hurry. And that's
+why I'm glad almost that you don't want to marry in a hurry."
+
+He considered. "That's why I'll have to go on to Germany and just let
+both of us turn things over in our minds."
+
+"Yes," said Cecily, weighing his speech. "_I_ think that is it. I think
+that I do want a religious marriage, and that what is wrong with Teddy
+and Letty is that they aren't religious. They pretend they are religious
+somewhere out of sight and round the corner.... Only--"
+
+He considered her gravely.
+
+"What _is_ Religion?" she asked.
+
+Here again there was a considerable pause.
+
+"Very nearly two-thirds of the papers read before our Massachusetts
+society since my connection with it, have dealt with that very
+question," Mr. Direck began. "And one of our most influential members
+was able to secure the services of a very able and highly trained young
+woman from Michigan University, to make a digest of all these
+representative utterances. We are having it printed in a thoroughly
+artistic mariner, as the club book for our autumn season. The drift of
+her results is that religion isn't the same thing as religions. That
+most religions are old and that religion is always new.... Well, putting
+it simply, religion is the perpetual rediscovery of that Great Thing Out
+There.... What the Great Thing is goes by all sorts of names, but if you
+know it's there and if you remember it's there, you've got religion....
+That's about how she figured it out.... I shall send you the book as
+soon as a copy comes over to me.... I can't profess to put it as clearly
+as she puts it. She's got a real analytical mind. But it's one of the
+most suggestive lil' books I've ever seen. It just takes hold of you and
+_makes_ you think."
+
+He paused and regarded the ground before him--thoughtfully.
+
+"Life," said Cecily, "has either got to be religious or else it goes to
+pieces.... Perhaps anyhow it goes to pieces...."
+
+Mr. Direck endorsed these observations by a slow nodding of the head.
+
+He allowed a certain interval to elapse. Then a vaguely apprehended
+purpose that had been for a time forgotten in these higher interests
+came back to him. He took it up with a breathless sense of temerity.
+
+"Well," he said, "then you don't hate me?"
+
+She smiled.
+
+"You don't dislike me or despise me?"
+
+She was still reassuring.
+
+"You don't think I'm just a slow American sort of portent?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You think, on the whole, I might even--someday--?"
+
+She tried to meet his eyes with a pleasant frankness, and perhaps she
+was franker than she meant to be.
+
+"Look here," said Mr. Direck, with a little quiver of emotion softening
+his mouth. "I'll ask you something. We've got to wait. Until you feel
+clearer. Still.... Could you bring yourself--? If just once--I could
+kiss you....
+
+"I'm going away to Germany," he went on to her silence. "But I shan't be
+giving so much attention to Germany as I supposed I should when I
+planned it out. But somehow--if I felt--that I'd kissed you...."
+
+With a delusive effect of calmness the young lady looked first over her
+left shoulder and then over her right and surveyed the park about them.
+Then she stood up. "We can go that way home," she said with a movement
+of her head, "through the little covert."
+
+Mr. Direck stood up too.
+
+"If I was a poet or a bird," said Mr. Direck, "I should sing. But being
+just a plain American citizen all I can do is just to talk about all I'd
+do if I wasn't...."
+
+And when they had reached the little covert, with its pathway of soft
+moss and its sheltering screen of interlacing branches, he broke the
+silence by saying, "Well, what's wrong with right here and now?" and
+Cecily stood up to him as straight as a spear, with gifts in her clear
+eyes. He took her soft cool face between his trembling hands, and kissed
+her sweet half-parted lips. When he kissed her she shivered, and he held
+her tighter and would have kissed her again. But she broke away from
+him, and he did not press her. And muter than ever, pondering deeply,
+and secretly trembling in the queerest way, these two outwardly sedate
+young people returned to the Dower House....
+
+And after tea the taxicab from the junction came for him and he
+vanished, and was last seen as a waving hat receding along the top of
+the dog-rose hedge that ran beyond the hockey field towards the village.
+
+"He will see Germany long before I shall," said Herr Heinrich with a
+gust of nostalgia. "I wish almost I had not agreed to go to Boulogne."
+
+And for some days Miss Cecily Corner was a very grave and dignified
+young woman indeed. Pondering....
+
+
+Section 9
+
+After the departure of Mr. Direck things international began to move
+forward with great rapidity. It was exactly as if his American
+deliberation had hitherto kept things waiting. Before his postcard from
+Rotterdam reached the Dower House Austria had sent an ultimatum to
+Serbia, and before Cecily had got the letter he wrote her from Cologne,
+a letter in that curiously unformed handwriting the stenographer and the
+typewriter are making an American characteristic, Russia was mobilising,
+and the vast prospect of a European war had opened like the rolling up
+of a curtain on which the interests of the former week had been but a
+trivial embroidery. So insistent was this reality that revealed itself
+that even the shooting of the Dublin people after the gun-running of
+Howth was dwarfed to unimportance. The mind of Mr. Britling came round
+from its restless wanderings to a more and more intent contemplation of
+the hurrying storm-clouds that swept out of nothingness to blacken all
+his sky. He watched it, he watched amazed and incredulous, he watched
+this contradiction of all his reiterated confessions of faith in German
+sanity and pacifism, he watched it with all that was impersonal in his
+being, and meanwhile his personal life ran in a continually deeper and
+narrower channel as his intelligence was withdrawn from it.
+
+Never had the double refraction of his mind been more clearly defined.
+On the one hand the Britling of the disinterested intelligence saw the
+habitual peace of the world vanish as the daylight vanishes when a
+shutter falls over the window of a cell; and on the other the Britling
+of the private life saw all the pleasant comfort of his relations with
+Mrs. Harrowdean disappearing in a perplexing irrational quarrel. He did
+not want to lose Mrs. Harrowdean; he contemplated their breach with a
+profound and profoundly selfish dismay. It seemed the wanton termination
+of an arrangement of which he was only beginning to perceive the extreme
+and irreplaceable satisfactoriness.
+
+It wasn't that he was in love with her. He knew almost as clearly as
+though he had told himself as much that he was not. But then, on the
+other hand, it was equally manifest in its subdued and ignored way that
+as a matter of fact she was hardly more in love with him. What
+constituted the satisfactoriness of the whole affair was its essential
+unlovingness and friendly want of emotion. It left their minds free to
+play with all the terms and methods of love without distress. She could
+summon tears and delights as one summons servants, and he could act his
+part as lover with no sense of lost control. They supplied in each
+other's lives a long-felt want--if only, that is, she could control her
+curious aptitude for jealousy and the sexual impulse to vex. There, he
+felt, she broke the convention of their relations and brought in serious
+realities, and this little rift it was that had widened to a now
+considerable breach. He knew that in every sane moment she dreaded and
+wished to heal that breach as much as he did. But the deep simplicities
+of the instincts they had tacitly agreed to bridge over washed the piers
+of their reconciliation away.
+
+And unless they could restore the bridge things would end, and Mr.
+Britling felt that the ending of things would involve for him the most
+extraordinary exasperation. She would go to Oliver for comfort; she
+would marry Oliver; and he knew her well enough to be sure that she
+would thrust her matrimonial happiness with Oliver unsparingly upon his
+attention; while he, on the other hand, being provided with no
+corresponding Olivette, would be left, a sort of emotional celibate,
+with his slack times and his afternoons and his general need for
+flattery and amusement dreadfully upon his own hands. He would be
+tormented by jealousy. In which case--and here he came to verities--his
+work would suffer. It wouldn't grip him while all these vague demands
+she satisfied fermented unassuaged.
+
+And, after the fashion of our still too adolescent world, Mr. Britling
+and Mrs. Harrowdean proceeded to negotiate these extremely unromantic
+matters in the phrases of that simple, honest and youthful
+passionateness which is still the only language available, and at times
+Mr. Britling came very near persuading himself that he had something of
+the passionate love for her that he had once had for his Mary, and that
+the possible loss of her had nothing to do with the convenience of
+Pyecrafts or any discretion in the world. Though indeed the only thing
+in the whole plexus of emotional possibility that still kept anything of
+its youthful freshness in his mind was the very strong objection indeed
+he felt to handing her over to anybody else in the world. And in
+addition he had just a touch of fatherly feeling that a younger man
+would not have had, and it made him feel very anxious to prevent her
+making a fool of herself by marrying a man out of spite. He felt that
+since an obstinate lover is apt to be an exacting husband, in the end
+the heavy predominance of Oliver might wring much sincerer tears from
+her than she had ever shed for himself. But that generosity was but the
+bright edge to a mainly possessive jealousy.
+
+It was Mr. Britling who reopened the correspondence by writing a little
+apology for the corner of the small snapdragon bed, and this evoked an
+admirably touching reply. He replied quite naturally with assurances and
+declarations. But before she got his second letter her mood had changed.
+She decided that if he had really and truly been lovingly sorry, instead
+of just writing a note to her he would have rushed over to her in a
+wild, dramatic state of mind, and begged forgiveness on his knees. She
+wrote therefore a second letter to this effect, crossing his second one,
+and, her literary gift getting the better of her, she expanded her
+thesis into a general denunciation of his habitual off-handedness with
+her, to an abandonment of all hope of ever being happy with him, to a
+decision to end the matter once for all, and after a decent interval of
+dignified regrets to summon Oliver to the reward of his patience and
+goodness. The European situation was now at a pitch to get upon Mr.
+Britling's nerves, and he replied with a letter intended to be
+conciliatory, but which degenerated into earnest reproaches for her
+"unreasonableness." Meanwhile she had received his second and tenderly
+eloquent letter; it moved her deeply, and having now cleared her mind of
+much that had kept it simmering uncomfortably, she replied with a
+sweetly loving epistle. From this point their correspondence had a kind
+of double quality, being intermittently angry and loving; her third
+letter was tender, and it was tenderly answered in his fourth; but in
+the interim she had received his third and answered it with considerable
+acerbity, to which his fifth was a retort, just missing her generous and
+conclusive fifth. She replied to his fifth on a Saturday evening--it was
+that eventful Saturday, Saturday the First of August, 1914--by a
+telegram. Oliver was abroad in Holland, engaged in a much-needed
+emotional rest, and she wired to Mr. Britling: "Have wired for Oliver,
+he will come to me, do not trouble to answer this."
+
+She was astonished to get no reply for two days. She got no reply for
+two days because remarkable things were happening to the telegraph wires
+of England just then, and her message, in the hands of a boy scout on a
+bicycle, reached Mr. Britling's house only on Monday afternoon. He was
+then at Claverings discussing the invasion of Belgium that made
+Britain's participation in the war inevitable, and he did not open the
+little red-brown envelope until about half-past six. He failed to mark
+the date and hours upon it, but he perceived that it was essentially a
+challenge. He was expected, he saw, to go over at once with his
+renovated Gladys and end this unfortunate clash forever in one striking
+and passionate scene. His mind was now so full of the war that he found
+this the most colourless and unattractive of obligations. But he felt
+bound by the mysterious code of honour of the illicit love affair to
+play his part. He postponed his departure until after supper--there was
+no reason why he should be afraid of motoring by moonlight if he went
+carefully--because Hugh came in with Cissie demanding a game of hockey.
+Hockey offered a nervous refreshment, a scampering forgetfulness of the
+tremendous disaster of this war he had always believed impossible, that
+nothing else could do, and he was very glad indeed of the irruption....
+
+
+Section 10
+
+For days the broader side of Mr. Britling's mind, as distinguished from
+its egotistical edge, had been reflecting more and more vividly and
+coherently the spectacle of civilisation casting aside the thousand
+dispersed activities of peace, clutching its weapons and setting its
+teeth, for a supreme struggle against militarist imperialism. From the
+point of view of Matching's Easy that colossal crystallising of
+accumulated antagonisms was for a time no more than a confusion of
+headlines and a rearrangement of columns in the white windows of the
+newspapers through which those who lived in the securities of England
+looked out upon the world. It was a display in the sphere of thought and
+print immeasurably remote from the real green turf on which one walked,
+from the voice and the church-bells of Mr. Dimple that sounded their
+ample caresses in one's ears, from the clashing of the stags who were
+beginning to knock the velvet from their horns in the park, or the
+clatter of the butcher's cart and the respectful greeting of the butcher
+boy down the lane. It was the spectacle of the world less real even to
+most imaginations than the world of novels or plays. People talked of
+these things always with an underlying feeling that they romanced and
+intellectualised.
+
+On Thursday, July 23rd, the Austro-Hungarian minister at Belgrade
+presented his impossible ultimatum to the Serbian government, and
+demanded a reply within forty-eight hours. With the wisdom of retrospect
+we know now clearly enough what that meant. The Sarajevo crime was to be
+resuscitated and made an excuse for war. But nine hundred and
+ninety-nine Europeans out of a thousand had still no suspicion of what
+was happening to them. The ultimatum figured prominently in the morning
+papers that came to Matching's Easy on Friday, but it by no means
+dominated the rest of the news; Sir Edward Carson's rejection of the
+government proposals for Ulster was given the pride of place, and almost
+equally conspicuous with the Serbian news were the Caillaux trial and
+the storming of the St. Petersburg barricades by Cossacks. Herr
+Heinrich's questions at lunch time received reassuring replies.
+
+On Saturday Sir Edward Carson was still in the central limelight, Russia
+had intervened and demanded more time for Serbia, and the _Daily
+Chronicle_ declared the day a critical one for Europe. Dublin with
+bayonet charges and bullets thrust Serbia into a corner on Monday. No
+shots had yet been fired in the East, and the mischief in Ireland that
+Germany had counted on was well ahead. Sir Edward Grey was said to be
+working hard for peace.
+
+"It's the cry of wolf," said Mr. Britling to Herr Heinrich.
+
+"But at last there did come a wolf," said Herr Heinrich. "I wish I had
+not sent my first moneys to that Conference upon Esperanto. I feel sure
+it will be put off."
+
+"See!" said Teddy very cheerfully to Herr Heinrich on Tuesday, and held
+up the paper, in which "The Bloodshed in Dublin" had squeezed the "War
+Cloud Lifting" into a quite subordinate position.
+
+"What did we tell you?" said Mrs. Britling. "Nobody wants a European
+war."
+
+But Wednesday's paper vindicated his fears. Germany had commanded Russia
+not to mobilise.
+
+"Of course Russia will mobilise," said Herr Heinrich.
+
+"Or else forever after hold her peace," said Teddy.
+
+"And then Germany will mobilise," said Herr Heinrich, "and all my
+holiday will vanish. I shall have to go and mobilise too. I shall have
+to fight. I have my papers."
+
+"I never thought of you as a soldier before," said Teddy.
+
+"I have deferred my service until I have done my thesis," said Herr
+Heinrich. "Now all that will be--Piff! And my thesis three-quarters
+finished."
+
+"That is serious," said Teddy.
+
+"_Verdammte Dummheit!_" said Herr Heinrich. "Why do they do such
+things?"
+
+On Thursday, the 30th of July, Caillaux, Carson, strikes, and all the
+common topics of life had been swept out of the front page of the paper
+altogether; the stock exchanges were in a state of wild perturbation,
+and food prices were leaping fantastically. Austria was bombarding
+Belgrade, contrary to the rules of war hitherto accepted; Russia was
+mobilising; Mr. Asquith was, he declared, not relaxing his efforts "to
+do everything possible to circumscribe the area of possible conflict,"
+and the Vienna Conference of Peace Societies was postponed. "I do not
+see why a conflict between Russia and Austria should involve Western
+Europe," said Mr. Britling. "Our concern is only for Belgium and
+France."
+
+But Herr Heinrich knew better. "No," he said. "It is the war. It has
+come. I have heard it talked about in Germany many times. But I have
+never believed that it was obliged to come. Ach! It considers no one. So
+long as Esperanto is disregarded, all these things must be."
+
+Friday brought photographs of the mobilisation in Vienna, and the news
+that Belgrade was burning. Young men in straw hats very like English or
+French or Belgian young men in straw hats were shown parading the
+streets of Vienna, carrying flags and banners portentously, blowing
+trumpets or waving hats and shouting. Saturday saw all Europe
+mobilising, and Herr Heinrich upon Teddy's bicycle in wild pursuit of
+evening papers at the junction. Mobilisation and the emotions of Herr
+Heinrich now became the central facts of the Dower House situation. The
+two younger Britlings mobilised with great vigour upon the playroom
+floor. The elder had one hundred and ninety toy soldiers with a
+considerable equipment of guns and wagons; the younger had a force of a
+hundred and twenty-three, not counting three railway porters (with
+trucks complete), a policeman, five civilians and two ladies. Also they
+made a number of British and German flags out of paper. But as neither
+would allow his troops to be any existing foreign army, they agreed to
+be Redland and Blueland, according to the colour of their prevailing
+uniforms. Meanwhile Herr Heinrich confessed almost promiscuously the
+complication of his distresses by a hitherto unexpected emotional
+interest in the daughter of the village publican. She was a placid
+receptive young woman named Maud Hickson, on whom the young man had, it
+seemed, imposed the more poetical name of Marguerite.
+
+"Often we have spoken together, oh yes, often," he assured Mrs.
+Britling. "And now it must all end. She loves flowers, she loves birds.
+She is most sweet and innocent. I have taught her many words in German
+and several times I have tried to draw her in pencil, and now I must go
+away and never see her any more."
+
+His implicit appeal to the whole literature of Teutonic romanticism
+disarmed Mrs. Britling's objection that he had no business whatever to
+know the young woman at all.
+
+"Also," cried Herr Heinrich, facing another aspect of his distresses,
+"how am I to pack my things? Since I have been here I have bought many
+things, many books, and two pairs of white flannel trousers and some
+shirts and a tin instrument that I cannot work, for developing privately
+Kodak films. All this must go into my little portmanteau. And it will
+not go into my little portmanteau!
+
+"And there is Billy! Who will now go on with the education of Billy?"
+
+The hands of fate paused not for Herr Heinrich's embarrassments and
+distresses. He fretted from his room downstairs and back to his room, he
+went out upon mysterious and futile errands towards the village inn, he
+prowled about the garden. His head and face grew pinker and pinker; his
+eyes were flushed and distressed. Everybody sought to say and do kind
+and reassuring things to him.
+
+"Ach!" he said to Teddy; "you are a civilian. You live in a free
+country. It is not your war. You can be amused at it...."
+
+But then Teddy was amused at everything.
+
+Something but very dimly apprehended at Matching's Easy, something
+methodical and compelling away in London, seemed to be fumbling and
+feeling after Herr Heinrich, and Herr Heinrich it appeared was
+responding. Sunday's post brought the decision.
+
+"I have to go," he said. "I must go right up to London to-day. To an
+address in Bloomsbury. Then they will tell me how to go to Germany. I
+must pack and I must get the taxi-cab from the junction and I must go.
+Why are there no trains on the branch line on Sundays for me to go by
+it?"
+
+At lunch he talked politics. "I am entirely opposed to the war," he
+said. "I am entirely opposed to any war."
+
+"Then why go?" asked Mr. Britling. "Stay here with us. We all like you.
+Stay here and do not answer your mobilisation summons."
+
+"But then I shall lose all my country. I shall lose my papers. I shall
+be outcast. I must go."
+
+"I suppose a man should go with his own country," Mr. Britling
+reflected.
+
+"If there was only one language in all the world, none of such things
+would happen," Herr Heinrich declared. "There would be no English, no
+Germans, no Russians."
+
+"Just Esperantists," said Teddy.
+
+"Or Idoists," said Herr Heinrich. "I am not convinced of which. In some
+ways Ido is much better."
+
+"Perhaps there would have to be a war between Ido and Esperanto to
+settle it," said Teddy.
+
+"Who shall we play skat with when you have gone?" asked Mrs. Britling.
+
+"All this morning," said Herr Heinrich, expanding in the warmth of
+sympathy, "I have been trying to pack and I have been unable to pack. My
+mind is too greatly disordered. I have been told not to bring much
+luggage. Mrs. Britling, please."
+
+Mrs. Britling became attentive.
+
+"If I could leave much of my luggage, my clothes, some of them, and
+particularly my violin, it would be much more to my convenience. I do
+not care to be mobilised with my violin. There may be much crowding.
+Then I would but just take my rucksack...."
+
+"If you will leave your things packed up."
+
+"And afterwards they could be sent."
+
+But he did not leave them packed up. The taxi-cab, to order which he had
+gone to the junction in the morning on Teddy's complaisant machine, came
+presently to carry him off, and the whole family and the first
+contingent of the usual hockey players gathered about it to see him off.
+The elder boy of the two juniors put a distended rucksack upon the seat.
+Herr Heinrich then shook hands with every one.
+
+"Write and tell us how you get on," cried Mrs. Britling.
+
+"But if England also makes war!"
+
+"Write to Reynolds--let me give you his address; he is my agent in New
+York," said Mr. Britling, and wrote it down.
+
+"We'll come to the village corner with you, Herr Heinrich," cried the
+boys.
+
+"No," said Herr Heinrich, sitting down into the automobile, "I will part
+with you altogether. It is too much...."
+
+"_Auf Wiedersehen!_" cried Mr. Britling. "Remember, whatever happens
+there will be peace at last!"
+
+"Then why not at the beginning?" Herr Heinrich demanded with a
+reasonable exasperation and repeated his maturer verdict on the whole
+European situation; "_Verdammte Bummelei!_"
+
+"Go," said Mr. Britling to the taxi driver.
+
+"_Auf Wiedersehen_, Herr Heinrich!"
+
+"_Auf Wiedersehen!_"
+
+"Good-bye, Herr Heinrich!"
+
+"Good luck, Herr Heinrich!"
+
+The taxi started with a whir, and Herr Heinrich passed out of the gates
+and along the same hungry road that had so recently consumed Mr. Direck.
+"Give him a last send-off," cried Teddy. "One, Two, Three! _Auf
+Wiedersehen!_"
+
+The voices, gruff and shrill, sounded raggedly together. The dog-rose
+hedge cut off the sight of the little face. Then the pink head bobbed up
+again. He was standing up and waving the panama hat. Careless of
+sunstroke....
+
+Then Herr Heinrich had gone altogether....
+
+"Well," said Mr. Britling, turning away.
+
+"I do hope they won't hurt him," said a visitor.
+
+"Oh, they won't put a youngster like that in the fighting line," said
+Mr. Britling. "He's had no training yet. And he has to wear glasses. How
+can he shoot? They'll make a clerk of him."
+
+"He hasn't packed at all," said Mrs. Britling to her husband. "Just come
+up for an instant and peep at his room. It's--touching."
+
+It was touching.
+
+It was more than touching; in its minute, absurd way it was symbolical
+and prophetic, it was the miniature of one small life uprooted.
+
+The door stood wide open, as he had left it open, careless of all the
+little jealousies and privacies of occupation and ownership. Even the
+windows were wide open as though he had needed air; he who had always so
+sedulously shut his windows since first he came to England. Across the
+empty fireplace stretched the great bough of oak he had brought in for
+Billy, but now its twigs and leaves had wilted, and many had broken off
+and fallen on the floor. Billy's cage stood empty upon a little table in
+the corner of the room. Instead of packing, the young man had evidently
+paced up and down in a state of emotional elaboration; the bed was
+disordered as though he had several times flung himself upon it, and his
+books had been thrown about the room despairfully. He had made some
+little commencements of packing in a borrowed cardboard box. The violin
+lay as if it lay in state upon the chest of drawers, the drawers were
+all partially open, and in the middle of the floor sprawled a pitiful
+shirt of blue, dropped there, the most flattened and broken-hearted of
+garments. The fireplace contained an unsuccessful pencil sketch of a
+girl's face, torn across....
+
+Husband and wife regarded the abandoned room in silence for a time, and
+when Mr. Britling spoke he lowered his voice.
+
+"I don't see Billy," he said.
+
+"Perhaps he has gone out of the window," said Mrs. Britling also in a
+hushed undertone....
+
+"Well," said Mr. Britling abruptly and loudly, turning away from this
+first intimation of coming desolations, "let us go down to our hockey!
+He had to go, you know. And Billy will probably come back again when he
+begins to feel hungry...."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+Monday was a public holiday, the First Monday in August, and the day
+consecrated by long-established custom to the Matching's Easy Flower
+Show in Claverings Park. The day was to live in Mr. Britling's memory
+with a harsh brightness like the brightness of that sunshine one sees at
+times at the edge of a thunderstorm. There were tents with the exhibits,
+and a tent for "Popular Refreshments," there was a gorgeous gold and
+yellow steam roundabout with motor-cars and horses, and another in green
+and silver with wonderfully undulating ostriches and lions, and each had
+an organ that went by steam; there were cocoanut shies and many
+ingenious prize-giving shooting and dart-throwing and ring-throwing
+stalls, each displaying a marvellous array of crockery, clocks, metal
+ornaments, and suchlike rewards. There was a race of gas balloons, each
+with a postcard attached to it begging the finder to say where it
+descended, and you could get a balloon for a shilling and have a chance
+of winning various impressive and embarrassing prizes if your balloon
+went far enough--fish carvers, a silver-handled walking-stick, a bog-oak
+gramophone-record cabinet, and things like that. And by a special gate
+one could go for sixpence into the Claverings gardens, and the sixpence
+would be doubled by Lady Homartyn and devoted next winter to the
+Matching's Easy coal club. And Mr. Britling went through all the shows
+with his boys, and finally left them with a shilling each and his
+blessing and paid his sixpence for the gardens and made his way as he
+had promised, to have tea with Lady Homartyn.
+
+The morning papers had arrived late, and he had been reading them and
+re-reading them and musing over them intermittently until his family had
+insisted upon his coming out to the festivities. They said that if for
+no other reason he must come to witness Aunt Wilshire's extraordinary
+skill at the cocoanut shy. She could beat everybody. Well, one must not
+miss a thing like that. The headlines proclaimed, "The Great Powers at
+War; France Invaded by Germany; Germany invaded by Russia; 100,000
+Germans march into Luxemburg; Can England Abstain? Fifty Million Loan to
+be Issued." And Germany had not only violated the Treaty of London but
+she had seized a British ship in the Kiel Canal.... The roundabouts were
+very busy and windily melodious, and the shooting gallery kept popping
+and jingling as people shot and broke bottles, and the voices of the
+young men and women inviting the crowd to try their luck at this and
+that rang loud and clear. Teddy and Letty and Cissie and Hugh were
+developing a quite disconcerting skill at the dart-throwing, and were
+bent upon compiling a complete tea-set for the Teddy cottage out of
+their winnings. There was a score of automobiles and a number of traps
+and gigs about the entrance to the portion of the park that had been
+railed off for the festival, the small Britling boys had met some
+nursery visitors from Claverings House and were busy displaying skill
+and calm upon the roundabout ostriches, and less than four hundred miles
+away with a front that reached from Nancy to Ličge more than a million
+and a quarter of grey-clad men, the greatest and best-equipped host the
+world had ever seen, were pouring westward to take Paris, grip and
+paralyse France, seize the Channel ports, invade England, and make the
+German Empire the master-state of the earth. Their equipment was a
+marvel of foresight and scientific organisation, from the motor kitchens
+that rumbled in their wake to the telescopic sights of the
+sharp-shooters, the innumerable machine-guns of the infantry, the supply
+of entrenching material, the preparations already made in the invaded
+country....
+
+"Let's try at the other place for the sugar-basin!" said Teddy, hurrying
+past. "Don't get _two_ sugar-basins," said Cissie breathless in
+pursuit. "Hugh is trying for a sugar-basin at the other place."
+
+Then Mr. Britling heard a bellicose note.
+
+"Let's have a go at the bottles," said a cheerful young farmer. "Ought
+to keep up our shooting, these warlike times...."
+
+Mr. Britling ran against Hickson from the village inn and learnt that he
+was disturbed about his son being called up as a reservist. "Just when
+he was settling down here. It seems a pity they couldn't leave him for a
+bit."
+
+"'Tis a noosence," said Hickson, "but anyhow, they give first prize to
+his radishes. He'll be glad to hear they give first prize to his
+radishes. Do you think, Sir, there's very much probability of this war?
+It do seem to be beginning like."
+
+"It looks more like beginning than it has ever done," said Mr. Britling.
+"It's a foolish business."
+
+"I suppose if they start in on us we got to hit back at them," said Mr.
+Hickson. "Postman--he's got his papers too...."
+
+Mr. Britling made his way through the drifting throng towards the little
+wicket that led into the Gardens....
+
+He was swung round suddenly by a loud bang.
+
+It was the gun proclaiming the start of the balloon race.
+
+He stood for some moments watching the scene. The balloon start had
+gathered a little crowd of people, village girls in white gloves and
+cheerful hats, young men in bright ties and ready-made Sunday suits,
+fathers and mothers, boy scouts, children, clerks in straw hats,
+bicyclists and miscellaneous folk. Over their heads rose Mr. Cheshunt,
+the factotum of the estate. He was standing on a table and handing the
+little balloons up into the air one by one. They floated up from his
+hand like many-coloured grapes, some rising and falling, some soaring
+steadily upward, some spinning and eddying, drifting eastward before the
+gentle breeze, a string of bubbles against the sky and the big trees
+that bounded the park. Farther away to the right were the striped
+canvas tents of the flower-show, still farther off the roundabouts
+churned out their music, the shooting galleries popped, and the swing
+boats creaked through the air. Cut off from these things by a line of
+fencing lay the open park in which the deer grouped themselves under the
+great trees and regarded the festival mistrustfully. Teddy and Hugh
+appeared breaking away from the balloon race cluster, and hurrying back
+to their dart-throwing. A man outside a little tent that stood apart was
+putting up a brave-looking notice, "Unstinted Teas One Shilling." The
+Teddy perambulator was moored against the cocoanut shy, and Aunt
+Wilshire was still displaying her terrible prowess at the cocoanuts.
+Already she had won twenty-seven. Strange children had been impressed by
+her to carry them, and formed her retinue. A wonderful old lady was Aunt
+Wilshire....
+
+Then across all the sunshine of this artless festival there appeared, as
+if it were writing showing through a picture, "France Invaded by
+Germany; Germany Invaded by Russia."
+
+Mr. Britling turned again towards the wicket, with its collectors of
+tribute, that led into the Gardens.
+
+
+Section 12
+
+The Claverings gardens, and particularly the great rockery, the lily
+pond, and the herbaceous borders, were unusually populous with
+unaccustomed visitors and shy young couples. Mr. Britling had to go to
+the house for instructions, and guided by the under-butler found Lady
+Homartyn hiding away in the walled Dutch garden behind the dairy. She
+had been giving away the prizes of the flower-show, and she was resting
+in a deck chair while a spinster relation presided over the tea. Mrs.
+Britling had fled the outer festival earlier, and was sitting by the
+tea-things. Lady Meade and two or three visitors had motored out from
+Hartleytree to assist, and Manning had come in with his tremendous
+confirmation of all that the morning papers had foreshadowed.
+
+"Have you any news?" asked Mr. Britling.
+
+"It's _war!_" said Mrs. Britling.
+
+"They are in Luxemburg," said Manning. "That can only mean that they are
+coming through Belgium."
+
+"Then I was wrong," said Mr. Britling, "and the world is altogether mad.
+And so there is nothing else for us to do but win.... Why could they not
+leave Belgium alone?"
+
+"It's been in all their plans for the last twenty years," said Manning.
+
+"But it brings us in for certain."
+
+"I believe they have reckoned on that."
+
+"Well!" Mr. Britling took his tea and sat down, and for a time he said
+nothing.
+
+"It is three against three," said one of the visitors, trying to count
+the Powers engaged.
+
+"Italy," said Manning, "will almost certainly refuse to fight. In fact
+Italy is friendly to us. She is bound to be. This is, to begin with, an
+Austrian war. And Japan will fight for us...."
+
+"I think," said old Lady Meade, "that this is the suicide of Germany.
+They cannot possibly fight against Russia and France and ourselves. Why
+have they ever begun it?"
+
+"It may be a longer and more difficult war than people suppose," said
+Manning. "The Germans reckon they are going to win."
+
+"Against us all?"
+
+"Against us all. They are tremendously prepared."
+
+"It is impossible that Germany should win," said Mr. Britling, breaking
+his silence. "Against her Germany has something more than armies; all
+reason, all instinct--the three greatest peoples in the world."
+
+"At present very badly supplied with war material."
+
+"That may delay things; it may make the task harder; but it will not
+alter the end. Of course we are going to win. Nothing else is thinkable.
+I have never believed they meant it. But I see now they meant it. This
+insolent arming and marching, this forty years of national blustering;
+sooner or later it had to topple over into action...."
+
+He paused and found they were listening, and he was carried on by his
+own thoughts into further speech.
+
+"This isn't the sort of war," he said, "that is settled by counting guns
+and rifles. Something that has oppressed us all has become intolerable
+and has to be ended. And it will be ended. I don't know what soldiers
+and politicians think of our prospects, but I do know what ordinary
+reasonable men think of the business. I know that all we millions of
+reasonable civilised onlookers are prepared to spend our last shillings
+and give all our lives now, rather than see Germany unbeaten. I know
+that the same thing is felt in America, and that given half a chance,
+given just one extra shake of that foolish mailed fist in the face of
+America, and America also will be in this war by our side. Italy will
+come in. She is bound to come in. France will fight like one man. I'm
+quite prepared to believe that the Germans have countless rifles and
+guns; have got the most perfect maps, spies, plans you can imagine. I'm
+quite prepared to hear that they have got a thousand tremendous
+surprises in equipment up their sleeves. I'm quite prepared for sweeping
+victories for them and appalling disasters for us. Those are the first
+things. What I do know is that the Germans understand nothing of the
+spirit of man; that they do not dream for a moment of the devil of
+resentment this war will arouse. Didn't we all trust them not to let off
+their guns? Wasn't that the essence of our liberal and pacific faith?
+And here they are in the heart of Europe letting off their guns?"
+
+"And such a lot of guns," said Manning.
+
+"Then you think it will be a long war, Mr. Britling?" said Lady Meade.
+
+"Long or short, it will end in the downfall of Germany. But I do not
+believe it will be long. I do not agree with Manning. Even now I cannot
+believe that a whole great people can be possessed by war madness. I
+think the war is the work of the German armaments party and of the Court
+party. They have forced this war on Germany. Well--they must win and go
+on winning. So long as they win, Germany will hold together, so long as
+their armies are not clearly defeated nor their navy destroyed. But once
+check them and stay them and beat them, then I believe that suddenly the
+spirit of Germany will change even as it changed after Jena...."
+
+"Willie Nixon," said one of the visitors, "who came back from Hamburg
+yesterday, says they are convinced they will have taken Paris and St.
+Petersburg and one or two other little places and practically settled
+everything for us by about Christmas."
+
+"And London?"
+
+"I forgot if he said London. But I suppose a London more or less hardly
+matters. They don't think we shall dare come in, but if we do they will
+Zeppelin the fleet and walk through our army--if you can call it an
+army."
+
+Manning nodded confirmation.
+
+"They do not understand," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Sir George Padish told me the same sort of thing," said Lady Homartyn.
+"He was in Berlin in June."
+
+"Of course the efficiency of their preparations is almost incredible,"
+said another of Lady Meade's party.
+
+"They have thought out and got ready for everything--literally
+everything."
+
+
+Section 13
+
+Mr. Britling had been a little surprised by the speech he had made. He
+hadn't realised before he began to talk how angry and scornful he was at
+this final coming into action of the Teutonic militarism that had so
+long menaced his world. He had always said it would never really
+fight--and here it was fighting! He was furious with the indignation of
+an apologist betrayed. He had only realised the strength and passion of
+his own belligerent opinions as he had heard them, and as he walked back
+with his wife through the village to the Dower House, he was still in
+the swirl of this self-discovery; he was darkly silent, devising
+fiercely denunciatory phrases against Krupp and Kaiser. "Krupp and
+Kaiser," he grasped that obvious, convenient alliteration. "It is all
+that is bad in medićvalism allied to all that is bad in modernity," he
+told himself.
+
+"The world," he said, startling Mrs. Britling with his sudden speech,
+"will be intolerable to live in, it will be unendurable for a decent
+human being, unless we win this war.
+
+"We must smash or be smashed...."
+
+His brain was so busy with such stuff that for a time he stared at Mrs.
+Harrowdean's belated telegram without grasping the meaning of a word of
+it. He realised slowly that it was incumbent upon him to go over to her,
+but he postponed his departure very readily in order to play hockey.
+Besides which it would be a full moon, and he felt that summer moonlight
+was far better than sunset and dinner time for the declarations he was
+expected to make. And then he went on phrase-making again about Germany
+until he had actually bullied off at hockey.
+
+Suddenly in the midst of the game he had an amazing thought. It came to
+him like a physical twinge.
+
+"What the devil are we doing at this hockey?" he asked abruptly of
+Teddy, who was coming up to bully after a goal. "We ought to be drilling
+or shooting against those infernal Germans."
+
+Teddy looked at him questioningly.
+
+"Oh, come on!" said Mr. Britling with a gust of impatience, and snapped
+the sticks together.
+
+
+Section 14
+
+Mr. Britling started for his moonlight ride about half-past nine that
+night. He announced that he could neither rest nor work, the war had
+thrown him into a fever; the driving of the automobile was just the
+distraction he needed; he might not, he added casually, return for a day
+or so. When he felt he could work again he would come back. He filled up
+his petrol tank by the light of an electric torch, and sat in his car in
+the garage and studied his map of the district. His thoughts wandered
+from the road to Pyecrafts to the coast, and to the possible route of a
+raider. Suppose the enemy anticipated a declaration of war! Here he
+might come, and here....
+
+He roused himself from these speculations to the business in hand.
+
+The evening seemed as light as day, a cool moonshine filled the world.
+The road was silver that flushed to pink at the approach of Mr.
+Britling's headlight, the dark turf at the wayside and the bushes on the
+bank became for a moment an acid green as the glare passed. The full
+moon was climbing up the sky, and so bright that scarcely a star was
+visible in the blue grey of the heavens. Houses gleamed white a mile
+away, and ever and again a moth would flutter and hang in the light of
+the lamps, and then vanish again in the night.
+
+Gladys was in excellent condition for a run, and so was Mr. Britling. He
+went neither fast nor slow, and with a quite unfamiliar confidence.
+Life, which had seemed all day a congested confusion darkened by
+threats, became cool, mysterious and aloof and with a quality of
+dignified reassurance.
+
+He steered along the narrow road by the black dog-rose hedge, and so
+into the high road towards the village. The village was alight at
+several windows but almost deserted. Out beyond, a coruscation of lights
+burnt like a group of topaz and rubies set in the silver shield of the
+night. The festivities of the Flower Show were still in full progress,
+and the reduction of the entrance fee after seven had drawn in every
+lingering outsider. The roundabouts churned out their relentless music,
+and the bottle-shooting galleries popped and crashed. The
+well-patronised ostriches and motorcars flickered round in a pulsing
+rhythm; black, black, black, before the naphtha flares.
+
+Mr. Britling pulled up at the side of the road, and sat for a little
+while watching the silhouettes move hither and thither from shadow to
+shadow across the bright spaces.
+
+"On the very brink of war--on the brink of Armageddon," he whispered at
+last. "Do they understand? Do any of us understand?"
+
+He slipped in his gear to starting, and was presently running quietly
+with his engine purring almost inaudibly along the level road to
+Hartleytree. The sounds behind him grew smaller and smaller, and died
+away leaving an immense unruffled quiet under the moon. There seemed no
+motion but his own, no sound but the neat, subdued, mechanical rhythm in
+front of his feet. Presently he ran out into the main road, and heedless
+of the lane that turned away towards Pyecrafts, drove on smoothly
+towards the east and the sea. Never before had he driven by night. He
+had expected a fumbling and tedious journey; he found he had come into
+an undreamt-of silvery splendour of motion. For it seemed as though even
+the automobile was running on moonlight that night.... Pyecrafts could
+wait. Indeed the later he got to Pyecrafts the more moving and romantic
+the little comedy of reconciliation would be. And he was in no hurry for
+that comedy. He felt he wanted to apprehend this vast summer calm about
+him, that alone of all the things of the day seemed to convey anything
+whatever of the majestic tragedy that was happening to mankind. As one
+slipped through this still vigil one could imagine for the first time
+the millions away there marching, the wide river valleys, villages,
+cities, mountain-ranges, ports and seas inaudibly busy.
+
+"Even now," he said, "the battleships may be fighting."
+
+He listened, but the sound was only the low intermittent drumming of his
+cylinders as he ran with his throttle nearly closed, down a stretch of
+gentle hill.
+
+He felt that he must see the sea. He would follow the road beyond the
+Rodwell villages, and then turn up to the crest of Eastonbury Hill. And
+thither he went and saw in the gap of the low hills beyond a V-shaped
+level of moonlit water that glittered and yet lay still. He stopped his
+car by the roadside, and sat for a long time looking at this and musing.
+And once it seemed to him three little shapes like short black needles
+passed in line ahead across the molten silver.
+
+But that may have been just the straining of the eyes....
+
+All sorts of talk had come to Mr. Britling's ears about the navies of
+England and France and Germany; there had been public disputes of
+experts, much whispering and discussion in private. We had the heavier
+vessels, the bigger guns, but it was not certain that we had the
+preeminence in science and invention. Were they relying as we were
+relying on Dreadnoughts, or had they their secrets and surprises for us?
+To-night, perhaps, the great ships were steaming to conflict....
+
+To-night all over the world ships must be in flight and ships pursuing;
+ten thousand towns must be ringing with the immediate excitement of
+war....
+
+Only a year ago Mr. Britling had been lunching on a battleship and
+looking over its intricate machinery. It had seemed to him then that
+there could be no better human stuff in the world than the quiet,
+sunburnt, disciplined men and officers he had met.... And our little
+army, too, must be gathering to-night, the little army that had been
+chastened and reborn in South Africa, that he was convinced was
+individually more gallant and self-reliant and capable than any other
+army in the world. He would have sneered or protested if he had heard
+another Englishman say that, but in his heart he held the dear
+belief....
+
+And what other aviators in the world could fly as the Frenchmen and
+Englishmen he had met once or twice at Eastchurch and Salisbury could
+fly? These are things of race and national quality. Let the German cling
+to his gasbags. "We shall beat them in the air," he whispered. "We shall
+beat them on the seas. Surely we shall beat them on the seas. If we have
+men enough and guns enough we shall beat them on land.... Yet--For years
+they have been preparing...."
+
+There was little room in the heart of Mr. Britling that night for any
+love but the love of England. He loved England now as a nation of men.
+There could be no easy victory. Good for us with our too easy natures
+that there could be no easy victory. But victory we must have now--or
+perish....
+
+He roused himself with a sigh, restarted his engine, and went on to find
+some turning place. He still had a colourless impression that the
+journey's end was Pyecrafts.
+
+"We must all do the thing we can," he thought, and for a time the course
+of his automobile along a winding down-hill road held his attention so
+that he could not get beyond it. He turned about and ran up over the
+hill again and down long slopes inland, running very softly and smoothly
+with his lights devouring the road ahead and sweeping the banks and
+hedges beside him, and as he came down a little hill through a village
+he heard a confused clatter and jingle of traffic ahead, and saw the
+danger triangle that warns of cross-roads. He slowed down and then
+pulled up abruptly.
+
+Riding across the gap between the cottages was a string of horsemen, and
+then a grey cart, and then a team drawing a heavy object--a gun, and
+then more horsemen, and then a second gun. It was all a dim brown
+procession in the moonlight. A mounted officer came up beside him and
+looked at him and then went back to the cross-roads, but as yet England
+was not troubling about spies. Four more guns passed, and then a string
+of carts and more mounted men, sitting stiffly. Nobody was singing or
+shouting; scarcely a word was audible, and through all the column there
+was an effect of quiet efficient haste. And so they passed, and rumbled
+and jingled and clattered out of the scene, leaving Mr. Britling in his
+car in the dreaming village. He restarted his engine once more, and went
+his way thoughtfully.
+
+He went so thoughtfully that presently he missed the road to
+Pyecrafts--if ever he had been on the road to Pyecrafts at
+all--altogether. He found himself upon a highway running across a
+flattish plain, and presently discovered by the sight of the Great Bear,
+faint but traceable in the blue overhead, that he was going due north.
+Well, presently he would turn south and west; that in good time; now he
+wanted to feel; he wanted to think. How could he best help England in
+the vast struggle for which the empty silence and beauty of this night
+seemed to be waiting? But indeed he was not thinking at all, but
+feeling, feeling wonder, as he had never felt it since his youth had
+passed from him. This war might end nearly everything in the world as he
+had known the world; that idea struggled slowly through the moonlight
+into consciousness, and won its way to dominance in his mind.
+
+The character of the road changed; the hedges fell away, the pine trees
+and pine woods took the place of the black squat shapes of the hawthorn
+and oak and apple. The houses grew rarer and the world emptier and
+emptier, until he could have believed that he was the only man awake and
+out-of-doors in all the slumbering land....
+
+For a time a little thing caught hold of his dreaming mind. Continually
+as he ran on, black, silent birds rose startled out of the dust of the
+road before him, and fluttered noiselessly beyond his double wedge of
+light. What sort of bird could they be? Were they night-jars? Were they
+different kinds of birds snatching at the quiet of the night for a dust
+bath in the sand? This little independent thread of inquiry ran through
+the texture of his mind and died away....
+
+And at one place there was a great bolting of rabbits across the road,
+almost under his wheels....
+
+The phrases he had used that afternoon at Claverings came back presently
+into his head. They were, he felt assured, the phrases that had to be
+said now. This war could be seen as the noblest of wars, as the crowning
+struggle of mankind against national dominance and national aggression;
+or else it was a mere struggle of nationalities and pure destruction and
+catastrophe. Its enormous significances, he felt, must not be lost in
+any petty bickering about the minor issues of the conflict. But were
+these enormous significances being stated clearly enough? Were they
+being understood by the mass of liberal and pacific thinkers? He drove
+more and more slowly as these questions crowded upon his attention until
+at last he came to a stop altogether.... "Certain things must be said
+clearly," he whispered. "Certain things--The meaning of England.... The
+deep and long-unspoken desire for kindliness and fairness.... Now is the
+time for speaking. It must be put as straight now as her gun-fire, as
+honestly as the steering of her ships."
+
+Phrases and paragraphs began to shape themselves in his mind as he sat
+with one arm on his steering-wheel.
+
+Suddenly he roused himself, turned over the map in the map-case beside
+him, and tried to find his position....
+
+So far as he could judge he had strayed right into Suffolk....
+
+About one o'clock in the morning he found himself in Newmarket.
+Newmarket too was a moonlit emptiness, but as he hesitated at the
+cross-roads he became aware of a policeman standing quite stiff and
+still at the corner by the church.
+
+"Matching's Easy?" he cried.
+
+"That road, Sir, until you come to Market Saffron, and then to the
+left...."
+
+Mr. Britling had a definite purpose now in his mind, and he drove
+faster, but still very carefully and surely. He was already within a
+mile or so of Market Saffron before he remembered that he had made a
+kind of appointment with himself at Pyecrafts. He stared at two
+conflicting purposes. He turned over certain possibilities.
+
+At the Market Saffron cross-roads he slowed down, and for a moment he
+hung undecided.
+
+"Oliver," he said, and as he spoke he threw over his steering-wheel
+towards the homeward way.... He finished his sentence when he had
+negotiated the corner safely. "Oliver must have her...."
+
+And then, perhaps fifty yards farther along, and this time almost
+indignantly: "She ought to have married him long ago...."
+
+He put his automobile in the garage, and then went round under the black
+shadow of his cedars to the front door. He had no key, and for a long
+time he failed to rouse his wife by flinging pebbles and gravel at her
+half-open window. But at last he heard her stirring and called out to
+her.
+
+He explained he had returned because he wanted to write. He wanted
+indeed to write quite urgently. He went straight up to his room, lit his
+reading-lamp, made himself some tea, and changed into his nocturnal
+suit. Daylight found him still writing very earnestly at his pamphlet.
+The title he had chosen was: "And Now War Ends."
+
+
+Section 15
+
+In this fashion it was that the great war began in Europe and came to
+one man in Matching's Easy, as it came to countless intelligent men in
+countless pleasant homes that had scarcely heeded its coming through all
+the years of its relentless preparation. The familiar scenery of life
+was drawn aside, and War stood unveiled. "I am the Fact," said War, "and
+I stand astride the path of life. I am the threat of death and
+extinction that has always walked beside life, since life began. There
+can be nothing else and nothing more in human life until you have
+reckoned with me."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+MATCHING'S EASY AT WAR
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FIRST
+
+ONLOOKERS
+
+
+Section 1
+
+On that eventful night of the first shots and the first deaths Mr.
+Britling did not sleep until daylight had come. He sat writing at this
+pamphlet of his, which was to hail the last explosion and the ending of
+war. For a couple of hours he wrote with energy, and then his energy
+flagged. There came intervals when he sat still and did not write. He
+yawned and yawned again and rubbed his eyes. The day had come and the
+birds were noisy when he undressed slowly, dropping his clothes anyhow
+upon the floor, and got into bed....
+
+He woke to find his morning tea beside him and the housemaid going out
+of the room. He knew that something stupendous had happened to the
+world, but for a few moments he could not remember what it was. Then he
+remembered that France was invaded by Germany and Germany by Russia, and
+that almost certainly England was going to war. It seemed a harsh and
+terrible fact in the morning light, a demand for stresses, a certainty
+of destruction; it appeared now robbed of all the dark and dignified
+beauty of the night. He remembered just the same feeling of unpleasant,
+anxious expectation as he now felt when the Boer War had begun fifteen
+years ago, before the first news came. The first news of the Boer War
+had been the wrecking of a British armoured train near Kimberley. What
+similar story might not the overdue paper tell when presently it came?
+
+Suppose, for instance, that some important division of our Fleet had
+been surprised and overwhelmed....
+
+Suppose the Germans were already crumpling up the French armies between
+Verdun and Belfort, very swiftly and dreadfully....
+
+Suppose after all that the Cabinet was hesitating, and that there would
+be no war for some weeks, but only a wrangle about Belgian neutrality.
+While the Germans smashed France....
+
+Or, on the other hand, there might be some amazing, prompt success on
+our part. Our army and navy people were narrow, but in their narrow way
+he believed they were extraordinarily good....
+
+What would the Irish do?...
+
+His thoughts were no more than a thorny jungle of unanswerable questions
+through which he struggled in un-progressive circles.
+
+He got out of bed and dressed in a slow, distraught manner. When he
+reached his braces he discontinued dressing for a time; he opened the
+atlas at Northern France, and stood musing over the Belgian border. Then
+he turned to Whitaker's Almanack to browse upon the statistics of the
+great European armies. He was roused from this by the breakfast gong.
+
+At breakfast there was no talk of anything but war. Hugh was as excited
+as a cat in thundery weather, and the small boys wanted information
+about flags. The Russian and the Serbian flag were in dispute, and the
+flag page of Webster's Dictionary had to be consulted. Newspapers and
+letters were both abnormally late, and Mr. Britling, tiring of supplying
+trivial information to his offspring, smoked cigarettes in the garden.
+He had an idea of intercepting the postman. His eyes and ears informed
+him of the approach of Mrs. Faber's automobile. It was an old,
+resolute-looking machine painted red, and driven by a trusted gardener;
+there was no mistaking it.
+
+Mrs. Faber was in it, and she stopped it outside the gate and made
+signals. Mrs. Britling, attracted by the catastrophic sounds of Mrs.
+Faber's vehicle, came out by the front door, and she and her husband
+both converged upon the caller.
+
+
+Section 2
+
+"I won't come in," cried Mrs. Faber, "but I thought I'd tell you. I've
+been getting food."
+
+"Food?"
+
+"Provisions. There's going to be a run on provisions. Look at my flitch
+of bacon!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"Faber says we have to lay in what we can. This war--it's going to stop
+everything. We can't tell what will happen. I've got the children to
+consider, so here I am. I was at Hickson's before nine...."
+
+The little lady was very flushed and bright-eyed. Her fair hair was
+disordered, her hat a trifle askew. She had an air of enjoying unwonted
+excitements. "All the gold's being hoarded too," she said, with a crow
+of delight in her voice. "Faber says that probably our cheques won't be
+worth _that_ in a few days. He rushed off to London to get gold at his
+clubs--while he can. I had to insist on Hickson taking a cheque.
+'Never,' I said, 'will I deal with you again--never--unless you do....'
+Even then he looked at me almost as if he thought he wouldn't.
+
+"It's Famine!" she said, turning to Mr. Britling. "I've laid hands on
+all I can. I've got the children to consider."
+
+"But why is it famine?" asked Mr. Britling.
+
+"Oh! it _is_!" she said.
+
+"But why?"
+
+"Faber understands," she said. "Of course it's Famine...."
+
+"And would you believe me," she went on, going back to Mrs. Britling,
+"that man Hickson stood behind his counter--where I've dealt with him
+for _years_, and refused absolutely to let me have more than a dozen
+tins of sardines. _Refused!_ Point blank!
+
+"I was there before nine, and even then Hickson's shop was
+crowded--_crowded_, my dear!"
+
+"What have you got?" said Mr. Britling with an inquiring movement
+towards the automobile.
+
+She had got quite a lot. She had two sides of bacon, a case of sugar,
+bags of rice, eggs, a lot of flour.
+
+"What are all these little packets?" said Mr. Britling.
+
+Mrs. Faber looked slightly abashed.
+
+"Cerebos salt," she said. "One gets carried away a little. I just got
+hold of it and carried it out to the car. I thought we might have to
+salt things later."
+
+"And the jars are pickles?" said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Yes. But look at all my flour! That's what will go first...."
+
+The lady was a little flurried by Mr. Britling's too detailed
+examination of her haul. "What good is blacking?" he asked. She would
+not hear him. She felt he was trying to spoil her morning. She declared
+she must get on back to her home. "Don't say I didn't warn you," she
+said. "I've got no end of things to do. There's peas! I want to show
+cook how to bottle our peas. For this year--it's lucky, we've got no end
+of peas. I came by here just for the sake of telling you." And with that
+she presently departed--obviously ruffled by Mrs. Britling's lethargy
+and Mr. Britling's scepticism.
+
+Mr. Britling watched her go off with a slowly rising indignation.
+
+"And that," he said, "is how England is going to war! Scrambling for
+food--at the very beginning."
+
+"I suppose she is anxious for the children," said Mrs. Britling.
+
+"Blacking!"
+
+"After all," said Mr. Britling, "if other people are doing that sort of
+thing--"
+
+"That's the idea of all panics. We've got not to do it.... The country
+hasn't even declared war yet! Hallo, here we are! Better late than
+never."
+
+The head of the postman, bearing newspapers and letters, appeared
+gliding along the top of the hedge as he cycled down the road towards
+the Dower House corner.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+England was not yet at war, but all the stars were marching to that end.
+It was as if an event so vast must needs take its time to happen. No
+doubt was left upon Mr. Britling's mind, though a whole-page
+advertisement in the _Daily News_, in enormous type and of mysterious
+origin, implored Great Britain not to play into the hands of Russia,
+Russia the Terrible, that bugbear of the sentimental Radicals. The news
+was wide and sweeping, and rather inaccurate. The Germans were said to
+be in Belgium and Holland, and they had seized English ships in the Kiel
+Canal. A moratorium had been proclaimed, and the reports of a food panic
+showed Mrs. Faber to be merely one example of a large class of excitable
+people.
+
+Mr. Britling found the food panic disconcerting. It did not harmonise
+with his leading _motif_ of the free people of the world rising against
+the intolerable burthen of militarism. It spoilt his picture....
+
+Mrs. Britling shared the paper with Mr. Britling, they stood by the bed
+of begonias near the cedar tree and read, and the air was full of the
+cheerful activities of the lawn-mower that was being drawn by a
+carefully booted horse across the hockey field.
+
+Presently Hugh came flitting out of the house to hear what had happened.
+"One can't work somehow, with all these big things going on," he
+apologised. He secured the _Daily News_ while his father and mother read
+_The Times_. The voices of the younger boys came from the shade of the
+trees; they had brought all their toy soldiers out of doors, and were
+making entrenched camps in the garden.
+
+"The financial situation is an extraordinary one," said Mr. Britling,
+concentrating his attention.... "All sorts of staggering things may
+happen. In a social and economic system that has grown just anyhow....
+Never been planned.... In a world full of Mrs. Fabers...."
+
+"Moratorium?" said Hugh over his _Daily News_. "In relation to debts and
+so on? Modern side you sent me to, Daddy. I live at hand to mouth in
+etymology. Mors and crematorium--do we burn our bills instead of paying
+them?"
+
+"Moratorium," reflected Mr. Britling; "Moratorium. What nonsense you
+talk! It's something that delays, of course. Nothing to do with death.
+Just a temporary stoppage of payments.... Of course there's bound to be
+a tremendous change in values...."
+
+
+Section 4
+
+"There's bound to be a tremendous change in values."
+
+On that text Mr. Britling's mind enlarged very rapidly. It produced a
+wonderful crop of possibilities before he got back to his study. He sat
+down to his desk, but he did not immediately take up his work. He had
+discovered something so revolutionary in his personal affairs that even
+the war issue remained for a time in suspense.
+
+Tucked away in the back of Mr. Britling's consciousness was something
+that had not always been there, something warm and comforting that made
+life and his general thoughts about life much easier and pleasanter than
+they would otherwise have been, the sense of a neatly arranged
+investment list, a shrewdly and geographically distributed system of
+holdings in national loans, municipal investments, railway debentures,
+that had amounted altogether to rather over five-and-twenty thousand
+pounds; his and Mrs. Britling's, a joint accumulation. This was, so to
+speak, his economic viscera. It sustained him, and kept him going and
+comfortable. When all was well he did not feel its existence; he had
+merely a pleasant sense of general well-being. When here or there a
+security got a little disarranged he felt a vague discomfort. Now he
+became aware of grave disorders. It was as if he discovered he had been
+accidentally eating toadstools, and didn't quite know whether they
+weren't a highly poisonous sort. But an analogy may be carried too
+far....
+
+At any rate, when Mr. Britling got back to his writing-desk he was much
+too disturbed to resume "And Now War Ends."
+
+"There's bound to be a tremendous change in values!"
+
+He had never felt quite so sure as most people about the stability of
+the modern financial system. He did not, he felt, understand the working
+of this moratorium, or the peculiar advantage of prolonging the bank
+holidays. It meant, he supposed, a stoppage of payment all round, and a
+cutting off of the supply of ready money. And Hickson the grocer,
+according to Mrs. Faber, was already looking askance at cheques.
+
+Even if the bank did reopen Mr. Britling was aware that his current
+balance was low; at the utmost it amounted to twenty or thirty pounds.
+He had been expecting cheques from his English and American publishers,
+and the usual _Times_ cheque. Suppose these payments were intercepted!
+
+All these people might, so far as he could understand, stop payment
+under this moratorium! That hadn't at first occurred to him. But, of
+course, quite probably they might refuse to pay his account when it fell
+due.
+
+And suppose _The Times_ felt his peculiar vein of thoughtfulness
+unnecessary in these stirring days!
+
+And then if the bank really did lock up his deposit account, and his
+securities became unsaleable!
+
+Mr. Britling felt like an oyster that is invited to leave its shell....
+
+He sat back from his desk contemplating these things. His imagination
+made a weak attempt to picture a world in which credit has vanished and
+money is of doubtful value. He supposed a large number of people would
+just go on buying and selling at or near the old prices by force of
+habit.
+
+His mind and conscience made a valiant attempt to pick up "And Now War
+Ends" and go on with it, but before five minutes were out he was back at
+the thoughts of food panic and bankruptcy....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+The conflict of interests at Mr. Britling's desk became unendurable. He
+felt he must settle the personal question first. He wandered out upon
+the lawn and smoked cigarettes.
+
+His first conception of a great convergent movement of the nations to
+make a world peace and an end to militant Germany was being obscured by
+this second, entirely incompatible, vision of a world confused and
+disorganised. Mrs. Fabers in great multitudes hoarding provisions,
+riotous crowds attacking shops, moratorium, shut banks and waiting
+queues. Was it possible for the whole system to break down through a
+shock to its confidence? Without any sense of incongruity the dignified
+pacification of the planet had given place in his mind to these more
+intimate possibilities. He heard a rustle behind him, and turned to face
+his wife.
+
+"Do you think," she asked, "that there is any chance of a shortage of
+food?"
+
+"If all the Mrs. Fabers in the world run and grab--"
+
+"Then every one must grab. I haven't much in the way of stores in the
+house."
+
+"H'm," said Mr. Britling, and reflected.... "I don't think we must buy
+stores now."
+
+"But if we are short."
+
+"It's the chances of war," said Mr. Britling.
+
+He reflected. "Those who join a panic make a panic. After all, there is
+just as much food in the world as there was last month. And short of
+burning it the only way of getting rid of it is to eat it. And the
+harvests are good. Why begin a scramble at a groaning board?"
+
+"But people _are_ scrambling! It would be awkward--with the children and
+everything--if we ran short."
+
+"We shan't. And anyhow, you mustn't begin hoarding, even if it means
+hardship."
+
+"Yes. But you won't like it if suddenly there's no sugar for your tea."
+
+Mr. Britling ignored this personal application.
+
+"What is far more serious than a food shortage is the possibility of a
+money panic."
+
+He paced the lawn with her and talked. He said that even now very few
+people realised the flimsiness of the credit system by which the modern
+world was sustained. It was a huge growth of confidence, due very
+largely to the uninquiring indolence of--everybody. It was sound so long
+as mankind did, on the whole, believe in it; give only a sufficient loss
+of faith and it might suffer any sort of collapse. It might vanish
+altogether--as the credit system vanished at the breaking up of Italy by
+the Goths--and leave us nothing but tangible things, real property,
+possession nine points of the law, and that sort of thing. Did she
+remember that last novel of Gissing's?--"Veranilda," it was called. It
+was a picture of the world when there was no wealth at all except what
+one could carry hidden or guarded about with one. That sort of thing
+came to the Roman Empire slowly, in the course of lifetimes, but
+nowadays we lived in a rapider world--with flimsier institutions. Nobody
+knew the strength or the weakness of credit; nobody knew whether even
+the present shock might not send it smashing down.... And then all the
+little life we had lived so far would roll away....
+
+Mrs. Britling, he noted, glanced ever and again at her sunlit
+house--there were new sunblinds, and she had been happy in her choice of
+a colour--and listened with a sceptical expression to this
+disquisition.
+
+"A few days ago," said Mr. Britling, trying to make things concrete for
+her, "you and I together were worth five-and-twenty thousand pounds. Now
+we don't know what we are worth; whether we have lost a thousand or ten
+thousand...."
+
+He examined his sovereign purse and announced he had six pounds. "What
+have you?"
+
+She had about eighteen pounds in the house.
+
+"We may have to get along with that for an indefinite time."
+
+"But the bank will open again presently," she said. "And people about
+here trust us."
+
+"Suppose they don't?"
+
+She did not trouble about the hypothesis. "And our investments will
+recover. They always do recover."
+
+"Everything may recover," he admitted. "But also nothing may recover.
+All this life of ours which has seemed so settled and secure--isn't
+secure. I have felt that we were fixed here and rooted--for all our
+lives. Suppose presently things sweep us out of it? It's a possibility
+we may have to face. I feel this morning as if two enormous gates had
+opened in our lives, like the gates that give upon an arena, gates
+giving on a darkness--through which anything might come. Even death.
+Suppose suddenly we were to see one of those great Zeppelins in the air,
+or hear the thunder of guns away towards the coast. And if a messenger
+came upon a bicycle telling us to leave everything and go inland...."
+
+"I see no reason why one should go out to meet things like that."
+
+"But there is no reason why one should not envisage them...."
+
+"The curious thing," said Mr. Britling, pursuing his examination of the
+matter, "is that, looking at these things as one does now, as things
+quite possible, they are not nearly so terrifying and devastating to the
+mind as they would have seemed--last week. I believe I should load you
+all into Gladys and start off westward with a kind of exhilaration...."
+
+She looked at him as if she would speak, and said nothing. She suspected
+him of hating his home and affecting to care for it out of politeness to
+her....
+
+"Perhaps mankind tries too much to settle down. Perhaps these stirrings
+up have to occur to save us from our disposition to stuffy comfort.
+There's the magic call of the unknown experience, of dangers and
+hardships. One wants to go. But unless some push comes one does not go.
+There is a spell that keeps one to the lair and the old familiar ways.
+Now I am afraid--and at the same time I feel that the spell is broken.
+The magic prison is suddenly all doors. You may call this ruin,
+bankruptcy, invasion, flight; they are doors out of habit and
+routine.... I have been doing nothing for so long, except idle things
+and discursive things."
+
+"I thought that you managed to be happy here. You have done a lot of
+work."
+
+"Writing is recording, not living. But now I feel suddenly that we are
+living intensely. It is as if the whole quality of life was changing.
+There are such times. There are times when the spirit of life changes
+altogether. The old world knew that better than we do. It made a
+distinction between weekdays and Sabbaths, and between feasts and fasts
+and days of devotion. That is just what has happened now. Week-day rules
+must be put aside. Before--oh! three days ago, competition was fair, it
+was fair and tolerable to get the best food one could and hold on to
+one's own. But that isn't right now. War makes a Sabbath, and we shut
+the shops. The banks are shut, and the world still feels as though
+Sunday was keeping on...."
+
+He saw his own way clear.
+
+"The scale has altered. It does not matter now in the least if we are
+ruined. It does not matter in the least if we have to live upon potatoes
+and run into debt for our rent. These now are the most incidental of
+things. A week ago they would have been of the first importance. Here we
+are face to face with the greatest catastrophe and the greatest
+opportunity in history. We have to plunge through catastrophe to
+opportunity. There is nothing to be done now in the whole world except
+to get the best out of this tremendous fusing up of all the settled
+things of life." He had got what he wanted. He left her standing upon
+the lawn and hurried back to his desk....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+When Mr. Britling, after a strenuous morning among high ideals,
+descended for lunch, he found Mr. Lawrence Carmine had come over to join
+him at that meal. Mr. Carmine was standing in the hall with his legs
+very wide apart reading _The Times_ for the fourth time. "I can do no
+work," he said, turning round. "I can't fix my mind. I suppose we are
+going to war. I'd got so used to the war with Germany that I never
+imagined it would happen. Gods! what a bore it will be.... And Maxse and
+all those scaremongers cock-a-hoop and 'I told you so.' Damn these
+Germans!"
+
+He looked despondent and worried. He followed Mr. Britling towards the
+dining-room with his hands deep in his pockets.
+
+"It's going to be a tremendous thing," he said, after he had greeted
+Mrs. Britling and Hugh and Aunt Wilshire and Teddy, and seated himself
+at Mr. Britling's hospitable board. "It's going to upset everything. We
+don't begin to imagine all the mischief it is going to do."
+
+Mr. Britling was full of the heady draught of liberal optimism he had
+been brewing upstairs. "I am not sorry I have lived to see this war," he
+said. "It may be a tremendous catastrophe in one sense, but in another
+it is a huge step forward in human life. It is the end of forty years of
+evil suspense. It is crisis and solution."
+
+"I wish I could see it like that," said Mr. Carmine.
+
+"It is like a thaw--everything has been in a frozen confusion since that
+Jew-German Treaty of Berlin. And since 1871."
+
+"Why not since Schleswig-Holstein?" said Mr. Carmine.
+
+"Why not? Or since the Treaty of Vienna?"
+
+"Or since--One might go back."
+
+"To the Roman Empire," said Hugh.
+
+"To the first conquest of all," said Teddy....
+
+"I couldn't work this morning," said Hugh. "I have been reading in the
+Encyclopćdia about races and religions in the Balkans.... It's very
+mixed."
+
+"So long as it could only be dealt with piecemeal," said Mr. Britling.
+"And that is just where the tremendous opportunity of this war comes in.
+Now everything becomes fluid. We can redraw the map of the world. A week
+ago we were all quarrelling bitterly about things too little for human
+impatience. Now suddenly we face an epoch. This is an epoch. The world
+is plastic for men to do what they will with it. This is the end and the
+beginning of an age. This is something far greater than the French
+Revolution or the Reformation.... And we live in it...."
+
+He paused impressively.
+
+"I wonder what will happen to Albania?" said Hugh, but his comment was
+disregarded.
+
+"War makes men bitter and narrow," said Mr. Carmine.
+
+"War narrowly conceived," said Mr. Britling. "But this is an indignant
+and generous war."
+
+They speculated about the possible intervention of the United States.
+Mr. Britling thought that the attack on Belgium demanded the
+intervention of every civilised power, that all the best instincts of
+America would be for intervention. "The more," he said, "the quicker."
+
+"It would be strange if the last power left out to mediate were to be
+China," said Mr. Carmine. "The one people in the world who really
+believe in peace.... I wish I had your confidence, Britling."
+
+For a time they contemplated a sort of Grand Inquest on Germany and
+militarism, presided over by the Wisdom of the East. Militarism was, as
+it were, to be buried as a suicide at four cross-roads, with a stake
+through its body to prevent any untimely resuscitation.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Mr. Britling was in a phase of imaginative release. Such a release was
+one of the first effects of the war upon many educated minds. Things
+that had seemed solid forever were visibly in flux; things that had
+seemed stone were alive. Every boundary, every government, was seen for
+the provisional thing it was. He talked of his World Congress meeting
+year by year, until it ceased to be a speculation and became a mere
+intelligent anticipation; he talked of the "manifest necessity" of a
+Supreme Court for the world. He beheld that vision at the Hague, but Mr.
+Carmine preferred Delhi or Samarkand or Alexandria or Nankin. "Let us
+get away from the delusion of Europe anyhow," said Mr. Carmine....
+
+As Mr. Britling had sat at his desk that morning and surveyed the
+stupendous vistas of possibility that war was opening, the catastrophe
+had taken on a more and more beneficial quality. "I suppose that it is
+only through such crises as these that the world can reconstruct
+itself," I said. And, on the whole that afternoon he was disposed to
+hope that the great military machine would not smash itself too easily.
+"We want the nations to feel the need of one another," he said. "Too
+brief a campaign might lead to a squabble for plunder. The Englishman
+has to learn his dependence on the Irishman, the Russian has to be
+taught the value of education and the friendship of the Pole.... Europe
+will now have to look to Asia, and recognise that Indians and Chinamem
+are also 'white.'... But these lessons require time and stresses if
+they are to be learnt properly...."
+
+They discussed the possible duration of the war.
+
+Mr. Carmine thought it would be a long struggle; Mr. Britling thought
+that the Russians would be in Berlin by the next May. He was afraid they
+might get there before the end of the year. He thought that the Germans
+would beat out their strength upon the French and Belgian lines, and
+never be free to turn upon the Russian at all. He was sure they had
+underrated the strength and energy of the French and of ourselves. "The
+Russians meanwhile," he said, "will come on, slowly, steadily,
+inevitably...."
+
+
+Section 8
+
+That day of vast anticipations drew out into the afternoon. It was a
+day--obsessed. It was the precursor of a relentless series of doomed and
+fettered days. There was a sense of enormous occurrences going on just
+out of sound and sight--behind the mask of Essex peacefulness. From this
+there was no escape. It made all other interests fitful. Games of
+Badminton were begun and abruptly truncated by the arrival of the
+evening papers; conversations started upon any topic whatever returned
+to the war by the third and fourth remark....
+
+After lunch Mr. Britling and Mr. Carmine went on talking. Nothing else
+was possible. They repeated things they had already said. They went into
+things more thoroughly. They sat still for a time, and then suddenly
+broke out with some new consideration....
+
+It had been their custom to play skat with Herr Heinrich, who had shown
+them the game very explicitly and thoroughly. But there was no longer
+any Herr Heinrich--and somehow German games were already out of fashion.
+The two philosophers admitted that they had already considered skat to
+be complicated without subtlety, and that its chief delight for them had
+been the pink earnestness of Herr Heinrich, his inability to grasp
+their complete but tacit comprehension of its innocent strategy, and his
+invariable ill-success to bring off the coups that flashed before his
+imagination.
+
+He would survey the destructive counter-stroke with unconcealed
+surprise. He would verify his first impression by craning towards it and
+adjusting his glasses on his nose. He had a characteristic way of doing
+this with one stiff finger on either side of his sturdy nose.
+
+"It is very fortunate for you that you have played that card," he would
+say, growing pinker and pinker with hasty cerebration. "Or else--yes"--a
+glance at his own cards--"it would have been altogether bad for you. I
+had taken only a very small risk.... Now I must--"
+
+He would reconsider his hand.
+
+"_Zo!_" he would say, dashing down a card....
+
+Well, he had gone and skat had gone. A countless multitude of such links
+were snapping that day between hundreds of thousands of English and
+German homes.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+The imminence of war produced a peculiar exaltation in Aunt Wilshire.
+She developed a point of view that was entirely her own.
+
+It was Mr. Britling's habit, a habit he had set himself to acquire after
+much irritating experience, to disregard Aunt Wilshire. She was not,
+strictly speaking, his aunt; she was one of those distant cousins we
+find already woven into our lives when we attain to years of
+responsibility. She had been a presence in his father's household when
+Mr. Britling was a boy. Then she had been called "Jane," or "Cousin
+Jane," or "Your cousin Wilshire." It had been a kindly freak of Mr.
+Britling's to promote her to Aunty rank.
+
+She eked out a small inheritance by staying with relatives. Mr.
+Britling's earlier memories presented her as a slender young woman of
+thirty, with a nose upon which small boys were forbidden to comment. Yet
+she commented upon it herself, and called his attention to its marked
+resemblance to that of the great Duke of Wellington. "He was, I am
+told," said Cousin Wilshire to the attentive youth, "a great friend of
+your great-grandmother's. At any rate, they were contemporaries. Since
+then this nose has been in the family. He would have been the last to
+draw a veil over it, but other times, other manners. 'Publish,' he said,
+'and be damned.'"
+
+She had a knack of exasperating Mr. Britling's father, a knack which to
+a less marked degree she also possessed in relation to the son. But Mr.
+Britling senior never acquired the art of disregarding her. Her
+method--if one may call the natural expression of a personality a
+method--was an invincibly superior knowledge, a firm and ill-concealed
+belief that all statements made in her hearing were wrong and most of
+them absurd, and a manner calm, assured, restrained. She may have been
+born with it; it is on record that at the age of ten she was pronounced
+a singularly trying child. She may have been born with the air of
+thinking the doctor a muff and knowing how to manage all this business
+better. Mr. Britling had known her only in her ripeness. As a boy, he
+had enjoyed her confidences--about other people and the general neglect
+of her advice. He grew up rather to like her--most people rather liked
+her--and to attach a certain importance to her unattainable approval.
+She was sometimes kind, she was frequently absurd....
+
+With very little children she was quite wise and Jolly....
+
+So she circulated about a number of houses which at any rate always
+welcomed her coming. In the opening days of each visit she performed
+marvels of tact, and set a watch upon her lips. Then the demons of
+controversy and dignity would get the better of her. She would begin to
+correct, quietly but firmly, she would begin to disapprove of the tone
+and quality of her treatment. It was quite common for her visit to
+terminate in speechless rage both on the side of host and of visitor.
+The remarkable thing was that this speechless rage never endured. Though
+she could exasperate she could never offend. Always after an interval
+during which she was never mentioned, people began to wonder how Cousin
+Jane was getting on.... A tentative correspondence would begin, leading
+slowly up to a fresh invitation.
+
+She spent more time in Mr. Britling's house than in any other. There was
+a legend that she had "drawn out" his mind, and that she had "stood up"
+for him against his father. She had certainly contradicted quite a
+number of those unfavourable comments that fathers are wont to make
+about their sons. Though certainly she contradicted everything. And Mr.
+Britling hated to think of her knocking about alone in boarding-houses
+and hydropathic establishments with only the most casual chances for
+contradiction.
+
+Moreover, he liked to see her casting her eye over the morning paper.
+She did it with a manner as though she thought the terrestrial globe a
+great fool, and quite beyond the reach of advice. And as though she
+understood and was rather amused at the way in which the newspaper
+people tried to keep back the real facts of the case from her.
+
+And now she was scornfully entertained at the behaviour of everybody in
+the war crisis.
+
+She confided various secrets of state to the elder of the younger
+Britlings--preferably when his father was within earshot.
+
+"None of these things they are saying about the war," she said, "really
+matter in the slightest degree. It is all about a spoilt carpet and
+nothing else in the world--a madman and a spoilt carpet. If people had
+paid the slightest attention to common sense none of this war would have
+happened. The thing was perfectly well known. He was a delicate child,
+difficult to rear and given to screaming fits. Consequently he was never
+crossed, allowed to do everything. Nobody but his grandmother had the
+slightest influence with him. And she prevented him spoiling this carpet
+as completely as he wished to do. The story is perfectly well known. It
+was at Windsor--at the age of eight. After that he had but one thought:
+war with England....
+
+"Everybody seemed surprised," she said suddenly at tea to Mr. Carmine.
+"I at least am not surprised. I am only surprised it did not come
+sooner. If any one had asked me I could have told them, three years,
+five years ago."
+
+The day was one of flying rumours, Germany was said to have declared war
+on Italy, and to have invaded Holland as well as Belgium.
+
+"They'll declare war against the moon next!" said Aunt Wilshire.
+
+"And send a lot of Zeppelins," said the smallest boy. "Herr Heinrich
+told us they can fly thousands of miles."
+
+"He will go on declaring war until there is nothing left to declare war
+against. That is exactly what he has always done. Once started he cannot
+desist. Often he has had to be removed from the dinner-table for fear of
+injury. _Now_, it is ultimatums."
+
+She was much pleased by a headline in the _Daily Express_ that streamed
+right across the page: "The Mad Dog of Europe." Nothing else, she said,
+had come so near her feelings about the war.
+
+"Mark my words," said Aunt Wilshire in her most impressive tones. "He is
+insane. It will be proved to be so. He will end his days in an
+asylum--as a lunatic. I have felt it myself for years and said so in
+private.... Knowing what I did.... To such friends as I could trust not
+to misunderstand me.... Now at least I can speak out.
+
+"With his moustaches turned up!" exclaimed Aunt Wilshire after an
+interval of accumulation.... "They say he has completely lost the use of
+the joint in his left arm, he carries it stiff like a Punch and
+Judy--and he wants to conquer Europe.... While his grandmother lived
+there was some one to keep him in order. He stood in Awe of her. He
+hated her, but he did not dare defy her. Even his uncle had some
+influence. Now, nothing restrains him.
+
+"A double-headed mad dog," said Aunt Wilshire. "Him and his eagles!... A
+man like that ought never to have been allowed to make a war.... Not
+even a little war.... If he had been put under restraint when I said so,
+none of these things would have happened. But, of course I am nobody....
+It was not considered worth attending to."
+
+
+Section 10
+
+One remarkable aspect of the English attitude towards the war was the
+disposition to treat it as a monstrous joke. It is a disposition
+traceable in a vast proportion of the British literature of the time. In
+spite of violence, cruelty, injustice, and the vast destruction and
+still vaster dangers of the struggles, that disposition held. The
+English mind refused flatly to see anything magnificent or terrible in
+the German attack, or to regard the German Emperor or the Crown Prince
+as anything more than figures of fun. From first to last their
+conception of the enemy was an overstrenuous, foolish man, red with
+effort, with protruding eyes and a forced frightfulness of demeanour.
+That he might be tremendously lethal did not in the least obscure the
+fact that he was essentially ridiculous. And if as the war went on the
+joke grew grimmer, still it remained a joke. The German might make a
+desert of the world; that could not alter the British conviction that he
+was making a fool of himself.
+
+And this disposition kept coming to the surface throughout the
+afternoon, now in a casual allusion, now in some deliberate jest. The
+small boys had discovered the goose step, and it filled their little
+souls with amazement and delight. That human beings should consent to
+those ridiculous paces seemed to them almost incredibly funny. They
+tried it themselves, and then set out upon a goose-step propaganda.
+Letty and Cissie had come up to the Dower House for tea and news, and
+they were enrolled with Teddy and Hugh. The six of them, chuckling and
+swaying, marched, in vast scissor strides across the lawn. "Left," cried
+Hugh. "Left."
+
+"Toes _out_ more," said Mr. Lawrence Carmine.
+
+"Keep stiffer," said the youngest Britling.
+
+"Watch the Zeppelins and look proud," said Hugh. "With the chest out.
+_Zo!_"
+
+Mrs. Britling was so much amused that she went in for her camera, and
+took a snapshot of the detachment. It was a very successful snapshot,
+and a year later Mr. Britling was to find a print of it among his
+papers, and recall the sunshine and the merriment....
+
+
+Section 11
+
+That night brought the British declaration of war against Germany. To
+nearly every Englishman that came as a matter of course, and it is one
+of the most wonderful facts in history that the Germans were surprised
+by it. When Mr. Britling, as a sample Englishman, had said that there
+would never be war between Germany and England, he had always meant that
+it was inconceivable to him that Germany should ever attack Belgium or
+France. If Germany had been content to fight a merely defensive war upon
+her western frontier and let Belgium alone, there would scarcely have
+been such a thing as a war party in Great Britain. But the attack upon
+Belgium, the westward thrust, made the whole nation flame unanimously
+into war. It settled a question that was in open debate up to the very
+outbreak of the conflict. Up to the last the English had cherished the
+idea that in Germany, just as in England, the mass of people were
+kindly, pacific, and detached. That had been the English mistake.
+Germany was really and truly what Germany had been professing to be for
+forty years, a War State. With a sigh--and a long-forgotten
+thrill--England roused herself to fight. Even now she still roused
+herself sluggishly. It was going to be an immense thing, but just how
+immense it was going to be no one in England had yet imagined.
+
+Countless men that day whom Fate had marked for death and wounds stared
+open-mouthed at the news, and smiled with the excitement of the
+headlines, not dreaming that any of these things would come within three
+hundred miles of them. What was war to Matching's Easy--to all the
+Matching's Easies great and small that make up England? The last home
+that was ever burnt by an enemy within a hundred miles of Matching's
+Easy was burnt by the Danes rather more than a thousand years ago....
+And the last trace of those particular Danes in England were certain
+horny scraps of indurated skin under the heads of the nails in the door
+of St. Clement Danes in London....
+
+Now again, England was to fight in a war which was to light fires in
+England and bring death to English people on English soil. There were
+inconceivable ideas in August, 1914. Such things must happen before they
+can be comprehended as possible.
+
+
+Section 12
+
+This story is essentially the history of the opening and of the
+realisation of the Great War as it happened to one small group of people
+in Essex, and more particularly as it happened to one human brain. It
+came at first to all these people in a spectacular manner, as a thing
+happening dramatically and internationally, as a show, as something in
+the newspapers, something in the character of an historical epoch rather
+than a personal experience; only by slow degrees did it and its
+consequences invade the common texture of English life. If this story
+could be represented by sketches or pictures the central figure would be
+Mr. Britling, now sitting at his desk by day or by night and writing
+first at his tract "And Now War Ends" and then at other things, now
+walking about his garden or in Claverings park or going to and fro in
+London, in his club reading the ticker or in his hall reading the
+newspaper, with ideas and impressions continually clustering, expanding,
+developing more and more abundantly in his mind, arranging themselves,
+reacting upon one another, building themselves into generalisations and
+conclusions....
+
+All Mr. Britling's mental existence was soon threaded on the war. His
+more or less weekly _Times_ leader became dissertations upon the German
+point of view; his reviews of books and Literary Supplement articles
+were all oriented more and more exactly to that one supreme fact....
+
+It was rare that he really seemed to be seeing the war; few people saw
+it; for most of the world it came as an illimitable multitude of
+incoherent, loud, and confusing impressions. But all the time he was at
+least doing his utmost to see the war, to simplify it and extract the
+essence of it until it could be apprehended as something epic and
+explicable, as a stateable issue....
+
+Most typical picture of all would be Mr. Britling writing in a little
+circle of orange lamplight, with the blinds of his room open for the
+sake of the moonlight, but the window shut to keep out the moths that
+beat against it. Outside would be the moon and the high summer sky and
+the old church tower dim above the black trees half a mile away, with
+its clock--which Mr. Britling heard at night but never noted by
+day--beating its way round the slow semicircle of the nocturnal hours.
+He had always hated conflict and destruction, and felt that war between
+civilised states was the quintessential expression of human failure, it
+was a stupidity that stopped progress and all the free variation of
+humanity, a thousand times he had declared it impossible, but even now
+with his country fighting he was still far from realising that this was
+a thing that could possibly touch him more than intellectually. He did
+not really believe with his eyes and finger-tips and backbone that
+murder, destruction, and agony on a scale monstrous beyond precedent was
+going on in the same world as that which slumbered outside the black ivy
+and silver shining window-sill that framed his peaceful view.
+
+War had not been a reality of the daily life of England for more than a
+thousand years. The mental habit of the nation for fifty generations was
+against its emotional recognition. The English were the spoilt children
+of peace. They had never been wholly at war for three hundred years, and
+for over eight hundred years they had not fought for life against a
+foreign power. Spain and France had threatened in turn, but never even
+crossed the seas. It is true that England had had her civil dissensions
+and had made wars and conquests in every part of the globe and
+established an immense empire, but that last, as Mr. Britling had told
+Mr. Direck, was "an excursion." She had just sent out younger sons and
+surplus people, emigrants and expeditionary forces. Her own soil had
+never seen any successful foreign invasion; her homeland, the bulk of
+her households, her general life, had gone on untouched by these things.
+Nineteen people out of twenty, the middle class and most of the lower
+class, knew no more of the empire than they did of the Argentine
+Republic or the Italian Renaissance. It did not concern them. War that
+calls upon every man and threatens every life in the land, war of the
+whole national being, was a thing altogether outside English experience
+and the scope of the British imagination. It was still incredible, it
+was still outside the range of Mr. Britling's thoughts all through the
+tremendous onrush and check of the German attack in the west that opened
+the great war. Through those two months he was, as it were, a more and
+more excited spectator at a show, a show like a baseball match, a
+spectator with money on the event, rather than a really participating
+citizen of a nation thoroughly at war....
+
+
+Section 13
+
+After the jolt of the food panic and a brief, financial scare, the vast
+inertia of everyday life in England asserted itself. When the public
+went to the banks for the new paper money, the banks tendered
+gold--apologetically. The supply of the new notes was very insufficient,
+and there was plenty of gold. After the first impression that a
+universal catastrophe had happened there was an effect as if nothing had
+happened.
+
+Shops re-opened after the Bank Holiday, in a tentative spirit that
+speedily became assurance; people went about their business again, and
+the war, so far as the mass of British folk were concerned, was for some
+weeks a fever of the mind and intelligence rather than a physical and
+personal actuality. There was a keen demand for news, and for a time
+there was very little news. The press did its best to cope with this
+immense occasion. Led by the _Daily Express_, all the halfpenny
+newspapers adopted a new and more resonant sort of headline, the
+streamer, a band of emphatic type that ran clean across the page and
+announced victories or disconcerting happenings. They did this every
+day, whether there was a great battle or the loss of a trawler to
+announce, and the public mind speedily adapted itself to the new pitch.
+
+There was no invitation from the government and no organisation for any
+general participation in war. People talked unrestrictedly; every one
+seemed to be talking; they waved flags and displayed much vague
+willingness to do something. Any opportunity of service was taken very
+eagerly. Lord Kitchener was understood to have demanded five hundred
+thousand men; the War Office arrangements for recruiting, arrangements
+conceived on a scale altogether too small, were speedily overwhelmed by
+a rush of willing young men. The flow had to be checked by raising the
+physical standard far above the national average, and recruiting died
+down to manageable proportions. There was a quite genuine belief that
+the war might easily be too exclusively considered; that for the great
+mass of people it was a disturbing and distracting rather than a vital
+interest. The phase "Business as Usual" ran about the world, and the
+papers abounded in articles in which going on as though there was no war
+at all was demonstrated to be the truest form of patriotism. "Leave
+things to Kitchener" was another watchword with a strong appeal to the
+national quality. "Business as usual during Alterations to the Map of
+Europe" was the advertisement of one cheerful barber, widely quoted....
+
+Hugh was at home all through August. He had thrown up his rooms in
+London with his artistic ambitions, and his father was making all the
+necessary arrangements for him to follow Cardinal to Cambridge.
+Meanwhile Hugh was taking up his scientific work where he had laid it
+down. He gave a reluctant couple of hours in the afternoon to the
+mysteries of Little-go Greek, and for the rest of his time he was either
+working at mathematics and mathematical physics or experimenting in a
+little upstairs room that had been carved out of the general space of
+the barn. It was only at the very end of August that it dawned upon him
+or Mr. Britling that the war might have more than a spectacular and
+sympathetic appeal for him. Hitherto contemporary history had happened
+without his personal intervention. He did not see why it should not
+continue to happen with the same detachment. The last elections--and a
+general election is really the only point at which the life of the
+reasonable Englishman becomes in any way public--had happened four years
+ago, when he was thirteen.
+
+
+Section 14
+
+For a time it was believed in Matching's Easy that the German armies had
+been defeated and very largely destroyed at Ličge. It was a mistake not
+confined to Matching's Easy.
+
+The first raiding attack was certainly repulsed with heavy losses, and
+so were the more systematic assaults on August the sixth and seventh.
+After that the news from Ličge became uncertain, but it was believed in
+England that some or all of the forts were still holding out right up to
+the German entry into Brussels. Meanwhile the French were pushing into
+their lost provinces, occupying Altkirch, Mulhausen and Saarburg; the
+Russians were invading Bukovina and East Prussia; the _Goeben_, the
+_Breslau_ and the _Panther_ had been sunk by the newspapers in an
+imaginary battle in the Mediterranean, and Togoland was captured by the
+French and British. Neither the force nor the magnitude of the German
+attack through Belgium was appreciated by the general mind, and it was
+possible for Mr. Britling to reiterate his fear that the war would be
+over too soon, long before the full measure of its possible benefits
+could be secured. But these apprehensions were unfounded; the lessons
+the war had in store for Mr. Britling were far more drastic than
+anything he was yet able to imagine even in his most exalted moods.
+
+He resisted the intimations of the fall of Brussels and the appearance
+of the Germans at Dinant. The first real check to his excessive
+anticipations of victory for the Allies came with the sudden
+reappearance of Mr. Direck in a state of astonishment and dismay at
+Matching's Easy. He wired from the Strand office, "Coming to tell you
+about things," and arrived on the heels of his telegram.
+
+He professed to be calling upon Mr. and Mrs. Britling, and to a certain
+extent he was; but he had a quick eye for the door or windows; his
+glance roved irrelevantly as he talked. A faint expectation of Cissie
+came in with him and hovered about him, as the scent of violets follows
+the flower.
+
+He was, however, able to say quite a number of things before Mr.
+Britling's natural tendency to do the telling asserted itself.
+
+"My word," said Mr. Direck, "but this is _some_ war. It is going on
+regardless of every decent consideration. As an American citizen I
+naturally expected to be treated with some respect, war or no war. That
+expectation has not been realised.... Europe is dislocated.... You have
+no idea here yet how completely Europe is dislocated....
+
+"I came to Europe in a perfectly friendly spirit--and I must say I am
+surprised. Practically I have been thrown out, neck and crop. All my
+luggage is lost. Away at some one-horse junction near the Dutch frontier
+that I can't even learn the name of. There's joy in some German home, I
+guess, over my shirts; they were real good shirts. This tweed suit I
+have is all the wardrobe I've got in the world. All my money--good
+American notes--well, they laughed at them. And when I produced English
+gold they suspected me of being English and put me under arrest.... I
+can assure you that the English are most unpopular in Germany at the
+present time, thoroughly unpopular.... Considering that they are getting
+exactly what they were asking for, these Germans are really remarkably
+annoyed.... Well, I had to get the American consul to advance me money,
+and I've done more waiting about and irregular fasting and travelling on
+an empty stomach and viewing the world, so far as it was permitted, from
+railway sidings--for usually they made us pull the blinds down when
+anything important was on the track--than any cow that ever came to
+Chicago.... I was handed as freight--low grade freight.... It doesn't
+bear recalling."
+
+Mr. Direck assumed as grave and gloomy an expression as the facial
+habits of years would permit.
+
+"I tell you I never knew there was such a thing as war until this
+happened to me. In America we don't know there is such a thing. It's
+like pestilence and famine; something in the story books. We've
+forgotten it for anything real. There's just a few grandfathers go
+around talking about it. Judge Holmes and sage old fellows like him.
+Otherwise it's just a game the kids play at.... And then suddenly here's
+everybody running about in the streets--hating and threatening--and nice
+old gentlemen with white moustaches and fathers of families scheming and
+planning to burn houses and kill and hurt and terrify. And nice young
+women, too, looking for an Englishman to spit at; I tell you I've been
+within range and very uncomfortable several times.... And what one can't
+believe is that they are really doing these things. There's a little
+village called Visé near the Dutch frontier; some old chap got fooling
+there with a fowling-piece; and they've wiped it out. Shot the people by
+the dozen, put them out in rows three deep and shot them, and burnt the
+place. Short of scalping, Red Indians couldn't have done worse.
+Respectable German soldiers....
+
+"No one in England really seems to have any suspicion what is going on
+in Belgium. You hear stories--People tell them in Holland. It takes your
+breath away. They have set out just to cow those Belgians. They have
+started in to be deliberately frightful. You do not begin to
+understand.... Well.... Outrages. The sort of outrages Americans have
+never heard of. That one doesn't speak of.... Well.... Rape.... They
+have been raping women for disciplinary purposes on tables in the
+market-place of Ličge. Yes, sir. It's a fact. I was told it by a man who
+had just come out of Belgium. Knew the people, knew the place, knew
+everything. People over here do not seem to realise that those women are
+the same sort of women that you might find in Chester or Yarmouth, or in
+Matching's Easy for the matter of that. They still seem to think that
+Continental women are a different sort of women--more amenable to that
+sort of treatment. They seem to think there is some special Providential
+law against such things happening to English people. And it's within
+two hundred miles of you--even now. And as far as I can see there's
+precious little to prevent it coming nearer...."
+
+Mr. Britling thought there were a few little obstacles.
+
+"I've seen the new British army drilling in London, Mr. Britling. I
+don't know if you have. I saw a whole battalion. And they hadn't got
+half-a-dozen uniforms, and not a single rifle to the whole battalion.
+
+"You don't begin to realise in England what you are up against. You have
+no idea what it means to be in a country where everybody, the women, the
+elderly people, the steady middle-aged men, are taking war as seriously
+as business. They haven't the slightest compunction. I don't know what
+Germany was like before the war, I had hardly gotten out of my train
+before the war began; but Germany to-day is one big armed camp. It's all
+crawling with soldiers. And every soldier has his uniform and his boots
+and his arms and his kit.
+
+"And they're as sure of winning as if they had got London now. They mean
+to get London. They're cocksure they are going to walk through Belgium,
+cocksure they will get to Paris by Sedan day, and then they are going to
+destroy your fleet with Zeppelins and submarines and make a dash across
+the Channel. They say it's England they are after, in this invasion of
+Belgium. They'll just down France by the way. They say they've got guns
+to bombard Dover from Calais. They make a boast of it. They know for
+certain you can't arm your troops. They know you can't turn out ten
+thousand rifles a week. They come and talk to any one in the trains, and
+explain just how your defeat is going to be managed. It's just as though
+they were talking of rounding up cattle."
+
+Mr. Britling said they would soon be disillusioned.
+
+Mr. Direck, with the confidence of his authentic observations, remarked
+after a perceptible interval, "I wonder how."
+
+He reverted to the fact that had most struck upon his imagination.
+
+"Grown-up people, ordinary intelligent experienced people, taking war
+seriously, talking of punishing England; it's a revelation. A sort of
+solemn enthusiasm. High and low....
+
+"And the trainloads of men and the trainloads of guns...."
+
+"Ličge," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Ličge was just a scratch on the paint," said Mr. Direck. "A few
+thousand dead, a few score thousand dead, doesn't matter--not a red cent
+to them. There's a man arrived at the Cecil who saw them marching into
+Brussels. He sat at table with me at lunch yesterday. All day it went
+on, a vast unending river of men in grey. Endless waggons, endless guns,
+the whole manhood of a nation and all its stuff, marching....
+
+"I thought war," said Mr. Direck, "was a thing when most people stood
+about and did the shouting, and a sort of special team did the fighting.
+Well, Germany isn't fighting like that.... I confess it, I'm scared....
+It's the very biggest thing on record; it's the very limit in wars.... I
+dreamt last night of a grey flood washing everything in front of it. You
+and me--and Miss Corner--curious thing, isn't it? that she came into
+it--were scrambling up a hill higher and higher, with that flood pouring
+after us. Sort of splashing into a foam of faces and helmets and
+bayonets--and clutching hands--and red stuff.... Well, Mr. Britling, I
+admit I'm a little bit overwrought about it, but I can assure you you
+don't begin to realise in England what it is you've butted against...."
+
+
+Section 15
+
+Cissie did not come up to the Dower House that afternoon, and so Mr.
+Direck, after some vague and transparent excuses, made his way to the
+cottage.
+
+Here his report become even more impressive. Teddy sat on the writing
+desk beside the typewriter and swung his legs slowly. Letty brooded in
+the armchair. Cissie presided over certain limited crawling operations
+of the young heir.
+
+"They could have the equal of the whole British Army killed three times
+over and scarcely know it had happened. They're _all_ in it. It's a
+whole country in arms."
+
+Teddy nodded thoughtfully.
+
+"There's our fleet," said Letty.
+
+"Well, _that_ won't save Paris, will it?"
+
+Mr. Direck didn't, he declared, want to make disagreeable talk, but this
+was a thing people in England had to face. He felt like one of them
+himself--"naturally." He'd sort of hurried home to them--it was just
+like hurrying home--to tell them of the tremendous thing that was going
+to hit them. He felt like a man in front of a flood, a great grey flood.
+He couldn't hide what he had been thinking. "Where's our army?" asked
+Letty suddenly.
+
+"Lost somewhere in France," said Teddy. "Like a needle in a bottle of
+hay."
+
+"What I keep on worrying at is this," Mr. Direck resumed. "Suppose they
+did come, suppose somehow they scrambled over, sixty or seventy thousand
+men perhaps."
+
+"Every man would turn out and take a shot at them," said Letty.
+
+"But there's no rifles!"
+
+"There's shot guns."
+
+"That's exactly what I'm afraid of," said Mr. Direck. "They'd
+massacre....
+
+"You may be the bravest people on earth," said Mr. Direck, "but if you
+haven't got arms and the other chaps have--you're just as if you were
+sheep."
+
+He became gloomily pensive.
+
+He roused himself to describe his experiences at some length, and the
+extraordinary disturbance of his mind. He related more particularly his
+attempts to see the sights of Cologne during the stir of mobilisation.
+After a time his narrative flow lost force, and there was a general
+feeling that he ought to be left alone with Cissie. Teddy had a letter
+that must be posted; Letty took the infant to crawl on the mossy stones
+under the pear tree. Mr. Direck leant against the window-sill and became
+silent for some moments after the door had closed on Letty.
+
+"As for you, Cissie," he began at last, "I'm anxious. I'm real anxious.
+I wish you'd let me throw the mantle of Old Glory over you."
+
+He looked at her earnestly.
+
+"Old Glory?" asked Cissie.
+
+"Well--the Stars and Stripes. I want you to be able to claim American
+citizenship--in certain eventualities. It wouldn't be so very difficult.
+All the world over, Cissie, Americans are respected.... Nobody dares
+touch an American citizen. We are--an inviolate people."
+
+He paused. "But how?" asked Cissie.
+
+"It would be perfectly easy--perfectly."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Just marry an American citizen," said Mr. Direck, with his face beaming
+with ingenuous self-approval. "Then you'd be safe, and I'd not have to
+worry."
+
+"Because we're in for a stiff war!" cried Cissie, and Direck perceived
+he had blundered.
+
+"Because we may be invaded!" she said, and Mr. Direck's sense of error
+deepened.
+
+"I vow--" she began.
+
+"No!" cried Mr. Direck, and held out a hand.
+
+There was a moment of crisis.
+
+"Never will I desert my country--while she is at war," said Cissie,
+reducing her first fierce intention, and adding as though she regretted
+her concession, "Anyhow."
+
+"Then it's up to me to end the war, Cissie," said Mr. Direck, trying to
+get her back to a less spirited attitude.
+
+But Cissie wasn't to be got back so easily. The war was already
+beckoning to them in the cottage, and drawing them down from the
+auditorium into the arena.
+
+"This is the rightest war in history," she said. "If I was an American I
+should be sorry to be one now and to have to stand out of it. I wish I
+was a man now so that I could do something for all the decency and
+civilisation the Germans have outraged. I can't understand how any man
+can be content to keep out of this, and watch Belgium being destroyed.
+It is like looking on at a murder. It is like watching a dog killing a
+kitten...."
+
+Mr. Direck's expression was that of a man who is suddenly shown strange
+lights upon the world.
+
+
+Section 16
+
+Mr. Britling found Mr. Direck's talk very indigestible.
+
+He was parting very reluctantly from his dream of a disastrous collapse
+of German imperialism, of a tremendous, decisive demonstration of the
+inherent unsoundness of militarist monarchy, to be followed by a world
+conference of chastened but hopeful nations, and--the Millennium. He
+tried now to think that Mr. Direck had observed badly and misconceived
+what he saw. An American, unused to any sort of military occurrences,
+might easily mistake tens of thousands for millions, and the excitement
+of a few commercial travellers for the enthusiasm of a united people.
+But the newspapers now, with a kindred reluctance, were beginning to
+qualify, bit by bit, their first representation of the German attack
+through Belgium as a vast and already partly thwarted parade of
+incompetence. The Germans, he gathered, were being continually beaten in
+Belgium; but just as continually they advanced. Each fresh newspaper
+name he looked up on the map marked an oncoming tide. Alost--Charleroi.
+Farther east the French were retreating from the Saales Pass. Surely the
+British, who had now been in France for a fortnight, would presently be
+manifest, stemming the onrush; somewhere perhaps in Brabant or East
+Flanders. It gave Mr. Britling an unpleasant night to hear at Claverings
+that the French were very ill-equipped; had no good modern guns either
+at Lille or Maubeuge, were short of boots and equipment generally, and
+rather depressed already at the trend of things. Mr. Britling dismissed
+this as pessimistic talk, and built his hopes on the still invisible
+British army, hovering somewhere--
+
+He would sit over the map of Belgium, choosing where he would prefer to
+have the British hover....
+
+Namur fell. The place names continued to shift southward and westward.
+The British army or a part of it came to light abruptly at Mons. It had
+been fighting for thirty-eight hours and defeating enormously superior
+forces of the enemy. That was reassuring until a day or so later "the
+Cambray--Le Cateau line" made Mr. Britling realise that the victorious
+British had recoiled five and twenty miles....
+
+And then came the Sunday of _The Times_ telegram, which spoke of a
+"retreating and a broken army." Mr. Britling did not see this, but Mr.
+Manning brought over the report of it in a state of profound
+consternation. Things, he said, seemed to be about as bad as they could
+be. The English were retreating towards the coast and in much disorder.
+They were "in the air" and already separated from the Trench. They had
+narrowly escaped "a Sedan" under the fortifications of Maubeuge.... Mr.
+Britling was stunned. He went to his study and stared helplessly at
+maps. It was as if David had flung his pebble--and missed!
+
+But in the afternoon Mr. Manning telephoned to comfort his friend. A
+reassuring despatch from General French had been published and--all was
+well--practically--and the British had been splendid. They had been
+fighting continuously for several days round and about Mons; they had
+been attacked at odds of six to one, and they had repulsed and
+inflicted enormous losses on the enemy. They had established an
+incontestable personal superiority over the Germans. The Germans had
+been mown down in heaps; the British had charged through their cavalry
+like charging through paper. So at last and very gloriously for the
+British, British and German had met in battle. After the hard fighting
+of the 26th about Landrecies, the British had been comparatively
+unmolested, reinforcements covering double the losses had joined them
+and the German advance was definitely checked ... Mr. Britling's mind
+swung back to elation. He took down the entire despatch from Mr.
+Manning's dictation, and ran out with it into the garden where Mrs.
+Britling, with an unwonted expression of anxiety, was presiding over the
+teas of the usual casual Sunday gathering.... The despatch was read
+aloud twice over. After that there was hockey and high spirits, and then
+Mr. Britling went up to his study to answer a letter from Mrs.
+Harrowdean, the first letter that had come from her since their breach
+at the outbreak of the war, and which he was now in a better mood to
+answer than he had been hitherto.
+
+She had written ignoring his silence and absence, or rather treating it
+as if it were an incident of no particular importance. Apparently she
+had not called upon the patient and devoted Oliver as she had
+threatened; at any rate, there were no signs of Oliver in her
+communication. But she reproached Mr. Britling for deserting her, and
+she clamoured for his presence and for kind and strengthening words. She
+was, she said, scared by this war. She was only a little thing, and it
+was all too dreadful, and there was not a soul in the world to hold her
+hand, at least no one who understood in the slightest degree how she
+felt. (But why was not Oliver holding her hand?) She was like a child
+left alone in the dark. It was perfectly horrible the way that people
+were being kept in the dark. The stories one heard, "_often from quite
+trustworthy sources_," were enough to depress and terrify any one.
+Battleship after battleship had been sunk by German torpedoes, a thing
+kept secret from us for no earthly reason, and Prince Louis of
+Battenberg had been discovered to be a spy and had been sent to the
+Tower. Haldane too was a spy. Our army in France had been "practically
+_sold_" by the French. Almost all the French generals were in German
+pay. The censorship and the press were keeping all this back, but what
+good was it to keep it back? It was folly not to trust people! But it
+was all too dreadful for a poor little soul whose only desire was to
+live happily. Why didn't he come along to her and make her feel she had
+protecting arms round her? She couldn't think in the daytime: she
+couldn't sleep at night....
+
+Then she broke away into the praises of serenity. Never had she thought
+so much of his beautiful "Silent Places" as she did now. How she longed
+to take refuge in some such dreamland from violence and treachery and
+foolish rumours! She was weary of every reality. She wanted to fly away
+into some secret hiding-place and cultivate her simple garden there--as
+Voltaire had done.... Sometimes at night she was afraid to undress. She
+imagined the sound of guns, she imagined landings and frightful scouts
+"in masks" rushing inland on motor bicycles....
+
+It was an ill-timed letter. The nonsense about Prince Louis of
+Battenberg and Lord Haldane and the torpedoed battleships annoyed him
+extravagantly. He had just sufficient disposition to believe such tales
+as to find their importunity exasperating. The idea of going over to
+Pyecrafts to spend his days in comforting a timid little dear obsessed
+by such fears, attracted him not at all. He had already heard enough
+adverse rumours at Claverings to make him thoroughly uncomfortable. He
+had been doubting whether after all his "Examination of War" was really
+much less of a futility than "And Now War Ends"; his mind was full of a
+sense of incomplete statements and unsubstantial arguments. He was
+indeed in a state of extreme intellectual worry. He was moreover
+extraordinarily out of love with Mrs. Harrowdean. Never had any
+affection in the whole history of Mr. Britling's heart collapsed so
+swiftly and completely. He was left incredulous of ever having cared for
+her at all. Probably he hadn't. Probably the whole business had been
+deliberate illusion from first to last. The "dear little thing"
+business, he felt, was all very well as a game of petting, but times
+were serious now, and a woman of her intelligence should do something
+better than wallow in fears and elaborate a winsome feebleness. A very
+unnecessary and tiresome feebleness. He came almost to the pitch of
+writing that to her.
+
+The despatch from General French put him into a kindlier frame of mind.
+He wrote instead briefly but affectionately. As a gentleman should. "How
+could you doubt our fleet or our army?" was the gist of his letter. He
+ignored completely every suggestion of a visit to Pyecrafts that her
+letter had conveyed. He pretended that it had contained nothing of the
+sort.... And with that she passed out of his mind again under the stress
+of more commanding interests....
+
+Mr. Britling's mood of relief did not last through the week. The
+defeated Germans continued to advance. Through a week of deepening
+disillusionment the main tide of battle rolled back steadily towards
+Paris. Lille was lost without a struggle. It was lost with mysterious
+ease.... The next name to startle Mr. Britling as he sat with newspaper
+and atlas following these great events was Compičgne. "Here!" Manifestly
+the British were still in retreat. Then the Germans were in possession
+of Laon and Rheims and still pressing south. Maubeuge surrounded and cut
+off for some days, had apparently fallen....
+
+It was on Sunday, September the sixth, that the final capitulation of
+Mr. Britling's facile optimism occurred.
+
+He stood in the sunshine reading the _Observer_ which the gardener's boy
+had just brought from the May Tree. He had spread it open on a garden
+table under the blue cedar, and father and son were both reading it,
+each as much as the other would let him. There was fresh news from
+France, a story of further German advances, fighting at Senlis--"But
+that is quite close to Paris!"--and the appearance of German forces at
+Nogent-sur-Seine. "Sur Seine!" cried Mr. Britling. "But where can that
+be? South of the Marne? Or below Paris perhaps?"
+
+It was not marked upon the _Observer's_ map, and Hugh ran into the house
+for the atlas.
+
+When he returned Mr. Manning was with his father, and they both looked
+grave.
+
+Hugh opened the map of northern France. "Here it is," he said.
+
+Mr. Britling considered the position.
+
+"Manning says they are at Rouen," he told Hugh. "Our base is to be moved
+round to La Rochelle...."
+
+He paused before the last distasteful conclusion.
+
+"Practically," he admitted, taking his dose, "they have got Paris. It is
+almost surrounded now."
+
+He sat down to the map. Mr. Manning and Hugh stood regarding him. He
+made a last effort to imagine some tremendous strategic reversal, some
+stone from an unexpected sling that should fell this Goliath in the
+midst of his triumph.
+
+"Russia," he said, without any genuine hope....
+
+
+Section 17
+
+And then it was that Mr. Britling accepted the truth.
+
+"One talks," he said, "and then weeks and months later one learns the
+meaning of the things one has been saying. I was saying a month ago that
+this is the biggest thing that has happened in history. I said that
+this was the supreme call upon the will and resources of England. I
+said there was not a life in all our empire that would not be vitally
+changed by this war. I said all these things; they came through my
+mouth; I suppose there was a sort of thought behind them.... Only at
+this moment do I understand what it is that I said. Now--let me say it
+over as if I had never said it before; this _is_ the biggest thing in
+history, that we _are_ all called upon to do our utmost to resist this
+tremendous attack upon the peace and freedom of the world. Well, doing
+our utmost does not mean standing about in pleasant gardens waiting for
+the newspaper.... It means the abandonment of ease and security....
+
+"How lazy we English are nowadays! How readily we grasp the comforting
+delusion that excuses us from exertion. For the last three weeks I have
+been deliberately believing that a little British army--they say it is
+scarcely a hundred thousand men--would somehow break this rush of
+millions. But it has been driven back, as any one not in love with easy
+dreams might have known it would be driven back--here and then here and
+then here. It has been fighting night and day. It has made the most
+splendid fight--and the most ineffectual fight.... You see the vast
+swing of the German flail through Belgium. And meanwhile we have been
+standing about talking of the use we would make of our victory....
+
+"We have been asleep," he said. "This country has been asleep....
+
+"At the back of our minds," he went on bitterly, "I suppose we thought
+the French would do the heavy work on land--while we stood by at sea. So
+far as we thought at all. We're so temperate-minded; we're so full of
+qualifications and discretions.... And so leisurely.... Well, France is
+down. We've got to fight for France now over the ruins of Paris. Because
+you and I, Manning, didn't grasp the scale of it, because we indulged in
+generalisations when we ought to have been drilling and working.
+Because we've been doing 'business as usual' and all the rest of that
+sort of thing, while Western civilisation has been in its death agony.
+If this is to be another '71, on a larger scale and against not merely
+France but all Europe, if Prussianism is to walk rough-shod over
+civilisation, if France is to be crushed and Belgium murdered, then life
+is not worth having. Compared with such an issue as that no other issue,
+no other interest matters. Yet what are we doing to decide it--you and
+I? How can it end in anything but a German triumph if you and I, by the
+million, stand by...."
+
+He paused despairfully and stared at the map.
+
+"What ought we to be doing?" asked Mr. Manning.
+
+"Every man ought to be in training," said Mr. Britling. "Every one ought
+to be participating.... In some way.... At any rate we ought not to be
+taking our ease at Matching's Easy any more...."
+
+
+Section 18
+
+"It interrupts everything," said Hugh suddenly. "These Prussians are the
+biggest nuisance the world has ever seen."
+
+He considered. "It's like every one having to run out because the house
+catches fire. But of course we have to beat them. It has to be done. And
+every one has to take a share.
+
+"Then we can get on with our work again."
+
+Mr. Britling turned his eyes to his eldest son with a startled
+expression. He had been speaking--generally. For the moment he had
+forgotten Hugh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE SECOND
+
+TAKING PART
+
+
+Section 1
+
+There were now two chief things in the mind of Mr. Britling. One was a
+large and valiant thing, a thing of heroic and processional quality, the
+idea of taking up one's share in the great conflict, of leaving the
+Dower House and its circle of habits and activities and going out--.
+From that point he wasn't quite sure where he was to go, nor exactly
+what he meant to do. His imagination inclined to the figure of a
+volunteer in an improvised uniform inflicting great damage upon a
+raiding invader from behind a hedge. The uniform, one presumes, would
+have been something in the vein of the costume in which he met Mr.
+Direck. With a "brassard." Or he thought of himself as working at a
+telephone or in an office engaged upon any useful quasi-administrative
+work that called for intelligence rather than training. Still, of
+course, with a "brassard." A month ago he would have had doubts about
+the meaning of "brassard"; now it seemed to be the very keyword for
+national organisation. He had started for London by the early train on
+Monday morning with the intention of immediate enrolment in any such
+service that offered; of getting, in fact, into his brassard at once.
+The morning papers he bought at the station dashed his conviction of the
+inevitable fall of Paris into hopeful doubts, but did not shake his
+resolution. The effect of rout and pursuit and retreat and retreat and
+retreat had disappeared from the news. The German right was being
+counter-attacked, and seemed in danger of getting pinched between Paris
+and Verdun with the British on its flank. This relieved his mind, but
+it did nothing to modify his new realisation of the tremendous gravity
+of the war. Even if the enemy were held and repulsed a little there was
+still work for every man in the task of forcing them back upon their own
+country. This war was an immense thing, it would touch everybody....
+That meant that every man must give himself. That he had to give
+himself. He must let nothing stand between him and that clear
+understanding. It was utterly shameful now to hold back and not to do
+one's utmost for civilisation, for England, for all the ease and safety
+one had been given--against these drilled, commanded, obsessed millions.
+
+Mr. Britling was a flame of exalted voluntaryism, of patriotic devotion,
+that day.
+
+But behind all this bravery was the other thing, the second thing in the
+mind of Mr. Britling, a fear. He was prepared now to spread himself like
+some valiant turkey-gobbler, every feather at its utmost, against the
+aggressor. He was prepared to go out and flourish bayonets, march and
+dig to the limit of his power, shoot, die in a ditch if needful, rather
+than permit German militarism to dominate the world. He had no fear for
+himself. He was prepared to perish upon the battlefield or cut a valiant
+figure in the military hospital. But what he perceived very clearly and
+did his utmost not to perceive was this qualifying and discouraging
+fact, that the war monster was not nearly so disposed to meet him as he
+was to meet the war, and that its eyes were fixed on something beside
+and behind him, that it was already only too evidently stretching out a
+long and shadowy arm past him towards Teddy--and towards Hugh....
+
+The young are the food of war....
+
+Teddy wasn't Mr. Britling's business anyhow. Teddy must do as he thought
+proper. Mr. Britling would not even advise upon that. And as for Hugh--
+
+Mr. Britling did his best to brazen it out.
+
+"My eldest boy is barely seventeen," he said. "He's keen to go, and I'd
+be sorry if he wasn't. He'll get into some cadet corps of course--he's
+already done something of that kind at school. Or they'll take him into
+the Territorials. But before he's nineteen everything will be over, one
+way or another. I'm afraid, poor chap, he'll feel sold...."
+
+And having thrust Hugh safely into the background of his mind
+as--juvenile, doing a juvenile share, no sort of man yet--Mr. Britling
+could give a free rein to his generous imaginations of a national
+uprising. From the idea of a universal participation in the struggle he
+passed by an easy transition to an anticipation of all Britain armed and
+gravely embattled. Across gulfs of obstinate reality. He himself was
+prepared to say, and accordingly he felt that the great mass of the
+British must be prepared to say to the government: "Here we are at your
+disposal. This is not a diplomatists' war nor a War Office war; this is
+a war of the whole people. We are all willing and ready to lay aside our
+usual occupations and offer our property and ourselves. Whim and
+individual action are for peace times. Take us and use us as you think
+fit. Take all we possess." When he thought of the government in this
+way, he forgot the governing class he knew. The slack-trousered Raeburn,
+the prim, attentive Philbert, Lady Frensham at the top of her voice,
+stern, preposterous Carson, boozy Bandershoot and artful Taper, wily
+Asquith, the eloquent yet unsubstantial George, and the immobile Grey,
+vanished out of his mind; all those representative exponents of the way
+things are done in Great Britain faded in the glow of his imaginative
+effort; he forgot the dreary debates, the floundering newspapers, the
+"bluffs," the intrigues, the sly bargains of the week-end party, the
+"schoolboy honour" of grown men, the universal weak dishonesty in
+thinking; he thought simply of a simplified and ideal government that
+governed. He thought vaguely of something behind and beyond them,
+England, the ruling genius of the land; something with a dignified
+assurance and a stable will. He imagined this shadowy ruler miraculously
+provided with schemes and statistics against this supreme occasion which
+had for so many years been the most conspicuous probability before the
+country. His mind leaping forwards to the conception of a great nation
+reluctantly turning its vast resources to the prosecution of a righteous
+defensive war, filled in the obvious corollaries of plan and
+calculation. He thought that somewhere "up there" there must be people
+who could count and who had counted everything that we might need for
+such a struggle, and organisers who had schemed and estimated down to
+practicable and manageable details....
+
+Such lapses from knowledge to faith are perhaps necessary that human
+heroism may be possible....
+
+His conception of his own share in the great national uprising was a
+very modest one. He was a writer, a footnote to reality; he had no trick
+of command over men, his rôle was observation rather than organisation,
+and he saw himself only as an insignificant individual dropping from his
+individuality into his place in a great machine, taking a rifle in a
+trench, guarding a bridge, filling a cartridge--just with a brassard or
+something like that on--until the great task was done. Sunday night was
+full of imaginations of order, of the countryside standing up to its
+task, of roads cleared and resources marshalled, of the petty interests
+of the private life altogether set aside. And mingling with that it was
+still possible for Mr. Britling, he was still young enough, to produce
+such dreams of personal service, of sudden emergencies swiftly and
+bravely met, of conspicuous daring and exceptional rewards, such dreams
+as hover in the brains of every imaginative recruit....
+
+The detailed story of Mr. Britling's two days' search for some easy and
+convenient ladder into the service of his threatened country would be a
+voluminous one. It would begin with the figure of a neatly brushed
+patriot, with an intent expression upon his intelligent face, seated in
+the Londonward train, reading the war news--the first comforting war
+news for many days--and trying not to look as though his life was torn
+up by the roots and all his being aflame with devotion; and it would
+conclude after forty-eight hours of fuss, inquiry, talk, waiting,
+telephoning, with the same gentleman, a little fagged and with a kind of
+weary apathy in his eyes, returning by the short cut from the station
+across Claverings park to resume his connection with his abandoned
+roots. The essential process of the interval had been the correction of
+Mr. Britling's temporary delusion that the government of the British
+Empire is either intelligent, instructed, or wise.
+
+The great "Business as Usual" phase was already passing away, and London
+was in the full tide of recruiting enthusiasm. That tide was breaking
+against the most miserable arrangements for enlistment it is possible to
+imagine. Overtaxed and not very competent officers, whose one idea of
+being very efficient was to refuse civilian help and be very, very slow
+and circumspect and very dignified and overbearing, sat in dirty little
+rooms and snarled at this unheard-of England that pressed at door and
+window for enrolment. Outside every recruiting office crowds of men and
+youths waited, leaning against walls, sitting upon the pavements, waited
+for long hours, waiting to the end of the day and returning next
+morning, without shelter, without food, many sick with hunger; men who
+had hurried up from the country, men who had thrown up jobs of every
+kind, clerks, shopmen, anxious only to serve England and "teach those
+damned Germans a lesson." Between them and this object they had
+discovered a perplexing barrier; an inattention. As Mr. Britling made
+his way by St. Martin's Church and across Trafalgar Square and marked
+the weary accumulation of this magnificently patriotic stuff, he had his
+first inkling of the imaginative insufficiency of the War Office that
+had been so suddenly called upon to organise victory. He was to be more
+fully informed when he reached his club.
+
+His impression of the streets through which he passed was an impression
+of great unrest. There were noticeably fewer omnibuses and less road
+traffic generally, but there was a quite unusual number of drifting
+pedestrians. The current on the pavements was irritatingly sluggish.
+There were more people standing about, and fewer going upon their
+business. This was particularly the case with the women he saw. Many of
+them seemed to have drifted in from the suburbs and outskirts of London
+in a state of vague expectation, unable to stay in their homes.
+
+Everywhere there were the flags of the Allies; in shop windows, over
+doors, on the bonnets of automobiles, on people's breasts, and there was
+a great quantity of recruiting posters on the hoardings and in windows:
+"Your King and Country Need You" was the chief text, and they still
+called for "A Hundred Thousand Men" although the demand of Lord
+Kitchener had risen to half a million. There were also placards calling
+for men on nearly all the taxicabs. The big windows of the offices of
+the Norddeutscher Lloyd in Cockspur Street were boarded up, and
+plastered thickly with recruiting appeals.
+
+At his club Mr. Britling found much talk and belligerent stir. In the
+hall Wilkins the author was displaying a dummy rifle of bent iron rod to
+several interested members. It was to be used for drilling until rifles
+could be got, and it could be made for eighteen pence. This was the
+first intimation Mr. Britling got that the want of foresight of the War
+Office only began with its unpreparedness for recruits. Men were talking
+very freely in the club; one of the temporary effects of the war in its
+earlier stages was to produce a partial thaw in the constitutional
+British shyness; and men who had glowered at Mr. Britling over their
+lunches and had been glowered at by Mr. Britling in silence for years
+now started conversations with him.
+
+"What is a man of my sort to do?" asked a clean-shaven barrister.
+
+"Exactly what I have been asking," said Mr. Britling. "They are fixing
+the upward age for recruits at thirty; it's absurdly low. A man well
+over forty like myself is quite fit to line a trench or guard a bridge.
+I'm not so bad a shot...."
+
+"We've been discussing home defence volunteers," said the barrister.
+"Anyhow we ought to be drilling. But the War Office sets its face as
+sternly against our doing anything of the sort as though we were going
+to join the Germans. It's absurd. Even if we older men aren't fit to go
+abroad, we could at least release troops who could."
+
+"If you had the rifles," said a sharp-featured man in grey to the right
+of Mr. Britling.
+
+"I suppose they are to be got," said Mr. Britling.
+
+The sharp-featured man indicated by appropriate facial action and
+head-shaking that this was by no means the case.
+
+"Every dead man, many wounded men, most prisoners," he said, "mean each
+one a rifle lost. We have lost five-and-twenty thousand rifles alone
+since the war began. Quite apart from arming new troops we have to
+replace those rifles with the drafts we send out. Do you know what is
+the maximum weekly output of rifles at the present time in this
+country?"
+
+Mr. Britling did not know.
+
+"Nine thousand."
+
+Mr. Britling suddenly understood the significance of Wilkins and his
+dummy gun.
+
+The sharp-featured man added with an air of concluding the matter: "It's
+the barrels are the trouble. Complicated machinery. We haven't got it
+and we can't make it in a hurry. And there you are!"
+
+The sharp-featured man had a way of speaking almost as if he was
+throwing bombs. He threw one now. "Zinc," he said.
+
+"We're not short of zinc?" said the lawyer.
+
+The sharp-featured man nodded, and then became explicit.
+
+Zinc was necessary for cartridges; it had to be refined zinc and very
+pure, or the shooting went wrong. Well, we had let the refining business
+drift away from England to Belgium and Germany. There were just one or
+two British firms still left.... Unless we bucked up tremendously we
+should get caught short of cartridges.... At any rate of cartridges so
+made as to ensure good shooting. "And there you are!" said the
+sharp-featured man.
+
+But the sharp-featured man did not at that time represent any
+considerable section of public thought. "I suppose after all we can get
+rifles from America," said the lawyer. "And as for zinc, if the shortage
+is known the shortage will be provided for...."
+
+The prevailing topic in the smoking-room upstairs was the inability of
+the War Office to deal with the flood of recruits that was pouring in,
+and its hostility to any such volunteering as Mr. Britling had in mind.
+Quite a number of members wanted to volunteer; there was much talk of
+their fitness; "I'm fifty-four," said one, "and I could do my
+twenty-five miles in marching kit far better than half those boys of
+nineteen." Another was thirty-eight. "I must hold the business
+together," he said; "but why anyhow shouldn't I learn to shoot and use a
+bayonet?" The personal pique of the rejected lent force to their
+criticisms of the recruiting and general organisation. "The War Office
+has one incurable system," said a big mine-owner. "During peace time it
+runs all its home administration with men who will certainly be wanted
+at the front directly there is a war. Directly war comes, therefore,
+there is a shift all round, and a new untried man--usually a dug-out in
+an advanced state of decay--is stuck into the job. Chaos follows
+automatically. The War Office always has done this, and so far as one
+can see it always will. It seems incapable of realising that another
+man will be wanted until the first is taken away. Its imagination
+doesn't even run to that."
+
+Mr. Britling found a kindred spirit in Wilkins.
+
+Wilkins was expounding his tremendous scheme for universal volunteering.
+Everybody was to be accepted. Everybody was to be assigned and
+registered and--_badged_.
+
+"A brassard," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It doesn't matter whether we really produce a fighting force or not,"
+said Wilkins. "Everybody now is enthusiastic--and serious. Everybody is
+willing to put on some kind of uniform and submit to some sort of
+orders. And the thing to do is to catch them in the willing stage. Now
+is the time to get the country lined up and organised, ready to meet the
+internal stresses that are bound to come later. But there's no
+disposition whatever to welcome this universal offering. It's just as
+though this war was a treat to which only the very select friends of the
+War Office were to be admitted. And I don't admit that the national
+volunteers would be ineffective--even from a military point of view.
+There are plenty of fit men of our age, and men of proper age who are
+better employed at home--armament workers for example, and there are all
+the boys under the age. They may not be under the age before things are
+over...."
+
+He was even prepared to plan uniforms.
+
+"A brassard," repeated Mr. Britling, "and perhaps coloured strips on the
+revers of a coat."
+
+"Colours for the counties," said Wilkins, "and if there isn't coloured
+cloth to be got there's--red flannel. Anything is better than leaving
+the mass of people to mob about...."
+
+A momentary vision danced before Mr. Britling's eyes of red flannel
+petticoats being torn up in a rapid improvisation of soldiers to resist
+a sudden invasion. Passing washerwomen suddenly requisitioned. But one
+must not let oneself be laughed out of good intentions because of
+ridiculous accessories. The idea at any rate was the sound one....
+
+The vision of what ought to be done shone brightly while Mr. Britling
+and Mr. Wilkins maintained it. But presently under discouraging
+reminders that there were no rifles, no instructors, and, above all, the
+open hostility of the established authorities, it faded again....
+
+Afterwards in other conversations Mr. Britling reverted to more modest
+ambitions.
+
+"Is there no clerical work, no minor administrative work, a man might be
+used for?" he asked.
+
+"Any old dug-out," said the man with the thin face, "any old doddering
+Colonel Newcome, is preferred to you in that matter...."
+
+Mr. Britling emerged from his club about half-past three with his mind
+rather dishevelled and with his private determination to do something
+promptly for his country's needs blunted by a perplexing "How?" His
+search for doors and ways where no doors and ways existed went on with a
+gathering sense of futility.
+
+He had a ridiculous sense of pique at being left out, like a child shut
+out from a room in which a vitally interesting game is being played.
+
+"After all, it is _our_ war," he said.
+
+He caught the phrase as it dropped from his lips with a feeling that it
+said more than he intended. He turned it over and examined it, and the
+more he did so the more he was convinced of its truth and soundness....
+
+
+Section 2
+
+By night there was a new strangeness about London. The authorities were
+trying to suppress the more brilliant illumination of the chief
+thoroughfares, on account of the possibility of an air raid. Shopkeepers
+were being compelled to pull down their blinds, and many of the big
+standard lights were unlit. Mr. Britling thought these precautions were
+very fussy and unnecessary, and likely to lead to accidents amidst the
+traffic. But it gave a Rembrandtesque quality to the London scene,
+turned it into mysterious arrangements of brown shadows and cones and
+bars of light. At first many people were recalcitrant, and here and
+there a restaurant or a draper's window still blazed out and broke the
+gloom. There were also a number of insubordinate automobiles with big
+head-lights. But the police were being unusually firm....
+
+"It will all glitter again in a little time," he told himself.
+
+He heard an old lady who was projecting from an offending automobile at
+Piccadilly Circus in hot dispute with a police officer. "Zeppelins
+indeed!" she said. "What nonsense! As if they would _dare_ to come here!
+Who would _let_ them, I should like to know?"
+
+Probably a friend of Lady Frensham's, he thought. Still--the idea of
+Zeppelins over London did seem rather ridiculous to Mr. Britling. He
+would not have liked to have been caught talking of it himself.... There
+never had been Zeppelins over London. They were gas bags....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+On Wednesday morning Mr. Britling returned to the Dower House, and he
+was still a civilian unassigned.
+
+In the hall he found a tall figure in khaki standing and reading _The
+Times_ that usually lay upon the hall table. The figure turned at Mr.
+Britling's entry, and revealed the aquiline features of Mr. Lawrence
+Carmine. It was as if his friend had stolen a march on him.
+
+But Carmine's face showed nothing of the excitement and patriotic
+satisfaction that would have seemed natural to Mr. Britling. He was
+white and jaded, as if he had not slept for many nights. "You see," he
+explained almost apologetically of the three stars upon his sleeve, "I
+used to be a captain of volunteers." He had been put in charge of a
+volunteer force which had been re-embodied and entrusted with the care
+of the bridges, gasworks, factories and railway tunnels, and with a
+number of other minor but necessary duties round about Easinghampton.
+"I've just got to shut up my house," said Captain Carmine, "and go into
+lodgings. I confess I hate it.... But anyhow it can't last six
+months.... But it's beastly.... Ugh!..."
+
+He seemed disposed to expand that "Ugh," and then thought better of it.
+And presently Mr. Britling took control of the conversation.
+
+His two days in London had filled him with matter, and he was glad to
+have something more than Hugh and Teddy and Mrs. Britling to talk it
+upon. What was happening now in Great Britain, he declared, was
+_adjustment_. It was an attempt on the part of a great unorganised
+nation, an attempt, instinctive at present rather than intelligent, to
+readjust its government and particularly its military organisation to
+the new scale of warfare that Germany had imposed upon the world. For
+two strenuous decades the British navy had been growing enormously under
+the pressure of German naval preparations, but the British military
+establishment had experienced no corresponding expansion. It was true
+there had been a futile, rather foolishly conducted agitation for
+universal military service, but there had been no accumulation of
+material, no preparation of armament-making machinery, no planning and
+no foundations for any sort of organisation that would have facilitated
+the rapid expansion of the fighting forces of a country in a time of
+crisis. Such an idea was absolutely antagonistic to the mental habits of
+the British military caste. The German method of incorporating all the
+strength and resources of the country into one national fighting machine
+was quite strange to the British military mind--still. Even after a
+month of war. War had become the comprehensive business of the German
+nation; to the British it was an incidental adventure. In Germany the
+nation was militarised, in England the army was specialised. The nation
+for nearly every practical purpose got along without it. Just as
+political life had also become specialised.... Now suddenly we wanted a
+government to speak for every one, and an army of the whole people. How
+were we to find it?
+
+Mr. Britling dwelt upon this idea of the specialised character of the
+British army and navy and government. It seemed to him to be the clue to
+everything that was jarring in the London spectacle. The army had been a
+thing aloof, for a special end. It had developed all the characteristics
+of a caste. It had very high standards along the lines of its
+specialisation, but it was inadaptable and conservative. Its
+exclusiveness was not so much a deliberate culture as a consequence of
+its detached function. It touched the ordinary social body chiefly
+through three other specialised bodies, the court, the church, and the
+stage. Apart from that it saw the great unofficial civilian world as
+something vague, something unsympathetic, something possibly
+antagonistic, which it comforted itself by snubbing when it dared and
+tricking when it could, something that projected members of Parliament
+towards it and was stingy about money. Directly one grasped how apart
+the army lived from the ordinary life of the community, from
+industrialism or from economic necessities, directly one understood that
+the great mass of Englishmen were simply "outsiders" to the War Office
+mind, just as they were "outsiders" to the political clique, one began
+to realise the complete unfitness of either government or War Office for
+the conduct of so great a national effort as was now needed. These
+people "up there" did not know anything of the broad mass of English
+life at all, they did not know how or where things were made; when they
+wanted things they just went to a shop somewhere and got them. This was
+the necessary psychology of a small army under a clique government.
+Nothing else was to be expected. But now--somehow--the nation had to
+take hold of the government that it had neglected so long....
+
+"You see," said Mr. Britling, repeating a phrase that was becoming more
+and more essential to his thoughts, "this is _our_ war....
+
+"Of course," said Mr. Britling, "these things are not going to be done
+without a conflict. We aren't going to take hold of our country which we
+have neglected so long without a lot of internal friction. But in
+England we can make these readjustments without revolution. It is our
+strength....
+
+"At present England is confused--but it's a healthy confusion. It's
+astir. We have more things to defeat than just Germany....
+
+"These hosts of recruits--weary, uncared for, besieging the recruiting
+stations. It's symbolical.... Our tremendous reserves of will and
+manhood. Our almost incredible insufficiency of direction....
+
+"Those people up there have no idea of the Will that surges up in
+England. They are timid little manoeuvring people, afraid of property,
+afraid of newspapers, afraid of trade-unions. They aren't leading us
+against the Germans; they are just being shoved against the Germans by
+necessity...."
+
+From this Mr. Britling broke away into a fresh addition to his already
+large collection of contrasts between England and Germany. Germany was a
+nation which has been swallowed up and incorporated by an army and an
+administration; the Prussian military system had assimilated to itself
+the whole German life. It was a State in a state of repletion, a State
+that had swallowed all its people. Britain was not a State. It was an
+unincorporated people. The British army, the British War Office, and the
+British administration had assimilated nothing; they were little old
+partial things; the British nation lay outside them, beyond their
+understanding and tradition; a formless new thing, but a great thing;
+and now this British nation, this real nation, the "outsiders," had to
+take up arms. Suddenly all the underlying ideas of that outer, greater
+English life beyond politics, beyond the services, were challenged, its
+tolerant good humour, its freedom, and its irresponsibility. It was not
+simply English life that was threatened; it was all the latitudes of
+democracy, it was every liberal idea and every liberty. It was
+civilisation in danger. The uncharted liberal system had been taken by
+the throat; it had to "make good" or perish....
+
+"I went up to London expecting to be told what to do. There is no one to
+tell any one what to do.... Much less is there any one to compel us what
+to do....
+
+"There's a War Office like a college during a riot, with its doors and
+windows barred; there's a government like a cockle boat in an Atlantic
+gale....
+
+"One feels the thing ought to have come upon us like the sound of a
+trumpet. Instead, until now, it has been like a great noise, that we
+just listened to, in the next house.... And now slowly the nation
+awakes. London is just like a dazed sleeper waking up out of a deep
+sleep to fire and danger, tumult and cries for help, near at hand. The
+streets give you exactly that effect. People are looking about and
+listening. One feels that at any moment, in a pause, in a silence, there
+may come, from far away, over the houses, faint and little, the boom of
+guns or the small outcries of little French or Belgian villages in
+agony...."
+
+Such was the gist of Mr. Britling's discourse.
+
+He did most of the table talk, and all that mattered. Teddy was an
+assenting voice, Hugh was silent and apparently a little inattentive,
+Mrs. Britling was thinking of the courses and the servants and the boys,
+and giving her husband only half an ear, Captain Carmine said little and
+seemed to be troubled by some disagreeable preoccupation. Now and then
+he would endorse or supplement the things Mr. Britling was saying.
+Thrice he remarked: "People still do not begin to understand."...
+
+
+Section 4
+It was only when they sat together in the barn court out of the way of
+Mrs. Britling and the children that Captain Carmine was able to explain
+his listless bearing and jaded appearance. He was suffering from a bad
+nervous shock. He had hardly taken over his command before one of his
+men had been killed--and killed in a manner that had left a scar upon
+his mind.
+
+The man had been guarding a tunnel, and he had been knocked down by one
+train when crossing the line behind another. So it was that the bomb of
+Sarajevo killed its first victim in Essex. Captain Carmine had found the
+body. He had found the body in a cloudy moonlight; he had almost fallen
+over it; and his sensations and emotions had been eminently
+disagreeable. He had had to drag the body--it was very dreadfully
+mangled--off the permanent way, the damaged, almost severed head had
+twisted about very horribly in the uncertain light, and afterwards he
+had found his sleeves saturated with blood. He had not noted this at the
+time, and when he had discovered it he had been sick. He had thought the
+whole thing more horrible and hateful than any nightmare, but he had
+succeeded in behaving with a sufficient practicality to set an example
+to his men. Since this had happened he had not had an hour of dreamless
+sleep.
+
+"One doesn't expect to be called upon like that," said Captain Carmine,
+"suddenly here in England.... When one is smoking after supper...."
+
+Mr. Britling listened to this experience with distressed brows. All his
+talking and thinking became to him like the open page of a monthly
+magazine. Across it this bloody smear, this thing of red and black, was
+dragged....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+The smear was still bright red in Mr. Britling's thoughts when Teddy
+came to him.
+
+"I must go," said Teddy, "I can't stop here any longer."
+
+"Go where?"
+
+"Into khaki. I've been thinking of it ever since the war began. Do you
+remember what you said when we were bullying off at hockey on Bank
+Holiday--the day before war was declared?"
+
+Mr. Britling had forgotten completely; he made an effort. "What did I
+say?"
+
+"You said, 'What the devil are we doing at this hockey? We ought to be
+drilling or shooting against those confounded Germans!' ... I've never
+forgotten it.... I ought to have done it before. I've been a
+scout-master. In a little while they will want officers. In London, I'm
+told, there are a lot of officers' training corps putting men through
+the work as quickly as possible.... If I could go...."
+
+"What does Letty think?" said Mr. Britling after a pause. This was
+right, of course--the only right thing--and yet he was surprised.
+
+"She says if you'd let her try to do my work for a time...."
+
+"She _wants_ you to go?"
+
+"Of course she does," said Teddy. "She wouldn't like me to be a
+shirker.... But I can't unless you help."
+
+"I'm quite ready to do that," said Mr. Britling. "But somehow I didn't
+think it of you. I hadn't somehow thought of _you_--"
+
+"What _did_ you think of me?" asked Teddy.
+
+"It's bringing the war home to us.... Of course you ought to go--if you
+want to go."
+
+He reflected. It was odd to find Teddy in this mood, strung up and
+serious and businesslike. He felt that in the past he had done Teddy
+injustice; this young man wasn't as trivial as he had thought him....
+
+They fell to discussing ways and means; there might have to be a loan
+for Teddy's outfit, if he did presently secure a commission. And there
+were one or two other little matters.... Mr. Britling dismissed a
+ridiculous fancy that he was paying to send Teddy away to something that
+neither that young man nor Letty understood properly....
+
+The next day Teddy vanished Londonward on his bicycle. He was going to
+lodge in London in order to be near his training. He was zealous. Never
+before had Teddy been zealous. Mrs. Teddy came to the Dower House for
+the correspondence, trying not to look self-conscious and important.
+
+Two Mondays later a very bright-eyed, excited little boy came running to
+Mr. Britling, who was smoking after lunch in the rose garden. "Daddy!"
+squealed the small boy. "Teddy! In khaki!"
+
+The other junior Britling danced in front of the hero, who was walking
+beside Mrs. Britling and trying not to be too aggressively a soldierly
+figure. He looked a very man in khaki and more of a boy than ever. Mrs.
+Teddy came behind, quietly elated.
+
+Mr. Britling had a recurrence of that same disagreeable fancy that these
+young people didn't know exactly what they were going into. He wished he
+was in khaki himself; then he fancied this compunction wouldn't trouble
+him quite so much.
+
+The afternoon with them deepened his conviction that they really didn't
+in the slightest degree understand. Life had been so good to them
+hitherto, that even the idea of Teddy's going off to the war seemed a
+sort of fun to them. It was just a thing he was doing, a serious,
+seriously amusing, and very creditable thing. It involved his dressing
+up in these unusual clothes, and receiving salutes in the street....
+They discussed every possible aspect of his military outlook with the
+zest of children, who recount the merits of a new game. They were
+putting Teddy through his stages at a tremendous pace. In quite a little
+time he thought he would be given the chance of a commission.
+
+"They want subalterns badly. Already they've taken nearly a third of our
+people," he said, and added with the wistfulness of one who glances at
+inaccessible delights: "one or two may get out to the front quite soon."
+
+He spoke as a young actor might speak of a star part. And with a touch
+of the quality of one who longs to travel in strange lands.... One must
+be patient. Things come at last....
+
+"If I'm killed she gets eighty pounds a year," Teddy explained among
+many other particulars.
+
+He smiled--the smile of a confident immortal at this amusing idea.
+
+"He's my little annuity," said Letty, also smiling, "dead or alive."
+
+"We'll miss Teddy in all sorts of ways," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It's only for the duration of the war," said Teddy. "And Letty's very
+intelligent. I've done my best to chasten the evil in her."
+
+"If you think you're going to get back your job after the war," said
+Letty, "you're very much mistaken. I'm going to raise the standard."
+
+"_You_!" said Teddy, regarding her coldly, and proceeded ostentatiously
+to talk of other things.
+
+
+Section 6
+
+"Hugh's going to be in khaki too," the elder junior told Teddy. "He's
+too young to go out in Kitchener's army, but he's joined the
+Territorials. He went off on Thursday.... I wish Gilbert and me was
+older...."
+
+Mr. Britling had known his son's purpose since the evening of Teddy's
+announcement.
+
+Hugh had come to his father's study as he was sitting musing at his
+writing-desk over the important question whether he should continue his
+"Examination of War" uninterruptedly, or whether he should not put that
+on one side for a time and set himself to state as clearly as possible
+the not too generally recognised misfit between the will and strength of
+Britain on the one hand and her administrative and military organisation
+on the other. He felt that an enormous amount of human enthusiasm and
+energy was being refused and wasted; that if things went on as they were
+going there would continue to be a quite disastrous shortage of gear,
+and that some broadening change was needed immediately if the swift
+exemplary victory over Germany that his soul demanded was to be ensured.
+Suppose he were to write some noisy articles at once, an article, for
+instance, to be called "The War of the Mechanics" or "The War of Gear,"
+and another on "Without Civil Strength there is no Victory." If he wrote
+such things would they be noted or would they just vanish
+indistinguishably into the general mental tumult? Would they be audible
+and helpful shouts, or just waste of shouting?... That at least was what
+he supposed himself to be thinking; it was, at any rate, the main
+current of his thinking; but all the same, just outside the circle of
+his attention a number of other things were dimly apprehended, bobbing
+up and down in the flood and ready at the slightest chance to swirl into
+the centre of his thoughts. There was, for instance, Captain Carmine in
+the moonlight lugging up a railway embankment something horrible,
+something loose and wet and warm that had very recently been a man.
+There was Teddy, serious and patriotic--filling a futile penman with
+incredulous respect. There was the thin-faced man at the club, and a
+curious satisfaction he had betrayed in the public disarrangement. And
+there was Hugh. Particularly there was Hugh, silent but watchful. The
+boy never babbled. He had his mother's gift of deep dark silences. Out
+of which she was wont to flash, a Black Princess waving a sword. He
+wandered for a little while among memories.... But Hugh didn't come out
+like that, though it always seemed possible he might--perhaps he didn't
+come out because he was a son. Revelation to his father wasn't his
+business.... What was he thinking of it all? What was he going to do?
+Mr. Britling was acutely anxious that his son should volunteer; he was
+almost certain that he would volunteer, but there was just a little
+shadow of doubt whether some extraordinary subtlety of mind mightn't
+have carried the boy into a pacifist attitude. No! that was impossible.
+In the face of Belgium.... But as greatly--and far more deeply in the
+warm flesh of his being--did Mr. Britling desire that no harm, no evil
+should happen to Hugh....
+
+The door opened, and Hugh came in....
+
+Mr. Britling glanced over his shoulder with an affectation of
+indifference. "Hal-_lo!_" he said. "What do you want?"
+
+Hugh walked awkwardly to the hearthrug.
+
+"Oh!" he said in an off-hand tone; "I suppose I've got to go soldiering
+for a bit. I just thought--I'd rather like to go off with a man I know
+to-morrow...."
+
+Mr. Britling's manner remained casual.
+
+"It's the only thing to do now, I'm afraid," he said.
+
+He turned in his chair and regarded his son. "What do you mean to do?
+O.T.C.?"
+
+"I don't think I should make much of an officer. I hate giving orders to
+other people. We thought we'd just go together into the Essex Regiment
+as privates...."
+
+There was a little pause. Both father and son had rehearsed this scene
+in their minds several times, and now they found that they had no use
+for a number of sentences that had been most effective in these
+rehearsals. Mr. Britling scratched his cheek with the end of his pen.
+"I'm glad you want to go, Hugh," he said.
+
+"I _don't_ want to go," said Hugh with his hands deep in his pockets. "I
+want to go and work with Cardinal. But this job has to be done by every
+one. Haven't you been saying as much all day?... It's like turning out
+to chase a burglar or suppress a mad dog. It's like necessary
+sanitation...."
+
+"You aren't attracted by soldiering?"
+
+"Not a bit. I won't pretend it, Daddy. I think the whole business is a
+bore. Germany seems to me now just like some heavy horrible dirty mass
+that has fallen across Belgium and France. We've got to shove the stuff
+back again. That's all...."
+
+He volunteered some further remarks to his father's silence.
+
+"You know I can't get up a bit of tootle about this business," he said.
+"I think killing people or getting killed is a thoroughly nasty
+habit.... I expect my share will be just drilling and fatigue duties and
+route marches, and loafing here in England...."
+
+"You can't possibly go out for two years," said Mr. Britling, as if he
+regretted it.
+
+A slight hesitation appeared in Hugh's eyes. "I suppose not," he said.
+
+"Things ought to be over by then--anyhow," Mr. Britling added, betraying
+his real feelings.
+
+"So it's really just helping at the furthest end of the shove," Hugh
+endorsed, but still with that touch of reservation in his manner....
+
+The pause had the effect of closing the theoretical side of the
+question. "Where do you propose to enlist?" said Mr. Britling, coming
+down to practical details.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+The battle of the Marne passed into the battle of the Aisne, and then
+the long lines of the struggle streamed north-westward until the British
+were back in Belgium failing to clutch Menin and then defending Ypres.
+The elation of September followed the bedazzlement and dismay of August
+into the chapter of forgotten moods; and Mr. Britling's sense of the
+magnitude, the weight and duration of this war beyond all wars,
+increased steadily. The feel of it was less and less a feeling of crisis
+and more and more a feeling of new conditions. It wasn't as it had
+seemed at first, the end of one human phase and the beginning of
+another; it was in itself a phase. It was a new way of living. And still
+he could find no real point of contact for himself with it all except
+the point of his pen. Only at his writing-desk, and more particularly at
+night, were the great presences of the conflict his. Yet he was always
+desiring some more personal and physical participation.
+
+Hugh came along one day in October in an ill-fitting uniform, looking
+already coarser in fibre and with a nose scorched red by the autumnal
+sun. He said the life was rough, but it made him feel extraordinarily
+well; perhaps man was made to toil until he dropped asleep from
+exhaustion, to fast for ten or twelve hours and then eat like a wolf. He
+was acquiring a taste for Woodbine cigarettes, and a heady variety of
+mineral waters called Monsters. He feared promotion; he felt he could
+never take the high line with other human beings demanded of a corporal.
+He was still trying to read a little chemistry and crystallography, but
+it didn't "go with the life." In the scanty leisure of a recruit in
+training it was more agreeable to lie about and write doggerel verses
+and draw caricatures of the men in one's platoon. Invited to choose what
+he liked by his family, he demanded a large tuckbox such as he used to
+have at school, only "_much_ larger," and a big tin of insect powder.
+It must be able to kill ticks....
+
+When he had gone, the craving for a personal share in the nation's
+physical exertions became overpowering in Mr. Britling. He wanted, he
+felt, to "get his skin into it." He had decided that the volunteer
+movement was a hopeless one. The War Office, after a stout resistance to
+any volunteer movement at all, decided to recognise it in such a manner
+as to make it ridiculous. The volunteers were to have no officers and no
+uniforms that could be remotely mistaken for those of the regulars, so
+that in the event of an invasion the Germans would be able to tell what
+they had to deal with miles away. Wilkins found his conception of a
+whole nation, all enrolled, all listed and badged according to capacity,
+his dream of every one falling into place in one great voluntary
+national effort, treated as the childish dreaming of that most ignorant
+of all human types, a "novelist." _Punch_ was delicately funny about
+him; he was represented as wearing a preposterous cocked hat of his own
+design, designing cocked hats for every one. Wilkins was told to "shut
+up" in a multitude of anonymous letters, and publicly and privately to
+"leave things to Kitchener." To bellow in loud clear tones "leave things
+to Kitchener," and to depart for the theatre or the river or an
+automobile tour, was felt very generally at that time to be the proper
+conduct for a patriot. There was a very general persuasion that to
+become a volunteer when one ought to be just modestly doing nothing at
+all, was in some obscure way a form of disloyalty....
+
+So Mr. Britling was out of conceit with volunteering, and instead he
+went and was duly sworn and entrusted with the badge of a special
+constable. The duties of a special constable were chiefly not to
+understand what was going on in the military sphere, and to do what he
+was told in the way of watching and warding conceivably vulnerable
+points. He had also to be available in the event of civil disorder. Mr.
+Britling was provided with a truncheon and sent out to guard various
+culverts, bridges, and fords in the hilly country to the north-westward
+of Matching's Easy. It was never very clear to him what he would do if
+he found a motor-car full of armed enemies engaged in undermining a
+culvert, or treacherously deepening some strategic ford. He supposed he
+would either engage them in conversation, or hit them with his
+truncheon, or perhaps do both things simultaneously. But as he really
+did not believe for a moment that any human being was likely to tamper
+with the telegraphs, telephones, ways and appliances committed to his
+care, his uncertainty did not trouble him very much. He prowled the
+lonely lanes and paths in the darkness, and became better acquainted
+with a multitude of intriguing little cries and noises that came from
+the hedges and coverts at night. One night he rescued a young leveret
+from a stoat, who seemed more than half inclined to give him battle for
+its prey until he cowed and defeated it with the glare of his electric
+torch....
+
+As he prowled the countryside under the great hemisphere of Essex sky,
+or leant against fences or sat drowsily upon gates or sheltered from
+wind and rain under ricks or sheds, he had much time for meditation, and
+his thoughts went down and down below his first surface impressions of
+the war. He thought no longer of the rights and wrongs of this
+particular conflict but of the underlying forces in mankind that made
+war possible; he planned no more ingenious treaties and conventions
+between the nations, and instead he faced the deeper riddles of
+essential evil and of conceivable changes in the heart of man. And the
+rain assailed him and thorns tore him, and the soaked soft meadows
+bogged and betrayed his wandering feet, and the little underworld of the
+hedges and ditches hissed and squealed in the darkness and pursued and
+fled, and devoured or were slain.
+
+And one night in April he was perplexed by a commotion among the
+pheasants and a barking of distant dogs, and then to his great
+astonishment he heard noises like a distant firework display and saw
+something like a phantom yellowish fountain-pen in the sky far away to
+the east lit intermittently by a quivering search-light and going very
+swiftly. And after he had rubbed his eyes and looked again, he realised
+that he was looking at a Zeppelin--a Zeppelin flying Londonward over
+Essex.
+
+And all that night was wonder....
+
+
+Section 8
+
+While Mr. Britling was trying to find his duty in the routine of a
+special constable, Mrs. Britling set to work with great energy to attend
+various classes and qualify herself for Red Cross work. And early in
+October came the great drive of the Germans towards Antwerp and the sea,
+the great drive that was apparently designed to reach Calais, and which
+swept before it multitudes of Flemish refugees. There was an exodus of
+all classes from Antwerp into Holland and England, and then a huge
+process of depopulation in Flanders and the Pas de Calais. This flood
+came to the eastern and southern parts of England and particularly to
+London, and there hastily improvised organisations distributed it to a
+number of local committees, each of which took a share of the refugees,
+hired and furnished unoccupied houses for the use of the penniless, and
+assisted those who had means into comfortable quarters. The Matching's
+Easy committee found itself with accommodation for sixty people, and
+with a miscellaneous bag of thirty individuals entrusted to its care,
+who had been part of the load of a little pirate steam-boat from Ostend.
+There were two Flemish peasant families, and the rest were more or less
+middle-class refugees from Antwerp. They were brought from the station
+to the Tithe barn at Claverings, and there distributed, under the
+personal supervision of Lady Homartyn and her agent, among those who
+were prepared for their entertainment. There was something like
+competition among the would-be hosts; everybody was glad of the chance
+of "doing something," and anxious to show these Belgians what England
+thought of their plucky little country. Mr. Britling was proud to lead
+off a Mr. Van der Pant, a neat little bearded man in a black tail-coat,
+a black bowler hat, and a knitted muffler, with a large rucksack and a
+conspicuously foreign-looking bicycle, to the hospitalities of Dower
+House. Mr. Van der Pant had escaped from Antwerp at the eleventh hour,
+he had caught a severe cold and, it would seem, lost his wife and family
+in the process; he had much to tell Mr. Britling, and in his zeal to
+tell it he did not at once discover that though Mr. Britling knew French
+quite well he did not know it very rapidly.
+
+The dinner that night at the Dower House marked a distinct fresh step in
+the approach of the Great War to the old habits and securities of
+Matching's Easy. The war had indeed filled every one's mind to the
+exclusion of all other topics since its very beginning; it had carried
+off Herr Heinrich to Germany, Teddy to London, and Hugh to Colchester,
+it had put a special brassard round Mr. Britling's arm and carried him
+out into the night, given Mrs. Britling several certificates, and
+interrupted the frequent visits and gossip of Mr. Lawrence Carmine; but
+so far it had not established a direct contact between the life of
+Matching's Easy and the grim business of shot, shell, and bayonet at the
+front. But now here was the Dower House accomplishing wonderful idioms
+in Anglo-French, and an animated guest telling them--sometimes one
+understood clearly and sometimes the meaning was clouded--of men blown
+to pieces under his eyes, of fragments of human beings lying about in
+the streets; there was trouble over the expression _omoplate d'une
+femme_, until one of the youngsters got the dictionary and found out it
+was the shoulder-blade of a woman; of pools of blood--everywhere--and
+of flight in the darkness.
+
+Mr. Van der Pant had been in charge of the dynamos at the Antwerp Power
+Station, he had been keeping the electrified wires in the entanglements
+"alive," and he had stuck to his post until the German high explosives
+had shattered his wires and rendered his dynamos useless. He gave vivid
+little pictures of the noises of the bombardment, of the dead lying
+casually in the open spaces, of the failure of the German guns to hit
+the bridge of boats across which the bulk of the defenders and refugees
+escaped. He produced a little tourist's map of the city of Antwerp, and
+dotted at it with a pencil-case. "The--what do you call?--_obus_, ah,
+shells! fell, so and so and so." Across here he had fled on his
+_bécane_, and along here and here. He had carried off his rifle, and hid
+it with the rifles of various other Belgians between floor and ceiling
+of a house in Zeebrugge. He had found the pirate steamer in the harbour,
+its captain resolved to extract the uttermost fare out of every refugee
+he took to London. When they were all aboard and started they found
+there was no food except the hard ration biscuits of some Belgian
+soldiers. They had portioned this out like shipwrecked people on a
+raft.... The _mer_ had been _calme_; thank Heaven! All night they had
+been pumping. He had helped with the pumps. But Mr. Van der Pant hoped
+still to get a reckoning with the captain of that ship.
+
+Mr. Van der Pant had had shots at various Zeppelins. When the Zeppelins
+came to Antwerp everybody turned out on the roofs and shot at them. He
+was contemptuous of Zeppelins. He made derisive gestures to express his
+opinion of them. They could do nothing unless they came low, and if they
+came low you could hit them. One which ventured down had been riddled;
+it had had to drop all its bombs--luckily they fell in an open field--in
+order to make its lame escape. It was all nonsense to say, as the
+English papers did, that they took part in the final bombardment. Not a
+Zeppelin.... So he talked, and the Britling family listened and
+understood as much as they could, and replied and questioned in
+Anglo-French. Here was a man who but a few days ago had been steering
+his bicycle in the streets of Antwerp to avoid shell craters, pools of
+blood, and the torn-off arms and shoulder-blades of women. He had seen
+houses flaring, set afire by incendiary bombs, and once at a corner he
+had been knocked off his bicycle by the pouff of a bursting shell....
+Not only were these things in the same world with us, they were sitting
+at our table.
+
+He told one grim story of an invalid woman unable to move, lying in bed
+in her _appartement_, and of how her husband went out on the balcony to
+look at the Zeppelin. There was a great noise of shooting. Ever and
+again he would put his head back into the room and tell her things, and
+then after a time he was silent and looked in no more. She called to
+him, and called again. Becoming frightened, she raised herself by a
+great effort and peered through the glass. At first she was too puzzled
+to understand what had happened. He was hanging over the front of the
+balcony, with his head twisted oddly. Twisted and shattered. He had been
+killed by shrapnel fired from the outer fortifications....
+
+These are the things that happen in histories and stories. They do not
+happen at Matching's Easy....
+
+Mr. Van der Pant did not seem to be angry with the Germans. But he
+manifestly regarded them as people to be killed. He denounced nothing
+that they had done; he related. They were just an evil accident that had
+happened to Belgium and mankind. They had to be destroyed. He gave Mr.
+Britling an extraordinary persuasion that knives were being sharpened in
+every cellar in Brussels and Antwerp against the day of inevitable
+retreat, of a resolution to exterminate the invader that was far too
+deep to be vindictive.... And the man was most amazingly unconquered.
+Mr. Britling perceived the label on his habitual dinner wine with a
+slight embarrassment. "Do you care," he asked, "to drink a German wine?
+This is Berncasteler from the Moselle." Mr. Van der Pant reflected. "But
+it is a good wine," he said. "After the peace it will be Belgian....
+Yes, if we are to be safe in the future from such a war as this, we must
+have our boundaries right up to the Rhine."
+
+So he sat and talked, flushed and, as it were, elated by the vividness
+of all that he had undergone. He had no trace of tragic quality, no hint
+of subjugation. But for his costume and his trimmed beard and his
+language he might have been a Dubliner or a Cockney.
+
+He was astonishingly cut off from all his belongings. His house in
+Antwerp was abandoned to the invader; valuables and cherished objects
+very skilfully buried in the garden; he had no change of clothing except
+what the rucksack held. His only footwear were the boots he came in. He
+could not get on any of the slippers in the house, they were all too
+small for him, until suddenly Mrs. Britling bethought herself of Herr
+Heinrich's pair, still left unpacked upstairs. She produced them, and
+they fitted exactly. It seemed only poetical justice, a foretaste of
+national compensations, to annex them to Belgium forthwith....
+
+Also it became manifest that Mr. Van der Pant was cut off from all his
+family. And suddenly he became briskly critical of the English way of
+doing things. His wife and child had preceded him to England, crossing
+by Ostend and Folkestone a fortnight ago; her parents had come in
+August; both groups had been seized upon by improvised British
+organisations and very thoroughly and completely lost. He had written to
+the Belgian Embassy and they had referred him to a committee in London,
+and the committee had begun its services by discovering a Madame Van der
+Pant hitherto unknown to him at Camberwell, and displaying a certain
+suspicion and hostility when he said she would not do. There had been
+some futile telegrams. "What," asked Mr. Van der Pant, "ought one to
+do?"
+
+Mr. Britling temporised by saying he would "make inquiries," and put Mr.
+Van der Pant off for two days. Then he decided to go up to London with
+him and "make inquiries on the spot." Mr. Van der Pant did not discover
+his family, but Mr. Britling discovered the profound truth of a comment
+of Herr Heinrich's which he had hitherto considered utterly trivial, but
+which had nevertheless stuck in his memory. "The English," Herr Heinrich
+had said, "do not understanding indexing. It is the root of all good
+organisation."
+
+Finally, Mr. Van der Pant adopted the irregular course of asking every
+Belgian he met if they had seen any one from his district in Antwerp, if
+they had heard of the name of "Van der Pant," if they had encountered
+So-and-so or So-and-so. And by obstinacy and good fortune he really got
+on to the track of Madame Van der Pant; she had been carried off into
+Kent, and a day later the Dower House was the scene of a happy reunion.
+Madame was a slender lady, dressed well and plainly, with a Belgian
+common sense and a Catholic reserve, and André was like a child of wax,
+delicate and charming and unsubstantial. It seemed incredible that he
+could ever grow into anything so buoyant and incessant as his father.
+The Britling boys had to be warned not to damage him. A sitting-room was
+handed over to the Belgians for their private use, and for a time the
+two families settled into the Dower House side by side. Anglo-French
+became the table language of the household. It hampered Mr. Britling
+very considerably. And both families set themselves to much unrecorded
+observation, much unspoken mutual criticism, and the exercise of great
+patience. It was tiresome for the English to be tied to a language that
+crippled all spontaneous talk; these linguistic gymnastics were fun to
+begin with, but soon they became very troublesome; and the Belgians
+suspected sensibilities in their hosts and a vast unwritten code of
+etiquette that did not exist; at first they were always waiting, as it
+were, to be invited or told or included; they seemed always
+deferentially backing out from intrusions. Moreover, they would not at
+first reveal what food they liked or what they didn't like, or whether
+they wanted more or less.... But these difficulties were soon smoothed
+away, they Anglicised quickly and cleverly. André grew bold and
+cheerful, and lost his first distrust of his rather older English
+playmates. Every day at lunch he produced a new, carefully prepared
+piece of English, though for some time he retained a marked preference
+for "Good morning, Saire," and "Thank you very mush," over all other
+locutions, and fell back upon them on all possible and many impossible
+occasions. And he could do some sleight-of-hand tricks with remarkable
+skill and humour, and fold paper with quite astonishing results.
+Meanwhile Mr. Van der Pant sought temporary employment in England, went
+for long rides upon his bicycle, exchanged views with Mr. Britling upon
+a variety of subjects, and became a wonderful player of hockey.
+
+He played hockey with an extraordinary zest and nimbleness. Always he
+played in the tail coat, and the knitted muffler was never relinquished;
+he treated the game entirely as an occasion for quick tricks and
+personal agility; he bounded about the field like a kitten, he
+pirouetted suddenly, he leapt into the air and came down in new
+directions; his fresh-coloured face was alive with delight, the coat
+tails and the muffler trailed and swished about breathlessly behind his
+agility. He never passed to other players; he never realised his
+appointed place in the game; he sought simply to make himself a leaping
+screen about the ball as he drove it towards the goal. But André he
+would not permit to play at all, and Madame played like a lady, like a
+Madonna, like a saint carrying the instrument of her martyrdom. The
+game and its enthusiasms flowed round her and receded from her; she
+remained quite valiant but tolerant, restrained; doing her best to do
+the extraordinary things required of her, but essentially a being of
+passive dignities, living chiefly for them; Letty careering by her, keen
+and swift, was like a creature of a different species....
+
+Mr. Britling cerebrated abundantly about these contrasts.
+
+"What has been blown in among us by these German shells," he said, "is
+essentially a Catholic family. Blown clean out of its setting.... We who
+are really--Neo-Europeans....
+
+"At first you imagine there is nothing separating us but language.
+Presently you find that language is the least of our separations. These
+people are people living upon fundamentally different ideas from ours,
+ideas far more definite and complete than ours. You imagine that home in
+Antwerp as something much more rounded off, much more closed in, a cell,
+a real social unit, a different thing altogether from this place of
+meeting. Our boys play cheerfully with all comers; little André hasn't
+learnt to play with any outside children at all. We must seem incredibly
+_open_ to these Van der Pants. A house without sides.... Last Sunday I
+could not find out the names of the two girls who came on bicycles and
+played so well. They came with Kitty Westropp. And Van der Pant wanted
+to know how they were related to us. Or how was it they came?...
+
+"Look at Madame. She's built on a fundamentally different plan from any
+of our womenkind here. Tennis, the bicycle, co-education, the two-step,
+the higher education of women.... Say these things over to yourself, and
+think of her. It's like talking of a nun in riding breeches. She's a
+specialised woman, specialising in womanhood, her sphere is the home.
+Soft, trailing, draping skirts, slow movements, a veiled face; for no
+Oriental veil could be more effectual than her beautiful Catholic
+quiet. Catholicism invented the invisible purdah. She is far more akin
+to that sweet little Indian lady with the wonderful robes whom Carmine
+brought over with her tall husband last summer, than she is to Letty or
+Cissie. She, too, undertook to play hockey. And played it very much as
+Madame Van der Pant played it....
+
+"The more I see of our hockey," said Mr. Britling, "the more wonderful
+it seems to me as a touchstone of character and culture and
+breeding...."
+
+Mr. Manning, to whom he was delivering this discourse, switched him on
+to a new track by asking what he meant by "Neo-European."
+
+"It's a bad phrase," said Mr. Britling. "I'll withdraw it. Let me try
+and state exactly what I have in mind. I mean something that is coming
+up in America and here and the Scandinavian countries and Russia, a new
+culture, an escape from the Levantine religion and the Catholic culture
+that came to us from the Mediterranean. Let me drop Neo-European; let me
+say Northern. We are Northerners. The key, the heart, the nucleus and
+essence of every culture is its conception of the relations of men and
+women; and this new culture tends to diminish the specialisation of
+women as women, to let them out from the cell of the home into common
+citizenship with men. It's a new culture, still in process of
+development, which will make men more social and co-operative and women
+bolder, swifter, more responsible and less cloistered. It minimises
+instead of exaggerating the importance of sex....
+
+"And," said Mr. Britling, in very much the tones in which a preacher
+might say "Sixthly," "it is just all this Northern tendency that this
+world struggle is going to release. This war is pounding through Europe,
+smashing up homes, dispersing and mixing homes, setting Madame Van der
+Pant playing hockey, and André climbing trees with my young ruffians; it
+is killing young men by the million, altering the proportions of the
+sexes for a generation, bringing women into business and office and
+industry, destroying the accumulated wealth that kept so many of them in
+refined idleness, flooding the world with strange doubts and novel
+ideas...."
+
+
+Section 9
+
+But the conflict of manners and customs that followed the invasion of
+the English villages by French and Belgian refugees did not always
+present the immigrants as Catholics and the hosts as "Neo-European." In
+the case of Mr. Dimple it was the other way round. He met Mr. Britling
+in Claverings park and told him his troubles....
+
+"Of course," he said, "we have to do our Utmost for Brave Little
+Belgium. I would be the last to complain of any little inconvenience one
+may experience in doing that. Still, I must confess I think you and dear
+Mrs. Britling are fortunate, exceptionally fortunate, in the Belgians
+you have got. My guests--it's unfortunate--the man is some sort of
+journalist and quite--oh! much too much--an Atheist. An open positive
+one. Not simply Honest Doubt. I'm quite prepared for honest doubt
+nowadays. You and I have no quarrel over that. But he is aggressive. He
+makes remarks about miracles, quite derogatory remarks, and not always
+in French. Sometimes he almost speaks English. And in front of my
+sister. And he goes out, he says, looking for a Café. He never finds a
+Café, but he certainly finds every public house within a radius of
+miles. And he comes back smelling dreadfully of beer. When I drop a
+Little Hint, he blames the beer. He says it is not good beer--our good
+Essex beer! He doesn't understand any of our simple ways. He's
+sophisticated. The girls about here wear Belgian flags--and air their
+little bits of French. And he takes it as an encouragement. Only
+yesterday there was a scene. It seems he tried to kiss the Hickson girl
+at the inn--Maudie.... And his wife; a great big slow woman--in every
+way she is--Ample; it's dreadful even to seem to criticise, but I do so
+_wish_ she would not see fit to sit down and nourish her baby in my poor
+old bachelor drawing-room--often at the most _unseasonable_ times.
+And--so lavishly...."
+
+Mr. Britling attempted consolations.
+
+"But anyhow," said Mr. Dimple, "I'm better off than poor dear Mrs.
+Bynne. She secured two milliners. She insisted upon them. And their
+clothes were certainly beautifully made--even my poor old unworldly eye
+could tell that. And she thought two milliners would be so useful with a
+large family like hers. They certainly _said_ they were milliners. But
+it seems--I don't know what we shall do about them.... My dear Mr.
+Britling, those young women are anything but milliners--anything but
+milliners...."
+
+A faint gleam of amusement was only too perceptible through the good
+man's horror.
+
+"Sirens, my dear Mr. Britling. Sirens. By profession."...
+
+
+Section 10
+
+October passed into November, and day by day Mr. Britling was forced to
+apprehend new aspects of the war, to think and rethink the war, to have
+his first conclusions checked and tested, twisted askew, replaced. His
+thoughts went far and wide and deeper--until all his earlier writing
+seemed painfully shallow to him, seemed a mere automatic response of
+obvious comments to the stimulus of the war's surprise. As his ideas
+became subtler and profounder, they became more difficult to express; he
+talked less; he became abstracted and irritable at table. To two people
+in particular Mr. Britling found his real ideas inexpressible, to Mr.
+Direck and to Mr. Van der Pant.
+
+Each of these gentlemen brought with him the implication or the
+intimation of a critical attitude towards England. It was all very well
+for Mr. Britling himself to be critical of England; that is an
+Englishman's privilege. To hear Mr. Van der Pant questioning British
+efficiency or to suspect Mr. Direck of high, thin American superiorities
+to war, was almost worse than to hear Mrs. Harrowdean saying hostile
+things about Edith. It roused an even acuter protective emotion.
+
+In the case of Mr. Van der Pant matters were complicated by the
+difficulty of the language, which made anything but the crudest
+statements subject to incalculable misconception.
+
+Mr. Van der Pant had not the extreme tactfulness of his so typically
+Catholic wife; he made it only too plain that he thought the British
+postal and telegraph service slow and slack, and the management of the
+Great Eastern branch lines wasteful and inefficient. He said the workmen
+in the fields and the workmen he saw upon some cottages near the
+junction worked slowlier and with less interest than he had ever seen
+any workman display in all his life before. He marvelled that Mr.
+Britling lit his house with acetylene and not electric light. He thought
+fresh eggs were insanely dear, and his opinion of Matching's Easy
+pig-keeping was uncomplimentary. The roads, he said, were not a means of
+getting from place to place, they were a _dédale_; he drew derisive maps
+with his finger on the table-cloth of the lane system about the Dower
+House. He was astonished that there was no Café in Matching's Easy; he
+declared that the "public house" to which he went with considerable
+expectation was no public house at all; it was just a sly place for
+drinking beer.... All these were things Mr. Britling might have remarked
+himself; from a Belgian refugee he found them intolerable.
+
+He set himself to explain to Mr. Van der Pant firstly that these things
+did not matter in the slightest degree, the national attention, the
+national interest ran in other directions; and secondly that they were,
+as a matter of fact and on the whole, merits slightly disguised. He
+produced a pleasant theory that England is really not the Englishman's
+field, it is his breeding place, his resting place, a place not for
+efficiency but good humour. If Mr. Van der Pant were to make inquiries
+he would find there was scarcely a home in Matching's Easy that had not
+sent some energetic representative out of England to become one of the
+English of the world. England was the last place in which English energy
+was spent. These hedges, these dilatory roads were full of associations.
+There was a road that turned aside near Market Saffron to avoid Turk's
+wood; it had been called Turk's wood first in the fourteenth century
+after a man of that name. He quoted Chesterton's happy verses to justify
+these winding lanes.
+
+ "The road turned first towards the left,
+ Where Perkin's quarry made the cleft;
+ The path turned next towards the right,
+ Because the mastiff used to bite...."
+
+And again:
+
+ "And I should say they wound about
+ To find the town of Roundabout,
+ The merry town of Roundabout
+ That makes the world go round."
+
+If our easy-going ways hampered a hard efficiency, they did at least
+develop humour and humanity. Our diplomacy at any rate had not failed
+us....
+
+He did not believe a word of this stuff. His deep irrational love for
+England made him say these things.... For years he had been getting
+himself into hot water because he had been writing and hinting just such
+criticisms as Mr. Van der Pant expressed so bluntly.... But he wasn't
+going to accept foreign help in dissecting his mother....
+
+And another curious effect that Mr. Van der Pant had upon Mr. Britling
+was to produce an obstinate confidence about the war and the nearness
+of the German collapse. He would promise Mr. Van der Pant that he should
+be back in Antwerp before May; that the Germans would be over the Rhine
+by July. He knew perfectly well that his ignorance of all the military
+conditions was unqualified, but still he could not restrain himself from
+this kind of thing so soon as he began to speak Entente
+Cordiale--Anglo-French, that is to say. Something in his relationship to
+Mr. Van der Pant obliged him to be acutely and absurdly the protecting
+British.... At times he felt like a conscious bankrupt talking off the
+hour of disclosure. But indeed all that Mr. Britling was trying to say
+against the difficulties of a strange language and an alien temperament,
+was that the honour of England would never be cleared until Belgium was
+restored and avenged....
+
+While Mr. Britling was patrolling unimportant roads and entertaining Mr.
+Van der Pant with discourses upon the nearness of victory and the subtle
+estimableness of all that was indolent, wasteful and evasive in English
+life, the war was passing from its first swift phases into a slower,
+grimmer struggle. The German retreat ended at the Aisne, and the long
+outflanking manoeuvres of both hosts towards the Channel began. The
+English attempts to assist Belgium in October came too late for the
+preservation of Antwerp, and after a long and complicated struggle in
+Flanders the British failed to outflank the German right, lost Ghent,
+Menin and the Belgian coast, but held Ypres and beat back every attempt
+of the enemy to reach Dunkirk and Calais. Meanwhile the smaller German
+colonies and islands were falling to the navy, the Australian battleship
+_Sydney_ smashed the _Emden_ at Cocos Island, and the British naval
+disaster of Coronel was wiped out by the battle of the Falklands. The
+Russians were victorious upon their left and took Lemberg, and after
+some vicissitudes of fortune advanced to Przemysl, occupying the larger
+part of Galicia; but the disaster of Tannenberg had broken their
+progress in East Prussia, and the Germans were pressing towards Warsaw.
+Turkey had joined the war, and suffered enormous losses in the Caucasus.
+The Dardanelles had been shelled for the first time, and the British
+were at Basra on the Euphrates.
+
+
+Section 11
+
+The Christmas of 1914 found England, whose landscape had hitherto been
+almost as peaceful and soldierless as Massachusetts, already far gone
+along the path of transformation into a country full of soldiers and
+munition makers and military supplies. The soldiers came first, on the
+well-known and greatly admired British principle of "first catch your
+hare" and then build your kitchen. Always before, Christmas had been a
+time of much gaiety and dressing up and prancing and two-stepping at the
+Dower House, but this year everything was too uncertain to allow of any
+gathering of guests. Hugh got leave for the day after Christmas, but
+Teddy was tied; and Cissie and Letty went off with the small boy to take
+lodgings near him. The Van der Pants had hoped to see an English
+Christmas at Matching's Easy, but within three weeks of Christmas Day
+Mr. Van der Pant found a job that he could do in Nottingham, and carried
+off his family. The two small boys cheered their hearts with paper
+decorations, but the Christmas Tree was condemned as too German, and it
+was discovered that Santa Claus had suddenly become Old Father Christmas
+again. The small boys discovered that the price of lead soldiers had
+risen, and were unable to buy electric torches, on which they had set
+their hearts. There was to have been a Christmas party at Claverings,
+but at the last moment Lady Homartyn had to hurry off to an orphan
+nephew who had been seriously wounded near Ypres, and the light of
+Claverings was darkened.
+
+Soon after Christmas there were rumours of an impending descent of the
+Headquarters staff of the South-Eastern army upon Claverings. Then Mr.
+Britling found Lady Homartyn back from France, and very indignant
+because after all the Headquarters were to go to Lady Wensleydale at
+Ladyholt. It was, she felt, a reflection upon Claverings. Lady Homartyn
+became still more indignant when presently the new armies, which were
+gathering now all over England like floods in a low-lying meadow, came
+pouring into the parishes about Claverings to the extent of a battalion
+and a Territorial battery. Mr. Britling heard of their advent only a day
+or two before they arrived; there came a bright young officer with an
+orderly, billeting; he was much exercised to get, as he expressed it
+several times, a quart into a pint bottle. He was greatly pleased with
+the barn. He asked the size of it and did calculations. He could "stick
+twenty-five men into it--easy." It would go far to solve his problems.
+He could manage without coming into the house at all. It was a ripping
+place. "No end."
+
+"But beds," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Lord! they don't want _beds_," said the young officer....
+
+The whole Britling family, who were lamenting the loss of their
+Belgians, welcomed the coming of the twenty-five with great enthusiasm.
+It made them feel that they were doing something useful once more. For
+three days Mrs. Britling had to feed her new lodgers--the kitchen motors
+had as usual gone astray--and she did so in a style that made their
+boastings about their billet almost insufferable to the rest of their
+battery. The billeting allowance at that time was ninepence a head, and
+Mr. Britling, ashamed of making a profit out of his country, supplied
+not only generous firing and lighting, but unlimited cigarettes, cards
+and games, illustrated newspapers, a cocoa supper with such little
+surprises as sprats and jam roly-poly, and a number of more incidental
+comforts. The men arrived fasting under the command of two very sage
+middle-aged corporals, and responded to Mrs. Britling's hospitalities by
+a number of good resolutions, many of which they kept. They never made
+noises after half-past ten, or at least only now and then when a
+singsong broke out with unusual violence; they got up and went out at
+five or six in the morning without a sound; they were almost
+inconveniently helpful with washing-up and tidying round.
+
+In quite a little time Mrs. Britling's mind had adapted itself to the
+spectacle of half-a-dozen young men in khaki breeches and shirts
+performing their toilets in and about her scullery, or improvising an
+unsanctioned game of football between the hockey goals. These men were
+not the miscellaneous men of the new armies; they were the earlier
+Territorial type with no heroics about them; they came from the
+midlands; and their two middle-aged corporals kept them well in hand and
+ruled them like a band of brothers. But they had an illegal side, that
+developed in directions that set Mr. Britling theorising. They seemed,
+for example, to poach by nature, as children play and sing. They
+possessed a promiscuous white dog. They began to add rabbits to their
+supper menu, unaccountable rabbits. One night there was a mighty smell
+of frying fish from the kitchen, and the cook reported trout. "Trout!"
+said Mr. Britling to one of the corporals; "now where did you chaps get
+trout?"
+
+The "fisherman," they said, had got them with a hair noose. They
+produced the fisherman, of whom they were manifestly proud. It was, he
+explained, a method of fishing he had learnt when in New York Harbour.
+He had been a stoker. He displayed a confidence in Mr. Britling that
+made that gentleman an accessory after his offence, his very serious
+offence against pre-war laws and customs. It was plain that the trout
+were the trout that Mr. Pumshock, the stock-broker and amateur
+gentleman, had preserved so carefully in the Easy. Hitherto the
+countryside had been forced to regard Mr. Pumshock's trout with an
+almost superstitious respect. A year ago young Snooker had done a month
+for one of those very trout. But now things were different.
+
+"But I don't really fancy fresh-water fish," said the fisherman. "It's
+just the ketchin' of 'em I like...."
+
+And a few weeks later the trumpeter, an angel-faced freckled child with
+deep-blue eyes, brought in a dozen partridge eggs which he wanted Mary
+to cook for him....
+
+The domesticity of the sacred birds, it was clear, was no longer safe in
+England....
+
+Then again the big guns would go swinging down the road and into
+Claverings park, and perform various exercises with commendable
+smartness and a profound disregard for Lady Homartyn's known objection
+to any departure from the public footpath....
+
+And one afternoon as Mr. Britling took his constitutional walk, a
+reverie was set going in his mind by the sight of a neglected-looking
+pheasant with a white collar. The world of Matching's Easy was getting
+full now of such elderly birds. Would _that_ go on again after the war?
+He imagined his son Hugh as a grandfather, telling the little ones about
+parks and preserves and game laws, and footmen and butlers and the
+marvellous game of golf, and how, suddenly, Mars came tramping through
+the land in khaki and all these things faded and vanished, so that
+presently it was discovered they were gone....
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE THIRD
+
+MALIGNITY
+
+
+Section 1
+
+And while the countryside of England changed steadily from its lax
+pacific amenity to the likeness of a rather slovenly armed camp, while
+long-fixed boundaries shifted and dissolved and a great irreparable
+wasting of the world's resources gathered way, Mr. Britling did his duty
+as a special constable, gave his eldest son to the Territorials,
+entertained Belgians, petted his soldiers in the barn, helped Teddy to
+his commission, contributed to war charities, sold out securities at a
+loss and subscribed to the War Loan, and thought, thought endlessly
+about the war.
+
+He could think continuously day by day of nothing else. His mind was as
+caught as a galley slave, as unable to escape from tugging at this oar.
+All his universe was a magnetic field which oriented everything, whether
+he would have it so or not, to this one polar question.
+
+His thoughts grew firmer and clearer; they went deeper and wider. His
+first superficial judgments were endorsed and deepened or replaced by
+others. He thought along the lonely lanes at night; he thought at his
+desk; he thought in bed; he thought in his bath; he tried over his
+thoughts in essays and leading articles and reviewed them and corrected
+them. Now and then came relaxation and lassitude, but never release. The
+war towered over him like a vigilant teacher, day after day, week after
+week, regardless of fatigue and impatience, holding a rod in its hand.
+
+
+Section 2
+
+Certain things had to be forced upon Mr. Britling because they jarred so
+greatly with his habits of mind that he would never have accepted them
+if he could have avoided doing so.
+
+Notably he would not recognise at first the extreme bitterness of this
+war. He would not believe that the attack upon Britain and Western
+Europe generally expressed the concentrated emotion of a whole nation.
+He thought that the Allies were in conflict with a system and not with a
+national will. He fought against the persuasion that the whole mass of a
+great civilised nation could be inspired by a genuine and sustained
+hatred. Hostility was an uncongenial thing to him; he would not
+recognise that the greater proportion of human beings are more readily
+hostile than friendly. He did his best to believe--in his "And Now War
+Ends" he did his best to make other people believe--that this war was
+the perverse exploit of a small group of people, of limited but powerful
+influences, an outrage upon the general geniality of mankind. The
+cruelty, mischief, and futility of war were so obvious to him that he
+was almost apologetic in asserting them. He believed that war had but to
+begin and demonstrate its quality among the Western nations in order to
+unify them all against its repetition. They would exclaim: "But we can't
+do things like this to one another!" He saw the aggressive imperialism
+of Germany called to account even by its own people; a struggle, a
+collapse, a liberal-minded conference of world powers, and a universal
+resumption of amiability upon a more assured basis of security. He
+believed--and many people in England believed with him--that a great
+section of the Germans would welcome triumphant Allies as their
+liberators from intolerable political obsessions.
+
+The English because of their insularity had been political amateurs for
+endless generations. It was their supreme vice, it was their supreme
+virtue, to be easy-going. They had lived in an atmosphere of comedy, and
+denied in the whole tenor of their lives that life is tragic. Not even
+the Americans had been more isolated. The Americans had had their
+Indians, their negroes, their War of Secession. Until the Great War the
+Channel was as broad as the Atlantic for holding off every vital
+challenge. Even Ireland was away--a four-hour crossing. And so the
+English had developed to the fullest extent the virtues and vices of
+safety and comfort; they had a hatred of science and dramatic behaviour;
+they could see no reason for exactness or intensity; they disliked
+proceeding "to extremes." Ultimately everything would turn out all
+right. But they knew what it is to be carried into conflicts by
+energetic minorities and the trick of circumstances, and they were ready
+to understand the case of any other country which has suffered that
+fate. All their habits inclined them to fight good-temperedly and
+comfortably, to quarrel with a government and not with a people. It took
+Mr. Britling at least a couple of months of warfare to understand that
+the Germans were fighting in an altogether different spirit.
+
+The first intimations of this that struck upon his mind were the news of
+the behaviour of the Kaiser and the Berlin crowd upon the declaration of
+war, and the violent treatment of the British subjects seeking to return
+to their homes. Everywhere such people had been insulted and
+ill-treated. It was the spontaneous expression of a long-gathered
+bitterness. While the British ambassador was being howled out of Berlin,
+the German ambassador to England was taking a farewell stroll, quite
+unmolested, in St. James's Park.... One item that struck particularly
+upon Mr. Britling's imagination was the story of the chorus of young
+women who assembled on the railway platform of the station through which
+the British ambassador was passing to sing--to his drawn
+blinds--"Deutschland, Deutschland über Alles." Mr. Britling could
+imagine those young people, probably dressed more or less uniformly in
+white, with flushed faces and shining eyes, letting their voices go,
+full throated, in the modern German way....
+
+And then came stories of atrocities, stories of the shooting of old men
+and the butchery of children by the wayside, stories of wounded men
+bayoneted or burnt alive, of massacres of harmless citizens, of looting
+and filthy outrages....
+
+Mr. Britling did his utmost not to believe these things. They
+contradicted his habitual world. They produced horrible strains in his
+mind. They might, he hoped, be misreported so as to seem more violent or
+less justifiable than they were. They might be the acts of stray
+criminals, and quite disconnected from the normal operations of the war.
+Here and there some weak-minded officer may have sought to make himself
+terrible.... And as for the bombardment of cathedrals and the crime of
+Louvain, well, Mr. Britling was prepared to argue that Gothic
+architecture is not sacrosanct if military necessity cuts through it....
+It was only after the war had been going on some months that Mr.
+Britling's fluttering, unwilling mind was pinned down by official
+reports and a cloud of witnesses to a definite belief in the grim
+reality of systematic rape and murder, destruction, dirtiness and
+abominable compulsions that blackened the first rush of the Prussians
+into Belgium and Champagne....
+
+They came hating and threatening the lands they outraged. They sought
+occasion to do frightful deeds.... When they could not be frightful in
+the houses they occupied, then to the best of their ability they were
+destructive and filthy. The facts took Mr. Britling by the throat....
+
+The first thing that really pierced Mr. Britling with the conviction
+that there was something essentially different in the English and the
+German attitude towards the war was the sight of a bale of German comic
+papers in the study of a friend in London. They were filled with
+caricatures of the Allies and more particularly of the English, and they
+displayed a force and quality of passion--an incredible force and
+quality of passion. Their amazing hate and their amazing filthiness
+alike overwhelmed Mr. Britling. There was no appearance of national
+pride or national dignity, but a bellowing patriotism and a limitless
+desire to hurt and humiliate. They spat. They were red in the face and
+they spat. He sat with these violent sheets in his hands--_ashamed_.
+
+"But I say!" he said feebly. "It's the sort of thing that might come out
+of a lunatic asylum...."
+
+One incredible craving was manifest in every one of them. The German
+caricaturist seemed unable to represent his enemies except in extremely
+tight trousers or in none; he was equally unable to represent them
+without thrusting a sword or bayonet, spluttering blood, into the more
+indelicate parts of their persons. This was the _leit-motif_ of the war
+as the German humorists presented it. "But," said Mr. Britling, "these
+things can't represent anything like the general state of mind in
+Germany."
+
+"They do," said his friend.
+
+"But it's blind fury--at the dirt-throwing stage."
+
+"The whole of Germany is in that blind fury," said his friend. "While we
+are going about astonished and rather incredulous about this war, and
+still rather inclined to laugh, that's the state of mind of Germany....
+There's a sort of deliberation in it. They think it gives them strength.
+They _want_ to foam at the mouth. They do their utmost to foam more.
+They write themselves up. Have you heard of the 'Hymn of Hate'?"
+
+Mr. Britling had not.
+
+"There was a translation of it in last week's _Spectator_.... This is
+the sort of thing we are trying to fight in good temper and without
+extravagance. Listen, Britling!
+
+ "_You_ will we hate with a lasting hate;
+ We will never forgo our hate--
+ Hate by water and hate by land,
+ Hate of the head and hate of the hand,
+ Hate of the hammer and hate of the crown,
+ Hate of seventy millions, choking down;
+ We love as one, we hate as one,
+ We have _one_ foe, and one alone--
+ ENGLAND!"
+
+He read on to the end.
+
+"Well," he said when he had finished reading, "what do you think of it?"
+
+"I want to feel his bumps," said Mr. Britling after a pause. "It's
+incomprehensible."
+
+"They're singing that up and down Germany. Lissauer, I hear, has been
+decorated...."
+
+"It's--stark malignity," said Mr. Britling. "What have we done?"
+
+"It's colossal. What is to happen to the world if these people prevail?"
+
+"I can't believe it--even with this evidence before me.... No! I want to
+feel their bumps...."
+
+
+Section 3
+
+"You see," said Mr. Britling, trying to get it into focus, "I have known
+quite decent Germans. There must be some sort of misunderstanding.... I
+wonder what makes them hate us. There seems to me no reason in it."
+
+"I think it is just thoroughness," said his friend. "They are at war. To
+be at war is to hate."
+
+"That isn't at all my idea."
+
+"We're not a thorough people. When we think of anything, we also think
+of its opposite. When we adopt an opinion we also take in a provisional
+idea that it is probably nearly as wrong as it is right. We
+are--atmospheric. They are concrete.... All this filthy, vile, unjust
+and cruel stuff is honest genuine war. We pretend war does not hurt.
+They know better.... The Germans are a simple honest people. It is
+their virtue. Possibly it is their only virtue...."
+
+
+Section 4
+
+Mr. Britling was only one of a multitude who wanted to feel the bumps of
+Germany at that time. The effort to understand a people who had suddenly
+become incredible was indeed one of the most remarkable facts in English
+intellectual life during the opening phases of the war. The English
+state of mind was unlimited astonishment. There was an enormous sale of
+any German books that seemed likely to illuminate the mystery of this
+amazing concentration of hostility; the works of Bernhardi, Treitschke,
+Nietzsche, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, became the material of countless
+articles and interminable discussions. One saw little clerks on the way
+to the office and workmen going home after their work earnestly reading
+these remarkable writers. They were asking, just as Mr. Britling was
+asking, what it was the British Empire had struck against. They were
+trying to account for this wild storm of hostility that was coming at
+them out of Central Europe.
+
+It was a natural next stage to this, when after all it became manifest
+that instead of there being a liberal and reluctant Germany at the back
+of imperialism and Junkerdom, there was apparently one solid and
+enthusiastic people, to suppose that the Germans were in some
+distinctive way evil, that they were racially more envious, arrogant,
+and aggressive than the rest of mankind. Upon that supposition a great
+number of English people settled. They concluded that the Germans had a
+peculiar devil of their own--and had to be treated accordingly. That was
+the second stage in the process of national apprehension, and it was
+marked by the first beginnings of a spy hunt, by the first denunciation
+of naturalised aliens, and by some anti-German rioting among the mixed
+alien population in the East End. Most of the bakers in the East End of
+London were Germans, and for some months after the war began they went
+on with their trade unmolested. Now many of these shops were wrecked....
+It was only in October that the British gave these first signs of a
+sense that they were fighting not merely political Germany but the
+Germans.
+
+But the idea of a peculiar malignity in the German quality as a key to
+the broad issue of the war was even less satisfactory and less permanent
+in Mr. Britling's mind than his first crude opposition of militarism and
+a peaceful humanity as embodied respectively in the Central Powers and
+the Russo-Western alliance. It led logically to the conclusion that the
+extermination of the German peoples was the only security for the
+general amiability of the world, a conclusion that appealed but weakly
+to his essential kindliness. After all, the Germans he had met and seen
+were neither cruel nor hate-inspired. He came back to that obstinately.
+From the harshness and vileness of the printed word and the unclean
+picture, he fell back upon the flesh and blood, the humanity and
+sterling worth, of--as a sample--young Heinrich.
+
+Who was moreover a thoroughly German young German--a thoroughly Prussian
+young Prussian.
+
+At times young Heinrich alone stood between Mr. Britling and the belief
+that Germany and the whole German race was essentially wicked,
+essentially a canting robber nation. Young Heinrich became a sort of
+advocate for his people before the tribunal of Mr. Britling's mind. (And
+on his shoulder sat an absurdly pampered squirrel.) s fresh, pink,
+sedulous face, very earnest, adjusting his glasses, saying "Please,"
+intervened and insisted upon an arrest of judgment....
+
+Since the young man's departure he had sent two postcards of greeting
+directly to the "Familie Britling," and one letter through the friendly
+intervention of Mr. Britling's American publisher. Once also he sent a
+message through a friend in Norway. The postcards simply recorded
+stages in the passage of a distraught pacifist across Holland to his
+enrolment. The letter by way of America came two months later. He had
+been converted into a combatant with extreme rapidity. He had been
+trained for three weeks, had spent a fortnight in hospital with a severe
+cold, and had then gone to Belgium as a transport driver--his father had
+been a horse-dealer and he was familiar with horses. "If anything
+happens to me," he wrote, "please send my violin at least very carefully
+to my mother." It was characteristic that he reported himself as very
+comfortably quartered in Courtrai with "very nice people." The niceness
+involved restraints. "Only never," he added, "do we talk about the war.
+It is better not to do so." He mentioned the violin also in the later
+communication through Norway. Therein he lamented the lost fleshpots of
+Courtrai. He had been in Posen, and now he was in the Carpathians, up to
+his knees in snow and "very uncomfortable...."
+
+And then abruptly all news from him ceased.
+
+Month followed month, and no further letter came.
+
+"Something has happened to him. Perhaps he is a prisoner...."
+
+"I hope our little Heinrich hasn't got seriously damaged.... He may be
+wounded...."
+
+"Or perhaps they stop his letters.... Very probably they stop his
+letters."
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Mr. Britling would sit in his armchair and stare at his fire, and recall
+conflicting memories of Germany--of a pleasant land, of friendly people.
+He had spent many a jolly holiday there. So recently as 1911 all the
+Britling family had gone up the Rhine from Rotterdam, had visited a
+string of great cities and stayed for a cheerful month of sunshine at
+Neunkirchen in the Odenwald.
+
+The little village perches high among the hills and woods, and at its
+very centre is the inn and the linden tree and--Adam Meyer. Or at least
+Adam Meyer _was_ there. Whether he is there now, only the spirit of
+change can tell; if he live to be a hundred no friendly English will
+ever again come tramping along by the track of the Blaue Breiecke or the
+Weisse Streiche to enjoy his hospitality; there are rivers of blood
+between, and a thousand memories of hate....
+
+It was a village distended with hospitalities. Not only the inn but all
+the houses about the place of the linden tree, the shoe-maker's, the
+post-mistress's, the white house beyond, every house indeed except the
+pastor's house, were full of Adam Meyer's summer guests. And about it
+and over it went and soared Adam Meyer, seeing they ate well, seeing
+they rested well, seeing they had music and did not miss the
+moonlight--a host who forgot profit in hospitality, an inn-keeper with
+the passion of an artist for his inn.
+
+Music, moonlight, the simple German sentiment, the hearty German voices,
+the great picnic in a Stuhl Wagen, the orderly round games the boys
+played with the German children, and the tramps and confidences Hugh had
+with Kurt and Karl, and at last a crowning jollification, a dance, with
+some gipsy musicians whom Mr. Britling discovered, when the Germans
+taught the English various entertaining sports with baskets and potatoes
+and forfeits and the English introduced the Germans to the licence of
+the two-step. And everybody sang "Britannia, Rule the Waves," and
+"Deutschland, Deutschland über Alles," and Adam Meyer got on a chair and
+made a tremendous speech more in dialect than ever, and there was much
+drinking of beer and sirops in the moonlight under the linden....
+
+Afterwards there had been a periodic sending of postcards and greetings,
+which indeed only the war had ended.
+
+Right pleasant people those Germans had been, sun and green-leaf lovers,
+for whom "Frisch Auf" seemed the most natural of national cries. Mr.
+Britling thought of the individual Germans who had made up the
+assembly, of the men's amusingly fierce little hats of green and blue
+with an inevitable feather thrust perkily into the hatband behind, of
+the kindly plumpnesses behind their turned-up moustaches, of the blonde,
+sedentary women, very wise about the comforts of life and very kind to
+the children, of their earnest pleasure in landscape and Art and Great
+Writers, of their general frequent desire to sing, of their plasticity
+under the directing hands of Adam Meyer. He thought of the mellow south
+German landscape, rolling away broad and fair, of the little clean
+red-roofed townships, the old castles, the big prosperous farms, the
+neatly marked pedestrian routes, the hospitable inns, and the artless
+abundant Aussichtthurms....
+
+He saw all those memories now through a veil of indescribable
+sadness--as of a world lost, gone down like the cities of Lyonesse
+beneath deep seas....
+
+Right pleasant people in a sunny land! Yet here pressing relentlessly
+upon his mind were the murders of Visé, the massacres of Dinant, the
+massacres of Louvain, murder red-handed and horrible upon an inoffensive
+people, foully invaded, foully treated; murder done with a sickening
+cant of righteousness and racial pretension....
+
+The two pictures would not stay steadily in his mind together. When he
+thought of the broken faith that had poured those slaughtering hosts
+into the decent peace of Belgium, that had smashed her cities, burnt her
+villages and filled the pretty gorges of the Ardennes with blood and
+smoke and terror, he was flooded with self-righteous indignation, a
+self-righteous indignation that was indeed entirely Teutonic in its
+quality, that for a time drowned out his former friendship and every
+kindly disposition towards Germany, that inspired him with destructive
+impulses, and obsessed him with a desire to hear of death and more death
+and yet death in every German town and home....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+It will be an incredible thing to the happier reader of a coming age--if
+ever this poor record of experience reaches a reader in the days to
+come--to learn how much of the mental life of Mr. Britling was occupied
+at this time with the mere horror and atrocity of warfare. It is idle
+and hopeless to speculate now how that future reader will envisage this
+war; it may take on broad dramatic outlines, it may seem a thing, just,
+logical, necessary, the burning of many barriers, the destruction of
+many obstacles. Mr. Britling was too near to the dirt and pain and heat
+for any such broad landscape consolations. Every day some new detail of
+evil beat into his mind. Now it would be the artless story of some
+Belgian refugee. There was a girl from Alost in the village for example,
+who had heard the fusillade that meant the shooting of citizens, the
+shooting of people she had known, she had seen the still blood-stained
+wall against which two murdered cousins had died, the streaked sand
+along which their bodies had been dragged; three German soldiers had
+been quartered in her house with her and her invalid mother, and had
+talked freely of the massacres in which they had been employed. One of
+them was in civil life a young schoolmaster, and he had had, he said, to
+kill a woman and a baby. The girl had been incredulous. Yes, he had done
+so! Of course he had done so! His officer had made him do it, had stood
+over him. He could do nothing but obey. But since then he had been
+unable to sleep, unable to forget.
+
+"We had to punish the people," he said. "They had fired on us."
+
+And besides, his officer had been drunk. It had been impossible to
+argue. His officer had an unrelenting character at all times....
+
+Over and over again Mr. Britling would try to imagine that young
+schoolmaster soldier at Alost. He imagined with a weak staring face and
+watery blue eyes behind his glasses, and that memory of murder....
+
+Then again it would be some incident of death and mutilation in Antwerp,
+that Van der Pant described to him. The Germans in Belgium were shooting
+women frequently, not simply for grave spying but for trivial
+offences.... Then came the battleship raid on Whitby and Scarborough,
+and the killing among other victims of a number of children on their way
+to school. This shocked Mr. Britling absurdly, much more than the
+Belgian crimes had done. They were _English_ children. At home!... The
+drowning of a great number of people on a torpedoed ship full of
+refugees from Flanders filled his mind with pitiful imaginings for days.
+The Zeppelin raids, with their slow crescendo of blood-stained futility,
+began before the end of 1914.... It was small consolation for Mr.
+Britling to reflect that English homes and women and children were,
+after all, undergoing only the same kind of experience that our ships
+have inflicted scores of times in the past upon innocent people in the
+villages of Africa and Polynesia....
+
+Each month the war grew bitterer and more cruel. Early in 1915 the
+Germans began their submarine war, and for a time Mr. Britling's concern
+was chiefly for the sailors and passengers of the ships destroyed. He
+noted with horror the increasing indisposition of the German submarines
+to give any notice to their victims; he did not understand the grim
+reasons that were turning every submarine attack into a desperate
+challenge of death. For the Germans under the seas had pitted themselves
+against a sea power far more resourceful, more steadfast and skilful,
+sterner and more silent, than their own. It was not for many months that
+Mr. Britling learnt the realities of the submarine blockade. Submarine
+after submarine went out of the German harbours into the North Sea,
+never to return. No prisoners were reported, no boasting was published
+by the British fishers of men; U boat after U boat vanished into a
+chilling mystery.... Only later did Mr. Britling begin to hear whispers
+and form ideas of the noiseless, suffocating grip that sought through
+the waters for its prey.
+
+The _Falaba_ crime, in which the German sailors were reported to have
+jeered at the drowning victims in the water, was followed by the sinking
+of the _Lusitania_. At that a wave of real anger swept through the
+Empire. Hate was begetting hate at last. There were violent riots in
+Great Britain and in South Africa. Wretched little German hairdressers
+and bakers and so forth fled for their lives, to pay for the momentary
+satisfaction of the Kaiser and Herr Ballin. Scores of German homes in
+England were wrecked and looted; hundreds of Germans maltreated. War is
+war. Hard upon the _Lusitania_ storm came the publication of the Bryce
+Report, with its relentless array of witnesses, its particulars of
+countless acts of cruelty and arrogant unreason and uncleanness in
+Belgium and the occupied territory of France. Came also the gasping
+torture of "gas," the use of flame jets, and a new exacerbation of the
+savagery of the actual fighting. For a time it seemed as though the
+taking of prisoners along the western front would cease. Tales of
+torture and mutilation, tales of the kind that arise nowhere and out of
+nothing, and poison men's minds to the most pitiless retaliations,
+drifted along the opposing fronts....
+
+The realities were evil enough without any rumours. Over various
+dinner-tables Mr. Britling heard this and that first-hand testimony of
+harshness and spite. One story that stuck in his memory was of British
+prisoners on the journey into Germany being put apart at a station from
+their French companions in misfortune, and forced to "run the gauntlet"
+back to their train between the fists and bayonets of files of German
+soldiers. And there were convincing stories of the same prisoners robbed
+of overcoats in bitter weather, baited with dogs, separated from their
+countrymen, and thrust among Russians and Poles with whom they could
+hold no speech. So Lissauer's Hate Song bore its fruit in a thousand
+cruelties to wounded and defenceless men. The English had cheated great
+Germany of another easy victory like that of '71. They had to be
+punished. That was all too plainly the psychological process. At one
+German station a woman had got out of a train and crossed a platform to
+spit on the face of a wounded Englishman.... And there was no monopoly
+of such things on either side. At some journalistic gathering Mr.
+Britling met a little white-faced, resolute lady who had recently been
+nursing in the north of France. She told of wounded men lying among the
+coal of coal-sheds, of a shortage of nurses and every sort of material,
+of an absolute refusal to permit any share in such things to reach the
+German "swine." ... "Why have they come here? Let our own boys have it
+first. Why couldn't they stay in their own country? Let the filth die."
+
+Two soldiers impressed to carry a wounded German officer on a stretcher
+had given him a "joy ride," pitching him up and down as one tosses a man
+in a blanket. "He was lucky to get off with that."...
+
+"All _our_ men aren't angels," said a cheerful young captain back from
+the front. "If you had heard a little group of our East London boys
+talking of what they meant to do when they got into Germany, you'd feel
+anxious...."
+
+"But that was just talk," said Mr. Britling weakly, after a pause....
+
+There were times when Mr. Britling's mind was imprisoned beyond any hope
+of escape amidst such monstrous realities....
+
+He was ashamed of his one secret consolation. For nearly two years yet
+Hugh could not go out to it. There would surely be peace before
+that....
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Tormenting the thought of Mr. Britling almost more acutely than this
+growing tale of stupidly inflicted suffering and waste and sheer
+destruction was the collapse of the British mind from its first fine
+phase of braced-up effort into a state of bickering futility.
+
+Too long had British life been corrupted by the fictions of loyalty to
+an uninspiring and alien Court, of national piety in an official Church,
+of freedom in a politician-rigged State, of justice in an economic
+system where the advertiser, the sweater and usurer had a hundred
+advantages over the producer and artisan, to maintain itself now
+steadily at any high pitch of heroic endeavour. It had bought its
+comfort with the demoralisation of its servants. It had no completely
+honest organs; its spirit was clogged by its accumulated insincerities.
+Brought at last face to face with a bitter hostility and a powerful and
+unscrupulous enemy, an enemy socialistic, scientific and efficient to an
+unexampled degree, it seemed indeed to be inspired for a time by an
+unwonted energy and unanimity. Youth and the common people shone. The
+sons of every class went out to fight and die, full of a splendid dream
+of this war. Easy-going vanished from the foreground of the picture. But
+only to creep back again as the first inspiration passed. Presently the
+older men, the seasoned politicians, the owners and hucksters, the
+charming women and the habitual consumers, began to recover from this
+blaze of moral exaltation. Old habits of mind and procedure reasserted
+themselves. The war which had begun so dramatically missed its climax;
+there was neither heroic swift defeat nor heroic swift victory. There
+was indecision; the most trying test of all for an undisciplined people.
+There were great spaces of uneventful fatigue. Before the Battle of the
+Yser had fully developed the dramatic quality had gone out of the war.
+It had ceased to be either a tragedy or a triumph; for both sides it
+became a monstrous strain and wasting. It had become a wearisome
+thrusting against a pressure of evils....
+
+Under that strain the dignity of England broke, and revealed a malignity
+less focussed and intense than the German, but perhaps even more
+distressing. No paternal government had organised the British spirit for
+patriotic ends; it became now peevish and impatient, like some
+ill-trained man who is sick, it directed itself no longer against the
+enemy alone but fitfully against imagined traitors and shirkers; it
+wasted its energies in a deepening and spreading net of internal
+squabbles and accusations. Now it was the wily indolence of the Prime
+Minister, now it was the German culture of the Lord Chancellor, now the
+imaginative enterprise of the First Lord of the Admiralty that focussed
+a vindictive campaign. There began a hunt for spies and of suspects of
+German origin in every quarter except the highest; a denunciation now of
+"traitors," now of people with imaginations, now of scientific men, now
+of the personal friend of the Commander-in-Chief, now of this group and
+then of that group.... Every day Mr. Britling read his three or four
+newspapers with a deepening disappointment.
+
+When he turned from the newspaper to his post, he would find the
+anonymous letter-writer had been busy....
+
+Perhaps Mr. Britling had remarked that Germans were after all human
+beings, or that if England had listened to Matthew Arnold in the
+'eighties our officers by this time might have added efficiency to their
+courage and good temper. Perhaps he had himself put a touch of irritant
+acid into his comment. Back flared the hate. "Who are _you_, Sir? What
+are _you_, Sir? What right have _you_, Sir? What claim have _you_,
+Sir?"...
+
+
+Section 8
+
+"Life had a wrangling birth. On the head of every one of us rests the
+ancestral curse of fifty million murders."
+
+So Mr. Britling's thoughts shaped themselves in words as he prowled one
+night in March, chill and melancholy, across a rushy meadow under an
+overcast sky. The death squeal of some little beast caught suddenly in a
+distant copse had set loose this train of thought. "Life struggling
+under a birth curse?" he thought. "How nearly I come back at times to
+the Christian theology!... And then, Redemption by the shedding of
+blood."
+
+"Life, like a rebellious child, struggling out of the control of the
+hate which made it what it is."
+
+But that was Mr. Britling's idea of Gnosticism, not of orthodox
+Christianity. He went off for a time into faded reminiscences of
+theological reading. What had been the Gnostic idea? That the God of the
+Old Testament was the Devil of the New? But that had been the idea of
+the Manichćans!...
+
+Mr. Britling, between the black hedges, came back presently from his
+attempts to recall his youthful inquiries into man's ancient
+speculations, to the enduring riddles that have outlasted a thousand
+speculations. Has hate been necessary, and is it still necessary, and
+will it always be necessary? Is all life a war forever? The rabbit is
+nimble, lives keenly, is prevented from degenerating into a diseased
+crawling eater of herbs by the incessant ferret. Without the ferret of
+war, what would life become?... War is murder truly, but is not Peace
+decay?
+
+It was during these prowling nights in the first winter of the war that
+Mr. Britling planned a new writing that was to go whole abysses beneath
+the facile superficiality of "And Now War Ends." It was to be called the
+"Anatomy of Hate." It was to deal very faithfully with the function of
+hate as a corrective to inefficiency. So long as men were slack, men
+must be fierce. This conviction pressed upon him....
+
+In spite of his detestation of war Mr. Britling found it impossible to
+maintain that any sort of peace state was better than a state of war. If
+wars produced destructions and cruelties, peace could produce indolence,
+perversity, greedy accumulation and selfish indulgences. War is
+discipline for evil, but peace may be relaxation from good. The poor man
+may be as wretched in peace time as in war time. The gathering forces of
+an evil peace, the malignity and waste of war, are but obverse and
+reverse of the medal of ill-adjusted human relationships. Was there no
+Greater Peace possible; not a mere recuperative pause in killing and
+destruction, but a phase of noble and creative living, a phase of
+building, of discovery, of beauty and research? He remembered, as one
+remembers the dead, dreams he had once dreamt of the great cities, the
+splendid freedoms, of a coming age, of marvellous enlargements of human
+faculty, of a coming science that would be light and of art that could
+be power....
+
+But would that former peace have ever risen to that?...
+
+After all, had such visions ever been more than idle dreams? Had the war
+done more than unmask reality?...
+
+He came to a gate and leant over it.
+
+The darkness drizzled about him; he turned up his collar and watched the
+dim shapes of trees and hedges gather out of the night to meet the
+dismal dawn. He was cold and hungry and weary.
+
+He may have drowsed; at least he had a vision, very real and plain, a
+vision very different from any dream of Utopia.
+
+It seemed to him that suddenly a mine burst under a great ship at sea,
+that men shouted and women sobbed and cowered, and flares played upon
+the rain-pitted black waves; and then the picture changed and showed a
+battle upon land, and searchlights were flickering through the rain and
+shells flashed luridly, and men darkly seen in silhouette against red
+flames ran with fixed bayonets and slipped and floundered over the mud,
+and at last, shouting thinly through the wind, leapt down into the enemy
+trenches....
+
+And then he was alone again staring over a wet black field towards a dim
+crest of shapeless trees.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+Abruptly and shockingly, this malignity of warfare, which had been so
+far only a festering cluster of reports and stories and rumours and
+suspicions, stretched out its arm into Essex and struck a barb of
+grotesque cruelty into the very heart of Mr. Britling. Late one
+afternoon came a telegram from Filmington-on-Sea, where Aunt Wilshire
+had been recovering her temper in a boarding-house after a round of
+visits in Yorkshire and the moorlands. And she had been "very seriously
+injured" by an overnight German air raid. It was a raid that had not
+been even mentioned in the morning's papers. She had asked to see him.
+
+It was, ran the compressed telegraphic phrase, "advisable to come at
+once."
+
+Mrs. Britling helped him pack a bag, and came with him to the station in
+order to drive the car back to the Dower House; for the gardener's boy
+who had hitherto attended to these small duties had now gone off as an
+unskilled labourer to some munition works at Chelmsford. Mr. Britling
+sat in the slow train that carried him across country to the junction
+for Filmington, and failed altogether to realise what had happened to
+the old lady. He had an absurd feeling that it was characteristic of her
+to intervene in affairs in this manner. She had always been so tough and
+unbent an old lady that until he saw her he could not imagine her as
+being really seriously and pitifully hurt....
+
+But he found her in the hospital very much hurt indeed. She had been
+smashed in some complicated manner that left the upper part of her body
+intact, and lying slantingly upon pillows. Over the horror of bandaged
+broken limbs and tormented flesh below sheets and a counterpane were
+drawn. Morphia had been injected, he understood, to save her from pain,
+but presently it might be necessary for her to suffer. She lay up in her
+bed with an effect of being enthroned, very white and still, her strong
+profile with its big nose and her straggling hair and a certain dignity
+gave her the appearance of some very important, very old man, of an aged
+pope for instance, rather than of an old woman. She had made no remark
+after they had set her and dressed her and put her to bed except "send
+for Hughie Britling, The Dower House, Matching's Easy. He is the best of
+the bunch." She had repeated the address and this commendation firmly
+over and over again, in large print as it were, even after they had
+assured her that a telegram had been despatched.
+
+In the night, they said, she had talked of him.
+
+He was not sure at first that she knew of his presence.
+
+"Here I am, Aunt Wilshire," he said.
+
+She gave no sign.
+
+"Your nephew Hugh."
+
+"Mean and preposterous," she said very distinctly.
+
+But she was not thinking of Mr. Britling. She was talking of something
+else.
+
+She was saying: "It should not have been known I was here. There are
+spies everywhere. Everywhere. There is a spy now--or a lump very like a
+spy. They pretend it is a hot-water bottle. Pretext.... Oh, yes! I
+admit--absurd. But I have been pursued by spies. Endless spies. Endless,
+endless spies. Their devices are almost incredible.... He has never
+forgiven me....
+
+"All this on account of a carpet. A palace carpet. Over which I had no
+control. I spoke my mind. He knew I knew of it. I never concealed it.
+So I was hunted. For years he had meditated revenge. Now he has it. But
+at what a cost! And they call him Emperor. Emperor!
+
+"His arm is withered; his son--imbecile. He will die--without
+dignity...."
+
+Her voice weakened, but it was evident she wanted to say something more.
+
+"I'm here," said Mr. Britling. "Your nephew Hughie."
+
+She listened.
+
+"Can you understand me?" he asked.
+
+She became suddenly an earnest, tender human being. "My dear!" she said,
+and seemed to search for something in her mind and failed to find it.
+
+"You have always understood me," she tried.
+
+"You have always been a good boy to me, Hughie," she said, rather
+vacantly, and added after some moments of still reflection, "_au fond_."
+
+After that she was silent for some minutes, and took no notice of his
+whispers.
+
+Then she recollected what had been in her mind. She put out a hand that
+sought for Mr. Britling's sleeve.
+
+"Hughie!"
+
+"I'm here, Auntie," said Mr. Britling. "I'm here."
+
+"Don't let him get at _your_ Hughie.... Too good for it, dear. Oh!
+much--much too good.... People let these wars and excitements run away
+with them.... They put too much into them.... They aren't--they aren't
+worth it. Don't let him get at your Hughie."
+
+"No!"
+
+"You understand me, Hughie?"
+
+"Perfectly, Auntie."
+
+"Then don't forget it. Ever."
+
+She had said what she wanted to say. She had made her testament. She
+closed her eyes. He was amazed to find this grotesque old creature had
+suddenly become beautiful, in that silvery vein of beauty one sometimes
+finds in very old men. She was exalted as great artists will sometimes
+exalt the portraits of the aged. He was moved to kiss her forehead.
+
+There came a little tug at his sleeve.
+
+"I think that is enough," said the nurse, who had stood forgotten at his
+elbow.
+
+"But I can come again?"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+She indicated departure by a movement of her hand.
+
+
+Section 10
+
+The next day Aunt Wilshire was unconscious of her visitor.
+
+They had altered her position so that she lay now horizontally, staring
+inflexibly at the ceiling and muttering queer old disconnected things.
+
+The Windsor Castle carpet story was still running through her mind, but
+mixed up with it now were scraps of the current newspaper controversies
+about the conduct of the war. And she was still thinking of the dynastic
+aspects of the war. And of spies. She had something upon her mind about
+the King's more German aunts.
+
+"As a precaution," she said, "as a precaution. Watch them all.... The
+Princess Christian.... Laying foundation stones.... Cement.... Guns. Or
+else why should they always be laying foundation stones?... Always....
+Why?... Hushed up....
+
+"None of these things," she said, "in the newspapers. They ought to be."
+
+And then after an interval, very distinctly, "The Duke of Wellington. My
+ancestor--in reality.... Publish and be damned."
+
+After that she lay still....
+
+The doctors and nurses could hold out only very faint hopes to Mr.
+Britling's inquiries; they said indeed it was astonishing that she was
+still alive.
+
+And about seven o'clock that evening she died....
+
+
+Section 11
+
+Mr. Britling, after he had looked at his dead cousin for the last time,
+wandered for an hour or so about the silent little watering-place before
+he returned to his hotel. There was no one to talk to and nothing else
+to do but to think of her death.
+
+The night was cold and bleak, but full of stars. He had already mastered
+the local topography, and he knew now exactly where all the bombs that
+had been showered upon the place had fallen. Here was the corner of
+blackened walls and roasted beams where three wounded horses had been
+burnt alive in a barn, here the row of houses, some smashed, some almost
+intact, where a mutilated child had screamed for two hours before she
+could be rescued from the debris that had pinned her down, and taken to
+the hospital. Everywhere by the dim light of the shaded street lamps he
+could see the black holes and gaps of broken windows; sometimes
+abundant, sometimes rare and exceptional, among otherwise uninjured
+dwellings. Many of the victims he had visited in the little cottage
+hospital where Aunt Wilshire had just died. She was the eleventh dead.
+Altogether fifty-seven people had been killed or injured in this
+brilliant German action. They were all civilians, and only twelve were
+men.
+
+Two Zeppelins had come in from over the sea, and had been fired at by an
+anti-aircraft gun coming on an automobile from Ipswich. The first
+intimation the people of the town had had of the raid was the report of
+this gun. Many had run out to see what was happening. It was doubtful if
+any one had really seen the Zeppelins, though every one testified to the
+sound of their engines. Then suddenly the bombs had come streaming
+down. Only six had made hits upon houses or people; the rest had fallen
+ruinously and very close together on the local golf links, and at least
+half had not exploded at all and did not seem to have been released to
+explode.
+
+A third at least of the injured people had been in bed when destruction
+came upon them.
+
+The story was like a page from some fantastic romance of Jules Verne's;
+the peace of the little old town, the people going to bed, the quiet
+streets, the quiet starry sky, and then for ten minutes an uproar of
+guns and shells, a clatter of breaking glass, and then a fire here, a
+fire there, a child's voice pitched high by pain and terror, scared
+people going to and fro with lanterns, and the sky empty again, the
+raiders gone....
+
+Five minutes before, Aunt Wilshire had been sitting in the
+boarding-house drawing-room playing a great stern "Patience," the
+Emperor Patience ("Napoleon, my dear!--not that Potsdam creature") that
+took hours to do. Five minutes later she was a thing of elemental terror
+and agony, bleeding wounds and shattered bones, plunging about in the
+darkness amidst a heap of wreckage. And already the German airmen were
+buzzing away to sea again, proud of themselves, pleased no doubt--like
+boys who have thrown a stone through a window, beating their way back to
+thanks and rewards, to iron crosses and the proud embraces of delighted
+Fraus and Fräuleins....
+
+For the first time it seemed to Mr. Britling he really saw the immediate
+horror of war, the dense cruel stupidity of the business, plain and
+close. It was as if he had never perceived anything of the sort before,
+as if he had been dealing with stories, pictures, shows and
+representations that he knew to be shams. But that this dear, absurd old
+creature, this thing of home, this being of familiar humours and
+familiar irritations, should be torn to pieces, left in torment like a
+smashed mouse over which an automobile has passed, brought the whole
+business to a raw and quivering focus. Not a soul among all those who
+had been rent and torn and tortured in this agony of millions, but was
+to any one who understood and had been near to it, in some way lovable,
+in some way laughable, in some way worthy of respect and care. Poor Aunt
+Wilshire was but the sample thrust in his face of all this mangled
+multitude, whose green-white lips had sweated in anguish, whose broken
+bones had thrust raggedly through red dripping flesh.... The detested
+features of the German Crown Prince jerked into the centre of Mr.
+Britling's picture. The young man stood in his dapper uniform and
+grinned under his long nose, carrying himself jauntily, proud of his
+extreme importance to so many lives....
+
+And for a while Mr. Britling could do nothing but rage.
+
+"Devils they are!" he cried to the stars.
+
+"Devils! Devilish fools rather. Cruel blockheads. Apes with all science
+in their hands! My God! but _we will teach them a lesson yet!_..."
+
+That was the key of his mood for an hour of aimless wandering, wandering
+that was only checked at last by a sentinel who turned him back towards
+the town....
+
+He wandered, muttering. He found great comfort in scheming vindictive
+destruction for countless Germans. He dreamt of swift armoured
+aeroplanes swooping down upon the flying airship, and sending it reeling
+earthward, the men screaming. He imagined a shattered Zeppelin
+staggering earthward in the fields behind the Dower House, and how he
+would himself run out with a spade and smite the Germans down. "Quarter
+indeed! Kamerad! Take _that_, you foul murderer!"
+
+In the dim light the sentinel saw the retreating figure of Mr. Britling
+make an extravagant gesture, and wondered what it might mean.
+Signalling? What ought an intelligent sentry to do? Let fly at him?
+Arrest him?... Take no notice?...
+
+Mr. Britling was at that moment killing Count Zeppelin and beating out
+his brains. Count Zeppelin was killed that night and the German Emperor
+was assassinated; a score of lesser victims were offered up to the
+_manes_ of Aunt Wilshire; there were memorable cruelties before the
+wrath and bitterness of Mr. Britling was appeased. And then suddenly he
+had had enough of these thoughts; they were thrust aside, they vanished
+out of his mind.
+
+
+Section 12
+
+All the while that Mr. Britling had been indulging in these imaginative
+slaughterings and spending the tears and hate that had gathered in his
+heart, his reason had been sitting apart and above the storm, like the
+sun waiting above thunder, like a wise nurse watching and patient above
+the wild passions of a child. And all the time his reason had been
+maintaining silently and firmly, without shouting, without speech, that
+the men who had made this hour were indeed not devils, were no more
+devils than Mr. Britling was a devil, but sinful men of like nature with
+himself, hard, stupid, caught in the same web of circumstance. "Kill
+them in your passion if you will," said reason, "but understand. This
+thing was done neither by devils nor fools, but by a conspiracy of
+foolish motives, by the weak acquiescences of the clever, by a crime
+that was no man's crime but the natural necessary outcome of the
+ineffectiveness, the blind motives and muddleheadedness of all mankind."
+
+So reason maintained her thesis, like a light above the head of Mr.
+Britling at which he would not look, while he hewed airmen to quivering
+rags with a spade that he had sharpened, and stifled German princes with
+their own poison gas, given slowly and as painfully as possible. "And
+what of the towns _our_ ships have bombarded?" asked reason unheeded.
+"What of those Tasmanians _our_ people utterly swept away?"
+
+"What of French machine-guns in the Atlas?" reason pressed the case. "Of
+Himalayan villages burning? Of the things we did in China? Especially
+of the things we did in China...."
+
+Mr. Britling gave no heed to that.
+
+"The Germans in China were worse than we were," he threw out....
+
+He was maddened by the thought of the Zeppelin making off, high and far
+in the sky, a thing dwindling to nothing among the stars, and the
+thought of those murderers escaping him. Time after time he stood still
+and shook his fist at Boötes, slowly sweeping up the sky....
+
+And at last, sick and wretched, he sat down on a seat upon the deserted
+parade under the stars, close to the soughing of the invisible sea
+below....
+
+His mind drifted back once more to those ancient heresies of the
+Gnostics and the Manichćans which saw the God of the World as altogether
+evil, which sought only to escape by the utmost abstinences and evasions
+and perversions from the black wickedness of being. For a while his soul
+sank down into the uncongenial darknesses of these creeds of despair. "I
+who have loved life," he murmured, and could have believed for a time
+that he wished he had never had a son....
+
+Is the whole scheme of nature evil? Is life in its essence cruel? Is man
+stretched quivering upon the table of the eternal vivisector for no
+end--and without pity?
+
+These were thoughts that Mr. Britling had never faced before the war.
+They came to him now, and they came only to be rejected by the inherent
+quality of his mind. For weeks, consciously and subconsciously, his mind
+had been grappling with this riddle. He had thought of it during his
+lonely prowlings as a special constable; it had flung itself in
+monstrous symbols across the dark canvas of his dreams. "Is there indeed
+a devil of pure cruelty? Does any creature, even the very cruellest of
+creatures, really apprehend the pain it causes, or inflict it for the
+sake of the infliction?" He summoned a score of memories, a score of
+imaginations, to bear their witness before the tribunal of his mind. He
+forgot cold and loneliness in this speculation. He sat, trying all
+Being, on this score, under the cold indifferent stars.
+
+He thought of certain instances of boyish cruelty that had horrified him
+in his own boyhood, and it was clear to him that indeed it was not
+cruelty, it was curiosity, dense textured, thick skinned, so that it
+could not feel even the anguish of a blinded cat. Those boys who had
+wrung his childish soul to nigh intolerable misery, had not indeed been
+tormenting so much as observing torment, testing life as wantonly as one
+breaks thin ice in the early days of winter. In very much cruelty the
+real motive is surely no worse than that obtuse curiosity; a mere step
+of understanding, a mere quickening of the nerves and mind, makes it
+impossible. But that is not true of all or most cruelty. Most cruelty
+has something else in it, something more than the clumsy plunging into
+experience of the hobbledehoy; it is vindictive or indignant; it is
+never tranquil and sensuous; it draws its incentive, however crippled
+and monstrous the justification may be, from something punitive in man's
+instinct, something therefore that implies a sense, however misguided,
+of righteousness and vindication. That factor is present even in spite;
+when some vile or atrocious thing is done out of envy or malice, that
+envy and malice has in it always--_always?_ Yes, always--a genuine
+condemnation of the hated thing as an unrighteous thing, as an unjust
+usurpation, as an inexcusable privilege, as a sinful overconfidence.
+Those men in the airship?--he was coming to that. He found himself
+asking himself whether it was possible for a human being to do any cruel
+act without an excuse--or, at least, without the feeling of
+excusability. And in the case of these Germans and the outrages they had
+committed and the retaliations they had provoked, he perceived that
+always there was the element of a perceptible if inadequate
+justification. Just as there would be if presently he were to maltreat a
+fallen German airman. There was anger in their vileness. These Germans
+were an unsubtle people, a people in the worst and best sense of the
+words, plain and honest; they were prone to moral indignation; and moral
+indignation is the mother of most of the cruelty in the world. They
+perceived the indolence of the English and Russians, they perceived
+their disregard of science and system, they could not perceive the
+longer reach of these greater races, and it seemed to them that the
+mission of Germany was to chastise and correct this laxity. Surely, they
+had argued, God was not on the side of those who kept an untilled field.
+So they had butchered these old ladies and slaughtered these children
+just to show us the consequences:
+
+ "All along of dirtiness, all along of mess,
+ All along of doing things rather more or less."
+
+The very justification our English poet has found for a thousand
+overbearing actions in the East! "Forget not order and the real," that
+was the underlying message of bomb and gas and submarine. After all,
+what right had we English _not_ to have a gun or an aeroplane fit to
+bring down that Zeppelin ignominiously and conclusively? Had we not
+undertaken Empire? Were we not the leaders of great nations? Had we
+indeed much right to complain if our imperial pose was flouted? "There,
+at least," said Mr. Britling's reason, "is one of the lines of thought
+that brought that unseen cruelty out of the night high over the houses
+of Filmington-on-Sea. That, in a sense, is the cause of this killing.
+Cruel it is and abominable, yes, but is it altogether cruel? Hasn't it,
+after all, a sort of stupid rightness?--isn't it a stupid reaction to an
+indolence at least equally stupid?"
+
+What was this rightness that lurked below cruelty? What was the
+inspiration of this pressure of spite, this anger that was aroused by
+ineffective gentleness and kindliness? Was it indeed an altogether evil
+thing; was it not rather an impulse, blind as yet, but in its ultimate
+quality _as good as mercy_, greater perhaps in its ultimate values than
+mercy?
+
+This idea had been gathering in Mr. Britling's mind for many weeks; it
+had been growing and taking shape as he wrote, making experimental
+beginnings for his essay, "The Anatomy of Hate." Is there not, he now
+asked himself plainly, a creative and corrective impulse behind all
+hate? Is not this malignity indeed only the ape-like precursor of the
+great disciplines of a creative state?
+
+The invincible hopefulness of his sanguine temperament had now got Mr.
+Britling well out of the pessimistic pit again. Already he had been on
+the verge of his phrase while wandering across the rushy fields towards
+Market Saffron; now it came to him again like a legitimate monarch
+returning from exile.
+
+"When hate shall have become creative energy....
+
+"Hate which passes into creative power; gentleness which is indolence
+and the herald of euthanasia....
+
+"Pity is but a passing grace; for mankind will not always be pitiful."
+
+But meanwhile, meanwhile.... How long were men so to mingle wrong with
+right, to be energetic without mercy and kindly without energy?...
+
+For a time Mr. Britling sat on the lonely parade under the stars and in
+the sound of the sea, brooding upon these ideas.
+
+His mind could make no further steps. It had worked for its spell. His
+rage had ebbed away now altogether. His despair was no longer infinite.
+But the world was dark and dreadful still. It seemed none the less dark
+because at the end there was a gleam of light. It was a gleam of light
+far beyond the limits of his own life, far beyond the life of his son.
+It had no balm for these sufferings. Between it and himself stretched
+the weary generations still to come, generations of bickering and
+accusation, greed and faintheartedness, and half truth and the hasty
+blow. And all those years would be full of pitiful things, such pitiful
+things as the blackened ruins in the town behind, the little grey-faced
+corpses, the lives torn and wasted, the hopes extinguished and the
+gladness gone....
+
+He was no longer thinking of the Germans as diabolical. They were human;
+they had a case. It was a stupid case, but our case, too, was a stupid
+case. How stupid were all our cases! What was it we missed? Something,
+he felt, very close to us, and very elusive. Something that would
+resolve a hundred tangled oppositions....
+
+His mind hung at that. Back upon his consciousness came crowding the
+horrors and desolations that had been his daily food now for three
+quarters of a year. He groaned aloud. He struggled against that renewed
+envelopment of his spirit. "Oh, blood-stained fools!" he cried, "oh,
+pitiful, tormented fools!
+
+"Even that vile airship was a ship of fools!
+
+"We are all fools still. Striving apes, irritated beyond measure by our
+own striving, easily moved to anger."
+
+Some train of subconscious suggestion brought a long-forgotten speech
+back into Mr. Britling's mind, a speech that is full of that light which
+still seeks so mysteriously and indefatigably to break through the
+darkness and thickness of the human mind.
+
+He whispered the words. No unfamiliar words could have had the same
+effect of comfort and conviction.
+
+He whispered it of those men whom he still imagined flying far away
+there eastward, through the clear freezing air beneath the stars, those
+muffled sailors and engineers who had caused so much pain and agony in
+this little town.
+
+"_Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do._"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FOURTH
+
+IN THE WEB OF THE INEFFECTIVE
+
+
+Section 1
+
+Hugh's letters were becoming a very important influence upon Mr.
+Britling's thought. Hugh had always been something of a letter-writer,
+and now what was perhaps an inherited desire to set things down was
+manifest. He had been accustomed to decorate his letters from school
+with absurd little sketches--sometimes his letters had been all
+sketches--and now he broke from drawing to writing and back to drawing
+in a way that pleased his father mightily. The father loved this queer
+trick of caricature; he did not possess it himself, and so it seemed to
+him the most wonderful of all Hugh's little equipment of gifts. Mr.
+Britling used to carry these letters about until their edges got grimy;
+he would show them to any one he felt capable of appreciating their
+youthful freshness; he would quote them as final and conclusive evidence
+to establish this or that. He did not dream how many thousands of
+mothers and fathers were treasuring such documents. He thought other
+sons were dull young men by comparison with Hugh.
+
+The earlier letters told much of the charms of discipline and the open
+air. "All the bother about what one has to do with oneself is over,"
+wrote Hugh. "One has disposed of oneself. That has the effect of a great
+relief. Instead of telling oneself that one ought to get up in the
+morning, a bugle tells you that.... And there's no nonsense about it, no
+chance of lying and arguing about it with oneself.... I begin to see the
+sense of men going into monasteries and putting themselves under rules.
+One is carried along in a sort of moral automobile instead of trudging
+the road...."
+
+And he was also sounding new physical experiences.
+
+"Never before," he declared, "have I known what fatigue is. It's a
+miraculous thing. One drops down in one's clothes on any hard old thing
+and sleeps...."
+
+And in his early letters he was greatly exercised by the elementary
+science of drill and discipline, and the discussion of whether these
+things were necessary. He began by assuming that their importance was
+overrated. He went on to discover that they constituted the very
+essentials of all good soldiering. "In a crisis," he concluded, "there
+is no telling what will get hold of a man, his higher instincts or his
+lower. He may show courage of a very splendid sort--or a hasty
+discretion. A habit is much more trustworthy than an instinct. So
+discipline sets up a habit of steady and courageous bearing. If you keep
+your head you are at liberty to be splendid. If you lose it, the habit
+will carry you through."
+
+The young man was also very profound upon the effects of the suggestion
+of various exercises upon the mind.
+
+"It is surprising how bloodthirsty one feels in a bayonet charge. We
+have to shout; we are encouraged to shout. The effect is to paralyse
+one's higher centres. One ceases to question--anything. One becomes a
+'bayoneteer.' As I go bounding forward I imagine fat men, succulent men
+ahead, and I am filled with the desire to do them in neatly. This sort
+of thing--"
+
+A sketch of slaughter followed, with a large and valiant Hugh leaving a
+train of fallen behind him.
+
+"Not like this. This is how I used to draw it in my innocent childhood,
+but it is incorrect. More than one German on the bayonet at a time is an
+incumbrance. And it would be swank--a thing we detest in the army."
+
+The second sketch showed the same brave hero with half a dozen of the
+enemy skewered like cat's-meat.
+
+"As for the widows and children, I disregard 'em."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+But presently Hugh began to be bored.
+
+"Route marching again," he wrote. "For no earthly reason than that they
+can do nothing else with us. We are getting no decent musketry training
+because there are no rifles. We are wasting half our time. If you
+multiply half a week by the number of men in the army you will see we
+waste centuries weekly.... If most of these men here had just been
+enrolled and left to go about their business while we trained officers
+and instructors and got equipment for them, and if they had then been
+put through their paces as rapidly as possible, it would have been
+infinitely better for the country.... In a sort of way we are keeping
+raw; in a sort of way we are getting stale.... I get irritated by this.
+I feel we are not being properly done by.
+
+"Half our men are educated men, reasonably educated, but we are always
+being treated as though we were too stupid for words....
+
+"No good grousing, I suppose, but after Statesminster and a glimpse of
+old Cardinal's way of doing things, one gets a kind of toothache in the
+mind at the sight of everything being done twice as slowly and half as
+well as it need be."
+
+He went off at a tangent to describe the men in his platoon. "The best
+man in our lot is an ex-grocer's assistant, but in order to save us from
+vain generalisations it happens that the worst man--a moon-faced
+creature, almost incapable of lacing up his boots without help and
+objurgation--is also an ex-grocer's assistant. Our most offensive member
+is a little cad with a snub nose, who has read Kipling and imagines he
+is the nearest thing that ever has been to Private Ortheris. He goes
+about looking for the other two of the Soldiers Three; it is rather like
+an unpopular politician trying to form a ministry. And he is
+conscientiously foul-mouthed. He feels losing a chance of saying
+'bloody' as acutely as a snob feels dropping an H. He goes back
+sometimes and says the sentence over again and puts the 'bloody' in. I
+used to swear a little out of the range of your parental ear, but
+Ortheris has cured me. When he is about I am mincing in my speech. I
+perceive now that cursing is a way of chewing one's own dirt. In a
+platoon there is no elbow-room for indifference; you must either love or
+hate. I have a feeling that my first taste of battle will not be with
+Germans, but with Private Ortheris...."
+
+And one letter was just a picture, a parody of the well-known picture of
+the bivouac below and the soldier's dream of return to his beloved
+above. But Master Hugh in the dream was embracing an enormous retort,
+while a convenient galvanometer registered his emotion and little
+tripods danced around him.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+Then came a letter which plunged abruptly into criticism.
+
+"My dear Parent, this is a swearing letter. I must let go to somebody.
+And somehow none of the other chaps are convenient. I don't know if I
+ought to be put against a wall and shot for it, but I hereby declare
+that all the officers of this battalion over and above the rank of
+captain are a constellation of incapables--and several of the captains
+are herewith included. Some of them are men of a pleasant disposition
+and carefully aborted mental powers, and some are men of an unpleasant
+disposition and no mental powers at all. And I believe--a little
+enlightened by your recent letter to _The Times_--that they are a fair
+sample of the entire 'army' class which has got to win this war. Usually
+they are indolent, but when they are thoroughly roused they are fussy.
+The time they should spend in enlarging their minds and increasing their
+military efficiency they devote to keeping fit. They are, roughly
+speaking, fit--for nothing. They cannot move us thirty miles without
+getting half of us left about, without losing touch with food and
+shelter, and starving us for thirty-six hours or so in the process, and
+they cannot count beyond the fingers of one hand, not having learnt to
+use the nose for arithmetical operations.... I conclude this war is
+going to be a sort of Battle of Inkerman on a large scale. We chaps in
+the ranks will have to do the job. Leading is 'off.'...
+
+"All of this, my dear Parent, is just a blow off. I have been needlessly
+starved, and fagged to death and exasperated. We have moved
+five-and-twenty miles across country--in fifty-seven hours. And without
+food for about eighteen hours. I have been with my Captain, who has been
+billeting us here in Cheasingholt. Oh, he is a MUFF! Oh God! oh God of
+Heaven! what a MUFF! He is afraid of printed matter, but he controls
+himself heroically. He prides himself upon having no 'sense of locality,
+confound it!' Prides himself! He went about this village, which is a
+little dispersed, at a slight trot, and wouldn't avail himself of the
+one-inch map I happened to have. He judged the capacity of each room
+with his eye and wouldn't let me measure, even with God's own paces. Not
+with the legs I inherit. 'We'll put five fellahs hea!' he said. 'What
+d'you want to measure the room for? We haven't come to lay down
+carpets.' Then, having assigned men by _coup d'oeil_, so as to congest
+half the village miserably, he found the other half unoccupied and had
+to begin all over again. 'If you measured the floor space first, sir,' I
+said, 'and made a list of the houses--' 'That isn't the way I'm going to
+do it,' he said, fixing me with a pitiless eye....
+
+"That isn't the way they are going to do it, Daddy! The sort of thing
+that is done over here in the green army will be done over there in the
+dry. They won't be in time; they'll lose their guns where now they lose
+our kitchens. I'm a mute soldier; I've got to do what I'm told; still,
+I begin to understand the Battle of Neuve Chapelle.
+
+"They say the relations of men and officers in the new army are
+beautiful. Some day I may learn to love my officer--but not just yet.
+Not till I've forgotten the operations leading up to the occupation of
+Cheasingholt.... He muffs his real job without a blush, and yet he would
+rather be shot than do his bootlaces up criss-cross. What I say about
+officers applies only and solely to him really.... How well I understand
+now the shooting of officers by their men.... But indeed, fatigue and
+exasperation apart, this shift has been done atrociously...."
+
+The young man returned to these criticisms in a later letter.
+
+"You will think I am always carping, but it does seem to me that nearly
+everything is being done here in the most wasteful way possible. We
+waste time, we waste labour, we waste material, oh Lord! how we waste
+our country's money. These aren't, I can assure you, the opinions of a
+conceited young man. It's nothing to be conceited about.... We're bored
+to death by standing about this infernal little village. There is
+nothing to do--except trail after a small number of slatternly young
+women we despise and hate. I _don't_, Daddy. And I don't drink. Why have
+I inherited no vices? We had a fight here yesterday--sheer boredom.
+Ortheris has a swollen lip, and another private has a bad black eye.
+There is to be a return match. I perceive the chief horror of warfare is
+boredom....
+
+"Our feeding here is typical of the whole system. It is a system
+invented not with any idea of getting the best results--that does not
+enter into the War Office philosophy--but to have a rule for everything,
+and avoid arguments. There is rather too generous an allowance of bread
+and stuff per man, and there is a very fierce but not very efficient
+system of weighing and checking. A rather too generous allowance is, of
+course, a direct incentive to waste or stealing--as any one but our
+silly old duffer of a War Office would know. The checking is for
+quantity, which any fool can understand, rather than for quality. The
+test for the quality of army meat is the smell. If it doesn't smell bad,
+it is good....
+
+"Then the raw material is handed over to a cook. He is a common soldier
+who has been made into a cook by a simple ceremony. He is told, 'You are
+a cook.' He does his best to be. Usually he roasts or bakes to begin
+with, guessing when the joint is done, afterwards he hacks up what is
+left of his joints and makes a stew for next day. A stew is hacked meat
+boiled up in a big pot. It has much fat floating on the top. After you
+have eaten your fill you want to sit about quiet. The men are fed
+usually in a large tent or barn. We have a barn. It is not a clean barn,
+and just to make it more like a picnic there are insufficient plates,
+knives and forks. (I tell you, no army people can count beyond eight or
+ten.) The corporals after their morning's work have to carve. When they
+have done carving they tell me they feel they have had enough dinner.
+They sit about looking pale, and wander off afterwards to the village
+pub. (I shall probably become a corporal soon.) In these islands before
+the war began there was a surplus of women over men of about a million.
+(See the publications of the Fabian Society, now so popular among the
+young.) None of these women have been trusted by the government with the
+difficult task of cooking and giving out food to our soldiers. No man of
+the ordinary soldier class ever cooks anything until he is a soldier....
+All food left over after the stew or otherwise rendered uneatable by the
+cook is thrown away. We throw away pail-loads. _We bury meat_....
+
+"Also we get three pairs of socks. We work pretty hard. We don't know
+how to darn socks. When the heels wear through, come blisters. Bad
+blisters disable a man. Of the million of surplus women (see above) the
+government has not had the intelligence to get any to darn our socks.
+So a certain percentage of us go lame. And so on. And so on.
+
+"You will think all this is awful grousing, but the point I want to
+make--I hereby to ease my feelings make it now in a fair round hand--is
+that all this business could be done far better and far cheaper if it
+wasn't left to these absolutely inexperienced and extremely exclusive
+military gentlemen. They think they are leading England and showing us
+all how; instead of which they are just keeping us back. Why in thunder
+are they doing everything? Not one of them, when he is at home, is
+allowed to order the dinner or poke his nose into his own kitchen or
+check the household books.... The ordinary British colonel is a helpless
+old gentleman; he ought to have a nurse.... This is not merely the
+trivial grievance of my insulted stomach, it is a serious matter for the
+country. Sooner or later the country may want the food that is being
+wasted in all these capers. In the aggregate it must amount to a daily
+destruction of tons of stuff of all sorts. Tons.... Suppose the war
+lasts longer than we reckon!"
+
+From this point Hugh's letter jumped to a general discussion of the
+military mind.
+
+"Our officers are beastly good chaps, nearly all of them. That's where
+the perplexity of the whole thing comes in. If only they weren't such
+good chaps! If only they were like the Prussian officers to their men,
+then we'd just take on a revolution as well as the war, and make
+everything tidy at once. But they are decent, they are charming.... Only
+they do not think hard, and they do not understand that doing a job
+properly means doing it as directly and thought-outly as you possibly
+can. They won't worry about things. If their tempers were worse perhaps
+their work might be better. They won't use maps or timetables or books
+of reference. When we move to a new place they pick up what they can
+about it by hearsay; not one of our lot has the gumption to possess a
+contoured map or a Michelin guide. They have hearsay minds. They are
+fussy and petty and wasteful--and, in the way of getting things done,
+pretentious. By their code they're paragons of honour. Courage--they're
+all right about that; no end of it; honesty, truthfulness, and so
+on--high. They have a kind of horsey standard of smartness and pluck,
+too, that isn't bad, and they have a fine horror of whiskers and being
+unbuttoned. But the mistake they make is to class thinking with
+whiskers, as a sort of fussy sidegrowth. Instead of classing it with
+unbuttonedupness. They hate economy. And preparation....
+
+"They won't see that inefficiency is a sort of dishonesty. If a man
+doesn't steal sixpence, they think it a light matter if he wastes half a
+crown. Here follows wisdom! _From the point of view of a nation at war,
+sixpence is just a fifth part of half a crown_....
+
+"When I began this letter I was boiling with indignation, complicated, I
+suspect, by this morning's 'stew'; now I have written thus far I feel
+I'm an ungenerous grumbler.... It is remarkable, my dear Parent, that I
+let off these things to you. I like writing to you. I couldn't possibly
+say the things I can write. Heinrich had a confidential friend at
+Breslau to whom he used to write about his Soul. I never had one of
+those Teutonic friendships. And I haven't got a Soul. But I have to
+write. One must write to some one--and in this place there is nothing
+else to do. And now the old lady downstairs is turning down the gas; she
+always does at half-past ten. She didn't ought. She gets--ninepence
+each. Excuse the pencil...."
+
+That letter ended abruptly. The next two were brief and cheerful. Then
+suddenly came a new note.
+
+"We've got rifles! We're real armed soldiers at last. Every blessed man
+has got a rifle. And they come from Japan! They are of a sort of light
+wood that is like new oak and art furniture, and makes one feel that
+one belongs to the First Garden Suburb Regiment; but I believe much can
+be done with linseed oil. And they are real rifles, they go bang. We are
+a little light-headed about them. Only our training and discipline
+prevent our letting fly at incautious spectators on the skyline. I saw a
+man yesterday about half a mile off. I was possessed by the idea that I
+could get him--right in the middle.... Ortheris, the little beast, has
+got a motor-bicycle, which he calls his 'b----y oto'--no one knows
+why--and only death or dishonourable conduct will save me, I gather,
+from becoming a corporal in the course of the next month...."
+
+
+Section 4
+
+A subsequent letter threw fresh light on the career of the young man
+with the "oto." Before the rifle and the "oto," and in spite of his
+fights with some person or persons unknown, Ortheris found trouble. Hugh
+told the story with the unblushing _savoir-faire_ of the very young.
+
+"By the by, Ortheris, following the indications of his creator and
+succumbing to the universal boredom before the rifles came, forgot Lord
+Kitchener's advice and attempted 'seduktion.' With painful results which
+he insists upon confiding to the entire platoon. He has been severely
+smacked and scratched by the proposed victim, and warned off the
+premises (licensed premises) by her father and mother--both formidable
+persons. They did more than warn him off the premises. They had
+displayed neither a proper horror of Don Juan nor a proper respect for
+the King's uniform. Mother, we realise, got hold of him and cuffed him
+severely. 'What the 'ell's a chap to do?' cried Ortheris. 'You can't go
+'itting a woman back.' Father had set a dog on him. A less ingenuous
+character would be silent about such passages--I should be too
+egotistical and humiliated altogether--but that is not his quality. He
+tells us in tones of naďve wonder. He talks about it and talks about
+it. 'I don't care what the old woman did,' he says, 'not--reely. What
+'urts me about it is that I jest made a sort of mistake 'ow _she'd_ tike
+it. You see, I sort of feel I've 'urt and insulted _'er_. And reely I
+didn't mean to. Swap me, I didn't mean to. Gawd 'elp me. I wouldn't 'ave
+'ad it 'appened as it 'as 'appened, not for worlds. And now I can't get
+round to 'er, or anyfing, not to explain.... You chaps may laugh, but
+you don't know what there is _in_ it.... I tell you it worries me
+something frightful. You think I'm just a little cad who took liberties
+he didn't ought to. (Note of anger drowning uncharitable grunts of
+assent.) 'Ow the 'ell is 'e to know _when_ 'e didn't ought to? ... I
+_swear_ she liked me....'
+
+"This kind of thing goes on for hours--in the darkness.
+
+"'I'd got regular sort of fond of 'er.'
+
+"And the extraordinary thing is it makes me begin to get regular fond of
+Ortheris.
+
+"I think it is because the affair has surprised him right out of acting
+Ortheris and Tommy Atkins for a bit, into his proper self. He's
+frightfully like some sort of mongrel with a lot of wiry-haired terrier
+and a touch of Airedale in it. A mongrel you like in spite of the
+flavour of all the horrid things he's been nosing into. And he's as hard
+as nails and, my dear daddy! he can't box for nuts."
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Mr. Britling, with an understanding much quickened by Hugh's letters,
+went about Essex in his automobile, and on one or two journeys into
+Berkshire and Buckinghamshire, and marked the steady conversion of the
+old pacific countryside into an armed camp. He was disposed to minimise
+Hugh's criticisms. He found in them something of the harshness of youth,
+which is far too keen-edged to be tolerant with half performance and
+our poor human evasion of perfection's overstrain. "Our poor human
+evasion of perfection's overstrain"; this phrase was Mr. Britling's. To
+Mr. Britling, looking less closely and more broadly, the new army was a
+pride and a marvel.
+
+He liked to come into some quiet village and note the clusters of sturdy
+khaki-clad youngsters going about their business, the tethered horses,
+the air of subdued bustle, the occasional glimpses of guns and
+ammunition trains. Wherever one went now there were soldiers and still
+more soldiers. There was a steady flow of men into Flanders, and
+presently to Gallipoli, but it seemed to have no effect upon the
+multitude in training at home. He was pleasantly excited by the evident
+increase in the proportion of military material upon the railways; he
+liked the promise and mystery of the long lines of trucks bearing
+tarpaulin-covered wagons and carts and guns that he would pass on his
+way to Liverpool Street station. He could apprehend defeat in the
+silence of the night, but when he saw the men, when he went about the
+land, then it was impossible to believe in any end but victory....
+
+But through the spring and summer there was no victory. The "great
+offensive" of May was checked and abandoned after a series of
+ineffective and very costly attacks between Ypres and Soissons. The
+Germans had developed a highly scientific defensive in which
+machine-guns replaced rifles and a maximum of punishment was inflicted
+upon an assaulting force with a minimum of human loss. The War Office
+had never thought much of machine-guns before, but now it thought a good
+deal. Moreover, the energies of Britain were being turned more and more
+towards the Dardanelles.
+
+The idea of an attack upon the Dardanelles had a traditional
+attractiveness for the British mind. Old men had been brought up from
+childhood with "forcing the Dardanelles" as a familiar phrase; it had
+none of the flighty novelty and vulgarity about it that made an "aerial
+offensive" seem so unwarrantable a proceeding. Forcing the Dardanelles
+was historically British. It made no break with tradition. Soon after
+Turkey entered the war British submarines appeared in the Sea of
+Marmora, and in February a systematic bombardment of the Dardanelles
+began; this was continued intermittently for a month, the defenders
+profiting by their experiences and by spells of bad weather to
+strengthen their works. This first phase of the attack culminated in the
+loss of the _Irresistible_, _Ocean_, and _Bouvet_, when on the 17th of
+March the attacking fleet closed in upon the Narrows. After an interlude
+of six weeks to allow of further preparations on the part of the
+defenders, who were now thoroughly alive to what was coming, the Allied
+armies gathered upon the scene, and a difficult and costly landing was
+achieved at two points upon the peninsula of Gallipoli. With that began
+a slow and bloody siege of the defences of the Dardanelles, clambering
+up to the surprise landing of a fresh British army in Suvla Bay in
+August, and its failure in the battle of Anafarta, through incompetent
+commanders and a general sloppiness of leading, to cut off and capture
+Maidos and the Narrows defences.... Meanwhile the Russian hosts, which
+had reached their high-water mark in the capture of Przemysl, were being
+forced back first in the south and then in the north. The Germans
+recaptured Lemberg, entered Warsaw, and pressed on to take Brest
+Litowsk. The Russian lines rolled back with an impressive effect of
+defeat, and the Germans thrust towards Riga and Petrograd, reaching
+Vilna about the middle of September....
+
+Day after day Mr. Britling traced the swaying fortunes of the conflict,
+with impatience, with perplexity, but with no loss of confidence in the
+ultimate success of Britain. The country was still swarming with troops,
+and still under summer sunshine. A second hay harvest redeemed the
+scantiness of the first, the wheat crops were wonderful, and the great
+fig tree at the corner of the Dower House had never borne so bountifully
+nor such excellent juicy figs....
+
+And one day in early June while those figs were still only a hope, Teddy
+appeared at the Dower House with Letty, to say good-bye before going to
+the front. He was going out in a draft to fill up various gaps and
+losses; he did not know where. Essex was doing well but bloodily over
+there. Mrs. Britling had tea set out upon the lawn under the blue cedar,
+and Mr. Britling found himself at a loss for appropriate sayings, and
+talked in his confusion almost as though Teddy's departure was of no
+significance at all. He was still haunted by that odd sense of
+responsibility for Teddy. Teddy was not nearly so animated as he had
+been in his pre-khaki days; there was a quiet exaltation in his manner
+rather than a lively excitement. He knew now what he was in for. He knew
+now that war was not a lark, that for him it was to be the gravest
+experience he had ever had or was likely to have. There were no more
+jokes about Letty's pension, and a general avoidance of the topics of
+high explosives and asphyxiating gas....
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Britling took the young people to the gate.
+
+"Good luck!" cried Mr. Britling as they receded.
+
+Teddy replied with a wave of the hand.
+
+Mr. Britling stood watching them for some moments as they walked towards
+the little cottage which was to be the scene of their private parting.
+
+"I don't like his going," he said. "I hope it will be all right with
+him.... Teddy's so grave nowadays. It's a mean thing, I know, it has
+none of the Roman touch, but I am glad that this can't happen with
+Hugh--" He computed. "Not for a year and three months, even if they
+march him into it upon his very birthday....
+
+"It may all he over by then...."
+
+
+Section 6
+
+In that computation he reckoned without Hugh.
+
+Within a month Hugh was also saying "Good-bye."
+
+"But how's this?" protested Mr. Britling, who had already guessed the
+answer. "You're not nineteen."
+
+"I'm nineteen enough for this job," said Hugh. "In fact, I enlisted as
+nineteen."
+
+Mr. Britling said nothing for a little while. Then he spoke with a catch
+in his breath. "I don't blame you," he said. "It was--the right spirit."
+
+Drill and responsibilities of non-commissioned rank had imposed a novel
+manliness upon the bearing of Corporal Britling. "I always classified a
+little above my age at Statesminster," he said as though that cleared up
+everything.
+
+He looked at a rosebud as though it interested him. Then he remarked
+rather casually:
+
+"I thought," he said, "that if I was to go to war I'd better do the
+thing properly. It seemed--sort of half and half--not to be eligible for
+the trenches.... I ought to have told you...."
+
+"Yes," Mr. Britling decided.
+
+"I was shy about it at first.... I thought perhaps the war would be over
+before it was necessary to discuss anything.... Didn't want to go into
+it."
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Britling as though that was a complete explanation.
+
+"It's been a good year for your roses," said Hugh.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Hugh was to stop the night. He spent what seemed to him and every one a
+long, shy, inexpressive evening. Only the small boys were really natural
+and animated. They were much impressed and excited by his departure, and
+wanted to ask a hundred questions about the life in the trenches. Many
+of them Hugh had to promise to answer when he got there. Then he would
+see just exactly how things were. Mrs. Britling was motherly and
+intelligent about his outfit. "Will you want winter things?" she
+asked....
+
+But when he was alone with his father after every one had gone to bed
+they found themselves able to talk.
+
+"This sort of thing seems more to us than it would be to a French
+family," Hugh remarked, standing on the hearthrug.
+
+"Yes," agreed Mr. Britling. "Their minds would be better prepared....
+They'd have their appropriate things to say. They have been educated by
+the tradition of service--and '71."
+
+Then he spoke--almost resentfully.
+
+"The older men ought to go before you boys. Who is to carry on if a lot
+of you get killed?"
+
+Hugh reflected. "In the stiffest battle that ever can be the odds are
+against getting killed," he said.
+
+"I suppose they are."
+
+"One in three or four in the very hottest corners."
+
+Mr. Britling expressed no satisfaction.
+
+"Every one is going through something of this sort."
+
+"All the decent people, at any rate," said Mr. Britling....
+
+"It will be an extraordinary experience. Somehow it seems out of
+proportion--"
+
+"With what?"
+
+"With life generally. As one has known it."
+
+"It isn't in proportion," Mr. Britling admitted.
+
+"Incommensurables," said Hugh.
+
+He considered his phrasing. "It's not," he said, "as though one was
+going into another part of the same world, or turning up another side of
+the world one was used to. It is just as if one had been living in a
+room and one had been asked to step outside.... It makes me think of a
+queer little thing that happened when I was in London last winter. I
+got into Queer Company. I don't think I told you. I went to have supper
+with some students in Chelsea. I hadn't been to the place before, but
+they seemed all right--just people like me--and everybody. And after
+supper they took me on to some people _they_ didn't know very well;
+people who had to do with some School of Dramatic Art. There were two or
+three young actresses there and a singer and people of that sort,
+sitting about smoking cigarettes, and we began talking plays and books
+and picture shows and all that stuff; and suddenly there was a knocking
+at the door and some one went out and found a policeman with a warrant
+on the landing. They took off our host's son.... It had to do with a
+murder...."
+
+Hugh paused. "It was the Bedford Mansions mystery. I don't suppose you
+remember about it or read about it at the time. He'd killed a man.... It
+doesn't matter about the particulars anyhow, but what I mean is the
+effect. The effect of a comfortable well-lit orderly room and the sense
+of harmless people--and then the door opening and the policeman and the
+cold draught flowing in. _Murder!_ A girl who seemed to know the people
+well explained to me in whispers what was happening. It was like the
+opening of a trap-door going down into some pit you have always known
+was there, but never really believed in."
+
+"I know," said Mr. Britling. "I know."
+
+"That's just how I feel about this war business. There's no real death
+over here. It's laid out and boxed up. And accidents are all padded
+about. If one got a toss from a horse here, you'd be in bed and
+comfortable in no time.... And there; it's like another planet. It's
+outside.... I'm going outside.... Instead of there being no death
+anywhere, it is death everywhere, outside there. We shall be using our
+utmost wits to kill each other. A kind of reverse to this world."
+
+Mr. Britling nodded.
+
+"I've never seen a dead body yet. In Dower-House land there aren't dead
+bodies."
+
+"We've kept things from you--horrid things of that sort."
+
+"I'm not complaining," said Hugh.... "But--Master Hugh--the Master Hugh
+you kept things from--will never come back."
+
+He went on quickly as his father raised distressed eyes to him. "I mean
+that anyhow _this_ Hugh will never come back. Another one may. But I
+shall have been outside, and it will all be different...."
+
+He paused. Never had Mr. Britling been so little disposed to take up the
+discourse.
+
+"Like a man," he said, seeking an image and doing no more than imitate
+his son's; "who goes out of a busy lighted room through a trap-door into
+a blizzard, to mend the roof...."
+
+For some moments neither father nor son said anything more. They had a
+queer sense of insurmountable insufficiency. Neither was saying what he
+had wanted to say to the other, but it was not clear to them now what
+they had to say to one another....
+
+"It's wonderful," said Mr. Britling.
+
+Hugh could only manage: "The world has turned right over...."
+
+"The job has to be done," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"The job has to be done," said Hugh.
+
+The pause lengthened.
+
+"You'll be getting up early to-morrow," said Mr. Britling....
+
+
+Section 8
+
+When Mr. Britling was alone in his own room all the thoughts and
+feelings that had been held up downstairs began to run more and more
+rapidly and abundantly through his mind.
+
+He had a feeling--every now and again in the last few years he had had
+the same feeling--as though he was only just beginning to discover Hugh.
+This perpetual rediscovery of one's children is the experience of every
+observant parent. He had always considered Hugh as a youth, and now a
+man stood over him and talked, as one man to another. And this man, this
+very new man, mint new and clean and clear, filled Mr. Britling with
+surprise and admiration.
+
+It was as if he perceived the beauty of youth for the first time in
+Hugh's slender, well balanced, khaki-clad body. There was infinite
+delicacy in his clear complexion, his clear eyes; the delicately
+pencilled eyebrow that was so exactly like his mother's. And this thing
+of brightness and bravery talked as gravely and as wisely as any
+weather-worn, shop-soiled, old fellow....
+
+The boy was wise.
+
+Hugh thought for himself; he thought round and through his position, not
+egotistically but with a quality of responsibility. He wasn't just
+hero-worshipping and imitating, just spinning some self-centred romance.
+If he was a fair sample of his generation then it was a better
+generation than Mr. Britling's had been....
+
+At that Mr. Britling's mind went off at a tangent to the grievance of
+the rejected volunteer. It was acutely shameful to him that all these
+fine lads should be going off to death and wounds while the men of forty
+and over lay snug at home. How stupid it was to fix things like that!
+Here were the fathers, who had done their work, shot their bolts,
+returned some value for the costs of their education, unable to get
+training, unable to be of any service, shamefully safe, doing April fool
+work as special constables; while their young innocents, untried, all
+their gathering possibilities of service unbroached, went down into the
+deadly trenches.... The war would leave the world a world of cripples
+and old men and children....
+
+He felt himself as a cowardly brute, fat, wheezy, out of training,
+sheltering behind this dear one branch of Mary's life.
+
+He writhed with impotent humiliation....
+
+How stupidly the world is managed.
+
+He began to fret and rage. He could not lie in peace in his bed; he got
+up and prowled about his room, blundering against chairs and tables in
+the darkness.... We were too stupid to do the most obvious things; we
+were sending all these boys into hardship and pitiless danger; we were
+sending them ill-equipped, insufficiently supported, we were sending our
+children through the fires to Moloch, because essentially we English
+were a world of indolent, pampered, sham good-humoured, old and
+middle-aged men. (So he distributed the intolerable load of
+self-accusation.) Why was he doing nothing to change things, to get them
+better? What was the good of an assumed modesty, an effort at tolerance
+for and confidence in these boozy old lawyers, these ranting platform
+men, these stiff-witted officers and hide-bound officials? They were
+butchering the youth of England. Old men sat out of danger contriving
+death for the lads in the trenches. That was the reality of the thing.
+"My son!" he cried sharply in the darkness. His sense of our national
+deficiencies became tormentingly, fantastically acute. It was as if all
+his cherished delusions had fallen from the scheme of things.... What
+was the good of making believe that up there they were planning some
+great counter-stroke that would end in victory? It was as plain as
+daylight that they had neither the power of imagination nor the
+collective intelligence even to conceive of a counter-stroke. Any dull
+mass may resist, but only imagination can strike. Imagination! To the
+end we should not strike. We might strike through the air. We might
+strike across the sea. We might strike hard at Gallipoli instead of
+dribbling inadequate armies thither as our fathers dribbled men at the
+Redan.... But the old men would sit at their tables, replete and sleepy,
+and shake their cunning old heads. The press would chatter and make odd
+ambiguous sounds like a shipload of monkeys in a storm. The political
+harridans would get the wrong men appointed, would attack every possible
+leader with scandal and abuse and falsehood....
+
+The spirit and honour and drama had gone out of this war.
+
+Our only hope now was exhaustion. Our only strategy was to barter blood
+for blood--trusting that our tank would prove the deeper....
+
+While into this tank stepped Hugh, young and smiling....
+
+The war became a nightmare vision....
+
+
+Section 9
+
+In the morning Mr. Britling's face was white from his overnight brain
+storm, and Hugh's was fresh from wholesome sleep. They walked about the
+lawn, and Mr. Britling talked hopefully of the general outlook until it
+was time for them to start to the station....
+
+The little old station-master grasped the situation at once, and
+presided over their last hand-clasp.
+
+"Good luck, Hugh!" cried Mr. Britling.
+
+"Good luck!" cried the little old station-master.
+
+"It's not easy a-parting," he said to Mr. Britling as the train slipped
+down the line. "There's been many a parting hea' since this here old war
+began. Many. And some as won't come back again neether."
+
+
+Section 10
+
+For some days Mr. Britling could think of nothing but Hugh, and always
+with a dull pain at his heart. He felt as he had felt long ago while he
+had waited downstairs and Hugh upstairs had been under the knife of a
+surgeon. But this time the operation went on and still went on. At the
+worst his boy had but one chance in five of death or serious injury, but
+for a time he could think of nothing but that one chance. He felt it
+pressing upon his mind, pressing him down....
+
+Then instead of breaking under that pressure, he was released by the
+trick of the sanguine temperament. His mind turned over, abruptly, to
+the four chances out of five. It was like a dislocated joint slipping
+back into place. It was as sudden as that. He found he had adapted
+himself to the prospect of Hugh in mortal danger. It had become a fact
+established, a usual thing. He could bear with it and go about his
+affairs.
+
+He went up to London, and met other men at the club in the same
+emotional predicament. He realised that it was neither very wonderful
+nor exceptionally tragic now to have a son at the front.
+
+"My boy is in Gallipoli," said one. "It's tough work there."
+
+"My lad's in Flanders," said Mr. Britling. "Nothing would satisfy him
+but the front. He's three months short of eighteen. He misstated his
+age."
+
+And they went on to talk newspaper just as if the world was where it had
+always been.
+
+But until a post card came from Hugh Mr. Britling watched the postman
+like a lovesick girl.
+
+Hugh wrote more frequently than his father had dared to hope, pencilled
+letters for the most part. It was as if he was beginning to feel an
+inherited need for talk, and was a little at a loss for a sympathetic
+ear. Park, his schoolmate, who had enlisted with him, wasn't, it seemed,
+a theoriser. "Park becomes a martinet," Hugh wrote. "Also he is a
+sergeant now, and this makes rather a gulf between us." Mr. Britling had
+the greatest difficulty in writing back. There were many grave deep
+things he wanted to say, and never did. Instead he gave elaborate
+details of the small affairs of the Dower House. Once or twice, with a
+half-unconscious imitation of his boy's style, he took a shot at the
+theological and philosophical hares that Hugh had started. But the
+exemplary letters that he composed of nights from a Father to a Son at
+War were never written down. It was just as well, for there are many
+things of that sort that are good to think and bad to say....
+
+Hugh was not very explicit about his position or daily duties. What he
+wrote now had to pass through the hands of a Censor, and any sort of
+definite information might cause the suppression of his letter. Mr.
+Britling conceived him for the most part as quartered some way behind
+the front, but in a flat, desolated country and within hearing of great
+guns. He assisted his imagination with the illustrated papers. Sometimes
+he put him farther back into pleasant old towns after the fashion of
+Beauvais, and imagined loitering groups in the front of cafés; sometimes
+he filled in the obvious suggestions of the phrase that all the Pas de
+Calais was now one vast British camp. Then he crowded the picture with
+tethered horses and tents and grey-painted wagons, and Hugh in the
+foreground--bare-armed, with a bucket....
+
+Hugh's letters divided themselves pretty fairly between two main topics;
+the first was the interest of the art of war, the second the reaction
+against warfare. "After one has got over the emotion of it," he wrote,
+"and when one's mind has just accepted and forgotten (as it does) the
+horrors and waste of it all, then I begin to perceive that war is
+absolutely the best game in the world. That is the real strength of war,
+I submit. Not as you put it in that early pamphlet of yours; ambition,
+cruelty, and all those things. Those things give an excuse for war, they
+rush timid and base people into war, but the essential matter is the
+hold of the thing itself upon an active imagination. It's such a big
+game. Instead of being fenced into a field and tied down to one set of
+tools as you are in almost every other game, you have all the world to
+play and you may use whatever you can use. You can use every scrap of
+imagination and invention that is in you. And it's wonderful.... But
+real soldiers aren't cruel. And war isn't cruel in its essence. Only in
+its consequences. Over here one gets hold of scraps of talk that light
+up things. Most of the barbarities were done--it is quite clear--by an
+excited civilian sort of men, men in a kind of inflamed state. The great
+part of the German army in the early stage of the war was really an army
+of demented civilians. Trained civilians no doubt, but civilians in
+soul. They were nice orderly clean law-abiding men suddenly torn up by
+the roots and flung into quite shocking conditions. They felt they were
+rushing at death, and that decency was at an end. They thought every
+Belgian had a gun behind the hedge and a knife in his trouser leg. They
+saw villages burning and dead people, and men smashed to bits. They
+lived in a kind of nightmare. They didn't know what they were doing.
+They did horrible things just as one does them sometimes in dreams...."
+
+He flung out his conclusion with just his mother's leaping
+consecutiveness. "Conscript soldiers are the ruin of war.... Half the
+Germans and a lot of the French ought never to have been brought within
+ten miles of a battlefield.
+
+"What makes all this so plain are the diaries the French and English
+have been finding on the dead. You know at the early state of the war
+every German soldier was expected to keep a diary. He was ordered to do
+it. The idea was to keep him interested in the war. Consequently, from
+the dead and wounded our people have got thousands.... It helps one to
+realise that the Germans aren't really soldiers at all. Not as our men
+are. They are obedient, law-abiding, intelligent people, who have been
+shoved into this. They have to see the war as something romantic and
+melodramatic, or as something moral, or as tragic fate. They have to
+bellow songs about 'Deutschland,' or drag in 'Gott.' They don't take to
+the game as our men take to the game....
+
+"I confess I'm taking to the game. I wish at times I had gone into the
+O.T.C. with Teddy, and got a better hold of it. I was too high-browed
+about this war business. I dream now of getting a commission....
+
+"That diary-hunting strategy is just the sort of thing that makes this
+war intellectually fascinating. Everything is being thought out and then
+tried over that can possibly make victory. The Germans go in for
+psychology much more than we do, just as they go in for war more than we
+do, but they don't seem to be really clever about it. So they set out to
+make all their men understand the war, while our chaps are singing
+'Tipperary.' But what the men put down aren't the beautiful things they
+ought to put down; most of them shove down lists of their meals, some of
+the diaries are all just lists of things eaten, and a lot of them have
+written the most damning stuff about outrages and looting. Which the
+French are translating and publishing. The Germans would give anything
+now to get back these silly diaries. And now they have made an order
+that no one shall go into battle with any written papers at all.... Our
+people got so keen on documenting and the value of chance writings that
+one of the principal things to do after a German attack had failed had
+been to hook in the documentary dead, and find out what they had on
+them.... It's a curious sport, this body fishing. You have a sort of
+triple hook on a rope, and you throw it and drag. They do the same. The
+other day one body near Hooghe was hooked by both sides, and they had a
+tug-of-war. With a sharpshooter or so cutting in whenever our men got
+too excited. Several men were hit. The Irish--it was an Irish
+regiment--got him--or at least they got the better part of him....
+
+"Now that I am a sergeant, Park talks to me again about all these
+things, and we have a first lieutenant too keen to resist such technical
+details. They are purely technical details. You must take them as that.
+One does not think of the dead body as a man recently deceased, who had
+perhaps a wife and business connections and a weakness for oysters or
+pale brandy. Or as something that laughed and cried and didn't like
+getting hurt. That would spoil everything. One thinks of him merely as a
+uniform with marks upon it that will tell us what kind of stuff we have
+against us, and possibly with papers that will give us a hint of how far
+he and his lot are getting sick of the whole affair....
+
+"There's a kind of hardening not only of the body but of the mind
+through all this life out here. One is living on a different level. You
+know--just before I came away--you talked of Dower-House-land--and
+outside. This is outside. It's different. Our men here are kind enough
+still to little things--kittens or birds or flowers. Behind the front,
+for example, everywhere there are Tommy gardens. Some are quite bright
+little patches. But it's just nonsense to suppose we are tender to the
+wounded up here--and, putting it plainly, there isn't a scrap of pity
+left for the enemy. Not a scrap. Not a trace of such feeling. They were
+tender about the wounded in the early days--men tell me--and reverent
+about the dead. It's all gone now. There have been atrocities, gas,
+unforgettable things. Everything is harder. Our people are inclined now
+to laugh at a man who gets hit, and to be annoyed at a man with a
+troublesome wound. The other day, they say, there was a big dead German
+outside the Essex trenches. He became a nuisance, and he was dragged in
+and taken behind the line and buried. After he was buried, a kindly soul
+was putting a board over him with 'Somebody's Fritz' on it, when a shell
+burst close by. It blew the man with the board a dozen yards and wounded
+him, and it restored Fritz to the open air. He was lifted clean out. He
+flew head over heels like a windmill. This was regarded as a tremendous
+joke against the men who had been at the pains of burying him. For a
+time nobody else would touch Fritz, who was now some yards behind his
+original grave. Then as he got worse and worse he was buried again by
+some devoted sanitarians, and this time the inscription was 'Somebody's
+Fritz. R.I.P.' And as luck would have it, he was spun up again. In
+pieces. The trench howled with laughter and cries of 'Good old Fritz!'
+'This isn't the Resurrection, Fritz.'...
+
+"Another thing that appeals to the sunny humour of the trenches as a
+really delicious practical joke is the trick of the fuses. We have two
+kinds of fuse, a slow-burning fuse such as is used for hand-grenades and
+such-like things, a sort of yard-a-minute fuse, and a rapid fuse that
+goes a hundred yards a second--for firing mines and so on. The latter is
+carefully distinguished from the former by a conspicuous red thread.
+Also, as you know, it is the habit of the enemy and ourselves when the
+trenches are near enough, to enliven each other by the casting of homely
+but effective hand-grenades made out of tins. When a grenade drops in a
+British trench somebody seizes it instantly and throws it back. To hoist
+the German with his own petard is particularly sweet to the British
+mind. When a grenade drops into a German trench everybody runs. (At
+least that is what I am told happens by the men from our trenches;
+though possibly each side has its exceptions.) If the bomb explodes, it
+explodes. If it doesn't, Hans and Fritz presently come creeping back to
+see what has happened. Sometimes the fuse hasn't caught properly, it has
+been thrown by a nervous man; or it hasn't burnt properly. Then Hans or
+Fritz puts in a new fuse and sends it back with loving care. To hoist
+the Briton with his own petard is particularly sweet to the German
+mind.... But here it is that military genius comes in. Some gifted
+spirit on our side procured (probably by larceny) a length of mine fuse,
+the rapid sort, and spent a laborious day removing the red thread and
+making it into the likeness of its slow brother. Then bits of it were
+attached to tin-bombs and shied--unlit of course--into the German
+trenches. A long but happy pause followed. I can see the chaps holding
+themselves in. Hans and Fritz were understood to be creeping back, to be
+examining the unlit fuse, to be applying a light thereunto, in order to
+restore it to its maker after their custom....
+
+"A loud bang in the German trenches indicated the moment of lighting,
+and the exit of Hans and Fritz to worlds less humorous.
+
+"The genius in the British trenches went on with the preparation of the
+next surprise bomb--against the arrival of Kurt and Karl....
+
+"Hans, Fritz, Kurt, Karl, Michael and Wilhelm; it went for quite a long
+time before they grew suspicious....
+
+"You once wrote that all fighting ought to be done nowadays by metal
+soldiers. I perceive, my dear Daddy, that all real fighting is...."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+Not all Hugh's letters were concerned with these grim technicalities. It
+was not always that news and gossip came along; it was rare that a young
+man with a commission would condescend to talk shop to two young men
+without one; there were few newspapers and fewer maps, and even in
+France and within sound of guns, Hugh could presently find warfare
+almost as much a bore as it had been at times in England. But his
+criticism of military methods died away. "Things are done better out
+here," he remarked, and "We're nearer reality here. I begin to respect
+my Captain. Who is developing a sense of locality. Happily for our
+prospects." And in another place he speculated in an oddly
+characteristic manner whether he was getting used to the army way,
+whether he was beginning to see the sense of the army way, or whether
+it really was that the army way braced up nearer and nearer to
+efficiency as it got nearer to the enemy. "And here one hasn't the
+haunting feeling that war is after all an hallucination. It's already
+common sense and the business of life....
+
+"In England I always had a sneaking idea that I had 'dressed up' in my
+uniform....
+
+"I never dreamt before I came here how much war is a business of waiting
+about and going through duties and exercises that were only too
+obviously a means of preventing our discovering just how much waiting
+about we were doing. I suppose there is no great harm in describing the
+place I am in here; it's a kind of scenery that is somehow all of a
+piece with the life we lead day by day. It is a village that has been
+only partly smashed up; it has never been fought through, indeed the
+Germans were never within two miles of it, but it was shelled
+intermittently for months before we made our advance. Almost all the
+houses are still standing, but there is not a window left with a square
+foot of glass in the place. One or two houses have been burnt out, and
+one or two are just as though they had been kicked to pieces by a
+lunatic giant. We sleep in batches of four or five on the floors of the
+rooms; there are very few inhabitants about, but the village inn still
+goes on. It has one poor weary billiard-table, very small with very big
+balls, and the cues are without tops; it is The Amusement of the place.
+Ortheris does miracles at it. When he leaves the army he says he's going
+to be a marker, 'a b----y marker.' The country about us is
+flat--featureless--desolate. How I long for hills, even for Essex mud
+hills. Then the road runs on towards the front, a brick road frightfully
+worn, lined with poplars. Just at the end of the village mechanical
+transport ends and there is a kind of depot from which all the stuff
+goes up by mules or men or bicycles to the trenches. It is the only
+movement in the place, and I have spent hours watching men shift grub or
+ammunition or lending them a hand. All day one hears guns, a kind of
+thud at the stomach, and now and then one sees an aeroplane, very high
+and small. Just beyond this point there is a group of poplars which have
+been punished by a German shell. They are broken off and splintered in
+the most astonishing way; all split and ravelled out like the end of a
+cane that has been broken and twisted to get the ends apart. The choice
+of one's leisure is to watch the A.S.C. or play football, twenty a side,
+or sit about indoors, or stand in the doorway, or walk down to the
+Estaminet and wait five or six deep for the billiard-table. Ultimately
+one sits. And so you get these unconscionable letters."
+
+"Unconscionable," said Mr. Britling. "Of course--he will grow out of
+that sort of thing.
+
+"And he'll write some day, sure enough. He'll write."
+
+He went on reading the letter.
+
+"We read, of course. But there never could be a library here big enough
+to keep us going. We can do with all sorts of books, but I don't think
+the ordinary sensational novel is quite the catch it was for a lot of
+them in peace time. Some break towards serious reading in the oddest
+fashion. Old Park, for example, says he wants books you can chew; he is
+reading a cheap edition of 'The Origin of Species.' He used to regard
+Florence Warden and William le Queux as the supreme delights of print. I
+wish you could send him Metchnikoff's 'Nature of Man' or Pearson's
+'Ethics of Freethought.' I feel I am building up his tender mind. Not
+for me though, Daddy. Nothing of that sort for me. These things take
+people differently. What I want here is literary opium. I want something
+about fauns and nymphs in broad low glades. I would like to read
+Spenser's 'Faerie Queen.' I don't think I have read it, and yet I have a
+very distinct impression of knights and dragons and sorcerers and wicked
+magic ladies moving through a sort of Pre-Raphaelite tapestry
+scenery--only with a light on them. I could do with some Hewlett of the
+'Forest Lovers' kind. Or with Joseph Conrad in his Kew Palm-house mood.
+And there is a book, I once looked into it at a man's room in London; I
+don't know the title, but it was by Richard Garnett, and it was all
+about gods who were in reduced circumstances but amidst sunny
+picturesque scenery. Scenery without steel or poles or wire. A thing
+after the manner of Heine's 'Florentine Nights.' Any book about Greek
+gods would be welcome, anything about temples of ivory-coloured stone
+and purple seas, red caps, chests of jewels, and lizards in the sun. I
+wish there was another 'Thais.' The men here are getting a kind of
+newspaper sheet of literature scraps called _The Times_ Broadsheets.
+Snippets, but mostly from good stuff. They're small enough to stir the
+appetite, but not to satisfy it. Rather an irritant--and one wants no
+irritant.... I used to imagine reading was meant to be a stimulant. Out
+here it has to be an anodyne....
+
+"Have you heard of a book called 'Tom Cringle's Log'?
+
+"War is an exciting game--that I never wanted to play. It excites once
+in a couple of months. And the rest of it is dirt and muddle and
+boredom, and smashed houses and spoilt roads and muddy scenery and
+boredom, and the lumbering along of supplies and the lumbering back of
+the wounded and weary--and boredom, and continual vague guessing of how
+it will end and boredom and boredom and boredom, and thinking of the
+work you were going to do and the travel you were going to have, and the
+waste of life and the waste of days and boredom, and splintered poplars
+and stink, everywhere stink and dirt and boredom.... And all because
+these accursed Prussians were too stupid to understand what a boredom
+they were getting ready when they pranced and stuck their chests out and
+earnt the praises of Mr. Thomas Carlyle.... _Gott strafe
+Deutschland_.... So send me some books, books of dreams, books about
+China and the willow-pattern plate and the golden age and fairyland. And
+send them soon and address them very carefully...."
+
+
+Section 12
+
+Teddy's misadventure happened while figs were still ripening on Mr.
+Britling's big tree. It was Cissie brought the news to Mr. Britling. She
+came up to the Dower House with a white, scared face.
+
+"I've come up for the letters," she said. "There's bad news of Teddy,
+and Letty's rather in a state."
+
+"He's not--?" Mr. Britling left the word unsaid.
+
+"He's wounded and missing," said Cissie.
+
+"A prisoner!" said Mr. Britling.
+
+"And wounded. _How_, we don't know."
+
+She added: "Letty has gone to telegraph."
+
+"Telegraph to whom?"
+
+"To the War Office, to know what sort of wound he has. They tell
+nothing. It's disgraceful."
+
+"It doesn't say _severely_?"
+
+"It says just nothing. Wounded and missing! Surely they ought to give us
+particulars."
+
+Mr. Britling thought. His first thought was that now news might come at
+any time that Hugh was wounded and missing. Then he set himself to
+persuade Cissie that the absence of "seriously" meant that Teddy was
+only quite bearably wounded, and that if he was also "missing" it might
+be difficult for the War Office to ascertain at once just exactly what
+she wanted to know. But Cissie said merely that "Letty was in an awful
+state," and after Mr. Britling had given her a few instructions for his
+typing, he went down to the cottage to repeat these mitigatory
+considerations to Letty. He found her much whiter than her sister, and
+in a state of cold indignation with the War Office. It was clear she
+thought that organisation ought to have taken better care of Teddy. She
+had a curious effect of feeling that something was being kept back from
+her. It was manifest too that she was disposed to regard Mr. Britling as
+biased in favour of the authorities.
+
+"At any rate," she said, "they could have answered my telegram
+promptly. I sent it at eight. Two hours of scornful silence."
+
+This fierce, strained, unjust Letty was a new aspect to Mr. Britling.
+Her treatment of his proffered consolations made him feel slightly
+henpecked.
+
+"And just fancy!" she said. "They have no means of knowing if he has
+arrived safely on the German side. How can they know he is a prisoner
+without knowing that?"
+
+"But the word is 'missing.'"
+
+"That _means_ a prisoner," said Letty uncivilly....
+
+
+Section 13
+
+Mr. Britling returned to the Dower House perplexed and profoundly
+disturbed. He had a distressful sense that things were far more serious
+with Teddy than he had tried to persuade Letty they were; that "wounded
+and missing" meant indeed a man abandoned to very sinister
+probabilities. He was distressed for Teddy, and still more acutely
+distressed for Mrs. Teddy, whose every note and gesture betrayed
+suppositions even more sinister than his own. And that preposterous
+sense of liability, because he had helped Teddy to get his commission,
+was more distressful than it had ever been. He was surprised that Letty
+had not assailed him with railing accusations.
+
+And this event had wiped off at one sweep all the protective scab of
+habituation that had gathered over the wound of Hugh's departure. He was
+back face to face with the one evil chance in five....
+
+In the hall there was lying a letter from Hugh that had come by the
+second post. It was a relief even to see it....
+
+Hugh had had his first spell in the trenches.
+
+Before his departure he had promised his half brothers a long and
+circumstantial account of what the trenches were really like. Here he
+redeemed his promise. He had evidently written with the idea that the
+letter would be handed over to them.
+
+"Tell the bruddykinses I'm glad they're going to Brinsmead school. Later
+on, I suppose, they will go on to Statesminster. I suppose that you
+don't care to send them so far in these troubled times....
+
+"And now about those trenches--as I promised. The great thing to grasp
+is that they are narrow. They are a sort of negative wall. They are more
+like giant cracks in the ground than anything else.... But perhaps I had
+better begin by telling how we got there. We started about one in the
+morning ladened up with everything you can possibly imagine on a
+soldier, and in addition I had a kettle--filled with water--most of the
+chaps had bundles of firewood, and some had extra bread. We marched out
+of our quarters along the road for a mile or more, and then we took the
+fields, and presently came to a crest and dropped into a sort of maze of
+zigzag trenches going up to the front trench. These trenches, you know,
+are much deeper than one's height; you don't see anything. It's like
+walking along a mud-walled passage. You just trudge along them in single
+file. Every now and then some one stumbles into a soakaway for rainwater
+or swears at a soft place, or somebody blunders into the man in front of
+him. This seems to go on for hours and hours. It certainly went on for
+an hour; so I suppose we did two or three miles of it. At one place we
+crossed a dip in the ground and a ditch, and the trench was built up
+with sandbags up to the ditch and there was a plank. Overhead there were
+stars, and now and then a sort of blaze thing they send up lit up the
+edges of the trench and gave one a glimpse of a treetop or a factory
+roof far away. Then for a time it was more difficult to go on because
+you were blinded. Suddenly just when you were believing that this sort
+of trudge was going on forever, we were in the support trenches behind
+the firing line, and found the men we were relieving ready to come
+back.
+
+"And the firing line itself? Just the same sort of ditch with a parapet
+of sandbags, but with dug-outs, queer big holes helped out with sleepers
+from a nearby railway track, opening into it from behind. Dug-outs vary
+a good deal. Many are rather like the cubby-house we made at the end of
+the orchard last summer; only the walls are thick enough to stand a high
+explosive shell. The best dug-out in our company's bit of front was
+quite a dressy affair with some woodwork and a door got from the ruins
+of a house twenty or thirty yards behind us. It had a stove in it too,
+and a chimbley, and pans to keep water in. It was the best dug-out for
+miles. This house had a well, and there was a special trench ran back to
+that, and all day long there was a coming and going for water. There had
+once been a pump over the well, but a shell had smashed that....
+
+"And now you expect me to tell of Germans and the fight and shelling and
+all sorts of things. _I haven't seen a live German_; I haven't been
+within two hundred yards of a shell burst, there has been no attack and
+I haven't got the V.C. I have made myself muddy beyond describing; I've
+been working all the time, but I've not fired a shot or fought a
+ha'porth. We were busy all the time--just at work, repairing the
+parapet, which had to be done gingerly because of snipers, bringing our
+food in from the rear in big carriers, getting water, pushing our trench
+out from an angle slantingways forward. Getting meals, clearing up and
+so on takes a lot of time. We make tea in big kettles in the big
+dug-out, which two whole companies use for their cooking, and carry them
+with a pole through the handles to our platoons. We wash up and wash and
+shave. Dinner preparation (and consumption) takes two or three hours.
+Tea too uses up time. It's like camping out and picnicking in the park.
+This first time (and next too) we have been mixed with some Sussex men
+who have been here longer and know the business.... It works out that we
+do most of the fatigue. Afterwards we shall go up alone to a pitch of
+our own....
+
+"But all the time you want to know about the Germans. They are a quarter
+of a mile away at this part, or nearly a quarter of a mile. When you
+snatch a peep at them it is like a low parti-coloured stone wall--only
+the stones are sandbags. The Germans have them black and white, so that
+you cannot tell which are loopholes and which are black bags. Our people
+haven't been so clever--and the War Office love of uniformity has given
+us only white bags. No doubt it looks neater. But it makes our loopholes
+plain. For a time black sandbags were refused. The Germans sniped at us,
+but not very much. Only one of our lot was hit, by a chance shot that
+came through the sandbag at the top of the parapet. He just had a cut in
+the neck which didn't prevent his walking back. They shelled the
+trenches half a mile to the left of us though, and it looked pretty hot.
+The sandbags flew about. But the men lie low, and it looks worse than it
+is. The weather was fine and pleasant, as General French always says.
+And after three days and nights of cramped existence and petty chores,
+one in the foremost trench and two a little way back, and then two days
+in support, we came back--and here we are again waiting for our second
+Go.
+
+"The night time is perhaps a little more nervy than the day. You get
+your head up and look about, and see the flat dim country with its
+ruined houses and its lumps of stuff that are dead bodies and its long
+vague lines of sandbags, and the searchlights going like white windmill
+arms and an occasional flare or star shell. And you have a nasty feeling
+of people creeping and creeping all night between the trenches....
+
+"Some of us went out to strengthen a place in the parapet that was only
+one sandbag thick, where a man had been hit during the day. We made it
+four bags thick right up to the top. All the while you were doing it,
+you dreaded to find yourself in the white glare of a searchlight, and
+you had a feeling that something would hit you suddenly from behind. I
+had to make up my mind not to look round, or I should have kept on
+looking round.... Also our chaps kept shooting over us, within a foot of
+one's head. Just to persuade the Germans that we were not out of the
+trench....
+
+"Nothing happened to us. We got back all right. It was silly to have
+left that parapet only one bag thick. There's the truth, and all of my
+first time in the trenches.
+
+"And the Germans?
+
+"I tell you there was no actual fighting at all. I never saw the head of
+one.
+
+"But now see what a good bruddykins I am. I have seen a fight, a real
+exciting fight, and I have kept it to the last to tell you about.... It
+was a fight in the air. And the British won. It began with a German
+machine appearing, very minute and high, sailing towards our lines a
+long way to the left. We could tell it was a German because of the black
+cross; they decorate every aeroplane with a black Iron Cross on its
+wings and tail; that our officer could see with his glasses. (He let me
+look.) Suddenly whack, whack, whack, came a line of little puffs of
+smoke behind it, and then one in front of it, which meant that our
+anti-aircraft guns were having a go at it. Then, as suddenly, Archibald
+stopped, and we could see the British machine buzzing across the path of
+the German. It was just like two birds circling in the air. Or wasps.
+They buzzed like wasps. There was a little crackling--like brushing your
+hair in frosty weather. They were shooting at each other. Then our
+lieutenant called out, 'Hit, by Jove!' and handed the glasses to Park
+and instantly wanted them back. He says he saw bits of the machine
+flying off.
+
+"When he said that you could fancy you saw it too, up there in the blue.
+
+"Anyhow the little machine cocked itself up on end. Rather slowly....
+Then down it came like dropping a knife....
+
+"It made you say 'Ooooo!' to see that dive. It came down, seemed to get
+a little bit under control, and then dive down again. You could hear the
+engine roar louder and louder as it came down. I never saw anything fall
+so fast. We saw it hit the ground among a lot of smashed-up buildings on
+the crest behind us. It went right over and flew to pieces, all to
+smithereens....
+
+"It hurt your nose to see it hit the ground....
+
+"Somehow--I was sort of overcome by the thought of the men in that dive.
+I was trying to imagine how they felt it. From the moment when they
+realised they were going.
+
+"What on earth must it have seemed like at last?
+
+"They fell seven thousand feet, the men say; some say nine thousand
+feet. A mile and a half!
+
+"But all the chaps were cheering.... And there was our machine hanging
+in the sky. You wanted to reach up and pat it on the back. It went up
+higher and away towards the German lines, as though it was looking for
+another German. It seemed to go now quite slowly. It was an English
+machine, though for a time we weren't sure; our machines are done in
+tri-colour just as though they were French. But everybody says it was
+English. It was one of our crack fighting machines, and from first to
+last it has put down seven Germans.... And that's really all the
+fighting there was. There has been fighting here; a month ago. There are
+perhaps a dozen dead Germans lying out still in front of the lines.
+Little twisted figures, like overthrown scarecrows, about a hundred
+yards away. But that is all.
+
+"No, the trenches have disappointed me. They are a scene of tiresome
+domesticity. They aren't a patch on our quarters in the rear. There
+isn't the traffic. I've not found a single excuse for firing my rifle. I
+don't believe I shall ever fire my rifle at an enemy--ever....
+
+"You've seen Rendezvous' fresh promotion, I suppose? He's one of the men
+the young officers talk about. Everybody believes in him. Do you
+remember how Manning used to hide from him?..."
+
+
+Section 14
+
+Mr. Britling read this through, and then his thoughts went back to
+Teddy's disappearance and then returned to Hugh. The youngster was right
+in the front now, and one had to steel oneself to the possibilities of
+the case. Somehow Mr. Britling had not expected to find Hugh so speedily
+in the firing line, though he would have been puzzled to find a reason
+why this should not have happened. But he found he had to begin the
+lesson of stoicism all over again.
+
+He read the letter twice, and then he searched for some indication of
+its date. He suspected that letters were sometimes held back....
+
+Four days later this suspicion was confirmed by the arrival of another
+letter from Hugh in which he told of his second spell in the trenches.
+This time things had been much more lively. They had been heavily
+shelled and there had been a German attack. And this time he was writing
+to his father, and wrote more freely. He had scribbled in pencil.
+
+"Things are much livelier here than they were. Our guns are getting to
+work. They are firing in spells of an hour or so, three or four times a
+day, and just when they seem to be leaving off they begin again. The
+Germans suddenly got the range of our trenches the day before yesterday,
+and begun to pound us with high explosive.... Well, it's trying. You
+never seem quite to know when the next bang is coming, and that keeps
+your nerves hung up; it seems to tighten your muscles and tire you.
+We've done nothing but lie low all day, and I feel as weary as if I had
+marched twenty miles. Then 'whop,' one's near you, and there is a flash
+and everything flies. It's a mad sort of smash-about. One came much too
+close to be pleasant; as near as the old oil jars are from the barn
+court door. It bowled me clean over and sent a lot of gravel over me.
+When I got up there was twenty yards of trench smashed into a mere hole,
+and men lying about, and some of them groaning and one three-quarters
+buried. We had to turn to and get them out as well as we could....
+
+"I felt stunned and insensitive; it was well to have something to do....
+
+"Our guns behind felt for the German guns. It was the damnest racket.
+Like giant lunatics smashing about amidst colossal pots and pans. They
+fired different sorts of shells; stink shells as well as Jack Johnsons,
+and though we didn't get much of that at our corner there was a sting of
+chlorine in the air all through the afternoon. Most of the stink shells
+fell short. We hadn't masks, but we rigged up a sort of protection with
+our handkerchiefs. And it didn't amount to very much. It was rather like
+the chemistry room after Heinrich and the kids had been mixing things.
+Most of the time I was busy helping with the men who had got hurt.
+Suddenly there came a lull. Then some one said the Germans were coming,
+and I had a glimpse of them.
+
+"You don't look at anything steadily while the guns are going. When a
+big gun goes off or a shell bursts anywhere near you, you seem neither
+to see nor hear for a moment. You keep on being intermittently stunned.
+One sees in a kind of flicker in between the impacts....
+
+"Well, there they were. This time I saw them. They were coming out and
+running a little way and dropping, and our shell was bursting among them
+and behind them. A lot of it was going too far. I watched what our men
+were doing, and poured out a lot of cartridges ready to my hand and
+began to blaze away. Half the German attack never came out of their
+trench. If they really intended business against us, which I doubt, they
+were half-hearted in carrying it out. They didn't show for five
+minutes, and they left two or three score men on the ground. Whenever we
+saw a man wriggle we were told to fire at him; it might be an unwounded
+man trying to crawl back. For a time our guns gave them beans. Then it
+was practically over, but about sunset their guns got back at us again,
+and the artillery fight went on until it was moonlight. The chaps in our
+third company caught it rather badly, and then our guns seemed to find
+something and get the upper hand....
+
+"In the night some of our men went out to repair the wire entanglements,
+and one man crawled halfway to the enemy trenches to listen. But I had
+done my bit for the day, and I was supposed to sleep in the dug-out. I
+was far too excited to sleep. All my nerves were jumping about, and my
+mind was like a lot of flying fragments flying about very fast....
+
+"They shelled us again next day and our tea dixy was hit; so that we
+didn't get any tea....
+
+"I slept thirty hours after I got back here. And now I am slowly
+digesting these experiences. Most of our fellows are. My mind and nerves
+have been rather bumped and bruised by the shelling, but not so much as
+you might think. I feel as though I'd presently not think very much of
+it. Some of our men have got the stun of it a lot more than I have. It
+gets at the older men more. Everybody says that. The men of over
+thirty-five don't recover from a shelling for weeks. They go about--sort
+of hesitatingly....
+
+"Life is very primitive here--which doesn't mean that one is getting
+down to anything fundamental, but only going back to something immediate
+and simple. It's fetching and carrying and getting water and getting
+food and going up to the firing line and coming back. One goes on for
+weeks, and then one day one finds oneself crying out, 'What is all this
+for? When is it to end?' I seemed to have something ahead of me before
+this war began, education, science, work, discoveries; all sorts of
+things; but it is hard to feel that there is anything ahead of us
+here....
+
+"Somehow the last spell in the fire trench has shaken up my mind a lot.
+I was getting used to the war before, but now I've got back to my
+original amazement at the whole business. I find myself wondering what
+we are really up to, why the war began, why we were caught into this
+amazing routine. It looks, it feels orderly, methodical, purposeful. Our
+officers give us orders and get their orders, and the men back there get
+their orders. Everybody is getting orders. Back, I suppose, to Lord
+Kitchener. It goes on for weeks with the effect of being quite sane and
+intended and the right thing, and then, then suddenly it comes whacking
+into one's head, 'But this--this is utterly _mad_!' This going to and
+fro and to and fro and to and fro; this monotony which breaks ever and
+again into violence--violence that never gets anywhere--is exactly the
+life that a lunatic leads. Melancholia and mania.... It's just a
+collective obsession--by war. The world is really quite mad. I happen to
+be having just one gleam of sanity, that won't last after I have
+finished this letter. I suppose when an individual man goes mad and gets
+out of the window because he imagines the door is magically impossible,
+and dances about in the street without his trousers jabbing at
+passers-by with a toasting-fork, he has just the same sombre sense of
+unavoidable necessity that we have, all of us, when we go off with our
+packs into the trenches....
+
+"It's only by an effort that I can recall how life felt in the spring of
+1914. Do you remember Heinrich and his attempt to make a table chart of
+the roses, so that we could sit outside the barn and read the names of
+all the roses in the barn court? Like the mountain charts they have on
+tables in Switzerland. What an inconceivable thing that is now! For all
+I know I shot Heinrich the other night. For all I know he is one of the
+lumps that we counted after the attack went back.
+
+"It's a queer thing, Daddy, but I have a sort of _seditious_ feeling in
+writing things like this. One gets to feel that it is wrong to think.
+It's the effect of discipline. Of being part of a machine. Still, I
+doubt if I ought to think. If one really looks into things in this
+spirit, where is it going to take us? Ortheris--his real name by the by
+is Arthur Jewell--hasn't any of these troubles. 'The b----y Germans
+butted into Belgium,' he says. 'We've got to 'oof 'em out again. That's
+all abart it. Leastways it's all _I_ know.... I don't know nothing about
+Serbia, I don't know nothing about anything, except that the Germans got
+to stop this sort of gime for Everlasting, Amen.'...
+
+"Sometimes I think he's righter than I am. Sometimes I think he is only
+madder."
+
+
+Section 15
+
+These letters weighed heavily upon Mr. Britling's mind. He perceived
+that this precociously wise, subtle youngster of his was now close up to
+the line of injury and death, going to and fro from it, in a perpetual,
+fluctuating danger. At any time now in the day or night the evil thing
+might wing its way to him. If Mr. Britling could have prayed, he would
+have prayed for Hugh. He began and never finished some ineffectual
+prayers.
+
+He tried to persuade himself of a Roman stoicism; that he would be
+sternly proud, sternly satisfied, if this last sacrifice for his country
+was demanded from him. He perceived he was merely humbugging himself....
+
+This war had no longer the simple greatness that would make any such
+stern happiness possible....
+
+The disaster to Teddy and Mrs. Teddy hit him hard. He winced at the
+thought of Mrs. Teddy's white face; the unspoken accusation in her eyes.
+He felt he could never bring himself to say his one excuse to her: "I
+did not keep Hugh back. If I had done that, then you might have the
+right to blame."
+
+If he had overcome every other difficulty in the way to an heroic pose
+there was still Hugh's unconquerable lucidity of outlook. War _was_ a
+madness....
+
+But what else was to be done? What else could be done? We could not give
+in to Germany. If a lunatic struggles, sane men must struggle too....
+
+Mr. Britling had ceased to write about the war at all. All his later
+writings about it had been abandoned unfinished. He could not imagine
+them counting, affecting any one, producing any effect. Indeed he was
+writing now very intermittently. His contributions to _The Times_ had
+fallen away. He was perpetually thinking now about the war, about life
+and death, about the religious problems that had seemed so remote in the
+days of the peace; but none of his thinking would become clear and
+definite enough for writing. All the clear stars of his mind were hidden
+by the stormy clouds of excitement that the daily newspaper perpetually
+renewed and by the daily developments of life. And just as his
+professional income shrank before his mental confusion and impotence,
+the private income that came from his and his wife's investments became
+uncertain. She had had two thousand pounds in the Constantinople loan,
+seven hundred in debentures of the Ottoman railway; he had held similar
+sums in two Hungarian and one Bulgarian loan, in a linoleum factory at
+Rouen and in a Swiss Hotel company. All these stopped payments, and the
+dividends from their other investments shrank. There seemed no limit set
+to the possibilities of shrinkage of capital and income. Income tax had
+leapt to colossal dimensions, the cost of most things had risen, and the
+tangle of life was now increased by the need for retrenchments and
+economies. He decided that Gladys, the facetiously named automobile, was
+a luxury, and sold her for a couple of hundred pounds. He lost his
+gardener, who had gone to higher priced work with a miller, and he had
+great trouble to replace him, so that the garden became disagreeably
+unkempt and unsatisfactory. He had to give up his frequent trips to
+London. He was obliged to defer Statesminster for the boys. For a time
+at any rate they must go as day boys to Brinsmead. At every point he met
+this uncongenial consideration of ways and means. For years now he had
+gone easy, lived with a certain self-indulgence. It was extraordinarily
+vexatious to have one's greater troubles for one's country and one's son
+and one's faith crossed and complicated by these little troubles of the
+extra sixpence and the untimely bill.
+
+What worried his mind perhaps more than anything else was his gradual
+loss of touch with the essential issues of the war. At first the
+militarism, the aggression of Germany, had seemed so bad that he could
+not see the action of Britain and her allies as anything but entirely
+righteous. He had seen the war plainly and simply in the phrase, "Now
+this militarism must end." He had seen Germany as a system, as
+imperialism and junkerism, as a callous materialist aggression, as the
+spirit that makes war, and the Allies as the protest of humanity against
+all these evil things.
+
+Insensibly, in spite of himself, this first version of the war was
+giving place to another. The tawdry, rhetorical German Emperor, who had
+been the great antagonist at the outset, the last upholder of Cćsarism,
+God's anointed with the withered arm and the mailed fist, had receded
+from the foreground of the picture; that truer Germany which is thought
+and system, which is the will to do things thoroughly, the Germany of
+Ostwald and the once rejected Hindenburg, was coming to the fore. It
+made no apology for the errors and crimes that had been imposed upon it
+by its Hohenzollern leadership, but it fought now to save itself from
+the destruction and division that would be its inevitable lot if it
+accepted defeat too easily; fought to hold out, fought for a second
+chance, with discipline, with skill and patience, with a steadfast
+will. It fought with science, it fought with economy, with machines and
+thought against all too human antagonists. It necessitated an implacable
+resistance, but also it commanded respect. Against it fought three great
+peoples with as fine a will; but they had neither the unity, the
+habitual discipline, nor the science of Germany, and it was the latter
+defect that became more and more the distressful matter of Mr.
+Britling's thoughts. France after her initial experiences, after her
+first reeling month, had risen from the very verge of defeat to a steely
+splendour of resolution, but England and Russia, those twin slack
+giants, still wasted force, were careless, negligent, uncertain.
+Everywhere up and down the scale, from the stupidity of the uniform
+sandbags and Hugh's young officer who would not use a map, to the
+general conception and direction of the war, Mr. Britling's inflamed and
+oversensitised intelligence perceived the same bad qualities for which
+he had so often railed upon his countrymen in the days of the peace,
+that impatience, that indolence, that wastefulness and inconclusiveness,
+that failure to grip issues and do obviously necessary things. The same
+lax qualities that had brought England so close to the supreme
+imbecility of a civil war in Ireland in July, 1914, were now muddling
+and prolonging the war, and postponing, it might be for ever, the
+victory that had seemed so certain only a year ago. The politician still
+intrigued, the ineffectives still directed. Against brains used to the
+utmost their fight was a stupid thrusting forth of men and men and yet
+more men, men badly trained, under-equipped, stupidly led. A press
+clamour for invention and scientific initiative was stifled under a
+committee of elderly celebrities and eminent dufferdom; from the outset,
+the Ministry of Munitions seemed under the influence of the "business
+man."...
+
+It is true that righteousness should triumph over the tyrant and the
+robber, but have carelessness and incapacity any right to triumph over
+capacity and foresight? Men were coming now to dark questionings
+between this intricate choice. And, indeed, was our cause all
+righteousness?
+
+There surely is the worst doubt of all for a man whose son is facing
+death.
+
+Were we indeed standing against tyranny for freedom?
+
+There came drifting to Mr. Britling's ears a confusion of voices, voices
+that told of reaction, of the schemes of employers to best the trade
+unions, of greedy shippers and greedy house landlords reaping their
+harvest, of waste and treason in the very households of the Ministry, of
+religious cant and intolerance at large, of self-advertisement written
+in letters of blood, of forestalling and jobbery, of irrational and
+exasperating oppressions in India and Egypt.... It came with a shock to
+him, too, that Hugh should see so little else than madness in the war,
+and have so pitiless a realisation of its essential futility. The boy
+forced his father to see--what indeed all along he had been seeing more
+and more clearly. The war, even by the standards of adventure and
+conquest, had long since become a monstrous absurdity. Some way there
+must be out of this bloody entanglement that was yielding victory to
+neither side, that was yielding nothing but waste and death beyond all
+precedent. The vast majority of people everywhere must be desiring
+peace, willing to buy peace at any reasonable price, and in all the
+world it seemed there was insufficient capacity to end the daily
+butchery and achieve the peace that was so universally desired, the
+peace that would be anything better than a breathing space for further
+warfare.... Every day came the papers with the balanced story of
+battles, losses, destructions, ships sunk, towns smashed. And never a
+decision, never a sign of decision.
+
+One Saturday afternoon Mr. Britling found himself with Mrs. Britling at
+Claverings. Lady Homartyn was in mourning for her two nephews, the
+Glassington boys, who had both been killed, one in Flanders, the other
+in Gallipoli. Raeburn was there too, despondent and tired-looking.
+There were three young men in khaki, one with the red of a staff
+officer; there were two or three women whom Mr. Britling had not met
+before, and Miss Sharsper the novelist, fresh from nursing experience
+among the convalescents in the south of France. But he was disgusted to
+find that the gathering was dominated by his old antagonist, Lady
+Frensham, unsubdued, unaltered, rampant over them all, arrogant,
+impudent, insulting. She was in mourning, she had the most splendid
+black furs Mr. Britling had ever seen; her large triumphant profile came
+out of them like the head of a vulture out of its ruff; her elder
+brother was a wounded prisoner in Germany, her second was dead; it would
+seem that hers were the only sacrifices the war had yet extorted from
+any one. She spoke as though it gave her the sole right to criticise the
+war or claim compensation for the war.
+
+Her incurable propensity to split the country, to make mischievous
+accusations against classes and districts and public servants, was
+having full play. She did her best to provoke Mr. Britling into a
+dispute, and throw some sort of imputation upon his patriotism as
+distinguished from her own noisy and intolerant conceptions of
+"loyalty."
+
+She tried him first with conscription. She threw out insults at the
+shirkers and the "funk classes." All the middle-class people clung on to
+their wretched little businesses, made any sort of excuse....
+
+Mr. Britling was stung to defend them. "A business," he said acidly,
+"isn't like land, which waits and grows rich for its owner. And these
+people can't leave ferrety little agents behind them when they go off to
+serve. Tens of thousands of middle-class men have ruined themselves and
+flung away every prospect they had in the world to go to this war."
+
+"And scores of thousands haven't!" said Lady Frensham. "They are the men
+I'm thinking of."...
+
+Mr. Britling ran through a little list of aristocratic stay-at-homes
+that began with a duke.
+
+"And not a soul speaks to them in consequence," she said.
+
+She shifted her attack to the Labour people. They would rather see the
+country defeated than submit to a little discipline.
+
+"Because they have no faith in the house of lawyers or the house of
+landlords," said Mr. Britling. "Who can blame them?"
+
+She proceeded to tell everybody what she would do with strikers. She
+would give them "short shrift." She would give them a taste of the
+Prussian way--homoeopathic treatment. "But of course old vote-catching
+Asquith daren't--he daren't!" Mr. Britling opened his mouth and said
+nothing; he was silenced. The men in khaki listened respectfully but
+ambiguously; one of the younger ladies it seemed was entirely of Lady
+Frensham's way of thinking, and anxious to show it. The good lady having
+now got her hands upon the Cabinet proceeded to deal faithfully with its
+two-and-twenty members. Winston Churchill had overridden Lord Fisher
+upon the question of Gallipoli, and incurred terrible responsibilities.
+Lord Haldane--she called him "Tubby Haldane"--was a convicted traitor.
+"The man's a German out and out. Oh! what if he hasn't a drop of German
+blood in his veins? He's a German by choice--which is worse."
+
+"I thought he had a certain capacity for organisation," said Mr.
+Britling.
+
+"We don't want his organisation, and we don't want _him_," said Lady
+Frensham.
+
+Mr. Britling pleaded for particulars of the late Lord Chancellor's
+treasons. There were no particulars. It was just an idea the good lady
+had got into her head, that had got into a number of accessible heads.
+There was only one strong man in all the country now, Lady Frensham
+insisted. That was Sir Edward Carson.
+
+Mr. Britling jumped in his chair.
+
+"But has he ever done anything?" he cried, "except embitter Ireland?"
+
+Lady Frensham did not hear that question. She pursued her glorious
+theme. Lloyd George, who had once been worthy only of the gallows, was
+now the sole minister fit to put beside her hero. He had won her heart
+by his condemnation of the working man. He was the one man who was not
+afraid to speak out, to tell them they drank, to tell them they shirked
+and loafed, to tell them plainly that if defeat came to this country the
+blame would fall upon _them_!
+
+"_No!_" cried Mr. Britling.
+
+"Yes," said Lady Frensham. "Upon them and those who have flattered and
+misled them...."
+
+And so on....
+
+It presently became necessary for Lady Homartyn to rescue Mr. Britling
+from the great lady's patriotic tramplings. He found himself drifting
+into the autumnal garden--the show of dahlias had never been so
+wonderful--in the company of Raeburn and the staff officer and a small
+woman who was presently discovered to be remarkably well-informed. They
+were all despondent. "I think all this promiscuous blaming of people is
+quite the worst--and most ominous--thing about us just now," said Mr.
+Britling after the restful pause that followed the departure from the
+presence of Lady Frensham.
+
+"It goes on everywhere," said the staff officer.
+
+"Is it really--honest?" said Mr. Britling.
+
+Raeburn, after reflection, decided to answer. "As far as it is stupid,
+yes. There's a lot of blame coming; there's bound to be a day of
+reckoning, and I suppose we've all got an instinctive disposition to
+find a scapegoat for our common sins. The Tory press is pretty rotten,
+and there's a strong element of mere personal spite--in the Churchill
+attacks for example. Personal jealousy probably. Our 'old families'
+seem to have got vulgar-spirited imperceptibly--in a generation or so.
+They quarrel and shirk and lay blame exactly as bad servants do--and
+things are still far too much in their hands. Things are getting muffed,
+there can be no doubt about that--not fatally, but still rather
+seriously. And the government--it was human before the war, and we've
+added no archangels. There's muddle. There's mutual suspicion. You never
+know what newspaper office Lloyd George won't be in touch with next.
+He's honest and patriotic and energetic, but he's mortally afraid of old
+women and class intrigues. He doesn't know where to get his backing.
+He's got all a labour member's terror of the dagger at his back. There's
+a lack of nerve, too, in getting rid of prominent officers--who have
+friends."
+
+The staff officer nodded.
+
+"Northcliffe seems to me to have a case," said Mr. Britling. "Every one
+abuses him."
+
+"I'd stop his _Daily Mail_," said Raeburn. "I'd leave _The Times_, but
+I'd stop the _Daily Mail_ on the score of its placards alone. It
+overdoes Northcliffe. It translates him into the shrieks and yells of
+underlings. The plain fact is that Northcliffe is scared out of his wits
+by German efficiency--and in war time when a man is scared out of his
+wits, whether he is honest or not, you put his head in a bag or hold a
+pistol to it to calm him.... What is the good of all this clamouring for
+a change of government? We haven't a change of government. It's like
+telling a tramp to get a change of linen. Our men, all our public men,
+are second-rate men, with the habits of advocates. There is nothing
+masterful in their minds. How can you expect the system to produce
+anything else? But they are doing as well as they can, and there is no
+way of putting in any one else now, and there you are."
+
+"Meanwhile," said Mr. Britling, "our boys--get killed."
+
+"They'd get killed all the more if you had--let us say--Carson and
+Lloyd George and Northcliffe and Lady Frensham, with, I suppose, Austin
+Harrison and Horatio Bottomley thrown in--as a Strong Silent
+Government.... I'd rather have Northcliffe as dictator than that.... We
+can't suddenly go back on the past and alter our type. We didn't listen
+to Matthew Arnold. We've never thoroughly turned out and cleaned up our
+higher schools. We've resisted instruction. We've preferred to maintain
+our national luxuries of a bench of bishops and party politics. And
+compulsory Greek and the university sneer. And Lady Frensham. And all
+that sort of thing. And here we are!... Well, damn it, we're in for it
+now; we've got to plough through with it--with what we have--as what we
+are."
+
+The young staff officer nodded. He thought that was "about it."
+
+"You've got no sons," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"I'm not even married," said Raeburn, as though he thanked God.
+
+The little well-informed lady remarked abruptly that she had two sons;
+one was just home wounded from Suvla Bay. What her son told her made her
+feel very grave. She said that the public was still quite in the dark
+about the battle of Anafarta. It had been a hideous muddle, and we had
+been badly beaten. The staff work had been awful. Nothing joined up,
+nothing was on the spot and in time. The water supply, for example, had
+gone wrong; the men had been mad with thirst. One regiment which she
+named had not been supported by another; when at last the first came
+back the two battalions fought in the trenches regardless of the enemy.
+There had been no leading, no correlation, no plan. Some of the guns,
+she declared, had been left behind in Egypt. Some of the train was
+untraceable to this day. It was mislaid somewhere in the Levant. At the
+beginning Sir Ian Hamilton had not even been present. He had failed to
+get there in time. It had been the reckless throwing away of an army.
+And so hopeful an army! Her son declared it meant the complete failure
+of the Dardanelles project....
+
+"And when one hears how near we came to victory!" she cried, and left it
+at that.
+
+"Three times this year," said Raeburn, "we have missed victories because
+of the badness of our staff work. It's no good picking out scapegoats.
+It's a question of national habit. It's because the sort of man we turn
+out from our public schools has never learnt how to catch trains, get to
+an office on the minute, pack a knapsack properly, or do anything
+smartly and quickly--anything whatever that he can possibly get done for
+him. You can't expect men who are habitually easy-going to keep bucked
+up to a high pitch of efficiency for any length of time. All their
+training is against it. All their tradition. They hate being prigs. An
+Englishman will be any sort of stupid failure rather than appear a prig.
+That's why we've lost three good fights that we ought to have won--and
+thousands and thousands of men--and material and time, precious beyond
+reckoning. We've lost a year. We've dashed the spirit of our people."
+
+"My boy in Flanders," said Mr. Britling, "says about the same thing. He
+says our officers have never learnt to count beyond ten, and that they
+are scared at the sight of a map...."
+
+"And the war goes on," said the little woman.
+
+"How long, oh Lord! how long?" cried Mr. Britling.
+
+"I'd give them another year," said the staff officer. "Just going as we
+are going. Then something _must_ give way. There will be no money
+anywhere. There'll be no more men.... I suppose they'll feel that
+shortage first anyhow. Russia alone has over twenty millions."
+
+"That's about the size of it," said Raeburn....
+
+"Do you think, sir, there'll be civil war?" asked the young staff
+officer abruptly after a pause.
+
+There was a little interval before any one answered this surprising
+question.
+
+"After the peace, I mean," said the young officer.
+
+"There'll be just the devil to pay," said Raeburn.
+
+"One thing after another in the country is being pulled up by its
+roots," reflected Mr. Britling.
+
+"We've never produced a plan for the war, and it isn't likely we shall
+have one for the peace," said Raeburn, and added: "and Lady Frensham's
+little lot will be doing their level best to sit on the safety-valve....
+They'll rake up Ireland and Ulster from the very start. But I doubt if
+Ulster will save 'em."
+
+"We shall squabble. What else do we ever do?"
+
+No one seemed able to see more than that. A silence fell on the little
+party.
+
+"Well, thank heaven for these dahlias," said Raeburn, affecting the
+philosopher.
+
+The young staff officer regarded the dahlias without enthusiasm....
+
+
+Section 16
+
+Mr. Britling sat one September afternoon with Captain Lawrence Carmine
+in the sunshine of the barn court, and smoked with him and sometimes
+talked and sometimes sat still.
+
+"When it began I did not believe that this war could be like other
+wars," he said. "I did not dream it. I thought that we had grown wiser
+at last. It seemed to me like the dawn of a great clearing up. I thought
+the common sense of mankind would break out like a flame, an indignant
+flame, and consume all this obsolete foolery of empires and banners and
+militarism directly it made its attack upon human happiness. A score of
+things that I see now were preposterous, I thought must
+happen--naturally. I thought America would declare herself against the
+Belgian outrage; that she would not tolerate the smashing of the great
+sister republic--if only for the memory of Lafayette. Well--I gather
+America is chiefly concerned about our making cotton contraband. I
+thought the Balkan States were capable of a reasonable give and take; of
+a common care for their common freedom. I see now three German royalties
+trading in peasants, and no men in their lands to gainsay them. I saw
+this war, as so many Frenchmen have seen it, as something that might
+legitimately command a splendid enthusiasm of indignation.... It was all
+a dream, the dream of a prosperous comfortable man who had never come to
+the cutting edge of life. Everywhere cunning, everywhere small feuds and
+hatreds, distrusts, dishonesties, timidities, feebleness of purpose,
+dwarfish imaginations, swarm over the great and simple issues.... It is
+a war now like any other of the mobbing, many-aimed cataclysms that have
+shattered empires and devastated the world; it is a war without point, a
+war that has lost its soul, it has become mere incoherent fighting and
+destruction, a demonstration in vast and tragic forms of the stupidity
+and ineffectiveness of our species...."
+
+He stopped, and there was a little interval of silence.
+
+Captain Carmine tossed the fag end of his cigar very neatly into a tub
+of hydrangeas. "Three thousand years ago in China," he said, "there were
+men as sad as we are, for the same cause."
+
+"Three thousand years ahead perhaps," said Mr. Britling, "there will
+still be men with the same sadness.... And yet--and yet.... No. Just now
+I have no elasticity. It is not in my nature to despair, but things are
+pressing me down. I don't recover as I used to recover. I tell myself
+still that though the way is long and hard the spirit of hope, the
+spirit of creation, the generosities and gallantries in the heart of
+man, must end in victory. But I say that over as one repeats a worn-out
+prayer. The light is out of the sky for me. Sometimes I doubt if it will
+ever come back. Let younger men take heart and go on with the world. If
+I could die for the right thing now--instead of just having to live on
+in this world of ineffective struggle--I would be glad to die now,
+Carmine...."
+
+
+Section 17
+
+In these days also Mr. Direck was very unhappy.
+
+For Cissie, at any rate, had not lost touch with the essential issues of
+the war. She was as clear as ever that German militarism and the German
+attack on Belgium and France was the primary subject of the war. And she
+dismissed all secondary issues. She continued to demand why America did
+not fight. "We fight for Belgium. Won't you fight for the Dutch and
+Norwegian ships? Won't you even fight for your own ships that the
+Germans are sinking?"
+
+Mr. Direck attempted explanations that were ill received.
+
+"You were ready enough to fight the Spaniards when they blew up the
+_Maine_. But the Germans can sink the _Lusitania_! That's--as you say--a
+different proposition."
+
+His mind was shot by an extraordinary suspicion that she thought the
+_Lusitania_ an American vessel. But Mr. Direck was learning his Cissie,
+and he did not dare to challenge her on this score.
+
+"You haven't got hold of the American proposition," he said. "We're
+thinking beyond wars."
+
+"That's what we have been trying to do," said Cissie. "Do you think we
+came into it for the fun of the thing?"
+
+"Haven't I shown in a hundred ways that I sympathise?"
+
+"Oh--sympathy!..."
+
+He fared little better at Mr. Britling's hands. Mr. Britling talked
+darkly, but pointed all the time only too plainly at America. "There's
+two sorts of liberalism," said Mr. Britling, "that pretend to be the
+same thing; there's the liberalism of great aims and the liberalism of
+defective moral energy...."
+
+
+Section 18
+
+It was not until Teddy had been missing for three weeks that Hugh wrote
+about him. The two Essex battalions on the Flanders front were
+apparently wide apart, and it was only from home that Hugh learnt what
+had happened.
+
+"You can't imagine how things narrow down when one is close up against
+them. One does not know what is happening even within a few miles of us,
+until we get the newspapers. Then, with a little reading between the
+lines and some bold guessing, we fit our little bit of experience with a
+general shape. Of course I've wondered at times about Teddy. But oddly
+enough I've never thought of him very much as being out here. It's
+queer, I know, but I haven't. I can't imagine why....
+
+"I don't know about 'missing.' We've had nothing going on here that has
+led to any missing. All our men have been accounted for. But every few
+miles along the front conditions alter. His lot may have been closer up
+to the enemy, and there may have been a rush and a fight for a bit of
+trench either way. In some parts the German trenches are not thirty
+yards away, and there is mining, bomb throwing, and perpetual creeping
+up and give and take. Here we've been getting a bit forward. But I'll
+tell you about that presently. And, anyhow, I don't understand about
+'missing.' There's very few prisoners taken now. But don't tell Letty
+that. I try to imagine old Teddy in it....
+
+"Missing's a queer thing. It isn't tragic--or pitiful. Or partly
+reassuring like 'prisoner.' It just sends one speculating and
+speculating. I can't find any one who knows where the 14th Essex are.
+Things move about here so mysteriously that for all I know we may find
+them in the next trench next time we go up. But there _is_ a chance for
+Teddy. It's worth while bucking Letty all you can. And at the same time
+there's odds against him. There plainly and unfeelingly is how things
+stand in my mind. I think chiefly of Letty. I'm glad Cissie is with her,
+and I'm glad she's got the boy. Keep her busy. She was frightfully fond
+of him. I've seen all sorts of things between them, and I know that....
+I'll try and write to her soon, and I'll find something hopeful to tell
+her.
+
+"Meanwhile I've got something to tell you. I've been through a fight, a
+big fight, and I haven't got a scratch. I've taken two prisoners with my
+lily hand. Men were shot close to me. I didn't mind that a bit. It was
+as exciting as one of those bitter fights we used to have round the
+hockey goal. I didn't mind anything till afterwards. Then when I was in
+the trench in the evening I trod on something slippery--pah! And after
+it was all over one of my chums got it--sort of unfairly. And I keep on
+thinking of those two things so much that all the early part is just
+dreamlike. It's more like something I've read in a book, or seen in the
+_Illustrated London News_ than actually been through. One had been
+thinking so often, how will it feel? how shall I behave? that when it
+came it had an effect of being flat and ordinary.
+
+"They say we hadn't got enough guns in the spring or enough ammunition.
+That's all right now--anyhow. They started in plastering the Germans
+overnight, and right on until it was just daylight. I never heard such a
+row, and their trenches--we could stand up and look at them without
+getting a single shot at us--were flying about like the crater of a
+volcano. We were not in our firing trench. We had gone back into some
+new trenches, at the rear--I think to get out of the way of the counter
+fire. But this morning they weren't doing very much. For once our guns
+were on top. There was a feeling of anticipation--very like waiting for
+an examination paper to be given out; then we were at it. Getting out of
+a trench to attack gives you an odd feeling of being just hatched.
+Suddenly the world is big. I don't remember our gun fire stopping. And
+then you rush. 'Come on! Come on!' say the officers. Everybody gives a
+sort of howl and rushes. When you see men dropping, you rush the faster.
+The only thing that checks you at all is the wire twisted about
+everywhere. You don't want to trip over that. The frightening thing is
+the exposure. After being in the trenches so long you feel naked. You
+run like a scared child for the German trench ahead. I can't understand
+the iron nerve of a man who can expose his back by turning to run away.
+And there's a thirsty feeling with one's bayonet. But they didn't wait.
+They dropped rifles and ran. But we ran so fast after them that we
+caught one or two in the second trench. I got down into that, heard a
+voice behind me, and found my two prisoners lying artful in a dug-out.
+They held up their hands as I turned. If they hadn't I doubt if I should
+have done anything to them. I didn't feel like it. I felt _friendly_.
+
+"Not all the Germans ran. Three or four stuck to their machine-guns
+until they got bayoneted. Both the trenches were frightfully smashed
+about, and in the first one there were little knots and groups of dead.
+We got to work at once shying the sandbags over from the old front of
+the trench to the parados. Our guns had never stopped all the time; they
+were now plastering the third line trenches. And almost at once the
+German shells began dropping into us. Of course they had the range to an
+inch. One didn't have any time to feel and think; one just set oneself
+with all one's energy to turn the trench over....
+
+"I don't remember that I helped or cared for a wounded man all the time,
+or felt anything about the dead except to step over them and not on
+them. I was just possessed by the idea that we had to get the trench
+into a sheltering state before they tried to come back. And then stick
+there. I just wanted to win, and there was nothing else in my mind....
+
+"They did try to come back, but not very much....
+
+"Then when I began to feel sure of having got hold of the trench for
+good, I began to realise just how tired I was and how high the sun had
+got. I began to look about me, and found most of the other men working
+just as hard as I had been doing. 'We've done it!' I said, and that was
+the first word I'd spoken since I told my two Germans to come out of it,
+and stuck a man with a wounded leg to watch them. 'It's a bit of All
+Right,' said Ortheris, knocking off also, and lighting a half-consumed
+cigarette. He had been wearing it behind his ear, I believe, ever since
+the charge. Against this occasion. He'd kept close up to me all the
+time, I realised. And then old Park turned up very cheerful with a weak
+bayonet jab in his forearm that he wanted me to rebandage. It was good
+to see him practically all right too.
+
+"'I took two prisoners,' I said, and everybody I spoke to I told that. I
+was fearfully proud of it.
+
+"I thought that if I could take two prisoners in my first charge I was
+going to be some soldier.
+
+"I had stood it all admirably. I didn't feel a bit shaken. I was as
+tough as anything. I'd seen death and killing, and it was all just
+hockey.
+
+"And then that confounded Ortheris must needs go and get killed.
+
+"The shell knocked me over, and didn't hurt me a bit. I was a little
+stunned, and some dirt was thrown over me, and when I got up on my knees
+I saw Jewell lying about six yards off--and his legs were all smashed
+about. Ugh! Pulped!
+
+"He looked amazed. 'Bloody,' he said, 'bloody.' He fixed his eyes on me,
+and suddenly grinned. You know we'd once had two fights about his saying
+'bloody,' I think I told you at the time, a fight and a return match,
+he couldn't box for nuts, but he stood up like a Briton, and it appealed
+now to his sense of humour that I should be standing there too dazed to
+protest at the old offence. 'I thought _you_ was done in,' he said. 'I'm
+in a mess--a bloody mess, ain't I? Like a stuck pig. Bloody--right
+enough. Bloody! I didn't know I 'ad it _in_ me.'
+
+"He looked at me and grinned with a sort of pale satisfaction in keeping
+up to the last--dying good Ortheris to the finish. I just stood up
+helpless in front of him, still rather dazed.
+
+"He said something about having a thundering thirst on him.
+
+"I really don't believe he felt any pain. He would have done if he had
+lived.
+
+"And then while I was fumbling with my water-bottle, he collapsed. He
+forgot all about Ortheris. Suddenly he said something that cut me all to
+ribbons. His face puckered up just like the face of a fretful child
+which refuses to go to bed. 'I didn't want to be aut of it,' he said
+petulantly. 'And I'm done!' And then--then he just looked discontented
+and miserable and died--right off. Turned his head a little way over. As
+if he was impatient at everything. Fainted--and fluttered out.
+
+"For a time I kept trying to get him to drink....
+
+"I couldn't believe he was dead....
+
+"And suddenly it was all different. I began to cry. Like a baby. I kept
+on with the water-bottle at his teeth long after I was convinced he was
+dead. I didn't want him to be aut of it! God knows how I didn't. I
+wanted my dear little Cockney cad back. Oh! most frightfully I wanted
+him back.
+
+"I shook him. I was like a scared child. I blubbered and howled
+things.... It's all different since he died.
+
+"My dear, dear Father, I am grieving and grieving--and it's altogether
+nonsense. And it's all mixed up in my mind with the mess I trod on. And
+it gets worse and worse. So that I don't seem to feel anything really,
+even for Teddy.
+
+"It's been just the last straw of all this hellish foolery....
+
+"If ever there was a bigger lie, my dear Daddy, than any other, it is
+that man is a reasonable creature....
+
+"War is just foolery--lunatic foolery--hell's foolery....
+
+"But, anyhow, your son is sound and well--if sorrowful and angry. We
+were relieved that night. And there are rumours that very soon we are to
+have a holiday and a refit. We lost rather heavily. We have been
+praised. But all along, Essex has done well. I can't reckon to get back
+yet, but there are such things as leave for eight-and-forty hours or so
+in England....
+
+"I shall be glad of that sort of turning round....
+
+"I'm tired. Oh! I'm tired....
+
+"I wanted to write all about Jewell to his mother or his sweetheart or
+some one; I wanted to wallow in his praises, to say all the things I
+really find now that I thought about him, but I haven't even had that
+satisfaction. He was a Poor Law child; he was raised in one of those
+awful places between Sutton and Banstead in Surrey. I've told you of all
+the sweethearting he had. 'Soldiers Three' was his Bible; he was always
+singing 'Tipperary,' and he never got the tune right nor learnt more
+than three lines of it. He laced all his talk with 'b----y'; it was his
+jewel, his ruby. But he had the pluck of a robin or a squirrel; I never
+knew him scared or anything but cheerful. Misfortunes, humiliations,
+only made him chatty. And he'd starve to have something to give away.
+
+"Well, well, this is the way of war, Daddy. This is what war is. Damn
+the Kaiser! Damn all fools.... Give my love to the Mother and the
+bruddykins and every one...."
+
+
+Section 19
+
+It was just a day or so over three weeks after this last letter from
+Hugh that Mr. Direck reappeared at Matching's Easy. He had had a trip to
+Holland--a trip that was as much a flight from Cissie's reproaches as a
+mission of inquiry. He had intended to go on into Belgium, where he had
+already been doing useful relief work under Mr. Hoover, but the
+confusion of his own feelings had checked him and brought him back.
+
+Mr. Direck's mind was in a perplexity only too common during the
+stresses of that tragic year. He was entangled in a paradox; like a
+large majority of Americans at that time his feelings were quite
+definitely pro-Ally, and like so many in that majority he had a very
+clear conviction that it would be wrong and impossible for the United
+States to take part in the war. His sympathies were intensely with the
+Dower House and its dependent cottage; he would have wept with generous
+emotion to see the Stars and Stripes interwoven with the three other
+great banners of red, white and blue that led the world against German
+imperialism and militarism, but for all that his mind would not march to
+that tune. Against all these impulses fought something very fundamental
+in Mr. Direck's composition, a preconception of America that had grown
+almost insensibly in his mind, the idea of America as a polity aloof
+from the Old World system, as a fresh start for humanity, as something
+altogether too fine and precious to be dragged into even the noblest of
+European conflicts. America was to be the beginning of the fusion of
+mankind, neither German nor British nor French nor in any way national.
+She was to be the great experiment in peace and reasonableness. She had
+to hold civilisation and social order out of this fray, to be a refuge
+for all those finer things that die under stress and turmoil; it was her
+task to maintain the standards of life and the claims of humanitarianism
+in the conquered province and the prisoners' compound, she had to be
+the healer and arbitrator, the remonstrance and not the smiting hand.
+Surely there were enough smiting hands.
+
+But this idea of an America judicial, remonstrating, and aloof, led him
+to a conclusion that scandalised him. If America will not, and should
+not use force in the ends of justice, he argued, then America has no
+right to make and export munitions of war. She must not trade in what
+she disavows. He had a quite exaggerated idea of the amount of munitions
+that America was sending to the Allies, he was inclined to believe that
+they were entirely dependent upon their transatlantic supplies, and so
+he found himself persuaded that the victory of the Allies and the honour
+of America were incompatible things. And--in spite of his ethical
+aloofness--he loved the Allies. He wanted them to win, and he wanted
+America to abandon a course that he believed was vitally necessary to
+their victory. It was an intellectual dilemma. He hid this
+self-contradiction from Matching's Easy with much the same feelings that
+a curate might hide a poisoned dagger at a tea-party....
+
+It was entirely against his habits of mind to hide anything--more
+particularly an entanglement with a difficult proposition--but he
+perceived quite clearly that neither Cecily nor Mr. Britling were really
+to be trusted to listen calmly to what, under happier circumstances,
+might be a profoundly interesting moral complication. Yet it was not in
+his nature to conceal; it was in his nature to state.
+
+And Cecily made things much more difficult. She was pitiless with him.
+She kept him aloof. "How can I let you make love to me," she said, "when
+our English men are all going to the war, when Teddy is a prisoner and
+Hugh is in the trenches. If I were a man--!"
+
+She couldn't be induced to see any case for America. England was
+fighting for freedom, and America ought to be beside her. "All the
+world ought to unite against this German wickedness," she said.
+
+"I'm doing all I can to help in Belgium," he protested. "Aren't I
+working? We've fed four million people."
+
+He had backbone, and he would not let her, he was resolved, bully him
+into a falsehood about his country. America was aloof. She was right to
+be aloof.... At the same time, Cecily's reproaches were unendurable. And
+he could feel he was drifting apart from her....
+
+_He_ couldn't make America go to war.
+
+In the quiet of his London hotel he thought it all out. He sat at a
+writing-table making notes of a perfectly lucid statement of the
+reasonable, balanced liberal American opinion. An instinct of caution
+determined him to test it first on Mr. Britling.
+
+But Mr. Britling realised his worst expectations. He was beyond
+listening.
+
+"I've not heard from my boy for more than three weeks," said Mr.
+Britling in the place of any salutation. "This morning makes
+three-and-twenty days without a letter."
+
+It seemed to Mr. Direck that Mr. Britling had suddenly grown ten years
+older. His face was more deeply lined; the colour and texture of his
+complexion had gone grey. He moved restlessly and badly; his nerves were
+manifestly unstrung.
+
+"It's intolerable that one should be subjected to this ghastly suspense.
+The boy isn't three hundred miles away."
+
+Mr. Direck made obvious inquiries.
+
+"Always before he's written--generally once a fortnight."
+
+They talked of Hugh for a time, but Mr. Britling was fitful and
+irritable and quite prepared to hold Mr. Direck accountable for the
+laxity of the War Office, the treachery of Bulgaria, the ambiguity of
+Roumania or any other barb that chanced to be sticking into his
+sensibilities. They lunched precariously. Then they went into the study
+to smoke.
+
+There Mr. Direck was unfortunate enough to notice a copy of that
+innocent American publication _The New Republic_, lying close to two or
+three numbers of _The Fatherland_, a pro-German periodical which at that
+time inflicted itself upon English writers with the utmost
+determination. Mr. Direck remarked that _The New Republic_ was an
+interesting effort on the part of "_la Jeunesse Américaine_." Mr.
+Britling regarded the interesting effort with a jaded, unloving eye.
+
+"You Americans," he said, "are the most extraordinary people in the
+world."
+
+"Our conditions are exceptional," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"You think they are," said Mr. Britling, and paused, and then began to
+deliver his soul about America in a discourse of accumulating
+bitterness. At first he reasoned and explained, but as he went on he
+lost self-control; he became dogmatic, he became denunciatory, he became
+abusive. He identified Mr. Direck more and more with his subject; he
+thrust the uncivil "You" more and more directly at him. He let his cigar
+go out, and flung it impatiently into the fire. As though America was
+responsible for its going out....
+
+Like many Britons Mr. Britling had that touch of patriotic feeling
+towards America which takes the form of impatient criticism. No one in
+Britain ever calls an American a foreigner. To see faults in Germany or
+Spain is to tap boundless fountains of charity; but the faults of
+America rankle in an English mind almost as much as the faults of
+England. Mr. Britling could explain away the faults of England readily
+enough; our Hanoverian monarchy, our Established Church and its
+deadening effect on education, our imperial obligations and the strain
+they made upon our supplies of administrative talent were all very
+serviceable for that purpose. But there in America was the old race,
+without Crown or Church or international embarrassment, and it was
+still falling short of splendid. His speech to Mr. Direck had the
+rancour of a family quarrel. Let me only give a few sentences that were
+to stick in Mr. Direck's memory.
+
+"You think you are out of it for good and all. So did we think. We were
+as smug as you are when France went down in '71.... Yours is only one
+further degree of insularity. You think this vacuous aloofness of yours
+is some sort of moral superiority. So did we, so did we....
+
+"It won't last you ten years if we go down....
+
+"Do you think that our disaster will leave the Atlantic for you? Do you
+fancy there is any Freedom of the Seas possible beyond such freedom as
+we maintain, except the freedom to attack you? For forty years the
+British fleet has guarded all America from European attack. Your Monroe
+doctrine skulks behind it now....
+
+"I'm sick of this high thin talk of yours about the war.... You are a
+nation of ungenerous onlookers--watching us throttle or be throttled.
+You gamble on our winning. And we shall win; we shall win. And you will
+profit. And when we have won a victory only one shade less terrible than
+defeat, then you think you will come in and tinker with our peace. Bleed
+us a little more to please your hyphenated patriots...."
+
+He came to his last shaft. "You talk of your New Ideals of Peace. You
+say that you are too proud to fight. But your business men in New York
+give the show away. There's a little printed card now in half the
+offices in New York that tells of the real pacificism of America.
+They're busy, you know. Trade's real good. And so as not to interrupt it
+they stick up this card: 'Nix on the war!' Think of it!--'Nix on the
+war!' Here is the whole fate of mankind at stake, and America's
+contribution is a little grumbling when the Germans sank the
+_Lusitania_, and no end of grumbling when we hold up a ship or two and
+some fool of a harbour-master makes an overcharge. Otherwise--'Nix on
+the war!'...
+
+"Well, let it be Nix on the war! Don't come here and talk to me! You who
+were searching registers a year ago to find your Essex kin. Let it be
+Nix! Explanations! What do I want with explanations? And"--he mocked his
+guest's accent and his guest's mode of thought--"dif'cult prap'sitions."
+
+He got up and stood irresolute. He knew he was being preposterously
+unfair to America, and outrageously uncivil to a trusting guest; he knew
+he had no business now to end the talk in this violent fashion. But it
+was an enormous relief. And to mend matters--_No!_ He was glad he'd said
+these things....
+
+He swung a shoulder to Mr. Direck, and walked out of the room....
+
+Mr. Direck heard him cross the hall and slam the door of the little
+parlour....
+
+Mr. Direck had been stirred deeply by the tragic indignation of this
+explosion, and the ring of torment in Mr. Britling's voice. He had stood
+up also, but he did not follow his host.
+
+"It's his boy," said Mr. Direck at last, confidentially to the
+writing-desk. "How can one argue with him? It's just hell for him...."
+
+
+Section 20
+
+Mr. Direck took his leave of Mrs. Britling, and went very slowly towards
+the little cottage. But he did not go to the cottage. He felt he would
+only find another soul in torment there.
+
+"What's the good of hanging round talking?" said Mr. Direck.
+
+He stopped at the stile in the lane, and sat thinking deeply. "Only one
+thing will convince her," he said.
+
+He held out his fingers. "First this," he whispered, "and then that.
+Yes."
+
+He went on as far as the bend from which one sees the cottage, and stood
+for a little time regarding it.
+
+He returned still more sorrowfully to the junction, and with every step
+he took it seemed to him that he would rather see Cecily angry and
+insulting than not see her at all.
+
+At the post office he stopped and wrote a letter-card.
+
+"Dear Cissie," he wrote. "I came down to-day to see you--and thought
+better of it. I'm going right off to find out about Teddy. Somehow I'll
+get that settled. I'll fly around and do that somehow if I have to go up
+to the German front to do it. And when I've got that settled I've got
+something else in my mind--well, it will wipe out all this little
+trouble that's got so big between us about neutrality. And I love you
+dearly, Cissie."
+
+That was all the card would hold.
+
+
+Section 21
+
+And then as if it were something that every one in the Dower House had
+been waiting for, came the message that Hugh had been killed.
+
+The telegram was brought up by a girl in a pinafore instead of the boy
+of the old dispensation, for boys now were doing the work of youths and
+youths the work of the men who had gone to the war.
+
+Mr. Britling was standing at the front door; he had been surveying the
+late October foliage, touched by the warm light of the afternoon, when
+the messenger appeared. He opened the telegram, hoping as he had hoped
+when he opened any telegram since Hugh had gone to the front that it
+would not contain the exact words he read; that it would say wounded,
+that at the worst it would say "missing," that perhaps it might even
+tell of some pleasant surprise, a brief return to home such as the last
+letter had foreshadowed. He read the final, unqualified statement, the
+terse regrets. He stood quite still for a moment or so, staring at the
+words....
+
+It was a mile and a quarter from the post office to the Dower House, and
+it was always his custom to give telegraph messengers who came to his
+house twopence, and he wanted very much to get rid of the telegraph
+girl, who stood expectantly before him holding her red bicycle. He felt
+now very sick and strained; he had a conviction that if he did not by an
+effort maintain his bearing cool and dry he would howl aloud. He felt in
+his pocket for money; there were some coppers and a shilling. He pulled
+it all out together and stared at it.
+
+He had an absurd conviction that this ought to be a sixpenny telegram.
+The thing worried him. He wanted to give the brat sixpence, and he had
+only threepence and a shilling, and he didn't know what to do and his
+brain couldn't think. It would be a shocking thing to give her a
+shilling, and he couldn't somehow give just coppers for so important a
+thing as Hugh's death. Then all this problem vanished and he handed the
+child the shilling. She stared at him, inquiring, incredulous. "Is there
+a reply, Sir, please?"
+
+"No," he said, "that's for you. All of it.... This is a peculiar sort of
+telegram.... It's news of importance...."
+
+As he said this he met her eyes, and had a sudden persuasion that she
+knew exactly what it was the telegram had told him, and that she was
+shocked at this gala-like treatment of such terrible news. He hesitated,
+feeling that he had to say something else, that he was socially
+inadequate, and then he decided that at any cost he must get his face
+away from her staring eyes. She made no movement to turn away. She
+seemed to be taking him in, recording him, for repetition, greedily,
+with every fibre of her being.
+
+He stepped past her into the garden, and instantly forgot about her
+existence....
+
+
+Section 22
+
+He had been thinking of this possibility for the last few weeks almost
+continuously, and yet now that it had come to him he felt that he had
+never thought about it before, that he must go off alone by himself to
+envisage this monstrous and terrible fact, without distraction or
+interruption.
+
+He saw his wife coming down the alley between the roses.
+
+He was wrenched by emotions as odd and unaccountable as the emotions of
+adolescence. He had exactly the same feeling now that he had had when in
+his boyhood some unpleasant admission had to be made to his parents. He
+felt he could not go through a scene with her yet, that he could not
+endure the task of telling her, of being observed. He turned abruptly to
+his left. He walked away as if he had not seen her, across his lawn
+towards the little summer-house upon a knoll that commanded the high
+road. She called to him, but he did not answer....
+
+He would not look towards her, but for a time all his senses were alert
+to hear whether she followed him. Safe in the summer-house he could
+glance back.
+
+It was all right. She was going into the house.
+
+He drew the telegram from his pocket again furtively, almost guiltily,
+and re-read it. He turned it over and read it again....
+
+_Killed._
+
+Then his own voice, hoarse and strange to his ears, spoke his thought.
+
+"My God! how unutterably silly.... Why did I let him go? Why did I let
+him go?"
+
+
+Section 23
+
+Mrs. Britling did not learn of the blow that had struck them until after
+dinner that night. She was so accustomed to ignore his incomprehensible
+moods that she did not perceive that there was anything tragic about
+him until they sat at table together. He seemed heavy and sulky and
+disposed to avoid her, but that sort of moodiness was nothing very
+strange to her. She knew that things that seemed to her utterly trivial,
+the reading of political speeches in _The Times_, little comments on
+life made in the most casual way, mere movements, could so avert him.
+She had cultivated a certain disregard of such fitful darknesses. But at
+the dinner-table she looked up, and was stabbed to the heart to see a
+haggard white face and eyes of deep despair regarding her ambiguously.
+
+"Hugh!" she said, and then with a chill intimation, "_What is it?_"
+
+They looked at each other. His face softened and winced.
+
+"My Hugh," he whispered, and neither spoke for some seconds.
+
+"_Killed_," he said, and suddenly stood up whimpering, and fumbled with
+his pocket.
+
+It seemed he would never find what he sought. It came at last, a
+crumpled telegram. He threw it down before her, and then thrust his
+chair back clumsily and went hastily out of the room. She heard him sob.
+She had not dared to look at his face again.
+
+"Oh!" she cried, realising that an impossible task had been thrust upon
+her.
+
+"But what can I _say_ to him?" she said, with the telegram in her hand.
+
+The parlourmaid came into the room.
+
+"Clear the dinner away!" said Mrs. Britling, standing at her place.
+"Master Hugh is killed...." And then wailing: "Oh! what can I _say_?
+What can I _say_?"
+
+
+Section 24
+
+That night Mrs. Britling made the supreme effort of her life to burst
+the prison of self-consciousness and inhibition in which she was
+confined. Never before in all her life had she so desired to be
+spontaneous and unrestrained; never before had she so felt herself
+hampered by her timidity, her self-criticism, her deeply ingrained habit
+of never letting herself go. She was rent by reflected distress. It
+seemed to her that she would be ready to give her life and the whole
+world to be able to comfort her husband now. And she could conceive no
+gesture of comfort. She went out of the dining-room into the hall and
+listened. She went very softly upstairs until she came to the door of
+her husband's room. There she stood still. She could hear no sound from
+within. She put out her hand and turned the handle of the door a little
+way, and then she was startled by the loudness of the sound it made and
+at her own boldness. She withdrew her hand, and then with a gesture of
+despair, with a face of white agony, she flitted along the corridor to
+her own room.
+
+Her mind was beaten to the ground by this catastrophe, of which to this
+moment she had never allowed herself to think. She had never allowed
+herself to think of it. The figure of her husband, like some pitiful
+beast, wounded and bleeding, filled her mind. She gave scarcely a
+thought to Hugh. "Oh, what can I _do_ for him?" she asked herself,
+sitting down before her unlit bedroom fire.... "What can I say or do?"
+
+She brooded until she shivered, and then she lit her fire....
+
+It was late that night and after an eternity of resolutions and doubts
+and indecisions that Mrs. Britling went to her husband. He was sitting
+close up to the fire with his chin upon his hands, waiting for her; he
+felt that she would come to him, and he was thinking meanwhile of Hugh
+with a slow unprogressive movement of the mind. He showed by a movement
+that he heard her enter the room, but he did not turn to look at her. He
+shrank a little from her approach.
+
+She came and stood beside him. She ventured to touch him very softly,
+and to stroke his head. "My dear," she said. "My poor dear!
+
+"It is so dreadful for you," she said, "it is so dreadful for you. I
+know how you loved him...."
+
+He spread his hands over his face and became very still.
+
+"My poor dear!" she said, still stroking his hair, "my poor dear!"
+
+And then she went on saying "poor dear," saying it presently because
+there was nothing more had come into her mind. She desired supremely to
+be his comfort, and in a little while she was acting comfort so poorly
+that she perceived her own failure. And that increased her failure, and
+that increased her paralysing sense of failure....
+
+And suddenly her stroking hand ceased. Suddenly the real woman cried out
+from her.
+
+"I can't _reach_ you!" she cried aloud. "I can't reach you. I would do
+anything.... You! You with your heart half broken...."
+
+She turned towards the door. She moved clumsily, she was blinded by her
+tears.
+
+Mr. Britling uncovered his face. He stood up astonished, and then pity
+and pitiful understanding came storming across his grief. He made a step
+and took her in his arms. "My dear," he said, "don't go from me...."
+
+She turned to him weeping, and put her arms about his neck, and he too
+was weeping.
+
+"My poor wife!" he said, "my dear wife. If it were not for you--I think
+I could kill myself to-night. Don't cry, my dear. Don't, don't cry. You
+do not know how you comfort me. You do not know how you help me."
+
+He drew her to him; he put her cheek against his own....
+
+His heart was so sore and wounded that he could not endure that another
+human being should go wretched. He sat down in his chair and drew her
+upon his knees, and said everything he could think of to console her
+and reassure her and make her feel that she was of value to him. He
+spoke of every pleasant aspect of their lives, of every aspect, except
+that he never named that dear pale youth who waited now.... He could
+wait a little longer....
+
+At last she went from him.
+
+"Good night," said Mr. Britling, and took her to the door. "It was very
+dear of you to come and comfort me," he said....
+
+
+Section 25
+
+He closed the door softly behind her.
+
+The door had hardly shut upon her before he forgot her. Instantly he was
+alone again, utterly alone. He was alone in an empty world....
+
+Loneliness struck him like a blow. He had dependents, he had cares. He
+had never a soul to whom he might weep....
+
+For a time he stood beside his open window. He looked at the bed--but no
+sleep he knew would come that night--until the sleep of exhaustion came.
+He looked at the bureau at which he had so often written. But the
+writing there was a shrivelled thing....
+
+This room was unendurable. He must go out. He turned to the window, and
+outside was a troublesome noise of night-jars and a distant roaring of
+stags, black trees, blacknesses, the sky clear and remote with a great
+company of stars.... The stars seemed attentive. They stirred and yet
+were still. It was as if they were the eyes of watchers. He would go out
+to them....
+
+Very softly he went towards the passage door, and still more softly felt
+his way across the landing and down the staircase. Once or twice he
+paused to listen.
+
+He let himself out with elaborate precautions....
+
+Across the dark he went, and suddenly his boy was all about him,
+playing, climbing the cedars, twisting miraculously about the lawn on a
+bicycle, discoursing gravely upon his future, lying on the grass,
+breathing very hard and drawing preposterous caricatures. Once again
+they walked side by side up and down--it was athwart this very
+spot--talking gravely but rather shyly....
+
+And here they had stood a little awkwardly, before the boy went in to
+say good-bye to his stepmother and go off with his father to the
+station....
+
+"I will work to-morrow again," whispered Mr. Britling, "but
+to-night--to-night.... To-night is yours.... Can you hear me, can you
+hear? Your father ... who had counted on you...."
+
+
+Section 26
+
+He went into the far corner of the hockey paddock, and there he moved
+about for a while and then stood for a long time holding the fence with
+both hands and staring blankly into the darkness. At last he turned
+away, and went stumbling and blundering towards the rose garden. A spray
+of creeper tore his face and distressed him. He thrust it aside
+fretfully, and it scratched his hand. He made his way to the seat in the
+arbour, and sat down and whispered a little to himself, and then became
+very still with his arm upon the back of the seat and his head upon his
+arm.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+THE TESTAMENT OF MATCHING'S EASY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FIRST
+
+MRS. TEDDY GOES FOR A WALK
+
+
+Section 1
+
+All over England now, where the livery of mourning had been a rare thing
+to see, women and children went about in the October sunshine in new
+black clothes. Everywhere one met these fresh griefs, mothers who had
+lost their sons, women who had lost their men, lives shattered and hopes
+destroyed. The dyers had a great time turning coloured garments to
+black. And there was also a growing multitude of crippled and disabled
+men. It was so in England, much more was it so in France and Russia, in
+all the countries of the Allies, and in Germany and Austria; away into
+Asia Minor and Egypt, in India and Japan and Italy there was mourning,
+the world was filled with loss and mourning and impoverishment and
+distress.
+
+And still the mysterious powers that required these things of mankind
+were unappeased, and each day added its quota of heart-stabbing messages
+and called for new mourning, and sent home fresh consignments of broken
+and tormented men.
+
+Some clung to hopes that became at last almost more terrible than black
+certainties....
+
+Mrs. Teddy went about the village in a coloured dress bearing herself
+confidently. Teddy had been listed now as "missing, since reported
+killed," and she had had two letters from his comrades. They said Teddy
+had been left behind in the ruins of a farm with one or two other
+wounded, and that when the Canadians retook the place these wounded had
+all been found butchered. None had been found alive. Afterwards the
+Canadians had had to fall back. Mr. Direck had been at great pains to
+hunt up wounded men from Teddy's company, and also any likely Canadians
+both at the base hospital in France and in London, and to get what he
+could from them. He had made it a service to Cissie. Only one of his
+witnesses was quite clear about Teddy, but he, alas! was dreadfully
+clear. There had been only one lieutenant among the men left behind, he
+said, and obviously that must have been Teddy. "He had been prodded in
+half-a-dozen places. His head was nearly severed from his body."
+
+Direck came down and told the story to Cissie. "Shall I tell it to her?"
+he asked.
+
+Cissie thought. "Not yet," she said....
+
+Letty's face changed in those pitiful weeks when she was denying death.
+She lost her pretty colour, she became white; her mouth grew hard and
+her eyes had a hard brightness. She never wept, she never gave a sign of
+sorrow, and she insisted upon talking about Teddy, in a dry offhand
+voice. Constantly she referred to his final return. "Teddy," she said,
+"will be surprised at this," or "Teddy will feel sold when he sees how I
+have altered that."
+
+"Presently we shall see his name in a list of prisoners," she said. "He
+is a wounded prisoner in Germany."
+
+She adopted that story. She had no justification for it, but she would
+hear no doubts upon it. She presently began to prepare parcels to send
+him. "They want almost everything," she told people. "They are treated
+abominably. He has not been able to write to me yet, but I do not think
+I ought to wait until he asks me."
+
+Cissie was afraid to interfere with this.
+
+After a time Letty grew impatient at the delay in getting any address
+and took her first parcel to the post office.
+
+"Unless you know what prison he is at," said the postmistress.
+
+"Pity!" said Letty. "I don't know that. Must it wait for that? I
+thought the Germans were so systematic that it didn't matter."
+
+The postmistress made tedious explanations that Letty did not seem to
+hear. She stared straight in front of her at nothing. Then in a pause in
+the conversation she picked up her parcel.
+
+"It's tiresome for him to have to wait," she said. "But it can't be long
+before I know."
+
+She took the parcel back to the cottage.
+
+"After all," she said, "it gives us time to get the better sort of
+throat lozenges for him--the sort the syndicate shop doesn't keep."
+
+She put the parcel conspicuously upon the dresser in the kitchen where
+it was most in the way, and set herself to make a jersey for Teddy
+against the coming of the cold weather.
+
+But one night the white mask fell for a moment from her face.
+
+Cissie and she had been sitting in silence before the fire. She had been
+knitting--she knitted very badly--and Cissie had been pretending to
+read, and had been watching her furtively. Cissie eyed the slow,
+toilsome growth of the slack woolwork for a time, and the touch of angry
+effort in every stroke of the knitting needles. Then she was stirred to
+remonstrance.
+
+"Poor Letty!" she said very softly. "Suppose after all, he is dead?"
+
+Letty met her with a pitiless stare.
+
+"He is a prisoner," she said. "Isn't that enough? Why do you jab at me
+by saying that? A wounded prisoner. Isn't that enough despicable
+trickery for God even to play on Teddy--our Teddy? To the very last
+moment he shall not be dead. Until the war is over. Until six months
+after the war....
+
+"I will tell you why, Cissie...."
+
+She leant across the table and pointed her remarks with her knitting
+needles, speaking in a tone of reasonable remonstrance. "You see," she
+said, "if people like Teddy are to be killed, then all our ideas that
+life is meant for, honesty and sweetness and happiness, are wrong, and
+this world is just a place of devils; just a dirty cruel hell. Getting
+born would be getting damned. And so one must not give way to that idea,
+however much it may seem likely that he is dead....
+
+"You see, if he _is_ dead, then Cruelty is the Law, and some one must
+pay me for his death.... Some one must pay me.... I shall wait for six
+months after the war, dear, and then I shall go off to Germany and learn
+my way about there. And I will murder some German. Not just a common
+German, but a German who belongs to the guilty kind. A sacrifice. It
+ought, for instance, to be comparatively easy to kill some of the
+children of the Crown Prince or some of the Bavarian princes. I shall
+prefer German children. I shall sacrifice them to Teddy. It ought not to
+be difficult to find people who can be made directly responsible, the
+people who invented the poison gas, for instance, and kill them, or to
+kill people who are dear to them. Or necessary to them.... Women can do
+that so much more easily than men....
+
+"That perhaps is the only way in which wars of this kind will ever be
+brought to an end. By women insisting on killing the kind of people who
+make them. Rooting them out. By a campaign of pursuit and assassination
+that will go on for years and years after the war itself is over....
+Murder is such a little gentle punishment for the crime of war.... It
+would be hardly more than a reproach for what has happened. Falling like
+snow. Death after death. Flake by flake. This prince. That statesman.
+The count who writes so fiercely for war.... That is what I am going to
+do. If Teddy is really dead.... We women were ready enough a year or so
+ago to starve and die for the Vote, and that was quite a little thing in
+comparison with this business.... Don't you see what I mean? It's so
+plain and sensible, Cissie. Whenever a man sits and thinks whether he
+will make a war or not, then he will think too of women, women with
+daggers, bombs; of a vengeance that will never tire nor rest; of
+consecrated patient women ready to start out upon a pilgrimage that will
+only end with his death.... I wouldn't hurt these war makers. No. In
+spite of the poison gas. In spite of trench feet and the men who have
+been made blind and the wounded who have lain for days, dying slowly in
+the wet. Women ought not to hurt. But I would kill. Like killing
+dangerous vermin. It would go on year by year. Balkan kings, German
+princes, chancellors, they would have schemed for so much--and come to
+just a rattle in the throat.... And if presently other kings and
+emperors began to prance about and review armies, they too would go....
+
+"Until all the world understood that women would not stand war any more
+forever....
+
+"Of course I shall do something of the sort. What else is there to do
+now for me?"
+
+Letty's eyes were bright and intense, but her voice was soft and
+subdued. She went on after a pause in the same casual voice. "You see
+now, Cissie, why I cling to the idea that Teddy is alive. If Teddy is
+alive, then even if he is wounded, he will get some happiness out of
+it--and all this won't be--just rot. If he is dead then everything is so
+desperately silly and cruel from top to bottom--"
+
+She smiled wanly to finish her sentence.
+
+"But, Letty!" said Cissie, "there is the boy!"
+
+"I shall leave the boy to you. Compared with Teddy I don't care _that_
+for the boy. I never did. What is the good of pretending? Some women are
+made like that."
+
+She surveyed her knitting. "Poor stitches," she said....
+
+"I'm hard stuff, Cissie. I take after mother more than father. Teddy is
+my darling. All the tenderness of my life is Teddy. If it goes, it
+goes.... I won't crawl about the world like all these other snivelling
+widows. If they've killed my man I shall kill. Blood for blood and loss
+for loss. I shall get just as close to the particular Germans who made
+this war as I can, and I shall kill them and theirs....
+
+"The Women's Association for the Extirpation of the whole breed of War
+Lords," she threw out. "If I _do_ happen to hurt--does it matter?"
+
+She looked at her sister's shocked face and smiled again.
+
+"You think I go about staring at nothing," she remarked.... "Not a bit
+of it! I have been planning all sorts of things.... I have been thinking
+how I could get to Germany.... Or one might catch them in
+Switzerland.... I've had all sorts of plans. They can't go guarded for
+ever....
+
+"Oh, it makes me despise humanity to see how many soldiers and how few
+assassins there are in the world.... After the things we have seen. If
+people did their duty by the dagger there wouldn't be such a thing as a
+War Lord in the world. Not one.... The Kaiser and his sons and his sons'
+sons would know nothing but fear now for all their lives. Fear would
+only cease to pursue as the coffin went down into the grave. Fear by
+sea, fear by land, for the vessel he sailed in, the train he travelled
+in, fear when he slept for the death in his dreams, fear when he waked
+for the death in every shadow; fear in every crowd, fear whenever he was
+alone. Fear would stalk him through the trees, hide in the corner of the
+staircase; make all his food taste perplexingly, so that he would want
+to spit it out...."
+
+She sat very still brooding on that idea for a time, and then stood up.
+
+"What nonsense one talks!" she cried, and yawned. "I wonder why poor
+Teddy doesn't send me a post card or something to tell me his address. I
+tell you what I _am_ afraid of sometimes about him, Cissie."
+
+"Yes?" said Cissie.
+
+"Loss of memory. Suppose a beastly lump of shell or something whacked
+him on the head.... I had a dream of him looking strange about the eyes
+and not knowing me. That, you know, really _may_ have happened.... It
+would be beastly, of course...."
+
+Cissie's eyes were critical, but she had nothing ready to say.
+
+There were some moments of silence.
+
+"Oh! bed," said Letty. "Though I shall just lie scheming."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+Cissie lay awake that night thinking about her sister as if she had
+never thought about her before.
+
+She began to weigh the concentrated impressions of a thousand memories.
+She and her sister were near in age; they knew each other with an
+extreme intimacy, and yet it seemed to Cissie that night as though she
+did not know Letty at all. A year ago she would have been certain she
+knew everything about her. But the old familiar Letty, with the bright
+complexion, and the wicked eye, with her rebellious schoolgirl
+insistence upon the beautifulness of "Boof'l young men," and her frank
+and glowing passion for Teddy, with her delight in humorous
+mystifications and open-air exercise and all the sunshine and laughter
+of life, this sister Letty, who had been so satisfactory and complete
+and final, had been thrust aside like a mask. Cissie no longer knew her
+sister's eyes. Letty's hand had become thin and unfamiliar and a little
+wrinkled; she was sharp-featured and thin-lipped; her acts, which had
+once been predictable, were incomprehensible, and Cissie was thrown back
+upon speculations. In their schooldays Letty had had a streak of intense
+sensibility; she had been easily moved to tears. But never once had she
+wept or given any sign of weeping since Teddy's name had appeared in the
+casualty list.... What was the strength of this tragic tension? How far
+would it carry her? Was Letty really capable of becoming a Charlotte
+Corday? Of carrying out a scheme of far-seeing vengeance, of making her
+way through long months and years nearer and nearer to revenge?
+
+Were such revenges possible?
+
+Would people presently begin to murder the makers of the Great War? What
+a strange thing it would be in history if so there came a punishment and
+end to the folly of kings!
+
+Only a little while ago Cissie's imagination might have been captured by
+so romantic a dream. She was still but a year or so out of the stage of
+melodrama. But she was out of it. She was growing up now to a subtler
+wisdom. People, she was beginning to realise, do not do these simple
+things. They make vows of devotion and they are not real vows of
+devotion; they love--quite honestly--and qualify. There are no great
+revenges but only little mean ones; no life-long vindications except the
+unrelenting vengeance of the law. There is no real concentration of
+people's lives anywhere such as romance demands. There is change, there
+is forgetfulness. Everywhere there is dispersal. Even to the tragic
+story of Teddy would come the modifications of time. Even to the
+wickedness of the German princes would presently be added some
+conflicting aspects. Could Letty keep things for years in her mind, hard
+and terrible, as they were now? Surely they would soften; other things
+would overlay them....
+
+There came a rush of memories of Letty in a dozen schoolgirl adventures,
+times when she had ventured, and times when she had failed; Letty
+frightened, Letty vexed, Letty launching out to great enterprises, going
+high and hard and well for a time, and then failing. She had seen Letty
+snivelling and dirty; Letty shamed and humiliated. She knew her Letty to
+the soul. Poor Letty! Poor dear Letty! With a sudden clearness of vision
+Cissie realised what was happening in her sister's mind. All this tense
+scheming of revenges was the imaginative play with which Letty warded
+off the black alternative to her hope; it was not strength, it was
+weakness. It was a form of giving way. She could not face starkly the
+simple fact of Teddy's death. That was too much for her. So she was
+building up this dream of a mission of judgment against the day when she
+could resist the facts no longer. She was already persuaded, only she
+would not be persuaded until her dream was ready. If this state of
+suspense went on she might establish her dream so firmly that it would
+at last take complete possession of her mind. And by that time also she
+would have squared her existence at Matching's Easy with the elaboration
+of her reverie.
+
+She would go about the place then, fancying herself preparing for this
+tremendous task she would never really do; she would study German maps;
+she would read the papers about German statesmen and rulers; perhaps she
+would even make weak attempts to obtain a situation in Switzerland or in
+Germany. Perhaps she would buy a knife or a revolver. Perhaps presently
+she would begin to hover about Windsor or Sandringham when peace was
+made, and the German cousins came visiting again....
+
+Into Cissie's mind came the image of the thing that might be; Letty,
+shabby, draggled, with her sharp bright prettiness become haggard, an
+assassin dreamer, still dependent on Mr. Britling, doing his work rather
+badly, in a distraught unpunctual fashion.
+
+She must be told, she must be convinced soon, or assuredly she would
+become an eccentric, a strange character, a Matching's Easy Miss
+Flite....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+Cissie could think more clearly of Letty's mind than of her own.
+
+She herself was in a tangle. She had grown to be very fond of Mr.
+Direck, and to have a profound trust and confidence in him, and her
+fondness seemed able to find no expression at all except a constant
+girding at his and America's avoidance of war. She had fallen in love
+with him when he was wearing fancy dress; she was a young woman with a
+stronger taste for body and colour than she supposed; what indeed she
+resented about him, though she did not know it, was that he seemed never
+disposed to carry the spirit of fancy dress into everyday life. To begin
+with he had touched both her imagination and senses, and she wanted him
+to go on doing that. Instead of which he seemed lapsing more and more
+into reiterated assurances of devotion and the flat competent discharge
+of humanitarian duties. Always nowadays he was trying to persuade her
+that what he was doing was the right and honourable thing for him to do;
+what he did not realise, what indeed she did not realise, was the
+exasperation his rightness and reasonableness produced in her. When he
+saw he exasperated her he sought very earnestly to be righter and
+reasonabler and more plainly and demonstrably right and reasonable than
+ever.
+
+Withal, as she felt and perceived, he was such a good thing, such a very
+good thing; so kind, so trustworthy, with a sort of slow strength, with
+a careful honesty, a big good childishness, a passion for fairness. And
+so helpless in her hands. She could lash him and distress him. Yet she
+could not shake his slowly formed convictions.
+
+When Cissie had dreamt of the lover that fate had in store for her in
+her old romantic days, he was to be _perfect_ always, he and she were
+always to be absolutely in the right (and, if the story needed it, the
+world in the wrong). She had never expected to find herself tied by her
+affections to a man with whom she disagreed, and who went contrary to
+her standards, very much as if she was lashed on the back of a very nice
+elephant that would wince to but not obey the goad....
+
+So she nagged him and taunted him, and would hear no word of his case.
+And he wanted dreadfully to discuss his case. He felt that the point of
+conscience about the munitions was particularly fine and difficult. He
+wished she would listen and enter into it more. But she thought with
+that more rapid English flash which is not so much thinking as feeling.
+He loved that flash in her in spite of his persuasion of its injustice.
+
+Her thought that he ought to go to the war made him feel like a
+renegade; but her claim that he was somehow still English held him in
+spite of his reason. In the midst of such perplexities he was glad to
+find one neutral task wherein he could find himself whole-heartedly with
+and for Cissie.
+
+He hunted up the evidence of Teddy's fate with a devoted pertinacity.
+
+And in the meanwhile the other riddle resolved itself. He had had a
+certain idea in his mind for some time. He discovered one day that it
+was an inspiration. He could keep his conscientious objection about
+America, and still take a line that would satisfy Cissie. He took it.
+
+When he came down to Matching's Easy at her summons to bear his
+convincing witness of Teddy's fate, he came in an unwonted costume. It
+was a costume so wonderful in his imagination that it seemed to cry
+aloud, to sound like a trumpet as he went through London to Liverpool
+Street station; it was a costume like an international event; it was a
+costume that he felt would blare right away to Berlin. And yet it was a
+costume so commonplace, so much the usual wear now, that Cissie, meeting
+him at the station and full of the thought of Letty's trouble, did not
+remark it, felt indeed rather than observed that he was looking more
+strong and handsome than he had ever done since he struck upon her
+imagination in the fantastic wrap that Teddy had found for him in the
+merry days when there was no death in the world. And Letty too,
+resistant, incalculable, found no wonder in the wonderful suit.
+
+He bore his testimony. It was the queer halting telling of a
+patched-together tale....
+
+"I suppose," said Letty, "if I tell you now that I don't believe that
+that officer was Teddy you will think I am cracked.... But I don't."
+
+She sat staring straight before her for a time after saying this. Then
+suddenly she got up and began taking down her hat and coat from the peg
+behind the kitchen door. The hanging strap of the coat was twisted and
+she struggled with it petulantly until she tore it.
+
+"Where are you going?" cried Cissie.
+
+Letty's voice over her shoulder was the harsh voice of a scolding woman.
+
+"I'm going out--anywhere." She turned, coat in hand. "Can't I go out if
+I like?" she asked. "It's a beautiful day.... Mustn't I go out?... I
+suppose you think I ought to take in what you have told me in a moment.
+Just smile and say '_Indeed!_' ... Abandoned!--while his men retreated!
+How jolly! And then not think of it any more.... Besides, I must go out.
+You two want to be left together. You want to canoodle. Do it while you
+can!"
+
+Then she put on coat and hat, jamming her hat down on her head, and said
+something that Cissie did not immediately understand.
+
+"_He'll_ have his turn in the trenches soon enough. Now that he's made
+up his mind.... He might have done it sooner...."
+
+She turned her back as though she had forgotten them. She stood for a
+moment as though her feet were wooden, not putting her feet as she
+usually put her feet. She took slow, wide, unsure steps. She went
+out--like something that is mortally injured and still walks--into the
+autumnal sunshine. She left the door wide open behind her.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+And Cissie, with eyes full of distress for her sister, had still to
+grasp the fact that Direck was wearing a Canadian uniform....
+
+He stood behind her, ashamed that in such a moment this fact and its
+neglect by every one could be so vivid in his mind.
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Cissie's estimate of her sister's psychology had been just. The reverie
+of revenge had not yet taken a grip upon Letty's mind sufficiently
+strong to meet the challenge of this conclusive evidence of Teddy's
+death. She walked out into a world of sunshine now almost completely
+convinced that Teddy was dead, and she knew quite well that her dream of
+some dramatic and terrible vindication had gone from her. She knew that
+in truth she could do nothing of that sort....
+
+She walked out with a set face and eyes that seemed unseeing, and yet it
+was as if some heavy weight had been lifted from her shoulders. It was
+over; there was no more to hope for and there was nothing more to fear.
+She would have been shocked to realise that her mind was relieved.
+
+She wanted to be alone. She wanted to be away from every eye. She was
+like some creature that after a long nightmare incubation is at last
+born into a clear, bleak day. She had to feel herself; she had to
+stretch her mind in this cheerless sunshine, this new world, where there
+was to be no more Teddy and no real revenge nor compensation for Teddy.
+Teddy was past....
+
+Hitherto she had had an angry sense of being deprived of Teddy--almost
+as though he were keeping away from her. Now, there was no more Teddy to
+be deprived of....
+
+She went through the straggling village, and across the fields to the
+hillside that looks away towards Mertonsome and its steeple. And where
+the hill begins to fall away she threw herself down under the hedge by
+the path, near by the stile into the lane, and lay still. She did not so
+much think as remain blank, waiting for the beginning of impressions....
+
+It was as it were a blank stare at the world....
+
+She did not know if it was five minutes or half an hour later that she
+became aware that some one was looking at her. She turned with a start,
+and discovered the Reverend Dimple with one foot on the stile, and an
+expression of perplexity and consternation upon his chubby visage.
+
+Instantly she understood. Already on four different occasions since
+Teddy's disappearance she had seen the good man coming towards her,
+always with a manifest decision, always with the same faltering doubt as
+now. Often in their happy days had she and Teddy discussed him and
+derided him and rejoiced over him. They had agreed he was as good as
+Jane Austen's Mr. Collins. He really was very like Mr. Collins, except
+that he was plumper. And now, it was as if he was transparent to her
+hard defensive scrutiny. She knew he was impelled by his tradition, by
+his sense of fitness, by his respect for his calling, to offer her his
+ministrations and consolations, to say his large flat amiabilities over
+her and pat her kindly with his hands. And she knew too that he dreaded
+her. She knew that the dear old humbug knew at the bottom of his heart
+quite certainly that he was a poor old humbug, and that she was in his
+secret. And at the bottom of his heart he found himself too honest to
+force his poor platitudes upon any who would not be glad of them. If she
+could have been glad of them he would have had no compunction. He was a
+man divided against himself; failing to carry through his rich
+pretences, dismayed.
+
+He had been taking his afternoon "constitutional." He had discovered her
+beyond the stile just in time to pull up. Then had come a fatal, a
+preposterous hesitation. She stared at him now, with hard,
+expressionless eyes.
+
+He stared back at her, until his plump pink face was all consternation.
+He was extraordinarily distressed. It was as if a thousand unspoken
+things had been said between them.
+
+"No wish," he said, "intrude."
+
+If he had had the certain balm, how gladly would he have given it!
+
+He broke the spell by stepping back into the lane. He made a gesture
+with his hands, as if he would have wrung them. And then he had fled
+down the lane--almost at a run.
+
+"Po' girl," he shouted. "Po' girl," and left her staring.
+
+Staring--and then she laughed.
+
+This was good. This was the sort of thing one could tell Teddy, when at
+last he came back and she could tell him anything. And then she realised
+again; there was no more Teddy, there would be no telling. And suddenly
+she fell weeping.
+
+"Oh, Teddy, Teddy," she cried through her streaming tears. "How could
+you leave me? How can I bear it?"
+
+Never a tear had she shed since the news first came, and now she could
+weep, she could weep her grief out. She abandoned herself unreservedly
+to this blessed relief....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+There comes an end to weeping at last, and Letty lay still, in the red
+light of the sinking sun.
+
+She lay so still that presently a little foraging robin came dirting
+down to the grass not ten yards away and stopped and looked at her. And
+then it came a hop or so nearer.
+
+She had been lying in a state of passive abandonment, her swollen wet
+eyes open, regardless of everything. But those quick movements caught
+her back to attention. She began to watch the robin, and to note how it
+glanced sidelong at her and appeared to meditate further approaches. She
+made an almost imperceptible movement, and straightway the little
+creature was in a projecting spray of berried hawthorn overhead.
+
+Her tear-washed mind became vaguely friendly. With an unconscious
+comfort it focussed down to the robin. She rolled over, sat up, and
+imitated his friendly "cheep."
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Presently she became aware of footsteps rustling through the grass
+towards her.
+
+She looked over her shoulder and discovered Mr. Britling approaching by
+the field path. He looked white and tired and listless, even his
+bristling hair and moustache conveyed his depression; he was dressed in
+an old tweed knickerbocker suit and carrying a big atlas and some
+papers. He had an effect of hesitation in his approach. It was as if he
+wanted to talk to her and doubted her reception for him.
+
+He spoke without any preface. "Direck has told you?" he said, standing
+over her.
+
+She answered with a sob.
+
+"I was afraid it was so, and yet I did not believe it," said Mr.
+Britling. "Until now."
+
+He hesitated as if he would go on, and then he knelt down on the grass a
+little way from her and seated himself. There was an interval of
+silence.
+
+"At first it hurts like the devil," he said at last, looking away at
+Mertonsome spire and speaking as if he spoke to no one in particular.
+"And then it hurts. It goes on hurting.... And one can't say much to any
+one...."
+
+He said no more for a time. But the two of them comforted one another,
+and knew that they comforted each other. They had a common feeling of
+fellowship and ease. They had been stricken by the same thing; they
+understood how it was with each other. It was not like the attempted
+comfort they got from those who had not loved and dreaded....
+
+She took up a little broken twig and dug small holes in the ground with
+it.
+
+"It's strange," she said, "but I'm glad I know for sure."
+
+"I can understand that," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It stops the nightmares.... It isn't hopes I've had so much as
+fears.... I wouldn't admit he was dead or hurt. Because--I couldn't
+think it without thinking it--horrible. _Now_--"
+
+"It's final," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It's definite," she said after a pause. "It's like thinking he's
+asleep--for good."
+
+But that did not satisfy her. There was more than this in her mind. "It
+does away with the half and half," she said. "He's dead or he is
+alive...."
+
+She looked up at Mr. Britling as if she measured his understanding.
+
+"You don't still doubt?" he said.
+
+"I'm content now in my mind--in a way. He wasn't anyhow there--unless he
+was dead. But if I saw Teddy coming over the hedge there to me--It would
+be just natural.... No, don't stare at me. I know really he is dead. And
+it is a comfort. It is peace.... All the thoughts of him being crushed
+dreadfully or being mutilated or lying and screaming--or things like
+that--they've gone. He's out of his spoilt body. He's my unbroken Teddy
+again.... Out of sight somewhere.... Unbroken.... Sleeping."
+
+She resumed her excavation with the little stick, with the tears running
+down her face.
+
+Mr. Britling presently went on with the talk. "For me it came all at
+once, without a doubt or a hope. I hoped until the last that nothing
+would touch Hugh. And then it was like a black shutter falling--in an
+instant...."
+
+He considered. "Hugh, too, seems just round the corner at times. But at
+times, it's a blank place....
+
+"At times," said Mr. Britling, "I feel nothing but astonishment. The
+whole thing becomes incredible. Just as for weeks after the war began I
+couldn't believe that a big modern nation could really go to
+war--seriously--with its whole heart.... And they have killed Teddy and
+Hugh....
+
+"They have killed millions. Millions--who had fathers and mothers and
+wives and sweethearts...."
+
+
+Section 8
+
+"Somehow I can't talk about this to Edith. It is ridiculous, I know. But
+in some way I can't.... It isn't fair to her. If I could, I would....
+Quite soon after we were married I ceased to talk to her. I mean talking
+really and simply--as I do to you. And it's never come back. I don't
+know why.... And particularly I can't talk to her of Hugh.... Little
+things, little shadows of criticism, but enough to make it
+impossible.... And I go about thinking about Hugh, and what has happened
+to him sometimes... as though I was stifling."
+
+Letty compared her case.
+
+"I don't want to talk about Teddy--not a word."
+
+"That's queer.... But perhaps--a son is different. Now I come to think
+of it--I've never talked of Mary.... Not to any one ever. I've never
+thought of that before. But I haven't. I couldn't. No. Losing a lover,
+that's a thing for oneself. I've been through that, you see. But a
+son's more outside you. Altogether. And more your own making. It's not
+losing a thing _in_ you; it's losing a hope and a pride.... Once when I
+was a little boy I did a drawing very carefully. It took me a long
+time.... And a big boy tore it up. For no particular reason. Just out of
+cruelty.... That--that was exactly like losing Hugh...."
+
+Letty reflected.
+
+"No," she confessed, "I'm more selfish than that."
+
+"It isn't selfish," said Mr. Britling. "But it's a different thing. It's
+less intimate, and more personally important."
+
+"I have just thought, 'He's gone. He's gone.' Sometimes, do you know, I
+have felt quite angry with him. Why need he have gone--so soon?"
+
+Mr. Britling nodded understandingly.
+
+"I'm not angry. I'm not depressed. I'm just bitterly hurt by the ending
+of something I had hoped to watch--always--all my life," he said. "I
+don't know how it is between most fathers and sons, but I admired Hugh.
+I found exquisite things in him. I doubt if other people saw them. He
+was quiet. He seemed clumsy. But he had an extraordinary fineness. He
+was a creature of the most delicate and rapid responses.... These aren't
+my fond delusions. It was so.... You know, when he was only a few days
+old, he would start suddenly at any strange sound. He was alive like an
+Ćolian harp from the very beginning.... And his hair when he was
+born--he had a lot of hair--was like the down on the breast of a bird. I
+remember that now very vividly--and how I used to like to pass my hand
+over it. It was silk, spun silk. Before he was two he could talk--whole
+sentences. He had the subtlest ear. He loved long words.... And then,"
+he said with tears in his voice, "all this beautiful fine structure,
+this brain, this fresh life as nimble as water--as elastic as a steel
+spring, it is destroyed....
+
+"I don't make out he wasn't human. Often and often I have been angry
+with him, and disappointed in him. There were all sorts of weaknesses in
+him. We all knew them. And we didn't mind them. We loved him the better.
+And his odd queer cleverness!.... And his profound wisdom. And then all
+this beautiful and delicate fabric, all those clear memories in his dear
+brain, all his whims, his sudden inventions....
+
+"You know, I have had a letter from his chum Park. He was shot through a
+loophole. The bullet went through his eye and brow.... Think of it!
+
+"An amazement ... a blow ... a splattering of blood. Rags of tormented
+skin and brain stuff.... In a moment. What had taken eighteen
+years--love and care...."
+
+He sat thinking for an interval, and then went on, "The reading and
+writing alone! I taught him to read myself--because his first governess,
+you see, wasn't very clever. She was a very good methodical sort, but
+she had no inspiration. So I got up all sorts of methods for teaching
+him to read. But it wasn't necessary. He seemed to leap all sorts of
+difficulties. He leapt to what one was trying to teach him. It was as
+quick as the movement of some wild animal....
+
+"He came into life as bright and quick as this robin looking for
+food....
+
+"And he's broken up and thrown away.... Like a cartridge case by the
+side of a covert...."
+
+He choked and stopped speaking. His elbows were on his knees, and he put
+his face between his hands and shuddered and became still. His hair was
+troubled. The end of his stumpy moustache and a little roll of flesh
+stood out at the side of his hand, and made him somehow twice as
+pitiful. His big atlas, from which papers projected, seemed forgotten by
+his side. So he sat for a long time, and neither he nor Letty moved or
+spoke. But they were in the same shadow. They found great comfort in
+one another. They had not been so comforted before since their losses
+came upon them.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+It was Mr. Britling who broke silence. And when he drew his hands down
+from his face and spoke, he said one of the most amazing and unexpected
+things she had ever heard in her life.
+
+"The only possible government in Albania," he said, looking steadfastly
+before him down the hill-side, "is a group of republican cantons after
+the Swiss pattern. I can see no other solution that is not offensive to
+God. It does not matter in the least what we owe to Serbia or what we
+owe to Italy. We have got to set this world on a different footing. We
+have got to set up the world at last--on justice and reason."
+
+Then, after a pause, "The Treaty of Bucharest was an evil treaty. It
+must be undone. Whatever this German King of Bulgaria does, that treaty
+must be undone and the Bulgarians united again into one people. They
+must have themselves, whatever punishment they deserve, they must have
+nothing more, whatever reward they win."
+
+She could not believe her ears.
+
+"After this precious blood, after this precious blood, if we leave one
+plot of wickedness or cruelty in the world--"
+
+And therewith he began to lecture Letty on the importance of
+international politics--to every one. How he and she and every one must
+understand, however hard it was to understand.
+
+"No life is safe, no happiness is safe, there is no chance of bettering
+life until we have made an end to all that causes war....
+
+"We have to put an end to the folly and vanity of kings, and to any
+people ruling any people but themselves. There is no convenience, there
+is no justice in any people ruling any people but themselves; the ruling
+of men by others, who have not their creeds and their languages and
+their ignorances and prejudices, that is the fundamental folly that has
+killed Teddy and Hugh--and these millions. To end that folly is as much
+our duty and business as telling the truth or earning a living...."
+
+"But how can you alter it?"
+
+He held out a finger at her. "Men may alter anything if they have motive
+enough and faith enough."
+
+He indicated the atlas beside him.
+
+"Here I am planning the real map of the world," he said. "Every sort of
+district that has a character of its own must have its own rule; and the
+great republic of the united states of the world must keep the federal
+peace between them all. That's the plain sense of life; the federal
+world-republic. Why do we bother ourselves with loyalties to any other
+government but that? It needs only that sufficient men should say it,
+and that republic would be here now. Why have we loitered so long--until
+these tragic punishments come? We have to map the world out into its
+states, and plan its government and the way of its tolerations."
+
+"And you think it will come?"
+
+"It will come."
+
+"And you believe that men will listen to such schemes?" said Letty.
+
+Mr. Britling, with his eyes far away over the hills, seemed to think.
+"Yes," he said. "Not perhaps to-day--not steadily. But kings and empires
+die; great ideas, once they are born, can never die again. In the end
+this world-republic, this sane government of the world, is as certain as
+the sunset. Only...."
+
+He sighed, and turned over a page of his atlas blindly.
+
+"Only we want it soon. The world is weary of this bloodshed, weary of
+all this weeping, of this wasting of substance and this killing of sons
+and lovers. We want it soon, and to have it soon we must work to bring
+it about. We must give our lives. What is left of our lives....
+
+"That is what you and I must do, Letty. What else is there left for us
+to do?... I will write of nothing else, I will think of nothing else now
+but of safety and order. So that all these dear dead--not one of them
+but will have brought the great days of peace and man's real beginning
+nearer, and these cruel things that make men whimper like children, that
+break down bright lives into despair and kill youth at the very moment
+when it puts out its clean hands to take hold of life--these cruelties,
+these abominations of confusion, shall cease from the earth forever."
+
+
+Section 10
+
+Letty regarded him, frowning, and with her chin between her fists....
+
+"But do you really believe," said Letty, "that things can be better than
+they are?"
+
+"But--_Yes!_" said Mr. Britling.
+
+"I don't," said Letty. "The world is cruel. It is just cruel. So it will
+always be."
+
+"It need not be cruel," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It is just a place of cruel things. It is all set with knives. It is
+full of diseases and accidents. As for God--either there is no God or he
+is an idiot. He is a slobbering idiot. He is like some idiot who pulls
+off the wings of flies."
+
+"No," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"There is no progress. Nothing gets better. How can _you_ believe in God
+after Hugh? _Do_ you believe in God?"
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Britling after a long pause; "I do believe in God."
+
+"Who lets these things happen!" She raised herself on her arm and thrust
+her argument at him with her hand. "Who kills my Teddy and your
+Hugh--and millions."
+
+"No," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"But he _must_ let these things happen. Or why do they happen?"
+
+"No," said Mr. Britling. "It is the theologians who must answer that.
+They have been extravagant about God. They have had silly absolute
+ideas--that He is all powerful. That He's omni-everything. But the
+common sense of men knows better. Every real religious thought denies
+it. After all, the real God of the Christians is Christ, not God
+Almighty; a poor mocked and wounded God nailed on a cross of matter....
+Some day He will triumph.... But it is not fair to say that He causes
+all things now. It is not fair to make out a case against him. You have
+been misled. It is a theologian's folly. God is not absolute; God is
+finite.... A finite God who struggles in his great and comprehensive way
+as we struggle in our weak and silly way--who is _with_ us--that is the
+essence of all real religion.... I agree with you so--Why! if I thought
+there was an omnipotent God who looked down on battles and deaths and
+all the waste and horror of this war--able to prevent these
+things--doing them to amuse Himself--I would spit in his empty face...."
+
+"Any one would...."
+
+"But it's your teachers and catechisms have set you against God.... They
+want to make out He owns all Nature. And all sorts of silly claims. Like
+the heralds in the Middle Ages who insisted that Christ was certainly a
+great gentleman entitled to bear arms. But God is within Nature and
+necessity. Necessity is a thing beyond God--beyond good and ill, beyond
+space and time, a mystery everlastingly impenetrable. God is nearer than
+that. Necessity is the uttermost thing, but God is the innermost thing.
+Closer He is than breathing and nearer than hands and feet. He is the
+Other Thing than this world. Greater than Nature or Necessity, for he is
+a spirit and they are blind, but not controlling them.... Not yet...."
+
+"They always told me He was the maker of Heaven and Earth."
+
+"That's the Jew God the Christians took over. It's a Quack God, a
+Panacea. It's not my God."
+
+Letty considered these strange ideas.
+
+"I never thought of Him like that," she said at last. "It makes it all
+seem different."
+
+"Nor did I. But I do now.... I have suddenly found it and seen it plain.
+I see it so plain that I am amazed that I have not always seen it.... It
+is, you see, so easy to understand that there is a God, and how complex
+and wonderful and brotherly He is, when one thinks of those dear boys
+who by the thousand, by the hundred thousand, have laid down their
+lives.... Ay, and there were German boys too who did the same.... The
+cruelties, the injustice, the brute aggression--they saw it differently.
+They laid down their lives--they laid down their lives.... Those dear
+lives, those lives of hope and sunshine....
+
+"Don't you see that it must be like that, Letty? Don't you see that it
+must be like that?"
+
+"No," she said, "I've seen things differently from that."
+
+"But it's so plain to me," said Mr. Britling. "If there was nothing else
+in all the world but our kindness for each other, or the love that made
+you weep in this kind October sunshine, or the love I bear Hugh--if
+there was nothing else at all--if everything else was cruelty and
+mockery and filthiness and bitterness, it would still be certain that
+there was a God of love and righteousness. If there were no signs of God
+in all the world but the godliness we have seen in those two boys of
+ours; if we had no other light but the love we have between us....
+
+"You don't mind if I talk like this?" said Mr. Britling. "It's all I can
+think of now--this God, this God who struggles, who was in Hugh and
+Teddy, clear and plain, and how He must become the ruler of the
+world...."
+
+"This God who struggles," she repeated. "I have never thought of Him
+like that."
+
+"Of course He must be like that," said Mr. Britling. "How can God be a
+Person; how can He be anything that matters to man, unless He is limited
+and defined and--human like ourselves.... With things outside Him and
+beyond Him."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+Letty walked back slowly through the fields of stubble to her cottage.
+
+She had been talking to Mr. Britling for an hour, and her mind was full
+of the thought of this changed and simplified man, who talked of God as
+he might have done of a bird he had seen or of a tree he had sheltered
+under. And all mixed up with this thought of Mr. Britling was this
+strange idea of God who was also a limited person, who could come as
+close as Teddy, whispering love in the darkness. She had a ridiculous
+feeling that God really struggled like Mr. Britling, and that with only
+some indefinable inferiority of outlook Mr. Britling loved like God. She
+loved him for his maps and his dreams and the bareness of his talk to
+her. It was strange how the straining thought of the dead Teddy had
+passed now out of her mind. She was possessed by a sense of ending and
+beginning, as though a page had turned over in her life and everything
+was new. She had never given religion any thought but contemptuous
+thought for some years, since indeed her growing intelligence had
+dismissed it as a scheme of inexcusable restraints and empty pretences,
+a thing of discords where there were no discords except of its making.
+She had been a happy Atheist. She had played in the sunshine, a natural
+creature with the completest confidence in the essential goodness of the
+world in which she found herself. She had refused all thought of
+painful and disagreeable things. Until the bloody paw of war had wiped
+out all her assurance. Teddy, the playmate, was over, the love game was
+ended for ever; the fresh happy acceptance of life as life; and in the
+place of Teddy was the sorrow of life, the pity of life, and this coming
+of God out of utter remoteness into a conceivable relation to her own
+existence.
+
+She had left Mr. Britling to his atlas. He lay prone under the hedge
+with it spread before him. His occupation would have seemed to her only
+a little while ago the absurdest imaginable. He was drawing boundaries
+on his maps very carefully in red ink, with a fountain pen. But now she
+understood.
+
+She knew that those red ink lines of Mr. Britling's might in the end
+prove wiser and stronger than the bargains of the diplomats....
+
+In the last hour he had come very near to her. She found herself full of
+an unwonted affection for him. She had never troubled her head about her
+relations with any one except Teddy before. Now suddenly she seemed to
+be opening out to all the world for kindness. This new idea of a
+friendly God, who had a struggle of his own, who could be thought of as
+kindred to Mr. Britling, as kindred to Teddy--had gripped her
+imagination. He was behind the autumnal sunshine; he was in the little
+bird that had seemed so confident and friendly. Whatever was kind,
+whatever was tender; there was God. And a thousand old phrases she had
+read and heard and given little heed to, that had lain like dry bones in
+her memory, suddenly were clothed in flesh and became alive. This
+God--if this was God--then indeed it was not nonsense to say that God
+was love, that he was a friend and companion.... With him it might be
+possible to face a world in which Teddy and she would never walk side by
+side again nor plan any more happiness for ever. After all she had been
+very happy; she had had wonderful happiness. She had had far more
+happiness, far more love, in her short years or so than most people had
+in their whole lives. And so in the reaction of her emotions, Letty, who
+had gone out with her head full of murder and revenge, came back through
+the sunset thinking of pity, of the thousand kindnesses and tendernesses
+of Teddy that were, after all, perhaps only an intimation of the
+limitless kindnesses and tendernesses of God.... What right had she to a
+white and bitter grief, self-centred and vindictive, while old Britling
+could still plan an age of mercy in the earth and a red-gold sunlight
+that was warm as a smile from Teddy lay on all the world....
+
+She must go into the cottage and kiss Cissie, and put away that parcel
+out of sight until she could find some poor soldier to whom she could
+send it. She had been pitiless towards Cissie in her grief. She had, in
+the egotism of her sorrow, treated Cissie as she might have treated a
+chair or a table, with no thought that Cissie might be weary, might
+dream of happiness still to come. Cissie had still to play the lover,
+and her man was already in khaki. There would be no such year as Letty
+had had in the days before the war darkened the world. Before Cissie's
+marrying the peace must come, and the peace was still far away. And
+Direck too would have to take his chances....
+
+Letty came through the little wood and over the stile that brought her
+into sight of the cottage. The windows of the cottage as she saw it
+under the bough of the big walnut tree, were afire from the sun. The
+crimson rambler over the porch that she and Teddy had planted was still
+bearing roses. The door was open and people were moving in the porch.
+
+Some one was coming out of the cottage, a stranger, in an unfamiliar
+costume, and behind him was a man in khaki--but that was Mr. Direck! And
+behind him again was Cissie.
+
+But the stranger!
+
+He came out of the frame of the porch towards the garden gate....
+
+Who--who was this stranger?
+
+It was a man in queer-looking foreign clothes, baggy trousers of some
+soft-looking blue stuff and a blouse, and he had a white-bandaged left
+arm. He had a hat stuck at the back of his head, and a beard....
+
+He was entirely a stranger, a foreigner. Was she going insane? Of course
+he was a stranger!
+
+And then he moved a step, he made a queer sideways pace, a caper, on the
+path, and instantly he ceased to be strange and foreign. He became
+amazingly, incredibly, familiar by virtue of that step....
+
+_No!_
+
+Her breath stopped. All Letty's being seemed to stop. And this stranger
+who was also incredibly familiar, after he had stared at her motionless
+form for a moment, waved his hat with a gesture--a gesture that crowned
+and scaled the effect of familiarity. She gave no sign in reply.
+
+No, that familiarity was just a mad freakishness in things.
+
+This strange man came from Belgium perhaps, to tell something about
+Teddy....
+
+And then she surprised herself by making a groaning noise, an absurd
+silly noise, just like the noise when one imitates a cow to a child. She
+said "Mooo-oo."
+
+And she began to run forward, with legs that seemed misfits, waving her
+hands about, and as she ran she saw more and more certainly that this
+wounded man in strange clothing was Teddy. She ran faster and still
+faster, stumbling and nearly falling. If she did not get to him speedily
+the world would burst.
+
+To hold him, to hold close to him!...
+
+"Letty! Letty! Just one arm...."
+
+She was clinging to him and he was holding her....
+
+It was all right. She had always known it was all right. (Hold close to
+him.) Except just for a little while. But that had been foolishness.
+Hadn't she always known he was alive? And here he was alive! (Hold close
+to him.) Only it was so good to be sure--after all her torment; to hold
+him, to hang about him, to feel the solid man, kissing her, weeping too,
+weeping together with her. "Teddy my love!"
+
+
+Section 12
+
+Letty was in the cottage struggling to hear and understand things too
+complicated for her emotion-crowded mind. There was something that Mr.
+Direck was trying to explain about a delayed telegram that had come soon
+after she had gone out. There was much indeed that Mr. Direck was trying
+to explain. What did any explanation really matter when you had Teddy,
+with nothing but a strange beard and a bandaged arm between him and
+yourself? She had an absurd persuasion at first that those two
+strangenesses would also presently be set aside, so that Teddy would
+become just exactly what Teddy had always been.
+
+Teddy had been shot through the upper arm....
+
+"My hand has gone, dear little Letty. It's my left hand, luckily. I
+shall have to wear a hook like some old pirate...."
+
+There was something about his being taken prisoner. "That other
+officer"--that was Mr. Direck's officer--"had been lying there for
+days." Teddy had been shot through the upper arm, and stunned by a
+falling beam. When he came to he was disarmed, with a German standing
+over him....
+
+Then afterwards he had escaped. In quite a little time he had escaped.
+He had been in a railway station somewhere in Belgium; locked in a
+waiting-room with three or four French prisoners, and the junction had
+been bombed by French and British aeroplanes. Their guard and two of the
+prisoners had been killed. In the confusion the others had got away into
+the town. There were trucks of hay on fire, and a store of petrol was
+in danger. "After that one was bound to escape. One would have been shot
+if one had been found wandering about."
+
+The bomb had driven some splinters of glass and corrugated iron into
+Teddy's wrist; it seemed a small place at first; it didn't trouble him
+for weeks. But then some dirt got into it.
+
+In the narrow cobbled street beyond the station he had happened upon a
+woman who knew no English, but who took him to a priest, and the priest
+had hidden him.
+
+Letty did not piece together the whole story at first. She did not want
+the story very much; she wanted to know about this hand and arm.
+
+There would be queer things in the story when it came to be told. There
+was an old peasant who had made Teddy work in his fields in spite of his
+smashed and aching arm, and who had pointed to a passing German when
+Teddy demurred; there were the people called "they" who had at that time
+organised the escape of stragglers into Holland. There was the night
+watch, those long nights in succession before the dash for liberty. But
+Letty's concern was all with the hand. Inside the sling there was
+something that hurt the imagination, something bandaged, a stump. She
+could not think of it. She could not get away from the thought of it.
+
+"But why did you lose your hand?"
+
+It was only a little place at first, and then it got painful....
+
+"But I didn't go into a hospital because I was afraid they would intern
+me, and so I wouldn't be able to come home. And I was dying to come
+home. I was--homesick. No one was ever so homesick. I've thought of this
+place and the garden, and how one looked out of the window at the
+passers-by, a thousand times. I seemed always to be seeing them. Old
+Dimple with his benevolent smile, and Mrs. Wolker at the end cottage,
+and how she used to fetch her beer and wink when she caught us looking
+at her, and little Charlie Slobberface sniffing on his way to the pigs
+and all the rest of them. And you, Letty. Particularly you. And how we
+used to lean on the window-sill with our shoulders touching, and your
+cheek just in front of my eyes.... And nothing aching at all in one....
+
+"How I thought of that and longed for that!...
+
+"And so, you see, I didn't go to the hospital. I kept hoping to get to
+England first. And I left it too long...."
+
+"Life's come back to me with you!" said Letty. "Until just to-day I've
+believed you'd come back. And to-day--I doubted.... I thought it was all
+over--all the real life, love and the dear fun of things, and that there
+was nothing before me, nothing before me but just holding out--and
+keeping your memory.... Poor arm. Poor arm. And being kind to people.
+And pretending you were alive somewhere.... I'll not care about the arm.
+In a little while.... I'm glad you've gone, but I'm gladder you're back
+and can never go again.... And I will be your right hand, dear, and your
+left hand and all your hands. Both my hands for your dear lost left one.
+You shall have three hands instead of two...."
+
+
+Section 13
+
+Letty stood by the window as close as she could to Teddy in a world that
+seemed wholly made up of unexpected things. She could not heed the
+others, it was only when Teddy spoke to the others, or when they spoke
+to Teddy, that they existed for her.
+
+For instance, Teddy was presently talking to Mr. Direck.
+
+They had spoken about the Canadians who had come up and relieved the
+Essex men after the fight in which Teddy had been captured. And then it
+was manifest that Mr. Direck was talking of his regiment. "I'm not the
+only American who has gone Canadian--for the duration of the war."
+
+He had got to his explanation at last.
+
+"I've told a lie," he said triumphantly. "I've shifted my birthplace six
+hundred miles.
+
+"Mind you, I don't admit a thing that Cissie has ever said about
+America--not one thing. You don't understand the sort of proposition
+America is up against. America is the New World, where there are no
+races and nations any more; she is the Melting Pot, from which we will
+cast the better state. I've believed that always--in spite of a thousand
+little things I believe it now. I go back on nothing. I'm not fighting
+as an American either. I'm fighting simply as myself.... I'm not going
+fighting for England, mind you. Don't you fancy that. I don't know I'm
+so particularly in love with a lot of English ways as to do that. I
+don't see how any one can be very much in love with your Empire, with
+its dead-alive Court, its artful politicians, its lords and ladies and
+snobs, its way with the Irish and its way with India, and everybody
+shifting responsibility and telling lies about your common people. I'm
+not going fighting for England. I'm going fighting for Cissie--and
+justice and Belgium and all that--but more particularly for Cissie. And
+anyhow I can't look Pa Britling in the face any more.... And I want to
+see those trenches--close. I reckon they're a thing it will be
+interesting to talk about some day.... So I'm going," said Mr. Direck.
+"But chiefly--it's Cissie. See?"
+
+Cissie had come and stood by the side of him.
+
+She looked from poor broken Teddy to him and back again.
+
+"Up to now," she said, "I've wanted you to go...."
+
+Tears came into her eyes.
+
+"I suppose I must let you go," she said. "Oh! I'd hate you not to
+go...."
+
+
+Section 14
+
+"Good God! how old the Master looks!" cried Teddy suddenly.
+
+He was standing at the window, and as Mr. Direck came forward
+inquiringly he pointed to the figure of Mr. Britling passing along the
+road towards the Dower House.
+
+"He does look old. I hadn't noticed," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"Why, he's gone grey!" cried Teddy, peering. "He wasn't grey when I
+left."
+
+They watched the knickerbockered figure of Mr. Britling receding up the
+hill, atlas and papers in his hands behind his back.
+
+"I must go out to him," said Teddy, disengaging himself from Letty.
+
+"No," she said, arresting him with her hand.
+
+"But he will be glad--"
+
+She stood in her husband's way. She had a vision of Mr. Britling
+suddenly called out of his dreams of God ruling the united states of the
+world, to rejoice at Teddy's restoration....
+
+"No," she said; "it will only make him think again of Hugh--and how he
+died. Don't go out, Teddy. Not now. What does he care for _you_?... Let
+him rest from such things.... Leave him to dream over his atlas.... He
+isn't so desolate--if you knew.... I will tell you, Teddy--when I
+can....
+
+"But just now--No, he will think of Hugh again.... Let him go.... He has
+God and his atlas there.... They're more than you think."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE SECOND
+
+MR. BRITLING WRITES UNTIL SUNRISE
+
+
+Section 1
+
+It was some weeks later. It was now the middle of November, and Mr.
+Britling, very warmly wrapped in his thick dressing-gown and his thick
+llama wool pyjamas, was sitting at his night desk, and working ever and
+again at an essay, an essay of preposterous ambitions, for the title of
+it was "The Better Government of the World."
+
+Latterly he had had much sleepless misery. In the day life was
+tolerable, but in the night--unless he defended himself by working, the
+losses and cruelties of the war came and grimaced at him, insufferably.
+Now he would be haunted by long processions of refugees, now he would
+think of the dead lying stiff and twisted in a thousand dreadful
+attitudes. Then again he would be overwhelmed with anticipations of the
+frightful economic and social dissolution that might lie ahead.... At
+other times he thought of wounds and the deformities of body and spirit
+produced by injuries. And sometimes he would think of the triumph of
+evil. Stupid and triumphant persons went about a world that stupidity
+had desolated, with swaggering gestures, with a smiling consciousness of
+enhanced importance, with their scornful hatred of all measured and
+temperate and kindly things turned now to scornful contempt. And
+mingling with the soil they walked on lay the dead body of Hugh, face
+downward. At the back of the boy's head, rimmed by blood-stiffened
+hair--the hair that had once been "as soft as the down of a bird"--was a
+big red hole. That hole was always pitilessly distinct. They stepped on
+him--heedlessly. They heeled the scattered stuff of his exquisite brain
+into the clay....
+
+From all such moods of horror Mr. Britling's circle of lamplight was his
+sole refuge. His work could conjure up visions, like opium visions, of a
+world of order and justice. Amidst the gloom of world bankruptcy he
+stuck to the prospectus of a braver enterprise--reckless of his chances
+of subscribers....
+
+
+Section 2
+
+But this night even this circle of lamplight would not hold his mind.
+Doubt had crept into this last fastness. He pulled the papers towards
+him, and turned over the portion he had planned.
+
+His purpose in the book he was beginning to write was to reason out the
+possible methods of government that would give a stabler, saner control
+to the world. He believed still in democracy, but he was realising more
+and more that democracy had yet to discover its method. It had to take
+hold of the consciences of men, it had to equip itself with still
+unformed organisations. Endless years of patient thinking, of
+experimenting, of discussion lay before mankind ere this great idea
+could become reality, and right, the proven right thing, could rule the
+earth.
+
+Meanwhile the world must still remain a scene of blood-stained
+melodrama, of deafening noise, contagious follies, vast irrational
+destructions. One fine life after another went down from study and
+university and laboratory to be slain and silenced....
+
+Was it conceivable that this mad monster of mankind would ever be caught
+and held in the thin-spun webs of thought?
+
+Was it, after all, anything but pretension and folly for a man to work
+out plans for the better government of the world?--was it any better
+than the ambitious scheming of some fly upon the wheel of the romantic
+gods?
+
+Man has come, floundering and wounding and suffering, out of the
+breeding darknesses of Time, that will presently crush and consume him
+again. Why not flounder with the rest, why not eat, drink, fight,
+scream, weep and pray, forget Hugh, stop brooding upon Hugh, banish all
+these priggish dreams of "The Better Government of the World," and turn
+to the brighter aspects, the funny and adventurous aspects of the war,
+the Chestertonian jolliness, _Punch_ side of things? Think you because
+your sons are dead that there will be no more cakes and ale? Let mankind
+blunder out of the mud and blood as mankind has blundered in....
+
+Let us at any rate keep our precious Sense of Humour....
+
+He pulled his manuscript towards him. For a time he sat decorating the
+lettering of his title, "The Better Government of the World," with
+little grinning gnomes' heads and waggish tails....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+On the top of Mr. Britling's desk, beside the clock, lay a letter,
+written in clumsy English and with its envelope resealed by a label
+which testified that it had been "OPENED BY CENSOR."
+
+The friendly go-between in Norway had written to tell Mr. Britling that
+Herr Heinrich also was dead; he had died a wounded prisoner in Russia
+some months ago. He had been wounded and captured, after undergoing
+great hardships, during the great Russian attack upon the passes of the
+Carpathians in the early spring, and his wound had mortified. He had
+recovered partially for a time, and then he had been beaten and injured
+again in some struggle between German and Croatian prisoners, and he had
+sickened and died. Before he died he had written to his parents, and
+once again he had asked that the fiddle he had left in Mr. Britling's
+care should if possible be returned to them. It was manifest that both
+for him and them now it had become a symbol with many associations.
+
+The substance of this letter invaded the orange circle of the lamp; it
+would have to be answered, and the potentialities of the answer were
+running through Mr. Britling's brain to the exclusion of any impersonal
+composition. He thought of the old parents away there in Pomerania--he
+believed but he was not quite sure, that Heinrich had been an only
+son--and of the pleasant spectacled figure that had now become a broken
+and decaying thing in a prisoner's shallow grave....
+
+Another son had gone--all the world was losing its sons....
+
+He found himself thinking of young Heinrich in the very manner, if with
+a lesser intensity, in which he thought about his own son, as of hopes
+senselessly destroyed. His mind took no note of the fact that Heinrich
+was an enemy, that by the reckoning of a "war of attrition" his death
+was balance and compensation for the death of Hugh. He went straight to
+the root fact that they had been gallant and kindly beings, and that the
+same thing had killed them both....
+
+By no conceivable mental gymnastics could he think of the two as
+antagonists. Between them there was no imaginable issue. They had both
+very much the same scientific disposition; with perhaps more dash and
+inspiration in the quality of Hugh; more docility and method in the case
+of Karl. Until war had smashed them one against the other....
+
+He recalled his first sight of Heinrich at the junction, and how he had
+laughed at the sight of his excessive Teutonism. The close-cropped
+shining fair head surmounted by a yellowish-white corps cap had appeared
+dodging about among the people upon the platform, and manifestly asking
+questions. The face had been very pink with the effort of an
+unaccustomed tongue. The young man had been clad in a suit of white
+flannel refined by a purple line; his boots were of that greenish yellow
+leather that only a German student could esteem "chic"; his rucksack
+was upon his back, and the precious fiddle in its case was carried very
+carefully in one hand; this same dead fiddle. The other hand held a
+stick with a carved knob and a pointed end. He had been too German for
+belief. "Herr Heinrich!" Mr. Britling had said, and straightway the
+heels had clashed together for a bow, a bow from the waist, a bow that a
+heedless old lady much burthened with garden produce had greatly
+disarranged. From first to last amidst our off-hand English ways Herr
+Heinrich had kept his bow--and always it had been getting disarranged.
+
+That had been his constant effect; a little stiff, a little absurd, and
+always clean and pink and methodical. The boys had liked him without
+reserve, Mrs. Britling had liked him; everybody had found him a likeable
+creature. He never complained of anything except picnics. But he did
+object to picnics; to the sudden departure of the family to wild
+surroundings for the consumption of cold, knifeless and forkless meals
+in the serious middle hours of the day. He protested to Mr. Britling,
+respectfully but very firmly. It was, he held, implicit in their
+understanding that he should have a cooked meal in the middle of the
+day. Otherwise his Magen was perplexed and disordered. In the evening he
+could not eat with any gravity or profit....
+
+Their disposition towards under-feeding and a certain lack of fine
+sentiment were the only flaws in the English scheme that Herr Heinrich
+admitted. He certainly found the English unfeeling. His heart went even
+less satisfied than his Magen. He was a being of expressive affections;
+he wanted great friendships, mysterious relationships, love. He tried
+very bravely to revere and to understand and be occultly understood by
+Mr. Britling; he sought long walks and deep talks with Hugh and the
+small boys; he tried to fill his heart with Cissie; he found at last
+marvels of innocence and sweetness in the Hickson girl. She wore her
+hair in a pigtail when first he met her, and it made her almost
+Marguerite. This young man had cried aloud for love, warm and filling,
+like the Mittagsessen that was implicit in their understanding. And all
+these Essex people failed to satisfy him; they were silent, they were
+subtle, they slipped through the fat yet eager fingers of his heart, so
+that he fell back at last upon himself and his German correspondents and
+the idealisation of Maud Hickson and the moral education of Billy.
+Billy. Mr. Britling's memories came back at last to the figure of young
+Heinrich with the squirrel on his shoulder, that had so often stood in
+the way of the utter condemnation of Germany. That, seen closely, was
+the stuff of one brutal Prussian. What quarrel had we with him?...
+
+Other memories of Heinrich flitted across Mr. Britling's reverie.
+Heinrich at hockey, running with extreme swiftness and little skill,
+tricked and baffled by Letty, dodged by Hugh, going headlong forward and
+headlong back, and then with a cry flinging himself flat on the ground
+exhausted.... Or again Heinrich very grave and very pink, peering
+through his glasses at his cards at Skat.... Or Heinrich in the boats
+upon the great pond, or Heinrich swimming, or Heinrich hiding very, very
+artfully from the boys about the garden on a theory of his own, or
+Heinrich in strange postures, stalking the deer in Claverings Park. For
+a time he had had a great ambition to creep quite close to a deer and
+_touch_ it.... Or Heinrich indexing. He had a passion for listing and
+indexing books, music, any loose classifiable thing. His favourite
+amusement was devising schemes for the indentation of dictionary leaves,
+so that one could turn instantly to the needed word. He had bought and
+cut the edges of three dictionaries; each in succession improved upon
+the other; he had had great hopes of patents and wealth arising
+therefrom.... And his room had been a source of strange sounds; his
+search for music upon the violin. He had hoped when he came to
+Matching's Easy to join "some string quartette." But Matching's Easy
+produced no string quartette. He had to fall back upon the pianola, and
+try to play duets with that. Only the pianola did all the duet itself,
+and in the hands of a small Britling was apt to betray a facetious
+moodiness; sudden alternations between extreme haste and extreme
+lassitude....
+
+Then there came a memory of Heinrich talking very seriously; his glasses
+magnifying his round blue eyes, talking of his ideas about life, of his
+beliefs and disbeliefs, of his ambitions and prospects in life.
+
+He confessed two principal ambitions. They varied perhaps in their
+absolute dimensions, but they were of equal importance in his mind. The
+first of these was, so soon as he had taken his doctorate in philology,
+to give himself to the perfecting of an International Language; it was
+to combine all the virtues of Esperanto and Ido. "And then," said Herr
+Heinrich, "I do not think there will be any more wars--ever." The second
+ambition, which was important first because Herr Heinrich found much
+delight in working at it, and secondly because he thought it would give
+him great wealth and opportunity for propagating the perfect speech, was
+the elaboration of his system of marginal indentations for dictionaries
+and alphabetical books of reference of all sorts. It was to be so
+complete that one would just stand over the book to be consulted, run
+hand and eye over its edges and open the book--"at the very exact spot."
+He proposed to follow this business up with a quite Germanic
+thoroughness. "Presently," he said, "I must study the machinery by which
+the edges of books are cut. It is possible I may have to invent these
+also." This was the double-barrelled scheme of Herr Heinrich's career.
+And along it he was to go, and incidentally develop his large vague
+heart that was at present so manifestly unsatisfied....
+
+Such was the brief story of Herr Heinrich.
+
+That story was over--just as Hugh's story was over. That first volume
+would never now have a second and a third. It ended in some hasty grave
+in Russia. The great scheme for marginal indices would never be
+patented, the duets with the pianola would never be played again.
+
+Imagination glimpsed a little figure toiling manfully through the slush
+and snow of the Carpathians; saw it staggering under its first
+experience of shell fire; set it amidst attacks and flights and fatigue
+and hunger and a rush perhaps in the darkness; guessed at the wounding
+blow. Then came the pitiful pilgrimage of the prisoners into captivity,
+captivity in a land desolated, impoverished and embittered. Came wounds
+wrapped in filthy rags, pain and want of occupation, and a poor little
+bent and broken Heinrich sitting aloof in a crowded compound nursing a
+mortifying wound....
+
+He used always to sit in a peculiar attitude with his arms crossed on
+his crossed legs, looking slantingly through his glasses....
+
+So he must have sat, and presently he lay on some rough bedding and
+suffered, untended, in infinite discomfort; lay motionless and thought
+at times, it may be, of Matching's Easy and wondered what Hugh and Teddy
+were doing. Then he became fevered, and the world grew bright-coloured
+and fantastic and ugly for him. Until one day an infinite weakness laid
+hold of him, and his pain grew faint and all his thoughts and memories
+grew faint--and still fainter....
+
+The violin had been brought into Mr. Britling's study that afternoon,
+and lay upon the further window-seat. Poor little broken sherd, poor
+little fragment of a shattered life! It looked in its case like a baby
+in a coffin.
+
+"I must write a letter to the old father and mother," Mr. Britling
+thought. "I can't just send the poor little fiddle--without a word. In
+all this pitiful storm of witless hate--surely there may be one
+greeting--not hateful.
+
+"From my blackness to yours," said Mr. Britling aloud. He would have to
+write it in English. But even if they knew no English some one would be
+found to translate it to them. He would have to write very plainly.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+He pushed aside the manuscript of "The Better Government of the World,"
+and began to write rather slowly, shaping his letters roundly and
+distinctly:
+
+
+ _Dear Sir,_
+
+ _I am writing this letter to you to tell you I am sending back the
+ few little things I had kept for your son at his request when the
+ war broke out. I am sending them--_
+
+Mr. Britling left that blank for the time until he could arrange the
+method of sending to the Norwegian intermediary.
+
+ _Especially I am sending his violin, which he had asked me thrice to
+ convey to you. Either it is a gift from you or it symbolised many
+ things for him that he connected with home and you. I will have it
+ packed with particular care, and I will do all in my power to ensure
+ its safe arrival._
+
+ _I want to tell you that all the stress and passion of this war has
+ not made us here in Matching's Easy forget our friend your son. He
+ was one of us, he had our affection, he had friends here who are
+ still his friends. We found him honourable and companionable, and we
+ share something of your loss. I have got together for you a few
+ snapshots I chance to possess in which you will see him in the
+ sunshine, and which will enable you perhaps to picture a little more
+ definitely than you would otherwise do the life he led here. There
+ is one particularly that I have marked. Our family is lunching
+ out-of-doors, and you will see that next to your son is a youngster,
+ a year or so his junior, who is touching glasses with him. I have
+ put a cross over his head. He is my eldest son, he was very dear to
+ me, and he too has been, killed in this war. They are, you see,
+ smiling very pleasantly at each other._
+
+While writing this Mr. Britling had been struck by the thought of the
+photographs, and he had taken them out of the little drawer into which
+he was accustomed to thrust them. He picked out the ones that showed the
+young German, but there were others, bright with sunshine, that were now
+charged with acquired significances; there were two showing the children
+and Teddy and Hugh and Cissie and Letty doing the goose step, and there
+was one of Mr. Van der Pant, smiling at the front door, in Heinrich's
+abandoned slippers. There were endless pictures of Teddy also. It is the
+happy instinct of the Kodak to refuse those days that are overcast, and
+the photographic record of a life is a chain of all its kindlier
+aspects. In the drawer above these snapshots there were Hugh's letters
+and a miscellany of trivial documents touching on his life.
+
+Mr. Britling discontinued writing and turned these papers over and
+mused. Heinrich's letters and postcards had got in among them, and so
+had a letter of Teddy's....
+
+The letters reinforced the photographs in their reminder how kind and
+pleasant a race mankind can be. Until the wild asses of nationalism came
+kicking and slaying amidst them, until suspicion and jostling greed and
+malignity poison their minds, until the fools with the high explosives
+blow that elemental goodness into shrieks of hate and splashes of blood.
+How kindly men are--up to the very instant of their cruelties! His mind
+teemed suddenly with little anecdotes and histories of the goodwill of
+men breaking through the ill-will of war, of the mutual help of sorely
+wounded Germans and English lying together in the mud and darkness
+between the trenches, of the fellowship of captors and prisoners, of
+the Saxons at Christmas fraternising with the English.... Of that he had
+seen photographs in one of the daily papers....
+
+His mind came back presently from these wanderings to the task before
+him.
+
+He tried to picture these Heinrich parents. He supposed they were
+kindly, civilised people. It was manifest the youngster had come to him
+from a well-ordered and gentle-spirited home. But he imagined them--he
+could not tell why--as people much older than himself. Perhaps young
+Heinrich had on some occasion said they were old people--he could not
+remember. And he had a curious impulse too to write to them in phrases
+of consolation; as if their loss was more pitiable than his own. He
+doubted whether they had the consolation of his sanguine temperament,
+whether they could resort as readily as he could to his faith, whether
+in Pomerania there was the same consoling possibility of an essay on the
+Better Government of the World. He did not think this very clearly, but
+that was what was at the back of his mind. He went on writing.
+
+ _If you think that these two boys have both perished, not in some
+ noble common cause but one against the other in a struggle of
+ dynasties and boundaries and trade routes and tyrannous
+ ascendancies, then it seems to me that you must feel as I feel that
+ this war is the most tragic and dreadful thing that has ever
+ happened to mankind._
+
+He sat thinking for some minutes after he had written that, and when
+presently he resumed his writing, a fresh strain of thought was
+traceable even in his opening sentence.
+
+ _If you count dead and wounds this is the most dreadful war in
+ history; for you as for me, it has been almost the extremity of
+ personal tragedy.... Black sorrow.... But is it the most dreadful
+ war?_
+
+ _I do not think it is. I can write to you and tell you that I do
+ indeed believe that our two sons have died not altogether in vain.
+ Our pain and anguish may not be wasted--may be necessary. Indeed
+ they may be necessary. Here am I bereaved and wretched--and I hope.
+ Never was the fabric of war so black; that I admit. But never was
+ the black fabric of war so threadbare. At a thousand points the
+ light is shining through._
+
+Mr. Britling's pen stopped.
+
+There was perfect stillness in the study bedroom.
+
+"The tinpot style," said Mr. Britling at last in a voice of extreme
+bitterness.
+
+He fell into an extraordinary quarrel with his style. He forgot about
+those Pomeranian parents altogether in his exasperation at his own
+inexpressiveness, at his incomplete control of these rebel words and
+phrases that came trailing each its own associations and suggestions to
+hamper his purpose with it. He read over the offending sentence.
+
+"The point is that it is true," he whispered. "It is exactly what I want
+to say."...
+
+Exactly?...
+
+His mind stuck on that "exactly."... When one has much to say style is
+troublesome. It is as if one fussed with one's uniform before a
+battle.... But that is just what one ought to do before a battle.... One
+ought to have everything in order....
+
+He took a fresh sheet and made three trial beginnings.
+
+ _"War is like a black fabric."_...
+
+ _"War is a curtain of black fabric across the pathway."_
+
+ _"War is a curtain of dense black fabric across all the hopes and
+ kindliness of mankind. Yet always it has let through some gleams of
+ light, and now--I am not dreaming--it grows threadbare, and here and
+ there and at a thousand points the light is breaking through. We owe
+ it to all these dear youths--"_
+
+His pen stopped again.
+
+"I must work on a rough draft," said Mr. Britling.
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Three hours later Mr. Britling was working by daylight, though his study
+lamp was still burning, and his letter to old Heinrich was still no
+better than a collection of material for a letter. But the material was
+falling roughly into shape, and Mr. Britling's intentions were finding
+themselves. It was clear to him now that he was no longer writing as his
+limited personal self to those two personal selves grieving, in the old,
+large, high-walled, steep-roofed household amidst pine woods, of which
+Heinrich had once shown him a picture. He knew them too little for any
+such personal address. He was writing, he perceived, not as Mr. Britling
+but as an Englishman--that was all he could be to them--and he was
+writing to them as Germans; he could apprehend them as nothing more. He
+was just England bereaved to Germany bereaved....
+
+He was no longer writing to the particular parents of one particular
+boy, but to all that mass of suffering, regret, bitterness and fatigue
+that lay behind the veil of the "front." Slowly, steadily, the manhood
+of Germany was being wiped out. As he sat there in the stillness he
+could think that at least two million men of the Central Powers were
+dead, and an equal number maimed and disabled. Compared with that our
+British losses, immense and universal as they were by the standard of
+any previous experience, were still slight; our larger armies had still
+to suffer, and we had lost irrevocably not very much more than a quarter
+of a million. But the tragedy gathered against us. We knew enough
+already to know what must be the reality of the German homes to which
+those dead men would nevermore return....
+
+If England had still the longer account to pay, the French had paid
+already nearly to the limits of endurance. They must have lost well over
+a million of their mankind, and still they bled and bled. Russia too in
+the East had paid far more than man for man in this vast swapping off of
+lives. In a little while no Censorship would hold the voice of the
+peoples. There would be no more talk of honour and annexations,
+hegemonies and trade routes, but only Europe lamenting for her dead....
+
+The Germany to which he wrote would be a nation of widows and children,
+rather pinched boys and girls, crippled men, old men, deprived men, men
+who had lost brothers and cousins and friends and ambitions. No triumph
+now on land or sea could save Germany from becoming that. France too
+would be that, Russia, and lastly Britain, each in their degree. Before
+the war there had been no Germany to which an Englishman could appeal;
+Germany had been a threat, a menace, a terrible trampling of armed men.
+It was as little possible then to think of talking to Germany as it
+would have been to have stopped the Kaiser in mid career in his hooting
+car down the Unter den Linden and demand a quiet talk with him. But the
+Germany that had watched those rushes with a slightly doubting pride had
+her eyes now full of tears and blood. She had believed, she had obeyed,
+and no real victory had come. Still she fought on, bleeding, agonising,
+wasting her substance and the substance of the whole world, to no
+conceivable end but exhaustion, so capable she was, so devoted, so proud
+and utterly foolish. And the mind of Germany, whatever it was before the
+war, would now be something residual, something left over and sitting
+beside a reading-lamp as he was sitting beside a reading-lamp, thinking,
+sorrowing, counting the cost, looking into the dark future....
+
+And to that he wrote, to that dimly apprehended figure outside a circle
+of the light like his own circle of light--which was the father of
+Heinrich, which was great Germany, Germany which lived before and which
+will yet outlive the flapping of the eagles....
+
+ _Our boys_, he wrote, _have died, fighting one against the other.
+ They have been fighting upon an issue so obscure that your German
+ press is still busy discussing what it was. For us it was that
+ Belgium was invaded and France in danger of destruction. Nothing
+ else could have brought the English into the field against you. But
+ why you invaded Belgium and France and whether that might have been
+ averted we do not know to this day. And still this war goes on and
+ still more boys die, and these men who do not fight, these men in
+ the newspaper offices and in the ministries plan campaigns and
+ strokes and counter-strokes that belong to no conceivable plan at
+ all. Except that now for them there is something more terrible than
+ war. And that is the day of reckoning with their own people._
+
+ _What have we been fighting for? What are we fighting for? Do you
+ know? Does any one know? Why am I spending what is left of my
+ substance and you what is left of yours to keep on this war against
+ each other? What have we to gain from hurting one another still
+ further? Why should we be puppets any longer in the hands of crowned
+ fools and witless diplomatists? Even if we were dumb and acquiescent
+ before, does not the blood of our sons now cry out to us that this
+ foolery should cease? We have let these people send our sons to
+ death._
+
+ _It is you and I who must stop these wars, these massacres of boys._
+
+ _Massacres of boys! That indeed is the essence of modern war. The
+ killing off of the young. It is the destruction of the human
+ inheritance, it is the spending of all the life and material of the
+ future upon present-day hate and greed. Fools and knaves,
+ politicians, tricksters, and those who trade on the suspicions and
+ thoughtless, generous angers of men, make wars; the indolence and
+ modesty of the mass of men permit them. Are you and I to suffer such
+ things until the whole fabric of our civilisation, that has been so
+ slowly and so laboriously built up, is altogether destroyed?_
+
+ _When I sat down to write to you I had meant only to write to you of
+ your son and mine. But I feel that what can be said in particular of
+ our loss, need not be said; it can be understood without saying.
+ What needs to be said and written about is this, that war must be
+ put an end to and that nobody else but you and me and all of us can
+ do it. We have to do that for the love of our sons and our race and
+ all that is human. War is no longer human; the chemist and the
+ metallurgist have changed all that. My boy was shot through the eye;
+ his brain was blown to pieces by some man who never knew what he had
+ done. Think what that means!... It is plain to me, surely it is
+ plain to you and all the world, that war is now a mere putting of
+ the torch to explosives that flare out to universal ruin. There is
+ nothing for one sane man to write to another about in these days but
+ the salvation of mankind from war._
+
+ _Now I want you to be patient with me and hear me out. There was a
+ time in the earlier part of this war when it was hard to be patient
+ because there hung over us the dread of losses and disaster. Now we
+ need dread no longer. The dreaded thing has happened. Sitting
+ together as we do in spirit beside the mangled bodies of our dead,
+ surely we can be as patient as the hills._
+
+ _I want to tell you quite plainly and simply that I think that
+ Germany which is chief and central in this war is most to blame for
+ this war. Writing to you as an Englishman to a German and with war
+ still being waged, there must be no mistake between us upon this
+ point. I am persuaded that in the decade that ended with your
+ overthrow of France in 1871, Germany turned her face towards evil,
+ and that her refusal to treat France generously and to make friends
+ with any other great power in the world, is the essential cause of
+ this war. Germany triumphed--and she trampled on the loser. She
+ inflicted intolerable indignities. She set herself to prepare for
+ further aggressions; long before this killing began she was making
+ war upon land and sea, launching warships, building strategic
+ railways, setting up a vast establishment of war material,
+ threatening, straining all the world to keep pace with her
+ threats.... At last there was no choice before any European nation
+ but submission to the German will, or war. And it was no will to
+ which righteous men could possibly submit. It came as an illiberal
+ and ungracious will. It was the will of Zabern. It is not as if you
+ had set yourselves to be an imperial people and embrace and unify
+ the world. You did not want to unify the world. You wanted to set
+ the foot of an intensely national Germany, a sentimental and
+ illiberal Germany, a Germany that treasured the portraits of your
+ ridiculous Kaiser and his litter of sons, a Germany wearing uniform,
+ reading black letter, and despising every kultur but her own, upon
+ the neck of a divided and humiliated mankind. It was an intolerable
+ prospect. I had rather the whole world died._
+
+ _Forgive me for writing "you." You are as little responsible for
+ that Germany as I am for--Sir Edward Grey. But this happened over
+ you; you did not do your utmost to prevent it--even as England has
+ happened, and I have let it happen over me...._
+
+"It is so dry; so general," whispered Mr. Britling. "And yet--it is this
+that has killed our sons."
+
+He sat still for a time, and then went on reading a fresh sheet of his
+manuscript.
+
+ _When I bring these charges against Germany I have little
+ disposition to claim any righteousness for Britain. There has been
+ small splendour in this war for either Germany or Britain or Russia;
+ we three have chanced to be the biggest of the combatants, but the
+ glory lies with invincible France. It is France and Belgium and
+ Serbia who shine as the heroic lands. They have fought defensively
+ and beyond all expectation, for dear land and freedom. This war for
+ them has been a war of simple, definite issues, to which they have
+ risen with an entire nobility. Englishman and German alike may well
+ envy them that simplicity. I look to you, as an honest man schooled
+ by the fierce lessons of this war, to meet me in my passionate
+ desire to see France, Belgium and Serbia emerge restored from all
+ this blood and struggle, enlarged to the limits of their
+ nationality, vindicated and secure. Russia I will not write about
+ here; let me go on at once to tell you about my own country;
+ remarking only that between England and Russia there are endless
+ parallelisms. We have similar complexities, kindred difficulties. We
+ have for instance an imported dynasty, we have a soul-destroying
+ State Church which cramps and poisons the education of our ruling
+ class, we have a people out of touch with a secretive government,
+ and the same traditional contempt for science. We have our Irelands
+ and Polands. Even our kings bear a curious likeness...._
+
+At this point there was a break in the writing, and Mr. Britling made,
+as it were, a fresh beginning.
+
+ _Politically the British Empire is a clumsy collection of strange
+ accidents. It is a thing as little to be proud of as the outline of
+ a flint or the shape of a potato. For the mass of English people
+ India and Egypt and all that side of our system mean less than
+ nothing; our trade is something they do not understand, our imperial
+ wealth something they do not share. Britain has been a group of
+ four democracies caught in the net of a vast yet casual imperialism;
+ the common man here is in a state of political perplexity from the
+ cradle to the grave. None the less there is a great people here even
+ as there is a great people in Russia, a people with a soul and
+ character of its own, a people of unconquerable kindliness and with
+ a peculiar genius, which still struggle towards will and expression.
+ We have been beginning that same great experiment that France and
+ America and Switzerland and China are making, the experiment of
+ democracy. It is the newest form of human association, and we are
+ still but half awake to its needs and necessary conditions. For it
+ is idle to pretend that the little city democracies of ancient times
+ were comparable to the great essays in practical republicanism that
+ mankind is making to-day. This age of the democratic republics that
+ dawn is a new age. It has not yet lasted for a century, not for a
+ paltry hundred years.... All new things are weak things; a rat can
+ kill a man-child with ease; the greater the destiny, the weaker the
+ immediate self-protection may be. And to me it seems that your
+ complete and perfect imperialism, ruled by Germans for Germans, is
+ in its scope and outlook a more antiquated and smaller and less
+ noble thing than these sprawling emergent giant democracies of the
+ West that struggle so confusedly against it...._
+
+ _But that we do struggle confusedly, with pitiful leaders and
+ infinite waste and endless delay; that it is to our indisciplines
+ and to the dishonesties and tricks our incompleteness provokes, that
+ the prolongation of this war is to be ascribed, I readily admit. At
+ the outbreak of this war I had hoped to see militarism felled within
+ a year...._
+
+
+Section 6
+
+From this point onward Mr. Britling's notes became more fragmentary.
+They had a consecutiveness, but they were discontinuous. His thought had
+leapt across gaps that his pen had had no time to fill. And he had
+begun to realise that his letter to the old people in Pomerania was
+becoming impossible. It had broken away into dissertation.
+
+"Yet there must be dissertations," he said. "Unless such men as we are
+take these things in hand, always we shall be misgoverned, always the
+sons will die...."
+
+
+Section 7
+
+ _I do not think you Germans realise how steadily you were conquering
+ the world before this war began. Had you given half the energy and
+ intelligence you have spent upon this war to the peaceful conquest
+ of men's minds and spirits, I believe that you would have taken the
+ leadership of the world tranquilly--no man disputing. Your science
+ was five years, your social and economic organisation was a quarter
+ of a century in front of ours.... Never has it so lain in the power
+ of a great people to lead and direct mankind towards the world
+ republic and universal peace. It needed but a certain generosity of
+ the imagination...._
+
+ _But your Junkers, your Imperial court, your foolish vicious
+ Princes; what were such dreams to them?... With an envious
+ satisfaction they hurled all the accomplishment of Germany into the
+ fires of war...._
+
+
+Section 8
+
+ _Your boy, as no doubt you know, dreamt constantly of such a world
+ peace as this that I foreshadow; he was more generous than his
+ country. He could envisage war and hostility only as
+ misunderstanding. He thought that a world that could explain itself
+ clearly would surely be at peace. He was scheming always therefore
+ for the perfection and propagation of Esperanto or Ido, or some such
+ universal link. My youngster too was full of a kindred and yet
+ larger dream, the dream of human science, which knows neither king
+ nor country nor race_....
+
+ _These boys, these hopes, this war has killed_....
+
+That fragment ended so. Mr. Britling ceased to read for a time. "But has
+it killed them?" he whispered....
+
+"If you had lived, my dear, you and your England would have talked with
+a younger Germany--better than I can ever do...."
+
+He turned the pages back, and read here and there with an accumulating
+discontent.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+"Dissertations," said Mr. Britling.
+
+Never had it been so plain to Mr. Britling that he was a weak, silly,
+ill-informed and hasty-minded writer, and never had he felt so
+invincible a conviction that the Spirit of God was in him, and that it
+fell to him to take some part in the establishment of a new order of
+living upon the earth; it might be the most trivial part by the scale of
+the task, but for him it was to be now his supreme concern. And it was
+an almost intolerable grief to him that his services should be, for all
+his desire, so poor in quality, so weak in conception. Always he seemed
+to be on the verge of some illuminating and beautiful statement of his
+cause; always he was finding his writing inadequate, a thin treachery to
+the impulse of his heart, always he was finding his effort weak and
+ineffective. In this instance, at the outset he seemed to see with a
+golden clearness the message of brotherhood, or forgiveness, of a common
+call. To whom could such a message be better addressed than to those
+sorrowing parents; from whom could it come with a better effect than
+from himself? And now he read what he had made of this message. It
+seemed to his jaded mind a pitifully jaded effort. It had no light, it
+had no depth. It was like the disquisition of a debating society.
+
+He was distressed by a fancy of an old German couple, spectacled and
+peering, puzzled by his letter. Perhaps they would be obscurely hurt by
+his perplexing generalisations. Why, they would ask, should this
+Englishman preach to them?
+
+He sat back in his chair wearily, with his chin sunk upon his chest. For
+a time he did not think, and then, he read again the sentence in front
+of his eyes.
+
+ _"These boys, these hopes, this war has killed."_
+
+The words hung for a time in his mind.
+
+"No!" said Mr. Britling stoutly. "They live!"
+
+And suddenly it was borne in upon his mind that he was not alone. There
+were thousands and tens of thousands of men and women like himself,
+desiring with all their hearts to say, as he desired to say, the
+reconciling word. It was not only his hand that thrust against the
+obstacles.... Frenchmen and Russians sat in the same stillness, facing
+the same perplexities; there were Germans seeking a way through to him.
+Even as he sat and wrote. And for the first time clearly he felt a
+Presence of which he had thought very many times in the last few weeks,
+a Presence so close to him that it was behind his eyes and in his brain
+and hands. It was no trick of his vision; it was a feeling of immediate
+reality. And it was Hugh, Hugh that he had thought was dead, it was
+young Heinrich living also, it was himself, it was those others that
+sought, it was all these and it was more, it was the Master, the Captain
+of Mankind, it was God, there present with him, and he knew that it was
+God. It was as if he had been groping all this time in the darkness,
+thinking himself alone amidst rocks and pitfalls and pitiless things,
+and suddenly a hand, a firm strong hand, had touched his own. And a
+voice within him bade him be of good courage. There was no magic
+trickery in that moment; he was still weak and weary, a discouraged
+rhetorician, a good intention ill-equipped; but he was no longer lonely
+and wretched, no longer in the same world with despair. God was beside
+him and within him and about him.... It was the crucial moment of Mr.
+Britling's life. It was a thing as light as the passing of a cloud on an
+April morning; it was a thing as great as the first day of creation. For
+some moments he still sat back with his chin upon his chest and his
+hands dropping from the arms of his chair. Then he sat up and drew a
+deep breath....
+
+This had come almost as a matter of course.
+
+For weeks his mind had been playing about this idea. He had talked to
+Letty of this Finite God, who is the king of man's adventure in space
+and time. But hitherto God had been for him a thing of the intelligence,
+a theory, a report, something told about but not realised.... Mr.
+Britling's thinking about God hitherto had been like some one who has
+found an empty house, very beautiful and pleasant, full of the promise
+of a fine personality. And then as the discoverer makes his lonely,
+curious explorations, he hears downstairs, dear and friendly, the voice
+of the Master coming in....
+
+There was no need to despair because he himself was one of the feeble
+folk. God was with him indeed, and he was with God. The King was coming
+to his own. Amidst the darknesses and confusions, the nightmare
+cruelties and the hideous stupidities of the great war, God, the Captain
+of the World Republic, fought his way to empire. So long as one did
+one's best and utmost in a cause so mighty, did it matter though the
+thing one did was little and poor?
+
+"I have thought too much of myself," said Mr. Britling, "and of what I
+would do by myself. I have forgotten _that which was with me_...."
+
+
+Section 10
+
+He turned over the rest of the night's writing presently, and read it
+now as though it was the work of another man.
+
+These later notes were fragmentary, and written in a sprawling hand.
+
+ _"Let us make ourselves watchers and guardians of the order of the
+ world...._
+
+ _"If only for love of our dead...._
+
+ _"Let us pledge ourselves to service. Let us set ourselves with all
+ our minds and all our hearts to the perfecting and working out of
+ the methods of democracy and the ending for ever of the kings and
+ emperors and priestcrafts and the bands of adventurers, the traders
+ and owners and forestallers who have betrayed mankind into this
+ morass of hate and blood--in which our sons are lost--in which we
+ flounder still...."_
+
+How feeble was this squeak of exhortation! It broke into a scolding
+note.
+
+"Who have betrayed," read Mr. Britling, and judged the phrase.
+
+"Who have fallen with us," he amended....
+
+"One gets so angry and bitter--because one feels alone, I suppose.
+Because one feels that for them one's reason is no reason. One is
+enraged by the sense of their silent and regardless contradiction, and
+one forgets the Power of which one is a part...."
+
+The sheet that bore the sentence he criticised was otherwise blank
+except that written across it obliquely in a very careful hand were the
+words "Hugh," and "Hugh Philip Britling."...
+
+On the next sheet he had written: "Let us set up the peace of the World
+Republic amidst these ruins. Let it be our religion, our calling."
+
+There he had stopped.
+
+The last sheet of Mr. Britling's manuscript may be more conveniently
+given in fac-simile than described.
+
+[Handwritten:
+
+ Hugh
+ Hugh
+ My dear Hugh
+
+ Lawyers Princes
+ Dealers in Contention
+
+ _Honesty_
+
+ 'Blood Blood ...
+
+ [Transcriber's Note: illegible] an End to them
+
+]
+
+
+Section 11
+
+He sighed.
+
+He looked at the scattered papers, and thought of the letter they were
+to have made.
+
+His fatigue spoke first.
+
+"Perhaps after all I'd better just send the fiddle...."
+
+He rested his cheeks between his hands, and remained so for a long time.
+His eyes stared unseeingly. His thoughts wandered and spread and faded.
+At length he recalled his mind to that last idea. "Just send the
+fiddle--without a word."
+
+"No. I must write to them plainly.
+
+"About God as I have found Him.
+
+"As He has found me...."
+
+He forgot the Pomeranians for a time. He murmured to himself. He turned
+over the conviction that had suddenly become clear and absolute in his
+mind.
+
+"Religion is the first thing and the last thing, and until a man has
+found God and been found by God, he begins at no beginning, he works to
+no end. He may have his friendships, his partial loyalties, his scraps
+of honour. But all these things fall into place and life falls into
+place only with God. Only with God. God, who fights through men against
+Blind Force and Night and Non-Existence; who is the end, who is the
+meaning. He is the only King.... Of course I must write about Him. I
+must tell all my world of Him. And before the coming of the true King,
+the inevitable King, the King who is present whenever just men
+foregather, this blood-stained rubbish of the ancient world, these puny
+kings and tawdry emperors, these wily politicians and artful lawyers,
+these men who claim and grab and trick and compel, these war makers and
+oppressors, will presently shrivel and pass--like paper thrust into a
+flame...."
+
+Then after a time he said:
+
+"Our sons who have shown us God...."
+
+
+Section 12
+
+He rubbed his open hands over his eyes and forehead.
+
+The night of effort had tired his brain, and he was no longer thinking
+actively. He had a little interval of blankness, sitting at his desk
+with his hands pressed over his eyes....
+
+He got up presently, and stood quite motionless at the window, looking
+out.
+
+His lamp was still burning, but for some time he had not been writing by
+the light of his lamp. Insensibly the day had come and abolished his
+need for that individual circle of yellow light. Colour had returned to
+the world, clean pearly colour, clear and definite like the glance of a
+child or the voice of a girl, and a golden wisp of cloud hung in the sky
+over the tower of the church. There was a mist upon the pond, a soft
+grey mist not a yard high. A covey of partridges ran and halted and ran
+again in the dewy grass outside his garden railings. The partridges were
+very numerous this year because there had been so little shooting.
+Beyond in the meadow a hare sat up as still as a stone. A horse
+neighed.... Wave after wave of warmth and light came sweeping before the
+sunrise across the world of Matching's Easy. It was as if there was
+nothing but morning and sunrise in the world.
+
+From away towards the church came the sound of some early worker
+whetting a scythe.
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Mr. Britling Sees It Through, by H. G. Wells
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Britling Sees It Through, by H. G. Wells
+
+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: Mr. Britling Sees It Through
+
+Author: H. G. Wells
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2004 [EBook #14060]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Eric Eldred, Sandra Bannatyne and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<a name="Page_i"></a>
+<h1>MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH</h1>
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h2>H. G. WELLS</h2>
+<h3>New York</h3>
+<h4>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</h4>
+<h4>1916</h4>
+<a name="Page_iii"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="CONTENTS"></a>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<ul>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_I"><b>BOOK I &mdash; MATCHING'S EASY AT
+EASE</b></a>
+<ul>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_FIRST"><b>MR. DIRECK VISITS MR.
+BRITLING</b></a></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_SECOND"><b>MR. BRITLING CONTINUES
+HIS EXPOSITION</b></a></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_THIRD"><b>THE ENTERTAINMENT OF MR.
+DIRECK REACHES A CLIMAX</b></a></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_FOURTH"><b>MR. BRITLING IN
+SOLILOQUY</b></a></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_FIFTH"><b>THE COMING OF THE
+DAY</b></a></li>
+</ul>
+<br></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_II"><b>BOOK II &mdash; MATCHING'S EASY AT
+WAR</b></a>
+<ul>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_II_CHAPTER_THE_FIRST"><b>ONLOOKERS</b></a></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_II_CHAPTER_THE_SECOND"><b>TAKING
+PART</b></a></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_II_CHAPTER_THE_THIRD"><b>MALIGNITY</b></a></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_II_CHAPTER_THE_FOURTH"><b>IN THE WEB OF THE
+INEFFECTIVE</b></a></li>
+</ul>
+<br></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_III"><b>BOOK III &mdash; THE TESTAMENT OF
+MATCHING'S EASY</b></a>
+<ul>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_III_CHAPTER_THE_FIRST"><b>MRS. TEDDY GOES FOR A
+WALK</b></a></li>
+<li><a href="#BOOK_III_CHAPTER_THE_SECOND"><b>MR. BRITLING WRITES
+UNTIL SUNRISE</b></a></li>
+</ul>
+</li>
+</ul>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+<a name="Page_1"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_I"></a>
+<h2>BOOK I</h2>
+<h2>MATCHING'S EASY AT EASE</h2>
+<a name="Page_3"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_FIRST"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE FIRST</h2>
+<h2>MR. DIRECK VISITS MR. BRITLING</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It was the sixth day of Mr. Direck's first visit to England, and
+he was at his acutest perception of differences. He found England
+in every way gratifying and satisfactory, and more of a contrast
+with things American than he had ever dared to hope.</p>
+<p>He had promised himself this visit for many years, but being of
+a sunny rather than energetic temperament&mdash;though he firmly
+believed himself to be a reservoir of clear-sighted American
+energy&mdash;he had allowed all sorts of things, and more
+particularly the uncertainties of Miss Mamie Nelson, to keep him
+back. But now there were no more uncertainties about Miss Mamie
+Nelson, and Mr. Direck had come over to England just to convince
+himself and everybody else that there were other interests in life
+for him than Mamie....</p>
+<p>And also, he wanted to see the old country from which his
+maternal grandmother had sprung. Wasn't there even now in his
+bedroom in New York a water-colour of Market Saffron church, where
+the dear old lady had been confirmed? And generally he wanted to
+see Europe. As an interesting side show to the excursion he hoped,
+in his<a name="Page_4"></a> capacity of the rather underworked and
+rather over-salaried secretary of the Massachusetts Society for the
+Study of Contemporary Thought, to discuss certain agreeable
+possibilities with Mr. Britling, who lived at Matching's Easy.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck was a type of man not uncommon in America. He was
+very much after the fashion of that clean and pleasant-looking
+person one sees in the advertisements in American magazines, that
+agreeable person who smiles and says, "Good, it's the Fizgig
+Brand," or "Yes, it's a Wilkins, and that's the Best," or "My
+shirt-front never rucks; it's a Chesson." But now he was saying,
+still with the same firm smile, "Good. It's English." He was
+pleased by every unlikeness to things American, by every item he
+could hail as characteristic; in the train to London he had laughed
+aloud with pleasure at the chequer-board of little fields upon the
+hills of Cheshire, he had chuckled to find himself in a compartment
+without a corridor; he had tipped the polite yet kindly guard
+magnificently, after doubting for a moment whether he ought to tip
+him at all, and he had gone about his hotel in London saying
+"Lordy! Lordy! My <i>word!</i>" in a kind of ecstasy, verifying the
+delightful absence of telephone, of steam-heat, of any dependent
+bathroom. At breakfast the waiter (out of Dickens it seemed) had
+refused to know what "cereals" were, and had given him his egg in a
+china egg-cup such as you see in the pictures in <i>Punch</i>. The
+Thames, when he sallied out to see it, had been too good to be
+true, the smallest thing in rivers he had ever seen, and he had had
+to restrain himself from affecting a marked accent and accosting
+some passer-by with the question, "Say! But is this little wet
+ditch here the Historical River Thames?"</p>
+<p>In America, it must be explained, Mr. Direck spoke a very good
+and careful English indeed, but he now found the utmost difficulty
+in controlling his impulse to use a high-pitched nasal drone and
+indulge in dry "Americanisms"<a name="Page_5"></a> and poker
+metaphors upon all occasions. When people asked him questions he
+wanted to say "Yep" or "Sure," words he would no more have used in
+America than he could have used a bowie knife. But he had a sense
+of r&ocirc;le. He wanted to be visibly and audibly America
+eye-witnessing. He wanted to be just exactly what he supposed an
+Englishman would expect him to be. At any rate, his clothes had
+been made by a strongly American New York tailor, and upon the
+strength of them a taxi-man had assumed politely but firmly that
+the shillings on his taximeter were dollars, an incident that
+helped greatly to sustain the effect of Mr. Direck, in Mr. Direck's
+mind, as something standing out with an almost representative
+clearness against the English scene.... So much so that the
+taxi-man got the dollars....</p>
+<p>Because all the time he had been coming over he had dreaded that
+it wasn't true, that England was a legend, that London would turn
+out to be just another thundering great New York, and the English
+exactly like New Englanders....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>And now here he was on the branch line of the little old Great
+Eastern Railway, on his way to Matching's Easy in Essex, and he was
+suddenly in the heart of Washington Irving's England.</p>
+<p>Washington Irving's England! Indeed it was. He couldn't sit
+still and just peep at it, he had to stand up in the little
+compartment and stick his large, firm-featured, kindly countenance
+out of the window as if he greeted it. The country under the June
+sunshine was neat and bright as an old-world garden, with little
+fields of corn surrounded by dog-rose hedges, and woods and small
+rushy pastures of an infinite tidiness. He had seen a real deer
+park, it had rather tumbledown iron gates between its
+shield-surmounted pillars, and in the distance, beyond all
+question, was Bracebridge Hall nestling among<a name="Page_6"></a>
+great trees. He had seen thatched and timbered cottages, and
+half-a-dozen inns with creaking signs. He had seen a fat vicar
+driving himself along a grassy lane in a governess cart drawn by a
+fat grey pony. It wasn't like any reality he had ever known. It was
+like travelling in literature.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling's address was the Dower House, and it was, Mr.
+Britling's note had explained, on the farther edge of the park at
+Claverings. Claverings! The very name for some stately home of
+England....</p>
+<p>And yet this was only forty-two miles from London. Surely it
+brought things within the suburban range. If Matching's Easy were
+in America, commuters would live there. But in supposing that, Mr.
+Direck displayed his ignorance of a fact of the greatest importance
+to all who would understand England. There is a gap in the suburbs
+of London. The suburbs of London stretch west and south and even
+west by north, but to the north-eastward there are no suburbs;
+instead there is Essex. Essex is not a suburban county; it is a
+characteristic and individualised county which wins the heart.
+Between dear Essex and the centre of things lie two great barriers,
+the East End of London and Epping Forest. Before a train could get
+to any villadom with a cargo of season-ticket holders it would have
+to circle about this rescued woodland and travel for twenty
+unprofitable miles, and so once you are away from the main Great
+Eastern lines Essex still lives in the peace of the eighteenth
+century, and London, the modern Babylon, is, like the stars, just a
+light in the nocturnal sky. In Matching's Easy, as Mr. Britling
+presently explained to Mr. Direck, there are half-a-dozen old
+people who have never set eyes on London in their lives&mdash;and
+do not want to.</p>
+<p>"Aye-ya!"</p>
+<p>"Fussin' about thea."</p>
+<p>"Mr. Robinson, 'e went to Lon', 'e did. That's 'ow 'e 'urt 'is
+fut."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck had learnt at the main-line junction that<a name=
+"Page_7"></a> he had to tell the guard to stop the train for
+Matching's Easy; it only stopped "by request"; the thing was
+getting better and better; and when Mr. Direck seized his grip and
+got out of the train there was just one little old Essex
+station-master and porter and signalman and everything, holding a
+red flag in his hand and talking to Mr. Britling about the
+cultivation of the sweet peas which glorified the station. And
+there was the Mr. Britling who was the only item of business and
+the greatest expectation in Mr. Direck's European journey, and he
+was quite unlike the portraits Mr. Direck had seen and quite
+unmistakably Mr. Britling all the same, since there was nobody else
+upon the platform, and he was advancing with a gesture of
+welcome.</p>
+<p>"Did you ever see such peas, Mr. Dick?" said Mr. Britling by way
+of introduction.</p>
+<p>"My <i>word</i>," said Mr. Direck in a good old Farmer Hayseed
+kind of voice.</p>
+<p>"Aye-ya!" said the station-master in singularly strident tones.
+"It be a rare year for sweet peas," and then he slammed the door of
+the carriage in a leisurely manner and did dismissive things with
+his flag, while the two gentlemen took stock, as people say, of one
+another.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Except in the doubtful instance of Miss Mamie Nelson, Mr.
+Direck's habit was good fortune. Pleasant things came to him. Such
+was his position as the salaried secretary of this society of
+thoughtful Massachusetts business men to which allusion has been
+made. Its purpose was to bring itself expeditiously into touch with
+the best thought of the age.</p>
+<p>Too busily occupied with practical realities to follow the
+thought of the age through all its divagations and into all its
+recesses, these Massachusetts business men had had to consider
+methods of access more quintessential and<a name="Page_8"></a>
+nuclear. And they had decided not to hunt out the best thought in
+its merely germinating stages, but to wait until it had emerged and
+flowered to some trustworthy recognition, and then, rather than
+toil through recondite and possibly already reconsidered books and
+writings generally, to offer an impressive fee to the emerged new
+thinker, and to invite him to come to them and to lecture to them
+and to have a conference with them, and to tell them simply,
+competently and completely at first hand just all that he was
+about. To come, in fact, and be himself&mdash;in a highly
+concentrated form. In this way a number of interesting Europeans
+had been given very pleasant excursions to America, and the society
+had been able to form very definite opinions upon their teaching.
+And Mr. Britling was one of the representative thinkers upon which
+this society had decided to inform itself. It was to broach this
+invitation and to offer him the impressive honorarium by which the
+society honoured not only its guests but itself, that Mr. Direck
+had now come to Matching's Easy. He had already sent Mr. Britling a
+letter of introduction, not indeed intimating his precise purpose,
+but mentioning merely a desire to know him, and the letter had been
+so happily phrased and its writer had left such a memory of
+pleasant hospitality on Mr. Britling's mind during Mr. Britling's
+former visit to New York, that it had immediately produced for Mr.
+Direck an invitation not merely to come and see him but to come and
+stay over the week-end.</p>
+<p>And here they were shaking hands.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling did not look at all as Mr. Direck had expected him
+to look. He had expected an Englishman in a country costume of
+golfing tweeds, like the Englishman in country costume one sees in
+American illustrated stories. Drooping out of the country costume
+of golfing tweeds he had expected to see the mildly unhappy face,
+pensive even to its drooping moustache, with which Mr. Britling's
+publisher had for some faulty and unfortunate reason<a name=
+"Page_9"></a> familiarised the American public. Instead of this,
+Mr. Britling was in a miscellaneous costume, and mildness was the
+last quality one could attribute to him. His moustache, his hair,
+his eyebrows bristled; his flaming freckled face seemed about to
+bristle too. His little hazel eyes came out with a "ping" and
+looked at Mr. Direck. Mr. Britling was one of a large but still
+remarkable class of people who seem at the mere approach of
+photography to change their hair, their clothes, their moral
+natures. No photographer had ever caught a hint of his essential
+Britlingness and bristlingness. Only the camera could ever induce
+Mr. Britling to brush his hair, and for the camera alone did he
+reserve that expression of submissive martyrdom Mr. Direck knew.
+And Mr. Direck was altogether unprepared for a certain casualness
+of costume that sometimes overtook Mr. Britling. He was wearing now
+a very old blue flannel blazer, no hat, and a pair of
+knickerbockers, not tweed breeches but tweed knickerbockers of a
+remarkable bagginess, and made of one of those virtuous socialistic
+homespun tweeds that drag out into woolly knots and strings
+wherever there is attrition. His stockings were worsted and
+wrinkled, and on his feet were those extraordinary slippers of
+bright-coloured bast-like interwoven material one buys in the north
+of France. These were purple with a touch of green. He had, in
+fact, thought of the necessity of meeting Mr. Direck at the station
+at the very last moment, and had come away from his study in the
+clothes that had happened to him when he got up. His face wore the
+amiable expression of a wire-haired terrier disposed to be
+friendly, and it struck Mr. Direck that for a man of his real
+intellectual distinction Mr. Britling was unusually short.</p>
+<p>For there can be no denying that Mr. Britling was, in a sense,
+distinguished. The hero and subject of this novel was at its very
+beginning a distinguished man. He was in the <i>Who's Who</i> of
+two continents. In the last few years he had grown with some
+rapidity into a writer<a name="Page_10"></a> recognised and
+welcomed by the more cultivated sections of the American public,
+and even known to a select circle of British readers. To his
+American discoverers he had first appeared as an essayist, a
+serious essayist who wrote about aesthetics and Oriental thought
+and national character and poets and painting. He had come through
+America some years ago as one of those Kahn scholars, those
+promising writers and intelligent men endowed by Auguste Kahn of
+Paris, who go about the world nowadays in comfort and consideration
+as the travelling guests of that original philanthropist&mdash;to
+acquire the international spirit. Previously he had been a critic
+of art and literature and a writer of thoughtful third leaders in
+the London <i>Times</i>. He had begun with a Pembroke fellowship
+and a prize poem. He had returned from his world tour to his
+reflective yet original corner of <i>The Times</i> and to the
+production of books about national relationships and social
+psychology, that had brought him rapidly into prominence.</p>
+<p>His was a naturally irritable mind, which gave him point and
+passion; and moreover he had a certain obstinate originality and a
+generous disposition. So that he was always lively, sometimes
+spacious, and never vile. He loved to write and talk. He talked
+about everything, he had ideas about everything; he could no more
+help having ideas about everything than a dog can resist smelling
+at your heels. He sniffed at the heels of reality. Lots of people
+found him interesting and stimulating, a few found him seriously
+exasperating. He had ideas in the utmost profusion about races and
+empires and social order and political institutions and gardens and
+automobiles and the future of India and China and aesthetics and
+America and the education of mankind in general.... And all that
+sort of thing....</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck had read a very great deal of all this expressed
+opiniativeness of Mr. Britling: he found it entertaining and
+stimulating stuff, and it was with genuine enthusiasm that he had
+come over to encounter the man<a name="Page_11"></a> himself. On
+his way across the Atlantic and during the intervening days, he had
+rehearsed this meeting in varying keys, but always on the
+supposition that Mr. Britling was a large, quiet, thoughtful sort
+of man, a man who would, as it were, sit in attentive rows like a
+public meeting and listen. So Mr. Direck had prepared quite a
+number of pleasant and attractive openings, and now he felt was the
+moment for some one of these various simple, memorable utterances.
+But in none of these forecasts had he reckoned with either the
+spontaneous activities of Mr. Britling or with the station-master
+of Matching's Easy. Oblivious of any conversational necessities
+between Mr. Direck and Mr. Britling, this official now took charge
+of Mr. Direck's grip-sack, and, falling into line with the two
+gentlemen as they walked towards the exit gate, resumed what was
+evidently an interrupted discourse upon sweet peas, originally
+addressed to Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>He was a small, elderly man with a determined-looking face and a
+sea voice, and it was clear he overestimated the distance of his
+hearers.</p>
+<p>"Mr. Darling what's head gardener up at Claverings, <i>'e</i>
+can't get sweet peas like that, try <i>'ow</i> 'e will. Tried
+everything 'e 'as. Sand ballast, 'e's tried. Seeds same as me. 'E
+came along 'ere only the other day, 'e did, and 'e says to me, 'e
+says, 'darned 'f I can see why a station-master should beat a
+professional gardener at 'is own game,' 'e says, 'but you do. And
+in your orf time, too, so's to speak,' 'e says. 'I've tried sile,'
+'e says&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Your first visit to England?" asked Mr. Britling of his
+guest.</p>
+<p>"Absolutely," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"I says to 'im, 'there's one thing you 'aven't tried,' I says,"
+the station-master continued, raising his voice by a Herculean feat
+still higher.</p>
+<p>"I've got a little car outside here," said Mr. Britling. "I'm a
+couple of miles from the station."</p>
+<p>"I says to 'im, I says, ''ave you tried the vibritation
+of<a name="Page_12"></a> the trains?' I says. 'That's what you
+'aven't tried, Mr. Darling. That's what you <i>can't</i> try,' I
+says. 'But you rest assured that that's the secret of my sweet
+peas,' I says, 'nothing less and nothing more than the vibritation
+of the trains.'"</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck's mind was a little confused by the double nature of
+the conversation and by the fact that Mr. Britling spoke of a car
+when he meant an automobile. He handed his ticket mechanically to
+the station-master, who continued to repeat and endorse his
+anecdote at the top of his voice as Mr. Britling disposed himself
+and his guest in the automobile.</p>
+<p>"You know you 'aven't 'urt that mud-guard, sir, not the
+slightest bit that matters," shouted the station-master. "I've been
+a looking at it&mdash;er. It's my fence that's suffered most. And
+that's only strained the post a lil' bit. Shall I put your bag in
+behind, sir?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck assented, and then, after a momentary hesitation,
+rewarded the station-master's services.</p>
+<p>"Ready?" asked Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"That's all right sir," the station-master reverberated.</p>
+<p>With a rather wide curve Mr. Britling steered his way out of the
+station into the highroad.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>And now it seemed was the time for Mr. Direck to make his
+meditated speeches. But an unexpected complication was to defeat
+this intention. Mr. Direck perceived almost at once that Mr.
+Britling was probably driving an automobile for the first or second
+or at the extremest the third time in his life.</p>
+<p>The thing became evident when he struggled to get into the high
+gear&mdash;an attempt that stopped the engine, and it was even more
+startlingly so when Mr. Britling narrowly missed a collision with a
+baker's cart at a corner. "I pressed the accelerator," he explained
+afterwards,<a name="Page_13"></a> "instead of the brake. One does
+at first. I missed him by less than a foot." The estimate was a
+generous one. And after that Mr. Direck became too anxious not to
+distract his host's thoughts to persist with his conversational
+openings. An attentive silence came upon both gentlemen that was
+broken presently by a sudden outcry from Mr. Britling and a great
+noise of tormented gears. "Damn!" cried Mr. Britling, and "How the
+<i>devil</i>?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck perceived that his host was trying to turn the car
+into a very beautiful gateway, with gate-houses on either side.
+Then it was manifest that Mr. Britling had abandoned this idea, and
+then they came to a stop a dozen yards or so along the main road.
+"Missed it," said Mr. Britling, and took his hands off the steering
+wheel and blew stormily, and then whistled some bars of a fretful
+air, and became still.</p>
+<p>"Do we go through these ancient gates?" asked Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling looked over his right shoulder and considered
+problems of curvature and distance. "I think," he said, "I will go
+round outside the park. It will take us a little longer, but it
+will be simpler than backing and manoeuvring here now.... These
+electric starters are remarkably convenient things. Otherwise now I
+should have to get down and wind up the engine."</p>
+<p>After that came a corner, the rounding of which seemed to
+present few difficulties until suddenly Mr. Britling cried out,
+"Eh! <i>eh</i>! EH! Oh, <i>damn</i>!"</p>
+<p>Then the two gentlemen were sitting side by side in a rather
+sloping car that had ascended the bank and buried its nose in a
+hedge of dog-rose and honeysuckle, from which two missel thrushes,
+a blackbird and a number of sparrows had made a hurried
+escape....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"Perhaps," said Mr. Britling without assurance, and after a
+little peaceful pause, "I can reverse out of this."</p>
+<a name="Page_14"></a>
+<p>He seemed to feel some explanation was due to Mr. Direck. "You
+see, at first&mdash;it's perfectly simple&mdash;one steers
+<i>round</i> a corner and then one doesn't put the wheels straight
+again, and so one keeps on going round&mdash;more than one meant
+to. It's the bicycle habit; the bicycle rights itself. One expects
+a car to do the same thing. It was my fault. The book explains all
+this question clearly, but just at the moment I forgot."</p>
+<p>He reflected and experimented in a way that made the engine
+scold and fuss....</p>
+<p>"You see, she won't budge for the reverse....
+She's&mdash;embedded.... Do you mind getting out and turning the
+wheel back? Then if I reverse, perhaps we'll get a move on...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck descended, and there were considerable efforts.</p>
+<p>"If you'd just grip the spokes. Yes, so.... One, Two, Three!...
+No! Well, let's just sit here until somebody comes along to help
+us. Oh! Somebody will come all right. Won't you get up again?"</p>
+<p>And after a reflective moment Mr. Direck resumed his seat beside
+Mr. Britling....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The two gentlemen smiled at each other to dispel any suspicion
+of discontent.</p>
+<p>"My driving leaves something to be desired," said Mr. Britling
+with an air of frank impartiality. "But I have only just got this
+car for myself&mdash;after some years of hired cars&mdash;the sort
+of lazy arrangement where people supply car, driver, petrol, tyres,
+insurance and everything at so much a month. It bored me
+abominably. I can't imagine now how I stood it for so long. They
+sent me down a succession of compact, scornful boys who used to go
+fast when I wanted to go slow, and slow when I wanted to go fast,
+and who used to take every corner on the wrong<a name=
+"Page_15"></a> side at top speed, and charge dogs and hens for the
+sport of it, and all sorts of things like that. They would not even
+let me choose my roads. I should have got myself a car long ago,
+and driven it, if it wasn't for that infernal business with a
+handle one had to do when the engine stopped. But here, you see, is
+a reasonably cheap car with an electric starter&mdash;American, I
+need scarcely say. And here I am&mdash;going at my own pace."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck glanced for a moment at the pretty disorder of the
+hedge in which they were embedded, and smiled and admitted that it
+was certainly much more agreeable.</p>
+<p>Before he had finished saying as much Mr. Britling was talking
+again.</p>
+<p>He had a quick and rather jerky way of speaking; he seemed to
+fire out a thought directly it came into his mind, and he seemed to
+have a loaded magazine of thoughts in his head. He spoke almost
+exactly twice as fast as Mr. Direck, clipping his words much more,
+using much compacter sentences, and generally cutting his corners,
+and this put Mr. Direck off his game.</p>
+<p>That rapid attack while the transatlantic interlocutor is
+deploying is indeed a not infrequent defect of conversations
+between Englishmen and Americans. It is a source of many
+misunderstandings. The two conceptions of conversation differ
+fundamentally. The English are much less disposed to listen than
+the American; they have not quite the same sense of conversational
+give and take, and at first they are apt to reduce their visitors
+to the r&ocirc;le of auditors wondering when their turn will begin.
+Their turn never does begin. Mr. Direck sat deeply in his slanting
+seat with a half face to his celebrated host and said "Yep" and
+"Sure" and "That <i>is</i> so," in the dry grave tones that he
+believed an Englishman would naturally expect him to use, realising
+this only very gradually.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling, from his praise of the enterprise that had at last
+brought a car he could drive within his reach, went on to that
+favourite topic of all intelligent Englishmen,<a name=
+"Page_16"></a> the adverse criticism of things British. He pointed
+out that the central position of the brake and gear levers in his
+automobile made it extremely easy for the American manufacturer to
+turn it out either as a left-handed or a right-handed car, and so
+adapt it either to the Continental or to the British rule of the
+road. No English cars were so adaptable. We British suffered much
+from our insular rule of the road, just as we suffered much from
+our insular weights and measures. But we took a perverse pride in
+such disadvantages. The irruption of American cars into England was
+a recent phenomenon, it was another triumph for the tremendous
+organising ability of the American mind. They were doing with the
+automobile what they had done with clocks and watches and rifles,
+they had standardised and machined wholesale, while the British
+were still making the things one by one. It was an extraordinary
+thing that England, which was the originator of the industrial
+system and the original developer of the division of labour, should
+have so fallen away from systematic manufacturing. He believed this
+was largely due to the influence of Oxford and the Established
+Church....</p>
+<p>At this point Mr. Direck was moved by an anecdote. "It will help
+to illustrate what you are saying, Mr. Britling, about systematic
+organisation if I tell you a little incident that happened to a
+friend of mine in Toledo, where they are setting up a big plant
+with a view to capturing the entire American and European market in
+the class of the thousand-dollar car&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"There's no end of such little incidents," said Mr. Britling,
+cutting in without apparent effort. "You see, we get it on both
+sides. Our manufacturer class was, of course, originally an
+insurgent class. It was a class of distended craftsmen. It had the
+craftsman's natural enterprise and natural radicalism. As soon as
+it prospered and sent its boys to Oxford it was lost. Our
+manufacturing class was assimilated in no time to the
+conservative<a name="Page_17"></a> classes, whose education has
+always had a mandarin quality&mdash;very, very little of it, and
+very cold and choice. In America you have so far had no real
+conservative class at all. Fortunate continent! You cast out your
+Tories, and you were left with nothing but Whigs and Radicals. But
+our peculiar bad luck has been to get a sort of revolutionary who
+is a Tory mandarin too. Ruskin and Morris, for example, were as
+reactionary and anti-scientific as the dukes and the bishops.
+Machine haters. Science haters. Rule of Thumbites to the bone. So
+are our current Socialists. They've filled this country with the
+idea that the ideal automobile ought to be made entirely by the
+hand labour of traditional craftsmen, quite individually, out of
+beaten copper, wrought iron and seasoned oak. All this
+electric-starter business and this electric lighting outfit I have
+here, is perfectly hateful to the English mind.... It isn't that we
+are simply backward in these things, we are antagonistic. The
+British mind has never really tolerated electricity; at least, not
+that sort of electricity that runs through wires. Too slippery and
+glib for it. Associates it with Italians and fluency generally,
+with Volta, Galvani, Marconi and so on. The proper British
+electricity is that high-grade useless long-sparking stuff you get
+by turning round a glass machine; stuff we used to call frictional
+electricity. Keep it in Leyden jars.... At Claverings here they
+still refuse to have electric bells. There was a row when the
+Solomonsons, who were tenants here for a time, tried to put them
+in...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck had followed this cascade of remarks with a patient
+smile and a slowly nodding head. "What you say," he said, "forms a
+very marked contrast indeed with the sort of thing that goes on in
+America. This friend of mine I was speaking of, the one who is
+connected with an automobile factory in Toledo&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Of course," Mr. Britling burst out again, "even conservatism
+isn't an ultimate thing. After all, we and your<a name=
+"Page_18"></a> enterprising friend at Toledo, are very much the
+same blood. The conservatism, I mean, isn't racial. And our earlier
+energy shows it isn't in the air or in the soil. England has become
+unenterprising and sluggish because England has been so prosperous
+and comfortable...."</p>
+<p>"Exactly," said Mr. Direck. "My friend of whom I was telling
+you, was a man named Robinson, which indicates pretty clearly that
+he was of genuine English stock, and, if I may say so, quite of
+your build and complexion; racially, I should say, he was,
+well&mdash;very much what you are...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>This rally of Mr. Direck's mind was suddenly interrupted.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling stood up, and putting both hands to the sides of
+his mouth, shouted "Yi-ah! Aye-ya! Thea!" at unseen hearers.</p>
+<p>After shouting again, several times, it became manifest that he
+had attracted the attention of two willing but deliberate labouring
+men. They emerged slowly, first as attentive heads, from the
+landscape. With their assistance the car was restored to the road
+again. Mr. Direck assisted manfully, and noted the respect that was
+given to Mr. Britling and the shillings that fell to the men, with
+an intelligent detachment. They touched their hats, they called Mr.
+Britling "Sir." They examined the car distantly but kindly. "Ain't
+'urt 'e, not a bit 'e ain't, not really," said one encouragingly.
+And indeed except for a slight crumpling of the mud-guard and the
+detachment of the wire of one of the headlights the automobile was
+uninjured. Mr. Britling resumed his seat; Mr. Direck gravely and in
+silence got up beside him. They started with the usual convulsion,
+as though something had pricked the vehicle unexpectedly and
+shamefully behind. And from this point Mr. Britling, driving with
+meticulous care, got home without further mishap, excepting only
+that<a name="Page_19"></a> he scraped off some of the metal edge of
+his footboard against the gate-post of his very agreeable
+garden.</p>
+<p>His family welcomed his safe return, visitor and all, with
+undisguised relief and admiration. A small boy appeared at the
+corner of the house, and then disappeared hastily again. "Daddy's
+got back all right at last," they heard him shouting to unseen
+hearers.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Direck, though he was a little incommoded by the suppression
+of his story about Robinson&mdash;for when he had begun a thing he
+liked to finish it&mdash;found Mr. Britling's household at once
+thoroughly British, quite un-American and a little difficult to
+follow. It had a quality that at first he could not define at all.
+Compared with anything he had ever seen in his life before it
+struck him as being&mdash;he found the word at last&mdash;sketchy.
+For instance, he was introduced to nobody except his hostess, and
+she was indicated to him by a mere wave of Mr. Britling's hand.
+"That's Edith," he said, and returned at once to his car to put it
+away. Mrs. Britling was a tall, freckled woman with pretty bright
+brown hair and preoccupied brown eyes. She welcomed him with a
+handshake, and then a wonderful English parlourmaid&mdash;she at
+least was according to expectations&mdash;took his grip-sack and
+guided him to his room. "Lunch, sir," she said, "is outside," and
+closed the door and left him to that and a towel-covered can of hot
+water.</p>
+<p>It was a square-looking old red-brick house he had come to, very
+handsome in a simple Georgian fashion, with a broad lawn before it
+and great blue cedar trees, and a drive that came frankly up to the
+front door and then went off with Mr. Britling and the car round to
+unknown regions at the back. The centre of the house was a big airy
+hall, oak-panelled, warmed in winter only by one large fireplace
+and abounding in doors which he knew opened into the square
+separate rooms that England favours. Bookshelves<a name=
+"Page_20"></a> and stuffed birds comforted the landing outside his
+bedroom. He descended to find the hall occupied by a small bright
+bristling boy in white flannel shirt and knickerbockers and bare
+legs and feet. He stood before the vacant open fireplace in an
+attitude that Mr. Direck knew instantly was also Mr. Britling's.
+"Lunch is in the garden," the Britling scion proclaimed, "and I've
+got to fetch you. And, I say! is it true? Are you American?"</p>
+<p>"Why surely," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"Well, I know some American," said the boy. "I learnt it."</p>
+<p>"Tell me some," said Mr. Direck, smiling still more amiably.</p>
+<p>"Oh! Well&mdash;God darn you! Ouch, Gee-whizz! Soak him, Maud!
+It's up to you, Duke...."</p>
+<p>"Now where did you learn all that?" asked Mr. Direck
+recovering.</p>
+<p>"Out of the Sunday Supplement," said the youthful Britling.</p>
+<p>"Why! Then you know all about Buster Brown," said Mr. Direck.
+"He's Fine&mdash;eh?"</p>
+<p>The Britling child hated Buster Brown. He regarded Buster Brown
+as a totally unnecessary infant. He detested the way he wore his
+hair and the peculiar cut of his knickerbockers and&mdash;him. He
+thought Buster Brown the one drop of paraffin in the otherwise
+delicious feast of the Sunday Supplement. But he was a diplomatic
+child.</p>
+<p>"I think I like Happy Hooligan better," he said. "And dat ole
+Maud."</p>
+<p>He reflected with joyful eyes, Buster clean forgotten. "Every
+week," he said, "she kicks some one."</p>
+<p>It came to Mr. Direck as a very pleasant discovery that a
+British infant could find a common ground with the small people at
+home in these characteristically American jests. He had never
+dreamt that the fine wine of Maud and Buster could travel.</p>
+<a name="Page_21"></a>
+<p>"Maud's a treat," said the youthful Britling, relapsing into his
+native tongue.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling appeared coming to meet them. He was now in a grey
+flannel suit&mdash;he must have jumped into it&mdash;and altogether
+very much tidier....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 9</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The long narrow table under the big sycamores between the house
+and the adapted barn that Mr. Direck learnt was used for "dancing
+and all that sort of thing," was covered with a blue linen diaper
+cloth, and that too surprised him. This was his first meal in a
+private household in England, and for obscure reasons he had
+expected something very stiff and formal with "spotless napery." He
+had also expected a very stiff and capable service by implacable
+parlourmaids, and the whole thing indeed highly genteel. But two
+cheerful women servants appeared from what was presumably the
+kitchen direction, wheeling a curious wicker erection, which his
+small guide informed him was called Aunt Clatter&mdash;manifestly
+deservedly&mdash;and which bore on its shelves the substance of the
+meal. And while the maids at this migratory sideboard carved and
+opened bottles and so forth, the small boy and a slightly larger
+brother, assisted a little by two young men of no very defined
+position and relationship, served the company. Mrs. Britling sat at
+the head of the table, and conversed with Mr. Direck by means of
+hostess questions and imperfectly accepted answers while she kept a
+watchful eye on the proceedings.</p>
+<p>The composition of the company was a matter for some perplexity
+to Mr. Direck. Mr. and Mrs. Britling were at either end of the
+table, that was plain enough. It was also fairly plain that the two
+barefooted boys were little Britlings. But beyond this was a cloud
+of uncertainty. There was a youth of perhaps seventeen, much darker
+than Britling but with nose and freckles rather like his, who might
+be an early son or a stepson; he was shock-headed<a name=
+"Page_22"></a> and with that look about his arms and legs that
+suggests overnight growth; and there was an unmistakable young
+German, very pink, with close-cropped fair hair, glasses and a
+panama hat, who was probably the tutor of the younger boys. (Mr.
+Direck also was wearing his hat, his mind had been filled with an
+exaggerated idea of the treacheries of the English climate before
+he left New York. Every one else was hatless.) Finally, before one
+reached the limits of the explicable there was a pleasant young man
+with a lot of dark hair and very fine dark blue eyes, whom
+everybody called "Teddy." For him, Mr. Direck hazarded
+"secretary."</p>
+<p>But in addition to these normal and understandable presences,
+there was an entirely mysterious pretty young woman in blue linen
+who sat and smiled next to Mr. Britling, and there was a rather
+kindred-looking girl with darker hair on the right of Mr. Direck
+who impressed him at the very outset as being still prettier,
+and&mdash;he didn't quite place her at first&mdash;somehow familiar
+to him; there was a large irrelevant middle-aged lady in black with
+a gold chain and a large nose, between Teddy and the tutor; there
+was a tall middle-aged man with an intelligent face, who might be a
+casual guest; there was an Indian young gentleman faultlessly
+dressed up to his brown soft linen collar and cuffs, and thereafter
+an uncontrolled outbreak of fine bronze modelling and abundant
+fuzzy hair; and there was a very erect and attentive baby of a year
+or less, sitting up in a perambulator and gesticulating cheerfully
+to everybody. This baby it was that most troubled the orderly mind
+of Mr. Direck. The research for its paternity made his conversation
+with Mrs. Britling almost as disconnected and absent-minded as her
+conversation with him. It almost certainly wasn't Mrs. Britling's.
+The girl next to him or the girl next to Mr. Britling or the lady
+in black might any of them be married, but if so where was the
+spouse? It seemed improbable that they would wheel out a foundling
+to lunch....</p>
+<a name="Page_23"></a>
+<p>Realising at last that the problem of relationship must be left
+to solve itself if he did not want to dissipate and consume his
+mind entirely, Mr. Direck turned to his hostess, who was enjoying a
+brief lull in her administrative duties, and told her what a
+memorable thing the meeting of Mr. Britling in his own home would
+be in his life, and how very highly America was coming to esteem
+Mr. Britling and his essays. He found that with a slight change of
+person, one of his premeditated openings was entirely serviceable
+here. And he went on to observe that it was novel and entertaining
+to find Mr. Britling driving his own automobile and to note that it
+was an automobile of American manufacture. In America they had
+standardised and systematised the making of such things as
+automobiles to an extent that would, he thought, be almost
+startling to Europeans. It was certainly startling to the European
+manufacturers. In illustration of that he might tell a little story
+of a friend of his called Robinson&mdash;a man who curiously enough
+in general build and appearance was very reminiscent indeed of Mr.
+Britling. He had been telling Mr. Britling as much on his way here
+from the station. His friend was concerned with several others in
+one of the biggest attacks that had ever been made upon what one
+might describe in general terms as the thousand-dollar light
+automobile market. What they said practically was this: This market
+is a jig-saw puzzle waiting to be put together and made one. We are
+going to do it. But that was easier to figure out than to do. At
+the very outset of this attack he and his associates found
+themselves up against an unexpected and very difficult
+proposition....</p>
+<p>At first Mrs. Britling had listened to Mr. Direck with an almost
+undivided attention, but as he had developed his opening the feast
+upon the blue linen table had passed on to a fresh phase that
+demanded more and more of her directive intelligence. The two
+little boys appeared suddenly at her elbows. "Shall we take the
+plates and get<a name="Page_24"></a> the strawberries, Mummy?" they
+asked simultaneously. Then one of the neat maids in the background
+had to be called up and instructed in undertones, and Mr. Direck
+saw that for the present Robinson's illuminating experience was not
+for her ears. A little baffled, but quite understanding how things
+were, he turned to his neighbour on his left....</p>
+<p>The girl really had an extraordinarily pretty smile, and there
+was something in her soft bright brown eye&mdash;like the movement
+of some quick little bird. And&mdash;she was like somebody he knew!
+Indeed she was. She was quite ready to be spoken to.</p>
+<p>"I was telling Mrs. Britling," said Mr. Direck, "what a very
+great privilege I esteem it to meet Mr. Britling in this highly
+familiar way."</p>
+<p>"You've not met him before?"</p>
+<p>"I missed him by twenty-four hours when he came through Boston
+on the last occasion. Just twenty-four hours. It was a matter of
+very great regret to me."</p>
+<p>"I wish I'd been paid to travel round the world."</p>
+<p>"You must write things like Mr. Britling and then Mr. Kahn will
+send you."</p>
+<p>"Don't you think if I promised well?"</p>
+<p>"You'd have to write some promissory notes, I think&mdash;just
+to convince him it was all right."</p>
+<p>The young lady reflected on Mr. Britling's good fortune.</p>
+<p>"He saw India. He saw Japan. He had weeks in Egypt. And he went
+right across America."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck had already begun on the liner to adapt himself to
+the hopping inconsecutiveness of English conversation. He made now
+what he felt was quite a good hop, and he dropped his voice to a
+confidential undertone. (It was probably Adam in his first
+conversation with Eve, who discovered the pleasantness of dropping
+into a confidential undertone beside a pretty ear with a pretty
+wave of hair above it.)</p>
+<a name="Page_25"></a>
+<p>"It was in India, I presume," murmured Mr. Direck, "that Mr.
+Britling made the acquaintance of the coloured gentleman?"</p>
+<p>"Coloured gentleman!" She gave a swift glance down the table as
+though she expected to see something purple with yellow spots. "Oh,
+that is one of Mr. Lawrence Carmine's young men!" she explained
+even more confidentially and with an air of discussing the silver
+bowl of roses before him. "He's a great authority on Indian
+literature, he belongs to a society for making things pleasant for
+Indian students in London, and he has them down."</p>
+<p>"And Mr. Lawrence Carmine?" he pursued.</p>
+<p>Even more intimately and confidentially she indicated Mr.
+Carmine, as it seemed by a motion of her eyelash.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck prepared to be even more <i>sotto-voce</i> and to
+plumb a much profounder mystery. His eye rested on the
+perambulator; he leant a little nearer to the ear.... But the
+strawberries interrupted him.</p>
+<p>"Strawberries!" said the young lady, and directed his regard to
+his left shoulder by a little movement of her head.</p>
+<p>He found one of the boys with a high-piled plate ready to serve
+him.</p>
+<p>And then Mrs. Britling resumed her conversation with him. She
+was so ignorant, she said, of things American, that she did not
+even know if they had strawberries there. At any rate, here they
+were at the crest of the season, and in a very good year. And in
+the rose season too. It was one of the dearest vanities of English
+people to think their apples and their roses and their strawberries
+the best in the world.</p>
+<p>"And their complexions," said Mr. Direck, over the pyramid of
+fruit, quite manifestly intending a compliment. So that was all
+right.... But the girl on the left of him was speaking across the
+table to the German tutor,<a name="Page_26"></a> and did not hear
+what he had said. So that even if it wasn't very neat it didn't
+matter....</p>
+<p>Then he remembered that she was like that old daguerreotype of a
+cousin of his grandmother's that he had fallen in love with when he
+was a boy. It was her smile. Of course! Of course!... And he'd sort
+of adored that portrait.... He felt a curious disposition to tell
+her as much....</p>
+<p>"What makes this visit even more interesting if possible to me,"
+he said to Mrs. Britling, "than it would otherwise be, is that this
+Essex country is the country in which my maternal grandmother was
+raised, and also long way back my mother's father's people. My
+mother's father's people were very early New England people
+indeed.... Well, no. If I said <i>Mayflower</i> it wouldn't be
+true. But it would approximate. They were Essex Hinkinsons. That's
+what they were. I must be a good third of me at least Essex. My
+grandmother was an Essex Corner, I must confess I've had some
+thought&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Corner?" said the young lady at his elbow sharply.</p>
+<p>"I was telling Mrs. Britling I had some thought&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"But about those Essex relatives of yours?"</p>
+<p>"Well, of finding if they were still about in these parts....
+Say! I haven't dropped a brick, have I?"</p>
+<p>He looked from one face to another.</p>
+<p>"<i>She's</i> a Corner," said Mrs. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Direck, and hesitated for a moment. It was so
+delightful that one couldn't go on being just discreet. The
+atmosphere was free and friendly. His intonation disarmed offence.
+And he gave the young lady the full benefit of a quite expressive
+eye. "I'm very pleased to meet you, Cousin Corner. How are the old
+folks at home?"</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 10</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The bright interest of this consulship helped Mr. Direck more
+than anything to get the better of his Robinson-anecdote<a name=
+"Page_27"></a> crave, and when presently he found his dialogue with
+Mr. Britling resumed, he turned at once to this remarkable
+discovery of his long lost and indeed hitherto unsuspected
+relative. "It's an American sort of thing to do, I suppose," he
+said apologetically, "but I almost thought of going on, on Monday,
+to Market Saffron, which was the locality of the Hinkinsons, and
+just looking about at the tombstones in the churchyard for a day or
+so."</p>
+<p>"Very probably," said Mr. Britling, "you'd find something about
+them in the parish registers. Lots of our registers go back three
+hundred years or more. I'll drive you over in my lil' old car."</p>
+<p>"Oh! I wouldn't put you to that trouble," said Mr. Direck
+hastily.</p>
+<p>"It's no trouble. I like the driving. What I have had of it. And
+while we're at it, we'll come back by Harborough High Oak and look
+up the Corner pedigree. They're all over that district still. And
+the road's not really difficult; it's only a bit up and down and
+roundabout."</p>
+<p>"I couldn't think, Mr. Britling, of putting you to that much
+trouble."</p>
+<p>"It's no trouble. I want a day off, and I'm dying to take
+Gladys&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Gladys?" said Mr. Direck with sudden hope.</p>
+<p>"That's my name for the lil' car. I'm dying to take her for
+something like a decent run. I've only had her out four times
+altogether, and I've not got her up yet to forty miles. Which I'm
+told she ought to do easily. We'll consider that settled."</p>
+<p>For the moment Mr. Direck couldn't think of any further excuse.
+But it was very clear in his mind that something must happen; he
+wished he knew of somebody who could send a recall telegram from
+London, to prevent him committing himself to the casual destinies
+of Mr. Britling's car again. And then another interest became
+uppermost in his mind.</p>
+<a name="Page_28"></a>
+<p>"You'd hardly believe me," he said, "if I told you that that
+Miss Corner of yours has a quite extraordinary resemblance to a
+miniature I've got away there in America of a cousin of my maternal
+grandmother's. She seems a very pleasant young lady."</p>
+<p>But Mr. Britling supplied no further information about Miss
+Corner.</p>
+<p>"It must be very interesting," he said, "to come over here and
+pick up these American families of yours on the monuments and
+tombstones. You know, of course, that district south of Evesham
+where every other church monument bears the stars and stripes, the
+arms of departed Washingtons. I doubt though if you'll still find
+the name about there. Nor will you find many Hinkinsons in Market
+Saffron. But lots of this country here has five or six
+hundred-year-old families still flourishing. That's why Essex is so
+much more genuinely Old England than Surrey, say, or Kent. Round
+here you'll find Corners and Fairlies, and then you get Capels, and
+then away down towards Dunmow and Braintree Maynards and Byngs. And
+there are oaks and hornbeams in the park about Claverings that have
+echoed to the howling of wolves and the clank of men in armour. All
+the old farms here are moated&mdash;because of the wolves.
+Claverings itself is Tudor, and rather fine too. And the cottages
+still wear thatch...."</p>
+<p>He reflected. "Now if you went south of London instead of
+northward it's all different. You're in a different period, a
+different society. You're in London suburbs right down to the sea.
+You'll find no genuine estates left, not of our deep-rooted
+familiar sort. You'll find millionaires and that sort of people,
+sitting in the old places. Surrey is full of rich stockbrokers,
+company-promoters, bookies, judges, newspaper proprietors. Sort of
+people who fence the paths across their parks. They do something to
+the old places&mdash;I don't know what they do&mdash;but instantly
+the countryside becomes a villadom.<a name="Page_29"></a> And
+little sub-estates and red-brick villas and art cottages spring up.
+And a kind of new, hard neatness. And pneumatic tyre and automobile
+spirit advertisements, great glaring boards by the roadside. And
+all the poor people are inspected and rushed about until they
+forget who their grandfathers were. They become villa parasites and
+odd-job men, and grow basely rich and buy gramophones. This Essex
+and yonder Surrey are as different as Russia and Germany. But for
+one American who comes to look at Essex, twenty go to Godalming and
+Guildford and Dorking and Lewes and Canterbury. Those Surrey people
+are not properly English at all. They are strenuous. You have to
+get on or get out. They drill their gardeners, lecture very fast on
+agricultural efficiency, and have miniature rifle ranges in every
+village. It's a county of new notice-boards and barbed-wire fences;
+there's always a policeman round the corner. They dress for dinner.
+They dress for everything. If a man gets up in the night to look
+for a burglar he puts on the correct costume&mdash;or doesn't go.
+They've got a special scientific system for urging on their tramps.
+And they lock up their churches on a week-day. Half their soil is
+hard chalk or a rationalistic sand, only suitable for bunkers and
+villa foundations. And they play golf in a large, expensive,
+thorough way because it's the thing to do.... Now here in Essex
+we're as lax as the eighteenth century. We hunt in any old clothes.
+Our soil is a rich succulent clay; it becomes semi-fluid in
+winter&mdash;when we go about in waders shooting duck. All our
+fingerposts have been twisted round by facetious men years ago. And
+we pool our breeds of hens and pigs. Our roses and oaks are
+wonderful; that alone shows that this is the real England. If I
+wanted to play golf&mdash;which I don't, being a decent Essex
+man&mdash;I should have to motor ten miles into Hertfordshire. And
+for rheumatics and longevity Surrey can't touch us. I want you to
+be clear on these points, because they really will affect
+your<a name="Page_30"></a> impressions of this place.... This
+country is a part of the real England&mdash;England outside London
+and outside manufactures. It's one with Wessex and Mercia or old
+Yorkshire&mdash;or for the matter of that with Meath or Lothian.
+And it's the essential England still...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 11</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It detracted a little from Mr. Direck's appreciation of this
+flow of information that it was taking them away from the rest of
+the company. He wanted to see more of his new-found cousin, and
+what the baby and the Bengali gentleman&mdash;whom manifestly one
+mustn't call "coloured"&mdash;and the large-nosed lady and all the
+other inexplicables would get up to. Instead of which Mr. Britling
+was leading him off alone with an air of showing him round the
+premises, and talking too rapidly and variously for a question to
+be got in edgeways, much less any broaching of the matter that Mr.
+Direck had come over to settle.</p>
+<p>There was quite a lot of rose garden, it made the air delicious,
+and it was full of great tumbling bushes of roses and of neglected
+standards, and it had a long pergola of creepers and trailers and a
+great arbour, and underneath over the beds everywhere, contrary to
+all the rules, the blossom of a multitude of pansies and stock and
+little trailing plants swarmed and crowded and scrimmaged and
+drilled and fought great massed attacks. And then Mr. Britling
+talked their way round a red-walled vegetable garden with an
+abundance of fruit trees, and through a door into a terraced square
+that had once been a farmyard, outside the converted barn. The barn
+doors had been replaced by a door-pierced window of glass, and in
+the middle of the square space a deep tank had been made, full of
+rainwater, in which Mr. Britling remarked casually that "everybody"
+bathed when the weather was hot. Thyme and rosemary and suchlike
+sweet-scented things<a name="Page_31"></a> grew on the terrace
+about the tank, and ten trimmed little trees of <i>Arbor vitae</i>
+stood sentinel. Mr. Direck was tantalisingly aware that beyond some
+lilac bushes were his new-found cousin and the kindred young woman
+in blue playing tennis with the Indian and another young man, while
+whenever it was necessary the large-nosed lady crossed the stage
+and brooded soothingly over the perambulator. And Mr. Britling,
+choosing a seat from which Mr. Direck just couldn't look
+comfortably through the green branches at the flying glimpses of
+pink and blue and white and brown, continued to talk about England
+and America in relation to each other and everything else under the
+sun.</p>
+<p>Presently through a distant gate the two small boys were
+momentarily visible wheeling small but serviceable bicycles,
+followed after a little interval by the German tutor. Then an
+enormous grey cat came slowly across the garden court, and sat down
+to listen respectfully to Mr. Britling. The afternoon sky was an
+intense blue, with little puff-balls of cloud lined out across
+it.</p>
+<p>Occasionally, from chance remarks of Mr. Britling's, Mr. Direck
+was led to infer that his first impressions as an American visitor
+were being related to his host, but as a matter of fact he was
+permitted to relate nothing; Mr. Britling did all the talking. He
+sat beside his guest and spirted and played ideas and reflections
+like a happy fountain in the sunshine.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck sat comfortably, and smoked with quiet appreciation
+the one after-lunch cigar he allowed himself. At any rate, if he
+himself felt rather word-bound, the fountain was nimble and
+entertaining. He listened in a general sort of way to the talk, it
+was quite impossible to follow it thoughtfully throughout all its
+chinks and turnings, while his eyes wandered about the garden and
+went ever and again to the flitting tennis-players beyond the
+green. It was all very gay and comfortable and complete; it was
+various and delightful without being in the least <i>opulent</i>;
+that was one of the little secrets America<a name="Page_32"></a>
+had to learn. It didn't look as though it had been made or bought
+or cost anything, it looked as though it had happened rather
+luckily....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling's talk became like a wide stream flowing through
+Mr. Direck's mind, bearing along momentary impressions and
+observations, drifting memories of all the crowded English sights
+and sounds of the last five days, filmy imaginations about
+ancestral names and pretty cousins, scraps of those prepared
+conversational openings on Mr. Britling's standing in America, the
+explanation about the lecture club, the still incompletely
+forgotten purport of the Robinson anecdote....</p>
+<p>"Nobody planned the British estate system, nobody planned the
+British aristocratic system, nobody planned the confounded
+constitution, it came about, it was like layer after layer wrapping
+round an agate, but you see it came about so happily in a way, it
+so suited the climate and the temperament of our people and our
+island, it was on the whole so cosy, that our people settled down
+into it, you can't help settling down into it, they had already
+settled down by the days of Queen Anne, and Heaven knows if we
+shall ever really get away again. We're like that little shell the
+<i>Lingula</i>, that is found in the oldest rocks and lives to-day:
+it fitted its easy conditions, and it has never modified since. Why
+should it? It excretes all its disturbing forces. Our younger sons
+go away and found colonial empires. Our surplus cottage children
+emigrate to Australia and Canada or migrate into the towns. It
+doesn't alter <i>this</i>...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 12</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Direck's eye had come to rest upon the barn, and its
+expression changed slowly from lazy appreciation to a brightening
+intelligence. Suddenly he resolved to say something. He resolved to
+say it so firmly that he determined to say it even if Mr. Britling
+went on talking all the time.</p>
+<a name="Page_33"></a>
+<p>"I suppose, Mr. Britling," he said, "this barn here dates from
+the days of Queen Anne."</p>
+<p>"The walls of the yard here are probably earlier: probably
+monastic. That grey patch in the corner, for example. The barn
+itself is Georgian."</p>
+<p>"And here it is still. And this farmyard, here it is still."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was for flying off again, but Mr. Direck would not
+listen; he held on like a man who keeps his grip on a lasso.</p>
+<p>"There's one thing I would like to remark about your barn, Mr.
+Britling, and I might, while I am at it, say the same thing about
+your farmyard."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was held. "What's that?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Direck, "the point that strikes me most about
+all this is that that barn isn't a barn any longer, and that this
+farmyard isn't a farmyard. There isn't any wheat or chaff or
+anything of that sort in the barn, and there never will be again:
+there's just a pianola and a dancing floor, and if a cow came into
+this farmyard everybody in the place would be shooing it out again.
+They'd regard it as a most unnatural object."</p>
+<p>He had a pleasant sense of talking at last. He kept right on. He
+was moved to a sweeping generalisation.</p>
+<p>"You were so good as to ask me, Mr. Britling, a little while
+ago, what my first impression of England was. Well, Mr. Britling,
+my first impression of England that seems to me to matter in the
+least is this: that it looks and feels more like the traditional
+Old England than any one could possibly have believed, and that in
+reality it is less like the traditional Old England than any one
+would ever possibly have imagined."</p>
+<p>He was carried on even further. He made a tremendous literary
+epigram. "I thought," he said, "when I looked out of the train this
+morning that I had come to the England of Washington Irving. I find
+it is not even the England of Mrs. Humphry Ward."</p>
+<a name="Page_34"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_SECOND"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE SECOND</h2>
+<h2>MR. BRITLING CONTINUES HIS EXPOSITION</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Direck found little reason to revise his dictum in the
+subsequent experiences of the afternoon. Indeed the afternoon and
+the next day were steadily consistent in confirming what a very
+good dictum it had been. The scenery was the traditional scenery of
+England, and all the people seemed quicker, more irresponsible,
+more chaotic, than any one could have anticipated, and entirely
+inexplicable by any recognised code of English
+relationships....</p>
+<p>"You think that John Bull is dead and a strange generation is
+wearing his clothes," said Mr. Britling. "I think you'll find very
+soon it's the old John Bull. Perhaps not Mrs. Humphry Ward's John
+Bull, or Mrs. Henry Wood's John Bull but true essentially to
+Shakespeare, Fielding, Dickens, Meredith...."</p>
+<p>"I suppose," he added, "there are changes. There's a new
+generation grown up...."</p>
+<p>He looked at his barn and the swimming pool. "It's a good point
+of yours about the barn," he said. "What you say reminds me of that
+very jolly thing of Kipling's about the old mill-wheel that began
+by grinding corn and ended by driving dynamos....</p>
+<p>"Only I admit that barn doesn't exactly drive a dynamo....</p>
+<p>"To be frank, it's just a pleasure barn....</p>
+<p>"The country can afford it...."</p>
+<a name="Page_35"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>He left it at that for the time, but throughout the afternoon
+Mr. Direck had the gratification of seeing his thought floating
+round and round in the back-waters of Mr. Britling's mental
+current. If it didn't itself get into the stream again its
+reflection at any rate appeared and reappeared. He was taken about
+with great assiduity throughout the afternoon, and he got no more
+than occasional glimpses of the rest of the Dower House circle
+until six o'clock in the evening.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the fountains of Mr. Britling's active and
+encyclop&aelig;dic mind played steadily.</p>
+<p>He was inordinately proud of England, and he abused her
+incessantly. He wanted to state England to Mr. Direck as the
+amiable summation of a grotesque assembly of faults. That was the
+view into which the comforts and prosperities of his middle age had
+brought him from a radicalism that had in its earlier stages been
+angry and bitter. And for Mr. Britling England was "here." Essex
+was the county he knew. He took Mr. Direck out from his walled
+garden by a little door into a trim paddock with two white goals.
+"We play hockey here on Sundays," he said in a way that gave Mr.
+Direck no hint of the practically compulsory participation of every
+visitor to Matching's Easy in this violent and dangerous exercise,
+and thence they passed by a rich deep lane and into a high road
+that ran along the edge of the deer park of Claverings. "We will
+call in on Claverings later," said Mr. Britling. "Lady Homartyn has
+some people there for the week-end, and you ought to see the sort
+of thing it is and the sort of people they are. She wanted us to
+lunch there to-morrow, but I didn't accept that because of our
+afternoon hockey."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck received this reason uncritically.</p>
+<p>The village reminded Mr. Direck of Abbey's pictures. There was
+an inn with a sign standing out in the road, a<a name=
+"Page_36"></a> painted sign of the Clavering Arms; it had a water
+trough (such as Mr. Weller senior ducked the dissenter in) and a
+green painted table outside its inviting door. There were also a
+general shop and a number of very pleasant cottages, each marked
+with the Mainstay crest. All this was grouped about a green with
+real geese drilling thereon. Mr. Britling conducted his visitor
+(through a lych gate) into the church-yard, and there they found
+mossy, tumble-down tombstones, one with a skull and cross-bones
+upon it, that went back to the later seventeenth century. In the
+aisle of the church were three huge hatchments, and there was a
+side chapel devoted to the Mainstay family and the Barons Homartyn,
+with a series of monuments that began with painted Tudor effigies
+and came down to a vast stained glass window of the vilest
+commercial Victorian. There were also medi&aelig;val brasses of
+parish priests, and a marble crusader and his lady of some
+extinguished family which had ruled Matching's Easy before the
+Mainstays came. And as the two gentlemen emerged from the church
+they ran against the perfect vicar, Mr. Dimple, ample and genial,
+with an embracing laugh and an enveloping voice. "Come to see the
+old country," he said to Mr. Direck. "So Good of you Americans to
+do that! So Good of you...."</p>
+<p>There was some amiable sparring between the worthy man and Mr.
+Britling about bringing Mr. Direck to church on Sunday morning.
+"He's terribly Lax," said Mr. Dimple to Mr. Direck, smiling
+radiantly. "Terribly Lax. But then nowadays Everybody <i>is</i> so
+Lax. And he's very Good to my Coal Club; I don't know what we
+should do without him. So I just admonish him. And if he doesn't go
+to church, well, anyhow he doesn't go anywhere else. He may be a
+poor churchman, but anyhow he's not a dissenter...."</p>
+<p>"In England, you see," Mr. Britling remarked, after they had
+parted from the reverend gentleman, "we have<a name="Page_37"></a>
+domesticated everything. We have even domesticated God."</p>
+<p>For awhile Mr. Britling showed Mr. Direck English lanes, and
+then came back along narrow white paths across small fields of
+rising wheat, to the village and a little gate that led into the
+park.</p>
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Direck, "what you say about domestication does
+seem to me to be very true indeed. Why! even those clouds up there
+look as though they had a shepherd and were grazing."</p>
+<p>"Ready for shearing almost," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Indeed," said Mr. Direck, raising his voice a little, "I've
+seen scarcely anything in England that wasn't domesticated, unless
+it was some of your back streets in London."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling seemed to reflect for a moment. "They're an
+excrescence," he said....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The park had a trim wildness like nature in an old Italian
+picture; dappled fallow deer grouped close at hand and looked at
+the two men fearlessly; the path dropped through oak trees and some
+stunted bracken to a little loitering stream, that paused ever and
+again to play at ponds and waterfalls and bear a fleet of
+water-lily leaves; and then their way curved round in an indolent
+sweep towards the cedars and shrubberies of the great house. The
+house looked low and extensive to an American eye, and its
+red-brick chimneys rose like infantry in open order along its
+extended line. There was a glimpse of flower-bright garden and
+terraces to the right as they came round the corner to the front of
+the house through a path cut in the laurel bushes.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling had a moment of exposition as they approached the
+entrance.</p>
+<p>"I expect we shall find Philbert from the Home Office&mdash;or
+is it the Local Government Board?&mdash;and Sir<a name=
+"Page_38"></a> Thomas Loot, the Treasury man. There may be some
+other people of that sort, the people we call the Governing Class.
+Wives also. And I rather fancy the Countess of Frensham is coming,
+she's strong on the Irish Question, and Lady Venetia Trumpington,
+who they say is a beauty&mdash;I've never seen her. It's Lady
+Homartyn's way to expect me to come in&mdash;not that I'm an
+important item at these week-end social feasts&mdash;but she likes
+to see me on the table&mdash;to be nibbled at if any one wants to
+do so&mdash;like the olives and the salted almonds. And she always
+asks me to lunch on Sunday and I always refuse&mdash;because of the
+hockey. So you see I put in an appearance on the Saturday
+afternoon...."</p>
+<p>They had reached the big doorway.</p>
+<p>It opened into a large cool hall adorned with the heads of
+hippopotami and rhinoceroses and a stuffed lion, and furnished
+chiefly with a vast table on which hats and sticks and newspapers
+were littered. A manservant with a subdued, semi-confidential
+manner, conveyed to Mr. Britling that her ladyship was on the
+terrace, and took the hats and sticks that were handed to him and
+led the way through the house. They emerged upon a broad terrace
+looking out under great cedar trees upon flower beds and stone urns
+and tennis lawns and yew hedges that dipped to give a view of
+distant hills. On the terrace were grouped perhaps a dozen people
+for the most part holding teacups, they sat in deck chairs and
+folding seats about a little table that bore the tea-things. Lady
+Homartyn came forward to welcome the newcomers.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck was introduced as a travelling American gratified to
+see a typical English country house, and Lady Homartyn in an
+habituated way ran over the points of her Tudor specimen. Mr.
+Direck was not accustomed to titled people, and was suddenly in
+doubt whether you called a baroness "My Lady" or "Your Ladyship,"
+so he wisely avoided any form of address until he had a lead from
+Mr. Britling. Mr. Britling presently called her "Lady<a name=
+"Page_39"></a> Homartyn." She took Mr. Direck and sat him down
+beside a lady whose name he didn't catch, but who had had a lot to
+do with the British Embassy at Washington, and then she handed Mr.
+Britling over to the Rt. Honble. George Philbert, who was anxious
+to discuss certain points in the latest book of essays. The
+conversation of the lady from Washington was intelligent but not
+exacting, and Mr. Direck was able to give a certain amount of
+attention to the general effect of the scene.</p>
+<p>He was a little disappointed to find that the servants didn't
+wear livery. In American magazine pictures and in American
+cinematograph films of English stories and in the houses of very
+rich Americans living in England, they do so. And the Mansion House
+is misleading; he had met a compatriot who had recently dined at
+the Mansion House, and who had described "flunkeys" in hair-powder
+and cloth of gold&mdash;like Thackeray's Jeames Yellowplush. But
+here the only servants were two slim, discreet and attentive young
+gentlemen in black coats with a gentle piety in their manner
+instead of pride. And he was a little disappointed too by a certain
+lack of splendour in the company. The ladies affected him as being
+ill-dressed; there was none of the hard snap, the "<i>There!</i>
+and what do you say to it?" about them of the well-dressed American
+woman, and the men too were not so much tailored as unobtrusively
+and yet grammatically clothed.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>He was still only in the fragmentary stage of conversation when
+everything was thrown into commotion by the important arrival of
+Lady Frensham, and there was a general reshuffling of places. Lady
+Frensham had arrived from London by automobile; she appeared in
+veils and swathings and a tremendous dust cloak, with a sort of
+nephew in her train who had driven the car. She was manifestly a
+constitutionally triumphant woman. A<a name="Page_40"></a> certain
+afternoon lassitude vanished in the swirl of her arrival. Mr.
+Philbert removed wrappings and handed them to the manservant.</p>
+<p>"I lunched with Sir Edward Carson to-day, my dear," she told
+Lady Homartyn, and rolled a belligerent eye at Philbert.</p>
+<p>"And is he as obdurate as ever?" asked Sir Thomas.</p>
+<p>"Obdurate! It's Redmond who's obdurate," cried Lady Frensham.
+"What do you say, Mr. Britling?"</p>
+<p>"A plague on both your parties," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"You can't keep out of things like that," said Lady Frensham
+with the utmost gusto, "when the country's on the very verge of
+civil war.... You people who try to pretend there isn't a grave
+crisis when there is one, will be more accountable than any
+one&mdash;when the civil war does come. It won't spare you. Mark my
+words!"</p>
+<p>The party became a circle.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck found himself the interested auditor of a real
+English country-house week-end political conversation. This at any
+rate was like the England of which Mrs. Humphry Ward's novels had
+informed him, but yet not exactly like it. Perhaps that was due to
+the fact that for the most part these novels dealt with the England
+of the 'nineties, and things had lost a little in dignity since
+those days. But at any rate here were political figures and titled
+people, and they were talking about the "country."...</p>
+<p>Was it possible that people of this sort did "run" the country,
+after all?... When he had read Mrs. Humphry Ward in America he had
+always accepted this theory of the story quite easily, but now that
+he saw and heard them&mdash;!</p>
+<p>But all governments and rulers and ruling classes when you look
+at them closely are incredible....</p>
+<p>"I don't believe the country is on the verge of civil war," said
+Mr. Britling.</p>
+<a name="Page_41"></a>
+<p>"Facts!" cried Lady Frensham, and seemed to wipe away delusions
+with a rapid gesture of her hands.</p>
+<p>"You're interested in Ireland, Mr. Dirks?" asked Lady
+Homartyn.</p>
+<p>"We see it first when we come over," said Mr. Direck rather
+neatly, and after that he was free to attend to the general
+discussion.</p>
+<p>Lady Frensham, it was manifest, was one of that energetic body
+of aristocratic ladies who were taking up an irreconcilable
+attitude against Home Rule "in any shape or form" at that time.
+They were rapidly turning British politics into a system of bitter
+personal feuds in which all sense of imperial welfare was lost. A
+wild ambition to emulate the extremest suffragettes seems to have
+seized upon them. They insulted, they denounced, they refused every
+invitation lest they should meet that "traitor" the Prime Minister,
+they imitated the party hatreds of a fiercer age, and even now the
+moderate and politic Philbert found himself treated as an invisible
+object. They were supported by the extremer section of the Tory
+press, and the most extraordinary writers were set up to froth like
+lunatics against the government as "traitors," as men who "insulted
+the King"; the <i>Morning Post</i> and the lighter-witted side of
+the Unionist press generally poured out a torrent of partisan
+nonsense it is now almost incredible to recall. Lady Frensham,
+bridling over Lady Homartyn's party, and for a time leaving Mr.
+Britling, hurried on to tell of the newest developments of the
+great feud. She had a wonderful description of Lady Londonderry
+sitting opposite "that old rascal, the Prime Minister," at a
+performance of Mozart's <i>Zauberfl&ouml;te</i>.</p>
+<p>"If looks could kill!" cried Lady Frensham with tremendous
+gusto.</p>
+<p>"Sir Edward is quite firm that Ulster means to fight. They have
+machine-guns&mdash;ammunition. And I am sure the army is with
+us...."</p>
+<a name="Page_42"></a>
+<p>"Where did they get those machine-guns and ammunition?" asked
+Mr. Britling suddenly.</p>
+<p>"Ah! that's a secret," cried Lady Frensham.</p>
+<p>"Um," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"You see," said Lady Frensham; "it <i>will</i> be civil war! And
+yet you writing people who have influence do nothing to prevent
+it!"</p>
+<p>"What are we to do, Lady Frensham?"</p>
+<p>"Tell people how serious it is."</p>
+<p>"You mean, tell the Irish Nationalists to lie down and be walked
+over. They won't be...."</p>
+<p>"We'll see about that," cried Lady Frensham, "we'll see about
+that!"</p>
+<p>She was a large and dignified person with a kind of figure-head
+nobility of carriage, but Mr. Direck was suddenly reminded of a
+girl cousin of his who had been expelled from college for some
+particularly elaborate and aimless rioting....</p>
+<p>"May I say something to you, Lady Frensham," said Mr. Britling,
+"that you have just said to me? Do you realise that this Carsonite
+campaign is dragging these islands within a measurable distance of
+civil war?"</p>
+<p>"It's the fault of your Lloyd George and his government. It's
+the fault of your Socialists and sentimentalists. You've made the
+mischief and you have to deal with it."</p>
+<p>"Yes. But do you really figure to yourself what a civil war may
+mean for the empire? Surely there are other things in the world
+besides this quarrel between the 'loyalists' of Ulster and the
+Liberal government; there are other interests in this big empire
+than party advantages? Yon think you are going to frighten this
+Home Rule government into some ridiculous sort of collapse that
+will bring in the Tories at the next election. Well, suppose you
+don't manage that. Suppose instead that you really do contrive to
+bring about a civil war. Very few people here or in Ireland want
+it&mdash;I was over there not<a name="Page_43"></a> a month
+ago&mdash;but when men have loaded guns in their hands they
+sometimes go off. And then people see red. Few people realise what
+an incurable sore opens when fighting begins. Suppose part of the
+army revolts and we get some extraordinary and demoralising
+fighting over there. India watches these things. Bengal may imitate
+Ireland. At that distance rebellion and treason are rebellion and
+treason whether they are coloured orange or green. And then suppose
+the Germans see fit to attack us!"</p>
+<p>Lady Frensham had a woman's elusiveness. "Your Redmondites would
+welcome them with open arms."</p>
+<p>"It isn't the Redmondites who invite them now, anyhow," said Mr.
+Britling, springing his mine. "The other day one of your
+'loyalists,' Andrews, was talking in the <i>Morning Post</i> of
+preferring conquest by Germany to Home Rule; Craig has been at the
+same game; Major Crawford, the man who ran the German Mausers last
+April, boasted that he would transfer his allegiance to the German
+Emperor rather than see Redmond in power."</p>
+<p>"Rhetoric!" said Lady Frensham. "Rhetoric!"</p>
+<p>"But one of your Ulster papers has openly boasted that
+arrangements have been made for a 'powerful Continental monarch' to
+help an Ulster rebellion."</p>
+<p>"Which paper?" snatched Lady Frensham.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling hesitated.</p>
+<p>Mr. Philbert supplied the name. "I saw it. It was the <i>Irish
+Churchman</i>."</p>
+<p>"You two have got your case up very well," said Lady Frensham.
+"I didn't know Mr. Britling was a party man."</p>
+<p>"The Nationalists have been circulating copies," said Philbert.
+"Naturally."</p>
+<p>"They make it look worse than mere newspaper talk and speeches,"
+Mr. Britling pressed. "Carson, it seems, was lunching with the
+German Emperor last autumn. A fine fuss you'd make if Redmond did
+that. All this gun-running, too, is German gun-running."</p>
+<a name="Page_44"></a>
+<p>"What does it matter if it is?" said Lady Frensham, allowing a
+belligerent eye to rest for the first time on Philbert. "You drove
+us to it. One thing we are resolved upon at any cost. Johnny
+Redmond may rule England if he likes; he shan't rule
+Ireland...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling shrugged his shoulders, and his face betrayed
+despair.</p>
+<p>"My one consolation," he said, "in this storm is a talk I had
+last month with a young Irishwoman in Meath. She was a young person
+of twelve, and she took a fancy to me&mdash;I think because I went
+with her in an alleged dangerous canoe she was forbidden to
+navigate alone. All day the eternal Irish Question had banged about
+over her observant head. When we were out on the water she suddenly
+decided to set me right upon a disregarded essential. 'You
+English,' she said, 'are just a bit disposed to take all this
+trouble seriously. Don't you fret yourself about it... Half the
+time we're just laffing at you. You'd best leave us all
+alone....'"</p>
+<p>And then he went off at a tangent from his own anecdote.</p>
+<p>"But look at this miserable spectacle!" he cried. "Here is a
+chance of getting something like a reconciliation of the old feud
+of English and Irish, and something like a settlement of these
+ancient distresses, and there seems no power, no conscience, no
+sanity in any of us, sufficient to save it from this cantankerous
+bitterness, this sheer wicked mischief of mutual exasperation....
+Just when Ireland is getting a gleam of prosperity.... A murrain on
+both your parties!"</p>
+<p>"I see, Mr. Britling, you'd hand us all over to Jim Larkin!"</p>
+<p>"I'd hand you all over to Sir Horace Plunkett&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"That doctrinaire dairyman!" cried Lady Frensham, with an air of
+quite conclusive repartee. "You're hopeless, Mr. Britling. You're
+hopeless."</p>
+<p>And Lady Homartyn, seeing that the phase of mere personal
+verdicts drew near, created a diversion by giving<a name=
+"Page_45"></a> Lady Frensham a second cup of tea, and fluttering
+like a cooling fan about the heated brows of the disputants. She
+suggested tennis....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling was still flushed and ruffled as he and his guest
+returned towards the Dower House. He criticised England himself
+unmercifully, but he hated to think that in any respect she fell
+short of perfection; even her defects he liked to imagine were just
+a subtler kind of power and wisdom. And Lady Frensham had stuck her
+voice and her gestures through all these amiable illusions. He was
+like a lover who calls his lady a foolish rogue, and is startled to
+find that facts and strangers do literally agree with him.</p>
+<p>But it was so difficult to resolve Lady Frensham and the Irish
+squabble generally into anything better than idiotic mischief, that
+for a time he was unusually silent&mdash;wrestling with the
+problem, and Mr. Direck got the conversational initiative.</p>
+<p>"To an American mind it's a little&mdash;startling," said Mr.
+Direck, "to hear ladies expressing such vigorous political
+opinions."</p>
+<p>"I don't mind that," said Mr. Britling. "Women over here go into
+politics and into public-houses&mdash;I don't see why they
+shouldn't. If such things are good enough for men they are good
+enough for women; we haven't your sort of chivalry. But it's the
+peculiar malignant silliness of this sort of Toryism that's so
+discreditable. It's discreditable. There's no good in denying it.
+Those people you have heard and seen are a not unfair sample of our
+governing class&mdash;of a certain section of our governing
+class&mdash;as it is to-day. Not at all unfair. And you see how
+amazingly they haven't got hold of anything. There was a time when
+they could be politic.... Hidden away they have politic instincts
+even now.... But it makes me sick to think of this Irish business.
+Because, you know, it's true&mdash;we <i>are</i> drifting towards
+civil war there."</p>
+<a name="Page_46"></a>
+<p>"You are of that opinion?" said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"Well, isn't it so? Here's all this Ulster gun-running&mdash;you
+heard how she talked of it? Isn't it enough to drive the south into
+open revolt?..."</p>
+<p>"Is there very much, do you think, in the suggestion that some
+of this Ulster trouble is a German intrigue? You and Mr. Philbert
+were saying things&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"I don't know," said Mr. Britling shortly.</p>
+<p>"I don't know," he repeated. "But it isn't because I don't think
+our Unionists and their opponents aren't foolish enough for
+anything of the sort. It's only because I don't believe that the
+Germans are so stupid as to do such things.... Why should
+they?...</p>
+<p>"It makes me&mdash;expressionless with anger," said Mr. Britling
+after a pause, reverting to his main annoyance. "They won't
+consider any compromise. It's sheer love of quarrelling.... Those
+people there think that nothing can possibly happen. They are like
+children in a nursery playing at rebellion. Unscathed and heedless.
+Until there is death at their feet they will never realise they are
+playing with loaded guns...."</p>
+<p>For a time he said no more; and listened perfunctorily while Mr.
+Direck tried to indicate the feeling in New England towards the
+Irish Question and the many difficult propositions an American
+politician has to face in that respect. And when Mr. Britling took
+up the thread of speech again it had little or no relation to Mr.
+Direck's observations.</p>
+<p>"The psychology of all this recent insubordination and violence
+is&mdash;curious. Exasperating too.... I don't quite grasp it....
+It's the same thing whether you look at the suffrage business or
+the labour people or at this Irish muddle. People may be too safe.
+You see we live at the end of a series of secure generations in
+which none of the great things of life have changed materially.
+We've grown up with no sense of danger&mdash;that is to say, with
+no sense of responsibility. None of us, none of us&mdash;for though
+I<a name="Page_47"></a> talk my actions belie me&mdash;really
+believe that life can change very fundamentally any more forever.
+All this",&mdash;Mr. Britling waved his arm
+comprehensively&mdash;"looks as though it was bound to go on
+steadily forever. It seems incredible that the system could be
+smashed. It seems incredible that anything we can do will ever
+smash the system. Lady Homartyn, for example, is incapable of
+believing that she won't always be able to have week-end parties at
+Claverings, and that the letters and the tea won't come to her
+bedside in the morning. Or if her imagination goes to the point of
+supposing that some day <i>she</i> won't be there to receive the
+tea, it means merely that she supposes somebody else will be. Her
+pleasant butler may fear to lose his 'situation,' but nothing on
+earth could make him imagine a time when there will not be a
+'situation' for him to lose. Old Asquith thinks that we always have
+got along, and that we always shall get along by being quietly
+artful and saying, 'Wait and see.' And it's just because we are all
+convinced that we are so safe against a general breakdown that we
+are able to be so recklessly violent in our special cases. Why
+shouldn't women have the vote? they argue. What does it matter? And
+bang goes a bomb in Westminster Abbey. Why shouldn't Ulster create
+an impossible position? And off trots some demented Carsonite to
+Germany to play at treason on some half word of the German
+Emperor's and buy half a million rifles....</p>
+<p>"Exactly like children being very, very naughty....</p>
+<p>"And," said Mr. Britling with a gesture to round off his
+discourse, "we do go on. We shall go on&mdash;until there is a
+spark right into the magazine. We have lost any belief we ever had
+that fundamental things happen. We are everlasting children in an
+everlasting nursery...."</p>
+<p>And immediately he broke out again.</p>
+<p>"The truth of the matter is that hardly any one has ever yet
+mastered the fact that the world is round. The world is
+round&mdash;like an orange. The thing is told us&mdash;like<a name=
+"Page_48"></a> any old scandal&mdash;at school. For all practical
+purposes we forget it. Practically we all live in a world as flat
+as a pancake. Where time never ends and nothing changes. Who really
+believes in any world outside the circle of the horizon? Here we
+are and visibly nothing is changing. And so we go on
+to&mdash;nothing will ever change. It just goes on&mdash;in space,
+in time. If we could realise that round world beyond, then indeed
+we should go circumspectly.... If the world were like a whispering
+gallery, what whispers might we not hear now&mdash;from India, from
+Africa, from Germany, warnings from the past, intimations of the
+future....</p>
+<p>"We shouldn't heed them...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>And indeed at the very moment when Mr. Britling was saying these
+words, in Sarajevo in Bosnia, where the hour was somewhat later,
+men whispered together, and one held nervously to a black parcel
+that had been given him and nodded as they repeated his
+instructions, a black parcel with certain unstable chemicals and a
+curious arrangement of detonators therein, a black parcel destined
+ultimately to shatter nearly every landmark of Mr. Britling's and
+Lady Frensham's cosmogony....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>When Mr. Direck and Mr. Britling returned to the Dower House the
+guest was handed over to Mrs. Britling and Mr. Britling vanished,
+to reappear at supper time, for the Britlings had a supper in the
+evening instead of dinner. When Mr. Britling did reappear every
+trace of his vexation with the levities of British politics and the
+British ruling class had vanished altogether, and he was no longer
+thinking of all that might be happening in Germany or India....</p>
+<a name="Page_49"></a>
+<p>While he was out of the way Mr. Direck extended his acquaintance
+with the Britling household. He was taken round the garden and
+shown the roses by Mrs. Britling, and beyond the rose garden in a
+little arbour they came upon Miss Corner reading a book. She looked
+very grave and pretty reading a book. Mr. Direck came to a pause in
+front of her, and Mrs. Britling stopped beside him. The young lady
+looked up and smiled.</p>
+<p>"The last new novel?" asked Mr. Direck pleasantly.</p>
+<p>"Campanella's 'City of the Sun.'"</p>
+<p>"My word! but isn't that stiff reading?"</p>
+<p>"You haven't read it," said Miss Corner.</p>
+<p>"It's a dry old book anyhow."</p>
+<p>"It's no good pretending you have," she said, and there Mr.
+Direck felt the conversation had to end.</p>
+<p>"That's a very pleasant young lady to have about," he said to
+Mrs. Britling as they went on towards the barn court.</p>
+<p>"She's all at loose ends," said Mrs. Britling. "And she reads
+like a&mdash;Whatever does read? One drinks like a fish. One eats
+like a wolf."</p>
+<p>They found the German tutor in a little court playing Badminton
+with the two younger boys. He was a plump young man with glasses
+and compact gestures; the game progressed chiefly by misses and the
+score was counted in German. He won thoughtfully and chiefly
+through the ardour of the younger brother, whose enthusiastic
+returns invariably went out. Instantly the boys attacked Mrs.
+Britling with a concerted enthusiasm. "Mummy! Is it to be
+dressing-up supper?"</p>
+<p>Mrs. Britling considered, and it was manifest that Mr. Direck
+was material to her answer.</p>
+<p>"We wrap ourselves up in curtains and bright things instead of
+dressing," she explained. "We have a sort of wardrobe of fancy
+dresses. Do you mind?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck was delighted.</p>
+<p>And this being settled, the two small boys went off with<a name=
+"Page_50"></a> their mother upon some special decorative project
+they had conceived and Mr. Direck was left for a time to Herr
+Heinrich.</p>
+<p>Herr Heinrich suggested a stroll in the rose garden, and as Mr.
+Direck had not hitherto been shown the rose garden by Herr
+Heinrich, he agreed. Sooner or later everybody, it was evident, had
+got to show him that rose garden.</p>
+<p>"And how do you like living in an English household?" said Mr.
+Direck, getting to business at once. "It's interesting to an
+American to see this English establishment, and it must be still
+more interesting to a German."</p>
+<p>"I find it very different from Pomerania," said Herr Heinrich.
+"In some respects it is more agreeable, in others less so. It is a
+pleasant life but it is not a serious life.</p>
+<p>"At any time," continued Herr Heinrich, "some one may say, 'Let
+us do this thing,' or 'Let us do that thing,' and then everything
+is disarranged.</p>
+<p>"People walk into the house without ceremony. There is much
+kindness but no politeness. Mr. Britling will go away for three or
+four days, and when he returns and I come forward to greet him and
+bow, he will walk right past me, or he will say just like this,
+'How do, Heinrich?'"</p>
+<p>"Are you interested in Mr. Britling's writings?" Mr. Direck
+asked.</p>
+<p>"There again I am puzzled. His work is known even in Germany.
+His articles are reprinted in German and Austrian reviews. You
+would expect him to have a certain authority of manner. You would
+expect there to be discussion at the table upon questions of
+philosophy and aesthetics.... It is not so. When I ask him
+questions it is often that they are not seriously answered.
+Sometimes it is as if he did not like the questions I askt of him.
+Yesterday I askt of him did he agree or did he not agree with Mr.
+Bernard Shaw. He just said&mdash;I wrote it down in my
+memoranda&mdash;he said: 'Oh! Mixt Pickles.' What can one
+understand of that?&mdash;Mixt Pickles!"...</p>
+<a name="Page_51"></a>
+<p>The young man's sedulous blue eyes looked out of his pink face
+through his glasses at Mr. Direck, anxious for any light he could
+offer upon the atmospheric vagueness of this England.</p>
+<p>He was, he explained, a student of philology preparing for his
+doctorate. He had not yet done his year of military service. He was
+studying the dialects of East Anglia&mdash;</p>
+<p>"You go about among the people?" Mr. Direck inquired.</p>
+<p>"No, I do not do that. But I ask Mr. Carmine and Mrs. Britling
+and the boys many questions. And sometimes I talk to the
+gardener."</p>
+<p>He explained how he would prepare his thesis and how it would be
+accepted, and the nature of his army service and the various stages
+by which he would subsequently ascend in the orderly professorial
+life to which he was destined. He confessed a certain lack of
+interest in philology, but, he said, "it is what I have to do." And
+so he was going to do it all his life through. For his own part he
+was interested in ideas of universal citizenship, in Esperanto and
+Ido and universal languages and such-like attacks upon the barriers
+between man and man. But the authorities at home did not favour
+cosmopolitan ideas, and so he was relinquishing them. "Here, it is
+as if there were no authorities," he said with a touch of envy.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck induced him to expand that idea.</p>
+<p>Herr Heinrich made Mr. Britling his instance. If Mr. Britling
+were a German he would certainly have some sort of title, a
+definite position, responsibility. Here he was not even called Herr
+Doktor. He said what he liked. Nobody rewarded him; nobody
+reprimanded him. When Herr Heinrich asked him of his position,
+whether he was above or below Mr. Bernard Shaw or Mr. Arnold White
+or Mr. Garvin or any other publicist, he made jokes. Nobody here
+seemed to have a title and nobody seemed to have a definite place.
+There was Mr. Lawrence Carmine; he<a name="Page_52"></a> was a
+student of Oriental questions; he had to do with some public
+institution in London that welcomed Indian students; he was a
+Geheimrath&mdash;</p>
+<p>"Eh?" said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"It is&mdash;what do they call it? the Essex County Council."
+But nobody took any notice of that. And when Mr. Philbert, who was
+a minister in the government, came to lunch he was just like any
+one else. It was only after he had gone that Herr Heinrich had
+learnt by chance that he was a minister and "Right
+Honourable...."</p>
+<p>"In Germany everything is definite. Every man knows his place,
+has his papers, is instructed what to do...."</p>
+<p>"Yet," said Mr. Direck, with his eyes on the glowing roses, the
+neat arbour, the long line of the red wall of the vegetable garden
+and a distant gleam of cornfield, "it all looks orderly
+enough."</p>
+<p>"It is as if it had been put in order ages ago," said Herr
+Heinrich.</p>
+<p>"And was just going on by habit," said Mr. Direck, taking up the
+idea.</p>
+<p>Their comparisons were interrupted by the appearance of "Teddy,"
+the secretary, and the Indian young gentleman, damp and genial, as
+they explained, "from the boats." It seemed that "down below"
+somewhere was a pond with a punt and an island and a toy dinghy.
+And while they discussed swimming and boating, Mr. Carmine appeared
+from the direction of the park conversing gravely with the elder
+son. They had been for a walk and a talk together. There were
+proposals for a Badminton foursome. Mr. Direck emerged from the
+general interchange with Mr. Lawrence Carmine, and then strolled
+through the rose garden to see the sunset from the end. Mr. Direck
+took the opportunity to verify his impression that the elder son
+was the present Mrs. Britling's stepson, and he also contrived by a
+sudden admiration for a distant row of evening primroses to deflect
+their path past the<a name="Page_53"></a> arbour in which the
+evening light must now be getting a little too soft for Miss
+Corner's book.</p>
+<p>Miss Corner was drawn into the sunset party. She talked to Mr.
+Carmine and displayed, Mr. Direck thought, great originality of
+mind. She said "The City of the Sun" was like the cities the boys
+sometimes made on the playroom floor. She said it was the dearest
+little city, and gave some amusing particulars. She described the
+painted walls that made the tour of the Civitas Solis a liberal
+education. She asked Mr. Carmine, who was an authority on Oriental
+literature, why there were no Indian nor Chinese Utopias.</p>
+<p>Now it had never occurred to Mr. Direck to ask why there were no
+Indian nor Chinese Utopias, and even Mr. Carmine seemed surprised
+to discover this deficiency.</p>
+<p>"The primitive patriarchal village <i>is</i> Utopia to India and
+China," said Mr. Carmine, when they had a little digested the
+inquiry. "Or at any rate it is their social ideal. They want no
+Utopias."</p>
+<p>"Utopias came with cities," he said, considering the question.
+"And the first cities, as distinguished from courts and autocratic
+capitals, came with ships. India and China belong to an earlier
+age. Ships, trade, disorder, strange relationships, unofficial
+literature, criticism&mdash;and then this idea of some novel
+remaking of society...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Then Mr. Direck fell into the hands of Hugh, the eldest son, and
+anticipating the inevitable, said that he liked to walk in the rose
+garden. So they walked in the rose garden.</p>
+<p>"Do you read Utopias?" said Mr. Direck, cutting any preface, in
+the English manner.</p>
+<p>"Oh, <i>rather</i>!" said Hugh, and became at once friendly and
+confidential.</p>
+<p>"We all do," he explained. "In England everybody talks of change
+and nothing ever changes."</p>
+<a name="Page_54"></a>
+<p>"I found Miss Corner reading&mdash;what was it? the Sun
+People?&mdash;some old classical Italian work."</p>
+<p>"Campanella," said Hugh, without betraying the slightest
+interest in Miss Corner. "Nothing changes in England, because the
+people who want to change things change their minds before they
+change anything else. I've been in London talking for the last
+half-year. Studying art they call it. Before that I was a science
+student, and I want to be one again. Don't you think, Sir, there's
+something about science&mdash;it's steadier than anything else in
+the world?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck thought that the moral truths of human nature were
+steadier than science, and they had one of those little discussions
+of real life that begin about a difference inadequately
+apprehended, and do not so much end as are abandoned. Hugh struck
+him as being more speculative and detached than any American
+college youth of his age that he knew&mdash;but that might not be a
+national difference but only the Britling strain. He seemed to have
+read more and more independently, and to be doing less. And he was
+rather more restrained and self-possessed.</p>
+<p>Before Mr. Direck could begin a proper inquiry into the young
+man's work and outlook, he had got the conversation upon America.
+He wanted tremendously to see America. "The dad says in one of his
+books that over here we are being and that over there you are
+beginning. It must be tremendously stimulating to think that your
+country is still being made...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck thought that an interesting point of view. "Unless
+something tumbles down here, we never think of altering it," the
+young man remarked. "And even then we just shore it up."</p>
+<p>His remarks had the effect of floating off from some busy mill
+of thought within him. Hitherto Mr. Direck had been inclined to
+think this silent observant youth, with his hands in his pockets
+and his shoulders a little humped,<a name="Page_55"></a> as
+probably shy and adolescently ineffective. But the head was
+manifestly quite busy....</p>
+<p>"Miss Corner," he began, taking the first thing that came into
+his head, and then he remembered that he had already made the
+remark he was going to make not five minutes ago.</p>
+<p>"What form of art," he asked, "are you contemplating in your
+studies at the present time in London?"....</p>
+<p>Before this question could be dealt with at all adequately, the
+two small boys became active in the garden beating in everybody to
+"dress-up" before supper. The secretary, Teddy, came in a fatherly
+way to look after Mr. Direck and see to his draperies.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 9</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Direck gave his very best attention to this business of
+draping himself, for he had not the slightest intention of
+appearing ridiculous in the eyes of Miss Corner. Teddy came with an
+armful of stuff that he thought "might do."</p>
+<p>"What'll I come as?" asked Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"We don't wear costumes," said Teddy. "We just put on all the
+brightest things we fancy. If it's any costume at all, it's
+Futurist."</p>
+<p>"And surely why shouldn't one?" asked Mr. Direck, greatly struck
+by this idea. "Why should we always be tied by the fashions and
+periods of the past?"</p>
+<p>He rejected a rather Mephistopheles-like costume of crimson and
+a scheme for a brigand-like ensemble based upon what was evidently
+an old bolero of Mrs. Britling's, and after some reflection he
+accepted some black silk tights. His legs were not legs to be
+ashamed of. Over this he tried various brilliant wrappings from the
+Dower House <i>armoire</i>, and chose at last, after some
+hesitation in the direction of a piece of gold and purple brocade,
+a big square of green silk curtain stuff adorned with
+golden<a name="Page_56"></a> pheasants and other large and
+dignified ornaments; this he wore toga fashion over his light
+silken under-vest&mdash;Teddy had insisted on the abandonment of
+his shirt "if you want to dance at all"&mdash;and fastened with a
+large green glass-jewelled brooch. From this his head and neck
+projected, he felt, with a tolerable dignity. Teddy suggested a
+fillet of green ribbon, and this Mr. Direck tried, but after
+prolonged reflection before the glass rejected. He was still
+weighing the effect of this fillet upon the mind of Miss Corner
+when Teddy left him to make his own modest preparations. Teddy's
+departure gave him a chance for profile studies by means of an
+arrangement of the long mirror and the table looking-glass that he
+had been too shy to attempt in the presence of the secretary. The
+general effect was quite satisfactory.</p>
+<p>"Wa-a-a-l," he said with a quaver of laughter, "now who'd have
+thought it?" and smiled a consciously American smile at himself
+before going down.</p>
+<p>The company was assembling in the panelled hall, and made a
+brilliant show in the light of the acetylene candles against the
+dark background. Mr. Britling in a black velvet cloak and black
+silk tights was a deeper shade among the shadows; the high lights
+were Miss Corner and her sister, in glittering garments of peacock
+green and silver that gave a snake-like quality to their lithe
+bodies. They were talking to the German tutor, who had become a
+sort of cotton Cossack, a spectacled Cossack in buff and bright
+green. Mrs. Britling was dignified and beautiful in a purple
+djibbah, and her stepson had become a handsome still figure of
+black and crimson. Teddy had contrived something elaborate and
+effective in the Egyptian style, with a fish-basket and a cuirass
+of that thin matting one finds behind washstands; the small boys
+were brigands, with immensely baggy breeches and cummerbunds in
+which they had stuck a selection of paper-knives and toy pistols
+and similar weapons. Mr. Carmine and his young man had come
+provided with real Indian costumes;<a name="Page_57"></a> the
+feeling of the company was that Mr. Carmine was a mullah. The
+aunt-like lady with the noble nose stood out amidst these levities
+in a black silk costume with a gold chain. She refused, it seemed,
+to make herself absurd, though she encouraged the others to
+extravagance by nods and enigmatical smiles. Nevertheless she had
+put pink ribbons in her cap. A family of father, golden-haired
+mother, and two young daughters, sympathetically attired, had just
+arrived, and were discarding their outer wrappings with the
+assistance of host and hostess.</p>
+<p>It was all just exactly what Mr. Direck had never expected in
+England, and equally unexpected was the supper on a long candle-lit
+table without a cloth. No servants were present, but on a sideboard
+stood a cold salmon and cold joints and kalter aufschnitt and
+kartoffel salat, and a variety of other comestibles, and many
+bottles of beer and wine and whisky. One helped oneself and anybody
+else one could, and Mr. Direck did his best to be very attentive to
+Mrs. Britling and Miss Corner, and was greatly assisted by the
+latter.</p>
+<p>Everybody seemed unusually gay and bright-eyed. Mr. Direck found
+something exhilarating and oddly exciting in all this unusual
+bright costume and in this easy mutual service; it made everybody
+seem franker and simpler. Even Mr. Britling had revealed a sturdy
+handsomeness that had not been apparent to Mr. Direck before, and
+young Britling left no doubts now about his good looks. Mr. Direck
+forgot his mission and his position, and indeed things generally,
+in an irrational satisfaction that his golden pheasants harmonised
+with the glitter of the warm and smiling girl beside him. And he
+sat down beside her&mdash;"You sit anywhere," said Mrs.
+Britling&mdash;with far less compunction than in his ordinary
+costume he would have felt for so direct a confession of
+preference. And there was something in her eyes, it was quite
+indefinable and yet very satisfying, that told him that now he
+escaped from the stern square imperatives of his<a name=
+"Page_58"></a> patriotic tailor in New York she had made a
+discovery of him.</p>
+<p>Everybody chattered gaily, though Mr. Direck would have found it
+difficult to recall afterwards what it was they chattered about,
+except that somehow he acquired the valuable knowledge that Miss
+Corner was called Cecily, and her sister Letty, and then&mdash;so
+far old Essex custom held&mdash;the masculine section was left for
+a few minutes for some imaginary drinking, and a lighting of cigars
+and cigarettes, after which everybody went through interwoven
+moonlight and afterglow to the barn. Mr. Britling sat down to a
+pianola in the corner and began the familiar cadences of "Whistling
+Rufus."</p>
+<p>"You dance?" said Miss Cecily Corner.</p>
+<p>"I've never been much of a dancing man," said Mr. Direck. "What
+sort of dance is this?"</p>
+<p>"Just anything. A two-step."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck hesitated and regretted a well-spent youth, and then
+Hugh came prancing forward with outstretched hands and swept her
+away.</p>
+<p>Just for an instant Mr. Direck felt that this young man was a
+trifle superfluous....</p>
+<p>But it was very amusing dancing.</p>
+<p>It wasn't any sort of taught formal dancing. It was a
+spontaneous retort to the leaping American music that Mr. Britling
+footed out. You kept time, and for the rest you did as your nature
+prompted. If you had a partner you joined hands, you fluttered to
+and from one another, you paced down the long floor together, you
+involved yourselves in romantic pursuits and repulsions with other
+couples. There was no objection to your dancing alone. Teddy, for
+example, danced alone in order to develop certain Egyptian gestures
+that were germinating in his brain. There was no objection to your
+joining hands in a cheerful serpent....</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck hung on to Cissie and her partner. They danced very
+well together; they seemed to like and<a name="Page_59"></a>
+understand each other. It was natural of course for two young
+people like that, thrown very much together, to develop an
+affection for one another.... Still, she was older by three or four
+years.</p>
+<p>It seemed unreasonable that the boy anyhow shouldn't be in love
+with her....</p>
+<p>It seemed unreasonable that any one shouldn't be in love with
+her....</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Direck remarked that Cissie was watching Teddy's
+manoeuvres over her partner's shoulder with real affection and
+admiration....</p>
+<p>But then most refreshingly she picked up Mr. Direck's gaze and
+gave him the slightest of smiles. She hadn't forgotten him.</p>
+<p>The music stopped with an effect of shock, and all the bobbing,
+whirling figures became walking glories.</p>
+<p>"Now that's not difficult, is it?" said Miss Corner, glowing
+happily.</p>
+<p>"Not when you do it," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"I can't imagine an American not dancing a two-step. You must do
+the next with me. Listen! It's 'Away Down Indiana' ... ah! I knew
+you could."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck, too, understood now that he could, and they went off
+holding hands rather after the fashion of two skaters.</p>
+<p>"My word!" said Mr. Direck. "To think I'd be dancing."</p>
+<p>But he said no more because he needed his breath.</p>
+<p>He liked it, and he had another attempt with one of the visitor
+daughters, who danced rather more formally, and then Teddy took the
+pianola and Mr. Direck was astonished by the spectacle of an
+eminent British thinker in a whirl of black velvet and extremely
+active black legs engaged in a kind of Apache dance in pursuit of
+the visitor wife. In which Mr. Lawrence Carmine suddenly
+mingled.</p>
+<p>"In Germany," said Herr Heinrich, "we do not dance<a name=
+"Page_60"></a> like this. It could not be considered seemly. But it
+is very pleasant."</p>
+<p>And then there was a waltz, and Herr Heinrich bowed to and took
+the visitor wife round three times, and returned her very
+punctually and exactly to the point whence he had taken her, and
+the Indian young gentleman (who must not be called "coloured")
+waltzed very well with Cecily. Mr. Direck tried to take a tolerant
+European view of this brown and white combination. But he secured
+her as soon as possible from this Asiatic entanglement, and danced
+with her again, and then he danced with her again.</p>
+<p>"Come and look at the moonlight," cried Mrs. Britling.</p>
+<p>And presently Mr. Direck found himself strolling through the
+rose garden with Cecily. She had the sweetest moonlight face, her
+white shining robe made her a thing of moonlight altogether. If Mr.
+Direck had not been in love with her before he was now altogether
+in love. Mamie Nelson, whose freakish unkindness had been rankling
+like a poisoned thorn in his heart all the way from Massachusetts,
+suddenly became Ancient History.</p>
+<p>A tremendous desire for eloquence arose in Mr. Direck's soul, a
+desire so tremendous that no conceivable phrase he could imagine
+satisfied it. So he remained tongue-tied. And Cecily was
+tongue-tied, too. The scent of the roses just tinted the clear
+sweetness of the air they breathed.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck's mood was an immense solemnity, like a dark ocean
+beneath the vast dome of the sky, and something quivered in every
+fibre of his being, like moonlit ripples on the sea. He felt at the
+same time a portentous stillness and an immense enterprise....</p>
+<p>Then suddenly the pianola, pounding a cake walk, burst out into
+ribald invitation....</p>
+<p>"Come back to dance!" cried Cecily, like one from whom a spell
+has just been broken. And Mr. Direck, snatching at a vanishing
+scrap of everything he had not said, remarked, "I shall never
+forget this evening."</p>
+<p>She did not seem to hear that.</p>
+<a name="Page_61"></a>
+<p>They danced together again. And then Mr. Direck danced with the
+visitor lady, whose name he had never heard. And then he danced
+with Mrs. Britling, and then he danced with Letty. And then it
+seemed time for him to look for Miss Cecily again.</p>
+<p>And so the cheerful evening passed until they were within a
+quarter of an hour of Sunday morning. Mrs. Britling went to exert a
+restraining influence upon the pianola.</p>
+<p>"Oh! one dance more!" cried Cissie Corner.</p>
+<p>"Oh! one dance more!" cried Letty.</p>
+<p>"One dance more," Mr. Direck supported, and then things really
+<i>had</i> to end.</p>
+<p>There was a rapid putting out of candles and a stowing away of
+things by Teddy and the sons, two chauffeurs appeared from the
+region of the kitchen and brought Mr. Lawrence Carmine's car and
+the visitor family's car to the front door, and everybody drifted
+gaily through the moonlight and the big trees to the front of the
+house. And Mr. Direck saw the perambulator waiting&mdash;the
+mysterious perambulator&mdash;a little in the dark beyond the front
+door.</p>
+<p>The visitor family and Mr. Carmine and his young Indian
+departed. "Come to hockey!" shouted Mr. Britling to each departing
+car-load, and Mr. Carmine receding answered: "I'll bring
+three!"</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Direck, in accordance with a habit that had been
+growing on him throughout the evening, looked around for Miss
+Cissie Corner and failed to find her. And then behold she was
+descending the staircase with the mysterious baby in her arms. She
+held up a warning finger, and then glanced at her sleeping burthen.
+She looked like a silvery Madonna. And Mr. Direck remembered that
+he was still in doubt about that baby....</p>
+<p>Teddy, who was back in his flannels, seized upon the
+perambulator. There was much careful baby stowing on the part of
+Cecily; she displayed an infinitely maternal<a name="Page_62"></a>
+solicitude. Letty was away changing; she reappeared jauntily taking
+leave, disregarding the baby absolutely, and Teddy departed
+bigamously, wheeling the perambulator between the two sisters into
+the hazes of the moonlight. There was much crying of good nights.
+Mr. Direck's curiosities narrowed down to a point of great
+intensity....</p>
+<p>Of course, Mr. Britling's circle must be a very "Advanced"
+circle...</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 10</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Direck found he had taken leave of the rest of the company,
+and drifted into a little parlour with Mr. Britling and certain
+glasses and siphons and a whisky decanter on a tray....</p>
+<p>"It is a very curious thing," said Mr. Direck, "that in England
+I find myself more disposed to take stimulants and that I no longer
+have the need for iced water that one feels at home. I ascribe it
+to a greater humidity in the air. One is less dried and one is less
+braced. One is no longer pursued by a thirst, but one needs
+something to buck one up a little. Thank you. That is enough."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck took his glass of whisky and soda from Mr. Britling's
+hand.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling seated himself in an armchair by the fireplace and
+threw one leg carelessly over the arm. In his black velvet cloak
+and cap, and his black silk tights, he was very like a minor
+character, a court chamberlain for example, in some cloak and
+rapier drama. "I find this week-end dancing and kicking about
+wonderfully wholesome," he said. "That and our Sunday hockey. One
+starts the new week clear and bright about the mind. Friday is
+always my worst working day."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck leant against the table, wrapped in his golden
+pheasants, and appreciated the point.</p>
+<p>"Your young people dance very cheerfully," he said.</p>
+<a name="Page_63"></a>
+<p>"We all dance very cheerfully," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Then this Miss Corner," said Mr. Direck, "she is the sister, I
+presume, is she? of that pleasant young lady who is
+married&mdash;she is married, isn't she?&mdash;to the young man you
+call Teddy."</p>
+<p>"I should have explained these young people. They're the sort of
+young people we are producing over here now in quite enormous
+quantity. They are the sort of equivalent of the Russian
+Intelligentsia, an irresponsible middle class with ideas. Teddy,
+you know, is my secretary. He's the son, I believe, of a Kilburn
+solicitor. He was recommended to me by Datcher of <i>The Times</i>.
+He came down here and lived in lodgings for a time. Then suddenly
+appeared the young lady."</p>
+<p>"Miss Corner's sister?"</p>
+<p>"Exactly. The village was a little startled. The cottager who
+had let the rooms came to me privately. Teddy is rather touchy on
+the point of his personal independence, he considers any demand for
+explanations as an insult, and probably all he had said to the old
+lady was, 'This is Letty&mdash;come to share my rooms.' I put the
+matter to him very gently. 'Oh, yes,' he said, rather in the manner
+of some one who has overlooked a trifle. 'I got married to her in
+the Christmas holidays. May I bring her along to see Mrs.
+Britling?' We induced him to go into a little cottage I rent. The
+wife was the daughter of a Colchester journalist and printer. I
+don't know if you talked to her."</p>
+<p>"I've talked to the sister rather."</p>
+<p>"Well, they're both idea'd. They're highly educated in the sense
+that they do really think for themselves. Almost fiercely. So does
+Teddy. If he thinks he hasn't thought anything he thinks for
+himself, he goes off and thinks it different. The sister is a
+teacher who wants to take the B.A. degree in London University.
+Meanwhile she pays the penalty of her sex."</p>
+<p>"Meaning&mdash;?" asked Mr. Direck, startled.</p>
+<a name="Page_64"></a>
+<p>"Oh! that she puts in a great deal too much of her time upon
+housework and minding her sister's baby."</p>
+<p>"She's a very interesting and charming young lady indeed," said
+Mr. Direck. "With a sort of Western college freedom of
+mind&mdash;and something about her that isn't American at all."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was following the train of his own thoughts.</p>
+<p>"My household has some amusing contrasts," he said. "I don't
+know if you have talked to that German.</p>
+<p>"He's always asking questions. And you tell him any old thing
+and he goes and writes it down in his room upstairs, and afterwards
+asks you another like it in order to perplex himself by the variety
+of your answers. He regards the whole world with a methodical
+distrust. He wants to document it and pin it down. He suspects it
+only too justly of disorderly impulses, and a capacity for
+self-contradiction. He is the most extraordinary contrast to Teddy,
+whose confidence in the universe amounts almost to effrontery.
+Teddy carries our national laxness to a foolhardy extent. He is
+capable of leaving his watch in the middle of Claverings Park and
+expecting to find it a month later&mdash;being carefully taken care
+of by a squirrel, I suppose&mdash;when he happens to want it. He's
+rather like a squirrel himself&mdash;without the habit of hoarding.
+He is incapable of asking a question about anything; he would be
+quite sure it was all right anyhow. He would feel that asking
+questions betrayed a want of confidence&mdash;was a sort of
+incivility. But my German, if you notice,&mdash;his normal
+expression is one of grave solicitude. He is like a conscientious
+ticket-collector among his impressions. And did you notice how
+beautifully my pianola rolls are all numbered and catalogued? He
+did that. He set to work and did it as soon as he got here, just as
+a good cat when you bring it into the house sets to work and
+catches mice. Previously the pianola music was chaos. You took what
+God sent you.</p>
+<p>"And he <i>looks</i> like a German," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<a name="Page_65"></a>
+<p>"He certainly does that," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"He has the fair type of complexion, the rather full habit of
+body, the temperamental disposition, but in addition that
+close-cropped head, it is almost as if it were shaved, the
+plumpness, the glasses&mdash;those are things that are made. And
+the way he carries himself. And the way he thinks. His
+meticulousness. When he arrived he was delightful, he was wearing a
+student's corps cap and a rucksack, he carried a violin; he seemed
+to have come out of a book. No one would ever dare to invent so
+German a German for a book. Now, a young Frenchman or a young
+Italian or a young Russian coming here might look like a foreigner,
+but he wouldn't have the distinctive national stamp a German has.
+He wouldn't be plainly French or Italian or Russian. Other peoples
+are not made; they are neither made nor created but
+proceeding&mdash;out of a thousand indefinable causes. The Germans
+are a triumph of directive will. I had to remark the other day that
+when my boys talked German they shouted. 'But when one talks German
+one <i>must</i> shout,' said Herr Heinrich. 'It is taught so in the
+schools.' And it is. They teach them to shout and to throw out
+their chests. Just as they teach them to read notice-boards and not
+think about politics. Their very ribs are not their own. My Herr
+Heinrich is comparatively a liberal thinker. He asked me the other
+day, 'But why should I give myself up to philology? But then,' he
+reflected, 'it is what I have to do.'"</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling seemed to have finished, and then just as Mr.
+Direck was planning a way of getting the talk back by way of Teddy
+to Miss Corner, he snuggled more deeply into his chair, reflected
+and broke out again.</p>
+<p>"This contrast between Heinrich's carefulness and Teddy's
+easy-goingness, come to look at it, is I suppose one of the most
+fundamental in the world. It reaches to everything. It mixes up
+with education, statecraft, morals. Will you make or will you take?
+Those are the two<a name="Page_66"></a> extreme courses in all such
+things. I suppose the answer of wisdom to that is, like all wise
+answers, a compromise. I suppose one must accept and then make all
+one can of it.... Have you talked at all to my eldest son?"</p>
+<p>"He's a very interesting young man indeed," said Mr. Direck. "I
+should venture to say there's a very great deal in him. I was most
+impressed by the few words I had with him."</p>
+<p>"There, for example, is one of my perplexities," said Mr.
+Britling.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck waited for some further light on this sudden
+transition.</p>
+<p>"Ah! your troubles in life haven't begun yet. Wait till you're a
+father. That cuts to the bone. You have the most delicate thing in
+the world in hand, a young kindred mind. You feel responsible for
+it, you know you are responsible for it; and you lose touch with
+it. You can't get at it. Nowadays we've lost the old tradition of
+fatherhood by divine right&mdash;and we haven't got a new one. I've
+tried not to be a cramping ruler, a director, a domestic tyrant to
+that lad&mdash;and in effect it's meant his going his own way.... I
+don't dominate. I hoped to advise. But you see he loves my respect
+and good opinion. Too much. When things go well I know of them.
+When the world goes dark for him, then he keeps his trouble from
+me. Just when I would so eagerly go into it with him.... There's
+something the matter now, something&mdash;it may be grave. I feel
+he wants to tell me. And there it is!&mdash;it seems I am the last
+person to whom he can humiliate himself by a confession of
+blundering, or weakness.... Something I should just laugh at and
+say, 'That's in the blood of all of us, dear Spit of myself. Let's
+see what's to be done.'..."</p>
+<p>He paused and then went on, finding in the unfamiliarity and
+transitoriness of his visitor a freedom he might have failed to
+find in a close friend.</p>
+<p>"I am frightened at times at all I don't know about in<a name=
+"Page_67"></a> that boy's mind. I know nothing of his
+religiosities. He's my son and he must have religiosities. I know
+nothing of his ideas or of his knowledge about sex and all that
+side of life. I do not know of the things he finds beautiful. I can
+guess at times; that's all; when he betrays himself.... You see,
+you don't know really what love is until you have children. One
+doesn't love women. Indeed you don't! One gives and gets; it's a
+trade. One may have tremendous excitements and expectations and
+overwhelming desires. That's all very well in its way. But the love
+of children is an exquisite tenderness: it rends the heart. It's a
+thing of God. And I lie awake at nights and stretch out my hands in
+the darkness to this lad&mdash;who will never know&mdash;until his
+sons come in their time...."</p>
+<p>He made one of his quick turns again.</p>
+<p>"And that's where our English way makes for distresses. Mr.
+Prussian respects and fears his father; respects authorities,
+attends, obeys and&mdash;<i>his father has a hold upon him</i>. But
+I said to myself at the outset, 'No, whatever happens, I will not
+usurp the place of God. I will not be the Priest-Patriarch of my
+children. They shall grow and I will grow beside them, helping but
+not cramping or overshadowing.' They grow more. But they blunder
+more. Life ceases to be a discipline and becomes an
+experiment...."</p>
+<p>"That's very true," said Mr. Direck, to whom it seemed the time
+was ripe to say something. "This is the problem of America perhaps
+even more than of England. Though I have not had the parental
+experience you have undergone.... I can see very clearly that a son
+is a very serious proposition."</p>
+<p>"The old system of life was organisation. That is where Germany
+is still the most ancient of European states. It's a reversion to a
+tribal cult. It's atavistic.... To organise or discipline, or mould
+characters or press authority, is to assume that you have reached
+finality in<a name="Page_68"></a> your general philosophy. It
+implies an assured end. Heinrich has his assured end, his
+philological professorship or thereabouts as a part of the Germanic
+machine. And that too has its assured end in German national
+assertion. Here, we have none of those convictions. We know we
+haven't finality, and so we are open and apologetic and receptive,
+rather than wilful.... You see all organisation, with its
+implication of finality, is death. We feel that. The Germans don't.
+What you organise you kill. Organised morals or organised religion
+or organised thought are dead morals and dead religion and dead
+thought. Yet some organisation you must have. Organisation is like
+killing cattle. If you do not kill some the herd is just waste. But
+you musn't kill all or you kill the herd. The unkilled cattle are
+the herd, the continuation; the unorganised side of life is the
+real life. The reality of life is adventure, not performance. What
+isn't adventure isn't life. What can be ruled about can be
+machined. But priests and schoolmasters and bureaucrats get hold of
+life and try to make it <i>all</i> rules, <i>all</i> etiquette and
+regulation and correctitude.... And parents and the love of parents
+make for the same thing. It is all very well to experiment for
+oneself, but when one sees these dear things of one's own, so young
+and inexperienced and so capable of every sort of gallant
+foolishness, walking along the narrow plank, going down into dark
+jungles, ah! then it makes one want to wrap them in laws and
+foresight and fence them about with 'Verboten' boards in all the
+conceivable aspects...."</p>
+<p>"In America of course we do set a certain store upon youthful
+self-reliance," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"As we do here. It's in your blood and our blood. It's the
+instinct of the English and the Irish anyhow to suspect government
+and take the risks of the chancy way.... And manifestly the
+Russians, if you read their novelists, have the same twist in
+them.... When we get this young Prussian here, he's a marvel to us.
+He really<a name="Page_69"></a> believes in Law. He <i>likes</i> to
+obey. That seems a sort of joke to us. It's curious how foreign
+these Germans are&mdash;to all the rest of the world. Because of
+their docility. Scratch the Russian and you get the Tartar. Educate
+the Russian or the American or the Englishman or the Irishman or
+Frenchman or any real northern European except the German, and you
+get the Anarchist, that is to say the man who dreams of order
+without organisation&mdash;of something beyond organisation....</p>
+<p>"It's one o'clock," said Mr. Britling abruptly, perceiving a
+shade of fatigue upon the face of his hearer and realising that his
+thoughts had taken him too far, "and Sunday. Let's go to bed."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 11</h4>
+<br>
+<p>For a time Mr. Direck could not sleep. His mind had been too
+excited by this incessant day with all its novelties and all its
+provocations to comparison. The whole complicated spectacle grouped
+itself, with a naturalness and a complete want of logic that all
+who have been young will understand, about Cecily Corner.</p>
+<p>She had to be in the picture, and so she came in as though she
+were the central figure, as though she were the quintessential
+England. There she was, the type, the blood, the likeness, of no
+end of Massachusetts families, the very same stuff indeed, and yet
+she was different....</p>
+<p>For a time his thoughts hovered ineffectively about certain
+details of her ear and cheek, and one may doubt if his interest in
+these things was entirely international....</p>
+<p>Then he found himself under way with an exposition of certain
+points to Mr. Britling. In the security of his bed he could imagine
+that he was talking very slowly and carefully while Mr. Britling
+listened; already he was more than half way to dreamland or he
+could not have supposed anything so incredible.</p>
+<p>"There's a curious sort of difference," he was saying.<a name=
+"Page_70"></a> "It is difficult to define, but on the whole I might
+express it by saying that such a gathering as this if it was in
+America would be drawn with harder lines, would show its bones more
+and have everything more emphatic. And just to take one
+illustrative point: in America in such a gathering as this there
+would be bound to be several jokes going on as it were, running
+jokes and running criticisms, from day to day and from week to
+week.... There would be jokes about your writing and your influence
+and jokes about Miss Corner's advanced reading.... You see, in
+America we pay much more attention to personal character. Here
+people, I notice, are not talked to about their personal characters
+at all, and many of them do not seem to be aware and do not seem to
+mind what personal characters they have....</p>
+<p>"And another thing I find noteworthy is the way in which what I
+might call mature people seem to go on having a good time instead
+of standing by and applauding the young people having a good
+time.... And the young people do not seem to have set out to have a
+good time at all.... Now in America, a charming girl like Miss
+Corner would be distinctly more aware of herself and her vitality
+than she is here, distinctly more. Her peculiarly charming sidelong
+look, if I might make so free with her&mdash;would have been called
+attention to. It's a perfectly beautiful look, the sort of look
+some great artist would have loved to make immortal. It's a look I
+shall find it hard to forget.... But she doesn't seem to be aware
+in the least of it. In America she would be aware of it. She would
+be distinctly aware of it. She would have been <i>made</i> aware of
+it. She would have been advised of it. It would be looked for and
+she would know it was looked for. She would <i>give</i> it as a
+singer gives her most popular song. Mamie Nelson, for example, used
+to give a peculiar little throw back of the chin and a laugh.... It
+was talked about. People came to see it....</p>
+<a name="Page_71"></a>
+<p>"Of course Mamie Nelson was a very brilliant girl indeed. I
+suppose in England you would say we spoilt her. I suppose we did
+spoil her...."</p>
+<p>It came into Mr. Direck's head that for a whole day he had
+scarcely given a thought to Mamie Nelson. And now he was thinking
+of her&mdash;calmly. Why shouldn't one think of Mamie Nelson
+calmly?</p>
+<p>She was a proud imperious thing. There was something Southern in
+her. Very dark blue eyes she had, much darker than Miss
+Corner's....</p>
+<p>But how tortuous she had been behind that outward pride of hers!
+For four years she had let him think he was the only man who really
+mattered in the world, and all the time quite clearly and
+definitely she had deceived him. She had made a fool of him and she
+had made a fool of the others perhaps&mdash;just to have her
+retinue and play the queen in her world. And at last humiliation,
+bitter humiliation, and Mamie with her chin in the air and her
+bright triumphant smile looking down on him.</p>
+<p>Hadn't he, she asked, had the privilege of loving her?</p>
+<p>She took herself at the value they had set upon her.</p>
+<p>Well&mdash;somehow&mdash;that wasn't right....</p>
+<p>All the way across the Atlantic Mr. Direck had been trying to
+forget her downward glance with the chin up, during that last
+encounter&mdash;and other aspects of the same humiliation. The
+years he had spent upon her! The time! Always relying upon her
+assurance of a special preference for him. He tried to think he was
+suffering from the pangs of unrequited love, and to conceal from
+himself just how bitterly his pride and vanity had been rent by her
+ultimate rejection. There had been a time when she had given him
+reason to laugh in his sleeve at Booth Wilmington.</p>
+<p>Perhaps Booth Wilmington had also had reason for laughing in his
+sleeve....</p>
+<a name="Page_72"></a>
+<p>Had she even loved Booth Wilmington? Or had she just snatched at
+him?...</p>
+<p>Wasn't he, Direck, as good a man as Booth Wilmington
+anyhow?...</p>
+<p>For some moments the old sting of jealousy rankled again. He
+recalled the flaring rivalry that had ended in his defeat, the
+competition of gifts and treats.... A thing so open that all
+Carrierville knew of it, discussed it, took sides.... And over it
+all Mamie with her flashing smile had sailed like a processional
+goddess....</p>
+<p>Why, they had made jokes about him in the newspapers!</p>
+<p>One couldn't imagine such a contest in Matching's Easy. Yet
+surely even in Matching's Easy there are lovers.</p>
+<p>Is it something in the air, something in the climate that makes
+things harder and clearer in America?...</p>
+<p>Cissie&mdash;why shouldn't one call her Cissie in one's private
+thoughts anyhow?&mdash;would never be as hard and clear as Mamie.
+She had English eyes&mdash;merciful eyes....</p>
+<p>That was the word&mdash;<i>merciful</i>!</p>
+<p>The English light, the English air, are merciful....</p>
+<p>Merciful....</p>
+<p>They tolerate old things and slow things and imperfect
+apprehensions. They aren't always getting at you....</p>
+<p>They don't laugh at you.... At least&mdash;they laugh
+differently....</p>
+<p>Was England the tolerant country? With its kind eyes and its
+wary sidelong look. Toleration. In which everything mellowed and
+nothing was destroyed. A soft country. A country with a passion for
+imperfection. A padded country....</p>
+<p>England&mdash;all stuffed with soft feathers ... under one's
+ear. A pillow&mdash;with soft, kind Corners ... Beautiful rounded
+Corners.... Dear, dear Corners. Cissie Corners. Corners. Could
+there be a better family?</p>
+<p>Massachusetts&mdash;but in heaven....</p>
+<a name="Page_73"></a>
+<p>Harps playing two-steps, and kind angels wrapped in
+moonlight.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>Very softly I and you,</p>
+<p>One turn, two turn, three turn, too.</p>
+<p>Off we go!....</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<a name="Page_74"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_THIRD"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE THIRD</h2>
+<h2>THE ENTERTAINMENT OF MR. DIRECK REACHES A CLIMAX</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Breakfast was in the open air, and a sunny, easy-going feast.
+Then the small boys laid hands on Mr. Direck and showed him the
+pond and the boats, while Mr. Britling strolled about the lawn with
+Hugh, talking rather intently. And when Mr. Direck returned from
+the boats in a state of greatly enhanced popularity he found Mr.
+Britling conversing over his garden railings to what was altogether
+a new type of Britisher in Mr. Direck's experience. It was a tall,
+lean, sun-bitten youngish man of forty perhaps, in brown tweeds,
+looking more like the Englishman of the American illustrations than
+anything Mr. Direck had met hitherto. Indeed he came very near to a
+complete realisation of that ideal except that there was a sort of
+intensity about him, and that his clipped moustache had the
+restrained stiffness of a wiry-haired terrier. This gentleman Mr.
+Direck learnt was Colonel Rendezvous. He spoke in clear short
+sentences, they had an effect of being punched out, and he was
+refusing to come into the garden and talk.</p>
+<p>"Have to do my fourteen miles before lunch," he said. "You
+haven't seen Manning about, have you?"</p>
+<p>"He isn't here," said Mr. Britling, and it seemed to Mr. Direck
+that there was the faintest ambiguity in this reply.</p>
+<p>"Have to go alone, then," said Colonel Rendezvous. "They told me
+that he had started to come here."</p>
+<p>"I shall motor over to Bramley High Oak for your Boy Scout
+festival," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<a name="Page_75"></a>
+<p>"Going to have three thousand of 'em," said the Colonel. "Good
+show."</p>
+<p>His steely eyes seemed to search the cover of Mr. Britling's
+garden for the missing Manning, and then he decided to give him up.
+"I must be going," he said. "So long. Come up!"</p>
+<p>A well-disciplined dog came to heel, and the lean figure had
+given Mr. Direck a semi-military salutation and gone upon its way.
+It marched with a long elastic stride; it never looked back.</p>
+<p>"Manning," said Mr. Britling, "is probably hiding up in my rose
+garden."</p>
+<p>"Curiously enough, I guessed from your manner that that might be
+the case," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"Yes. Manning is a London journalist. He has a little cottage
+about a mile over there"&mdash;Mr. Britling pointed
+vaguely&mdash;"and he comes down for the week-ends. And Rendezvous
+has found out he isn't fit. And everybody ought to be fit. That is
+the beginning and end of life for Rendezvous. Fitness. An almost
+mineral quality, an insatiable activity of body, great mental
+simplicity. So he takes possession of poor old Manning and trots
+him for that fourteen miles&mdash;at four miles an hour. Manning
+goes through all the agonies of death and damnation, he half
+dissolves, he pants and drags for the first eight or ten miles, and
+then I must admit he rather justifies Rendezvous' theory. He is to
+be found in the afternoon in a hammock suffering from blistered
+feet, but otherwise unusually well. But if he can escape it, he
+does. He hides."</p>
+<p>"But if he doesn't want to go with Rendezvous, why does he?"
+said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"Well, Rendezvous is accustomed to the command of men. And
+Manning's only way of refusing things is on printed forms. Which he
+doesn't bring down to Matching's Easy. Ah! behold!"</p>
+<p>Far away across the lawn between two blue cedars there<a name=
+"Page_76"></a> appeared a leisurely form in grey flannels and a
+loose tie, advancing with manifest circumspection.</p>
+<p>"He's gone," cried Britling.</p>
+<p>The leisurely form, obviously amiable, obviously a little out of
+condition, became more confident, drew nearer.</p>
+<p>"I'm sorry to have missed him," he said cheerfully. "I thought
+he might come this way. It's going to be a very warm day indeed.
+Let us sit about somewhere and talk.</p>
+<p>"Of course," he said, turning to Direck, "Rendezvous is the life
+and soul of the country."</p>
+<p>They strolled towards a place of seats and hammocks between the
+big trees and the rose garden, and the talk turned for a time upon
+Rendezvous. "They have the tidiest garden in Essex," said Manning.
+"It's not Mrs. Rendezvous' fault that it is so. Mrs. Rendezvous, as
+a matter of fact, has a taste for the picturesque. She just puts
+the things about in groups in the beds. She wants them, she says,
+to grow anyhow. She desires a romantic disorder. But she never gets
+it. When he walks down the path all the plants dress
+instinctively.... And there's a tree near their gate; it used to be
+a willow. You can ask any old man in the village. But ever since
+Rendezvous took the place it's been trying to present arms. With
+the most extraordinary results. I was passing the other day with
+old Windershin. 'You see that there old poplar,' he said. 'It's a
+willow,' said I. 'No,' he said, 'it did used to be a willow before
+Colonel Rendezvous he came. But now it's a poplar.'... And, by
+Jove, it is a poplar!"...</p>
+<p>The conversation thus opened by Manning centred for a time upon
+Colonel Rendezvous. He was presented as a monster of energy and
+self-discipline; as the determined foe of every form of looseness,
+slackness, and easy-goingness.</p>
+<p>"He's done wonderful work for the local Boy Scout movement,"
+said Manning.</p>
+<p>"It's Kitchenerism," said Britling.</p>
+<a name="Page_77"></a>
+<p>"It's the army side of the efficiency stunt," said Manning.</p>
+<p>There followed a digression upon the Boy Scout movement, and Mr.
+Direck made comparisons with the propaganda of Seton Thompson in
+America. "Colonel Teddyism," said Manning. "It's a sort of reaction
+against everything being too easy and too safe."</p>
+<p>"It's got its anti-decadent side," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"If there is such a thing as decadence," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"If there wasn't such a thing as decadence," said Manning, "we
+journalists would have had to invent it."...</p>
+<p>"There is something tragical in all this&mdash;what shall I call
+it?&mdash;Kitchenerism," Mr. Britling reflected "Here you have it
+rushing about and keeping itself&mdash;screwed up, and trying
+desperately to keep the country screwed up. And all because there
+may be a war some day somehow with Germany. Provided Germany
+<i>is</i> insane. It's that war, like some sort of bee in
+Rendezvous' brains, that is driving him along the road now to
+Market Saffron&mdash;he always keeps to the roads because they are
+severer&mdash;through all the dust and sunshine. When he might be
+here gossiping....</p>
+<p>"And you know, I don't see that war coming," said Mr. Britling.
+"I believe Rendezvous sweats in vain. I can't believe in that war.
+It has held off for forty years. It may hold off forever."</p>
+<p>He nodded his head towards the German tutor, who had come into
+view across the lawn, talking profoundly with Mr. Britling's eldest
+son.</p>
+<p>"Look at that pleasant person. There he is&mdash;<i>Echt
+Deutsch</i>&mdash;if anything ever was. Look at my son there! Do
+you see the two of them engaged in mortal combat? The thing's too
+ridiculous. The world grows sane. They may fight in the Balkans
+still; in many ways the Balkan States are in the very rear of
+civilisation; but to imagine decent countries like this or Germany
+going back to bloodshed!<a name="Page_78"></a> No.... When I see
+Rendezvous keeping it up and keeping it up, I begin to see just how
+poor Germany must be keeping it up. I begin to realise how sick
+Germany must be getting of the high road and the dust and heat and
+the everlasting drill and restraint.... My heart goes out to the
+South Germans. Old Manning here always reminds me of Austria. Think
+of Germany coming like Rendezvous on a Sunday morning, and looking
+stiffly over Austria's fence. 'Come for a good hard walk, man. Keep
+Fit....'"</p>
+<p>"But suppose this Balkan trouble becomes acute," said
+Manning.</p>
+<p>"It hasn't; it won't. Even if it did we should keep out of
+it."</p>
+<p>"But suppose Russia grappled Austria and Germany flung herself
+suddenly upon France&mdash;perhaps taking Belgium on the way."</p>
+<p>"Oh!&mdash;we should fight. Of course we should fight. Could any
+one but a congenital idiot suppose we shouldn't fight? They know we
+should fight. They aren't altogether idiots in Germany. But the
+thing's absurd. Why <i>should</i> Germany attack France? It's as if
+Manning here took a hatchet suddenly and assailed Edith.... It's
+just the dream of their military journalists. It's such schoolboy
+nonsense. Isn't that a beautiful pillar rose? Edith only put it in
+last year.... I hate all this talk of wars and rumours of wars....
+It's worried all my life. And it gets worse and it gets emptier
+every year...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Now just at that moment there was a loud report....</p>
+<p>But neither Mr. Britling nor Mr. Manning nor Mr. Direck was
+interrupted or incommoded in the slightest degree by that report.
+Because it was too far off over the curve of this round world to be
+either heard or seen at Matching's Easy. Nevertheless it was a very
+loud report.<a name="Page_79"></a> It occurred at an open space by
+a river that ran through a cramped Oriental city, a city spiked
+with white minarets and girt about by bare hills under a blazing
+afternoon sky. It came from a black parcel that the Archduke
+Francis Ferdinand of Austria, with great presence of mind, had just
+flung out from the open hood of his automobile, where, tossed from
+the side of the quay, it had descended a few seconds before. It
+exploded as it touched the cobbled road just under the front of the
+second vehicle in the procession, and it blew to pieces the front
+of the automobile and injured the aide-de-camp who was in it and
+several of the spectators. Its thrower was immediately gripped by
+the bystanders. The procession stopped. There was a tremendous
+commotion amongst that brightly-costumed crowd, a hot excitement in
+vivid contrast to the Sabbath calm of Matching's Easy....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling, to whom the explosion was altogether inaudible,
+continued his dissertation upon the common-sense of the world and
+the practical security of our Western peace.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Lunch was an open-air feast again. Three visitors had dropped
+in; they had motored down from London piled up on a motor-cycle and
+a side-car; a brother and two sisters they seemed to be, and they
+had apparently reduced hilariousness to a principle. The rumours of
+coming hockey that had been floating on the outskirts of Mr.
+Direck's consciousness ever since his arrival, thickened and
+multiplied.... It crept into his mind that he was expected to
+play....</p>
+<p>He decided he would not play. He took various people into his
+confidence. He told Mr. Britling, and Mr. Britling said, "We'll
+make you full back, where you'll get a hit now and then and not
+have very much to do. All you have to remember is to hit with the
+flat side of your stick and not raise it above your shoulders." He
+told<a name="Page_80"></a> Teddy, and Teddy said, "I strongly
+advise you to dress as thinly as you can consistently with decency,
+and put your collar and tie in your pocket before the game begins.
+Hockey is properly a winter game." He told the maiden aunt-like
+lady with the prominent nose, and she said almost enviously, "Every
+one here is asked to play except me. I assuage the perambulator. I
+suppose one mustn't be envious. I don't see why I shouldn't play.
+I'm not so old as all that." He told Hugh, and Hugh warned him to
+be careful not to get hold of one of the sprung sticks. He
+considered whether it wouldn't be wiser to go to his own room and
+lock himself in, or stroll off for a walk through Claverings Park.
+But then he would miss Miss Corner, who was certain, it seemed, to
+come up for hockey. On the other hand, if he did not miss her he
+might make himself ridiculous in her eyes, and efface the effect of
+the green silk stuff with the golden pheasants.</p>
+<p>He determined to stay behind until she arrived, and explain to
+her that he was not going to play. He didn't somehow want her to
+think he wasn't perfectly fit to play.</p>
+<p>Mr. Carmine arrived in an automobile with two Indians and a
+gentleman who had been a prospector in Alaska, the family who had
+danced overnight at the Dower House reappeared, and then Mrs.
+Teddy, very detached with a special hockey stick, and Miss Corner
+wheeling the perambulator. Then came further arrivals. At the
+earliest opportunity Mr. Direck secured the attention of Miss
+Corner, and lost his interest in any one else.</p>
+<p>"I can't play this hockey," said Mr. Direck. "I feel strange
+about it. It isn't an American game. Now if it were
+baseball&mdash;!"</p>
+<p>He left her to suppose him uncommonly hot stuff at baseball.</p>
+<p>"If you're on my side," said Cecily, "mind you pass to me."</p>
+<p>It became evident to Mr. Direck that he was going to play this
+hockey after all.</p>
+<a name="Page_81"></a>
+<p>"Well," he said, "if I've got to play hockey, I guess I've got
+to play hockey. But can't I just get a bit of practice somewhere
+before the game begins?"</p>
+<p>So Miss Corner went off to get two sticks and a ball and came
+back to instruct Mr. Direck. She said he had a good eye. The two
+small boys scenting play in the air got sticks and joined them. The
+overnight visitor's wife appeared from the house in abbreviated
+skirts, and wearing formidable shin-guards. With her abundant fair
+hair, which was already breaking loose, so to speak, to join the
+fray, she looked like a short stout dismounted Valkyr. Her gaze was
+clear and firm.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Hockey as it was played at the Dower House at Matching's Easy
+before the war, was a game combining danger, physical exercise and
+kindliness in a very high degree. Except for the infant in the
+perambulator and the outwardly calm but inwardly resentful aunt,
+who wheeled the child up and down in a position of maximum danger
+just behind the unnetted goal, every one was involved. Quite
+able-bodied people acquainted with the game played forward, the
+less well-informed played a defensive game behind the forward line,
+elderly, infirm, and bulky persons were used chiefly as obstacles
+in goal. Several players wore padded leg-guards, and all players
+were assumed to have them and expected to behave accordingly.</p>
+<p>Proceedings began with an invidious ceremony called picking up.
+This was heralded by Mr. Britling, clad in the diaphanous flannels
+and bearing a hockey stick, advancing with loud shouts to the
+centre of the hockey field. "Pick up! Pick up!" echoed the young
+Britlings.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck became aware of a tall, drooping man with long hair
+and long digressive legs in still longer white flannel trousers,
+and a face that was somehow familiar. He was talking with
+affectionate intimacy to Manning, and suddenly Mr. Direck
+remembered that it was in<a name="Page_82"></a> Manning's weekly
+paper, <i>The Sectarian</i>, in which a bitter caricaturist
+enlivened a biting text, that he had become familiar with the
+features of Manning's companion. It was Raeburn, Raeburn the
+insidious, Raeburn the completest product of the party system....
+Well, that was the English way. "Come for the pick up!" cried the
+youngest Britling, seizing upon Mr. Direck's elbow. It appeared
+that Mr. Britling and the overnight dinner guest&mdash;Mr. Direck
+never learnt his name&mdash;were picking up.</p>
+<p>Names were shouted. "I'll take Cecily!" Mr. Direck heard Mr.
+Britling say quite early. The opposing sides as they were picked
+fell into two groups. There seemed to be difficulties about some of
+the names. Mr. Britling, pointing to the more powerful looking of
+the Indian gentlemen, said, "<i>You</i>, Sir."</p>
+<p>"I'm going to speculate on Mr. Dinks," said Mr. Britling's
+opponent.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck gathered that Mr. Dinks was to be his hockey
+name.</p>
+<p>"You're on <i>our</i> side," said Mrs. Teddy. "I think you'll
+have to play forward, outer right, and keep a sharp eye on
+Cissie."</p>
+<p>"I'll do what I can," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>His captain presently confirmed this appointment.</p>
+<p>His stick was really a sort of club and the ball was a firm hard
+cricket ball.... He resolved to be very gentle with Cecily, and see
+that she didn't get hurt.</p>
+<p>The sides took their places for the game, and a kind of order
+became apparent to Mr. Direck. In the centre stood Mr. Britling and
+the opposing captain, and the ball lay between them. They were
+preparing to "bully off" and start the game. In a line with each of
+them were four other forwards. They all looked spirited and intent
+young people, and Mr. Direck wished he had had more exercise to
+justify his own alert appearance. Behind each centre forward
+hovered one of the Britling boys. Then on each side came a vaguer
+row of three backs, persons of gentler<a name="Page_83"></a>
+disposition or maturer years. They included Mr. Raeburn, who was
+considered to have great natural abilities for hockey but little
+experience. Mr. Raeburn was behind Mr. Direck. Mrs. Britling was
+the centre back. Then in a corner of Mr. Direck's side was a small
+girl of six or seven, and in the half-circle about the goal a lady
+in a motoring dust coat and a very short little man whom Mr. Direck
+had not previously remarked. Mr. Lawrence Carmine, stripped to the
+braces, which were richly ornamented with Oriental embroidery, kept
+goal for our team.</p>
+<p>The centre forwards went through a rapid little ceremony. They
+smote their sticks on the ground, and then hit the sticks together.
+"One," said Mr. Britling. The operation was repeated. "Two," ...
+"Three."</p>
+<p>Smack, Mr. Britling had got it and the ball had gone to the
+shorter and sturdier of the younger Britlings, who had been
+standing behind Mr. Direck's captain. Crack, and it was away to
+Teddy; smack, and it was coming right at Direck.</p>
+<p>"Lordy!" he said, and prepared to smite it.</p>
+<p>Then something swift and blue had flashed before him,
+intercepted the ball and shot it past him. This was Cecily Corner,
+and she and Teddy were running abreast like the wind towards Mr.
+Raeburn.</p>
+<p>"Hey!" cried Mr. Raeburn, "stop!" and advanced, as it seemed to
+Mr. Direck, with unseemly and threatening gestures towards
+Cissie.</p>
+<p>But before Mr. Direck could adjust his mind to this new phase of
+affairs, Cecily had passed the right honourable gentleman with the
+same mysterious ease with which she had flashed by Mr. Direck, and
+was bearing down upon the miscellaneous Landwehr which formed the
+"backs" of Mr. Direck's side.</p>
+<p>"<i>You</i> rabbit!" cried Mr. Raeburn, and became
+extraordinarily active in pursuit, administering great lengths of
+arm and leg with a centralised efficiency he had not hitherto
+displayed.</p>
+<a name="Page_84"></a>
+<p>Running hard to the help of Mr. Raeburn was the youngest
+Britling boy, a beautiful contrast. It was like a puff ball
+supporting and assisting a conger eel. In front of Mr. Direck the
+little stout man was being alert. Teddy was supporting the attack
+near the middle of the field, crying "Centre!" while Mr. Britling,
+very round and resolute, was bouncing straight towards the
+threatened goal. But Mrs. Teddy, running as swiftly as her sister,
+was between Teddy and the ball. Whack! the little short man's stick
+had clashed with Cecily's. Confused things happened with sticks and
+feet, and the little short man appeared to be trying to cut down
+Cecily as one cuts down a tree, she tried to pass the ball to her
+centre forward&mdash;too late, and then Mrs. Teddy had intercepted
+it, and was flickering back towards Mr. Britling's goal in a rush
+in which Mr. Direck perceived it was his duty to join.</p>
+<p>Yes, he had to follow up Mrs. Teddy and pick up the ball if he
+had a chance and send it in to her or the captain or across to the
+left forwards, as circumstances might decide. It was perfectly
+clear.</p>
+<p>Then came his moment. The little formidably padded lady who had
+dined at the Dower House overnight, made a gallant attack upon Mrs.
+Teddy. Out of the confusion of this clash the ball spun into Mr.
+Direck's radius. Where should he smite and how? A moment of
+reflection was natural.</p>
+<p>But now the easy-fitting discipline of the Dower House style of
+hockey became apparent. Mr. Direck had last observed the tall young
+Indian gentleman, full of vitality and anxious for destruction, far
+away in the distance on the opposing right wing. But now,
+regardless of the more formal methods of the game, this young man
+had resolved, without further delay and at any cost, to hit the
+ball hard, and he was travelling like some Asiatic typhoon with an
+extreme velocity across the remonstrances of Mr. Britling and the
+general order of his side. Mr. Direck became<a name="Page_85"></a>
+aware of him just before his impact. There was a sort of collision
+from which Mr. Direck emerged with a feeling that one side of his
+face was permanently flattened, but still gallantly resolved to hit
+the comparatively lethargic ball. He and the staggered but resolute
+Indian clashed sticks again. And Mr. Direck had the best of it.
+Years of experience couldn't have produced a better pass to the
+captain....</p>
+<p>"Good pass!"</p>
+<p>Apparently from one of the London visitors.</p>
+<p>But this was <i>some</i> game!</p>
+<p>The ball executed some rapid movements to and fro across the
+field. Our side was pressing hard. There was a violent convergence
+of miscellaneous backs and suchlike irregulars upon the threatened
+goal. Mr. Britling's dozen was rapidly losing its disciplined
+order. One of the sidecar ladies and the gallant Indian had shifted
+their activities to the defensive back, and with them was a
+spectacled gentleman waving his stick, high above all recognised
+rules. Mr. Direck's captain and both Britling boys hurried to join
+the fray. Mr. Britling, who seemed to Mr. Direck to be for a
+captain rather too demagogic, also ran back to rally his forces by
+loud cries. "Pass outwardly!" was the burthen of his
+contribution.</p>
+<p>The struggle about the Britling goal ceased to be a game and
+became something between a fight and a social gathering. Mr.
+Britling's goal-keeper could be heard shouting, "I can't see the
+ball! <i>Lift your feet!</i>" The crowded conflict lurched towards
+the goal posts. "My shin!" cried Mr. Manning. "No, you
+<i>don't!</i>"</p>
+<p>Whack, but again whack!</p>
+<p>Whack! "Ah! <i>would</i> you?" Whack.</p>
+<p>"Goal!" cried the side-car gentleman.</p>
+<p>"Goal!" cried the Britling boys....</p>
+<p>Mr. Manning, as goal-keeper, went to recover the ball, but one
+of the Britling boys politely anticipated him.</p>
+<a name="Page_86"></a>
+<p>The crowd became inactive, and then began to drift back to
+loosely conceived positions.</p>
+<p>"It's no good swarming into goal like that," Mr. Britling, with
+a faint asperity in his voice, explained to his followers. "We've
+got to keep open and not <i>crowd</i> each other."</p>
+<p>Then he went confidentially to the energetic young Indian to
+make some restrictive explanation of his activities.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck strolled back towards Cecily. He was very warm and a
+little blown, but not, he felt, disgraced. He was winning.</p>
+<p>"You'll have to take your coat off," she said.</p>
+<p>It was a good idea.</p>
+<p>It had occurred to several people and the boundary line was
+already dotted with hastily discarded jackets and wraps and so
+forth. But the lady in the motoring dust coat was buttoning it to
+the chin.</p>
+<p>"One goal love," said the minor Britling boy.</p>
+<p>"We haven't begun yet, Sunny," said Cecily.</p>
+<p>"Sonny! That's American," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"No. We call him Sunny Jim," said Cecily. "They're bullying off
+again."</p>
+<p>"Sunny Jim's American too," said Mr. Direck, returning to his
+place....</p>
+<p>The struggle was resumed. And soon it became clear that the
+first goal was no earnest of the quality of the struggle. Teddy and
+Cecily formed a terribly efficient combination. Against their
+brilliant rushes, supported in a vehement but effective manner by
+the Indian to their right and guided by loud shoutings from Mr.
+Britling (centre), Mr. Direck and the side-car lady and Mr. Raeburn
+struggled in vain. One swift advance was only checked by the dust
+cloak, its folds held the ball until help arrived; another was
+countered by a tremendous swipe of Mr. Raeburn's that sent the ball
+within an inch of the<a name="Page_87"></a> youngest Britling's
+head and right across the field; the third resulted in a swift pass
+from Cecily to the elder Britling son away on her right, and he
+shot the goal neatly and swiftly through the lattice of Mr.
+Lawrence Carmine's defensive movements. And after that very rapidly
+came another goal for Mr. Britling's side and then another.</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Britling cried out that it was "Half Time," and
+explained to Mr. Direck that whenever one side got to three goals
+they considered it was half time and had five minutes' rest and
+changed sides. Everybody was very hot and happy, except the lady in
+the dust cloak who was perfectly cool. In everybody's eyes shone
+the light of battle, and not a shadow disturbed the brightness of
+the afternoon for Mr. Direck except a certain unspoken anxiety
+about Mr. Raeburn's trousers.</p>
+<p>You see Mr. Direck had never seen Mr. Raeburn before, and knew
+nothing about his trousers.</p>
+<p>They appeared to be coming down.</p>
+<p>To begin with they had been rather loose over the feet and
+turned up, and as the game progressed, fold after fold of
+concertina-ed flannel gathered about his ankles. Every now and then
+Mr. Raeburn would seize the opportunity of some respite from the
+game to turn up a fresh six inches or so of this accumulation.
+Naturally Mr. Direck expected this policy to end unhappily. He did
+not know that the flannel trousers of Mr. Raeburn were like a
+river, that they could come down forever and still remain
+inexhaustible....</p>
+<p>He had visions of this scene of happy innocence being suddenly
+blasted by a monstrous disaster....</p>
+<p>Apart from this worry Mr. Direck was as happy as any one
+there!</p>
+<p>Perhaps these apprehensions affected his game. At any rate he
+did nothing that pleased him in the second half, Cecily danced all
+over him and round and about him, and<a name="Page_88"></a> in the
+course of ten minutes her side had won the two remaining goals with
+a score of Five-One; and five goals is "game" by the standards of
+Matching's Easy.</p>
+<p>And then with the very slightest of delays these insatiable
+people picked up again. Mr. Direck slipped away and returned in a
+white silk shirt, tennis trousers and a belt. This time he and
+Cecily were on the same side, the Cecily-Teddy combination was
+broken, and he it seemed was to take the place of the redoubtable
+Teddy on the left wing with her.</p>
+<p>This time the sides were better chosen and played a long,
+obstinate, even game. One-One. One-Two. One-Three. (Half Time.)
+Two-Three. Three all. Four-Three. Four all....</p>
+<p>By this time Mr. Direck was beginning to master the simple
+strategy of the sport. He was also beginning to master the fact
+that Cecily was the quickest, nimblest, most indefatigable player
+on the field. He scouted for her and passed to her. He developed
+tacit understandings with her. Ideas of protecting her had gone to
+the four winds of Heaven. Against them Teddy and a sidecar girl
+with Raeburn in support made a memorable struggle. Teddy was as
+quick as a cat. "Four-Three" looked like winning, but then Teddy
+and the tall Indian and Mrs. Teddy pulled square. They almost
+repeated this feat and won, but Mr. Manning saved the situation
+with an immense oblique hit that sent the ball to Mr. Direck. He
+ran with the ball up to Raeburn and then dodged and passed to
+Cecily. There was a lively struggle to the left; the ball was hit
+out by Mr. Raeburn and thrown in by a young Britling; lost by the
+forwards and rescued by the padded lady. Forward again! This time
+will do it!</p>
+<p>Cecily away to the left had worked round Mr. Raeburn once more.
+Teddy, realising that things were serious, was tearing back to
+attack her.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck supported with silent intentness. "Centre!" cried Mr.
+Britling. "Cen-tre!"</p>
+<a name="Page_89"></a>
+<p>"Mr. Direck!" came her voice, full of confidence. (Of such
+moments is the heroic life.) The ball shot behind the hurtling
+Teddy. Mr. Direck stopped it with his foot, a trick he had just
+learnt from the eldest Britling son. He was neither slow nor hasty.
+He was in the half-circle, and the way to the goal was barred only
+by the dust-cloak lady and Mr. Lawrence Carmine. He made as if to
+shoot to Mr. Carmine's left and then smacked the ball, with the
+swiftness of a serpent's stroke, to his right.</p>
+<p>He'd done it! Mr. Carmine's stick and feet were a yard away.</p>
+<p>Then hard on this wild triumph came a flash of horror. One can't
+see everything. His eye following the ball's trajectory....</p>
+<p>Directly in its line of flight was the perambulator.</p>
+<p>The ball missed the legs of the lady with the noble nose by a
+kind of miracle, hit and glanced off the wheel of the perambulator,
+and went spinning into a border of antirrhinums.</p>
+<p>"Good!" cried Cecily. "Splendid shot!"</p>
+<p>He'd shot a goal. He'd done it well. The perambulator it seemed
+didn't matter. Though apparently the impact had awakened the baby.
+In the margin of his consciousness was the figure of Mr. Britling
+remarking: "Aunty. You really mustn't wheel the
+perambulator&mdash;<i>just</i> there."</p>
+<p>"I thought," said the aunt, indicating the goal posts by a
+facial movement, "that those two sticks would be a sort of
+protection.... Aah! <i>Did</i> they then?"</p>
+<p>Never mind that.</p>
+<p>"That's <i>game!</i>" said one of the junior Britlings to Mr.
+Direck with a note of high appreciation, and the whole party,
+relaxing and crumpling like a lowered flag, moved towards the house
+and tea.</p>
+<a name="Page_90"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"We'll play some more after tea," said Cecily. "It will be
+cooler then."</p>
+<p>"My word, I'm beginning to like it," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"You're going to play very well," she said.</p>
+<p>And such is the magic of a game that Mr. Direck was humbly proud
+and grateful for her praise, and trotted along by the side of this
+creature who had revealed herself so swift and resolute and
+decisive, full to overflowing of the mere pleasure of just trotting
+along by her side. And after tea, which was a large confused
+affair, enlivened by wonderful and entirely untruthful
+reminiscences of the afternoon by Mr. Raeburn, they played again,
+with fewer inefficients and greater skill and swiftness, and Mr.
+Direck did such quick and intelligent things that everybody
+declared that he was a hockey player straight from heaven. The
+dusk, which at last made the position of the ball too speculative
+for play, came all too soon for him. He had played in six games,
+and he knew he would be as stiff as a Dutch doll in the morning.
+But he was very, very happy.</p>
+<p>The rest of the Sunday evening was essentially a sequel to the
+hockey.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck changed again, and after using some embrocation that
+Mrs. Britling recommended very strongly, came down in a black
+jacket and a cheerfully ample black tie. He had a sense of physical
+well-being such as he had not experienced since he came aboard the
+liner at New York. The curious thing was that it was not quite the
+same sense of physical well-being that one had in America. That is
+bright and clear and a little dry, this was&mdash;humid. His mind
+quivered contentedly, like sunset midges over a lake&mdash;it had
+no hard bright flashes&mdash;and his body wanted to sit about. His
+sense of intimacy with Cecily increased each time he looked at her.
+When she met his eyes she smiled. He'd caught her style now, he
+felt; he<a name="Page_91"></a> attempted no more compliments and
+was frankly her pupil at hockey and Badminton. After supper Mr.
+Britling renewed his suggestion of an automobile excursion on the
+Monday.</p>
+<p>"There's nothing to take you back to London," said Mr. Britling,
+"and we could just hunt about the district with the little old car
+and see everything you want to see...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck did not hesitate three seconds. He thought of Gladys;
+he thought of Miss Cecily Corner.</p>
+<p>"Well, indeed," he said, "if it isn't burthening you, if I'm not
+being any sort of inconvenience here for another night, I'd be
+really very glad indeed of the opportunity of going around and
+seeing all these ancient places...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The newspapers came next morning at nine, and were full of the
+Sarajevo Murders. Mr. Direck got the <i>Daily Chronicle</i> and
+found quite animated headlines for a British paper.</p>
+<p>"Who's this Archduke," he asked, "anyhow? And where is this
+Bosnia? I thought it was a part of Turkey."</p>
+<p>"It's in Austria," said Teddy.</p>
+<p>"It's in the middle ages," said Mr. Britling. "What an odd,
+pertinaceous business it seems to have been. First one bomb, then
+another; then finally the man with the pistol. While we were
+strolling about the rose garden. It's like something out of 'The
+Prisoner of Zenda.'"</p>
+<p>"Please," said Herr Heinrich.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling assumed an attentive expression.</p>
+<p>"Will not this generally affect European politics?"</p>
+<p>"I don't know. Perhaps it will."</p>
+<p>"It says in the paper that Serbia has sent those bombs to
+Sarajevo."</p>
+<p>"It's like another world," said Mr. Britling, over his paper.
+"Assassination as a political method. Can you imagine anything of
+the sort happening nowadays west<a name="Page_92"></a> of the
+Adriatic? Imagine some one assassinating the American
+Vice-President, and the bombs being at once ascribed to the arsenal
+at Toronto!... We take our politics more sadly in the West....
+Won't you have another egg, Direck?"</p>
+<p>"Please! Might this not lead to a war?"</p>
+<p>"I don't think so. Austria may threaten Serbia, but she doesn't
+want to provoke a conflict with Russia. It would be going too near
+the powder magazine. But it's all an extraordinary business."</p>
+<p>"But if she did?" Herr Heinrich persisted.</p>
+<p>"She won't.... Some years ago I used to believe in the
+inevitable European war," Mr. Britling explained to Mr. Direck,
+"but it's been threatened so long that at last I've lost all belief
+in it. The Powers wrangle and threaten. They're far too cautious
+and civilised to let the guns go off. If there was going to be a
+war it would have happened two years ago when the Balkan League
+fell upon Turkey. Or when Bulgaria attacked Serbia...."</p>
+<p>Herr Heinrich reflected, and received these conclusions with an
+expression of respectful edification.</p>
+<p>"I am naturally anxious," he said, "because I am taking tickets
+for my holidays at an Esperanto Conference at Boulogne."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"There is only one way to master such a thing as driving an
+automobile," said Mr. Britling outside his front door, as he took
+his place in the driver's seat, "and that is to resolve that from
+the first you will take no risks. Be slow if you like. Stop and
+think when you are in doubt. But do nothing rashly, permit no
+mistakes."</p>
+<p>It seemed to Mr. Direck as he took his seat beside his host that
+this was admirable doctrine.</p>
+<p>They started out of the gates with an extreme deliberation.
+Indeed twice they stopped dead in the act of turning into the road,
+and the engine had to be restarted.</p>
+<a name="Page_93"></a>
+<p>"You will laugh at me," said Mr. Britling; "but I'm resolved to
+have no blunders this time."</p>
+<p>"I don't laugh at you. It's excellent," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"It's the right way," said Mr. Britling. "Care&mdash;oh damn!
+I've stopped the engine again.
+Ugh!&mdash;ah!&mdash;<i>so!</i>&mdash;Care, I was saying&mdash;and
+calm."</p>
+<p>"Don't think I want to hurry you," said Mr. Direck. "I
+don't...."</p>
+<p>They passed through the tillage at a slow, agreeable pace,
+tooting loudly at every corner, and whenever a pedestrian was
+approached. Mr. Direck was reminded that he had still to broach the
+lecture project to Mr. Britling. So much had happened&mdash;</p>
+<p>The car halted abruptly and the engine stopped.</p>
+<p>"I thought that confounded hen was thinking of crossing the
+road," said Mr. Britling. "Instead of which she's gone through the
+hedge. She certainly looked this way.... Perhaps I'm a little fussy
+this morning.... I'll warm up to the work presently."</p>
+<p>"I'm convinced you can't be too careful," said Mr. Direck. "And
+this sort of thing enables one to see the country better...."</p>
+<p>Beyond the village Mr. Britling seemed to gather confidence. The
+pace quickened. But whenever other traffic or any indication of a
+side way appeared discretion returned. Mr. Britling stalked his
+sign posts, crawling towards them on the belly of the lowest gear;
+he drove all the morning like a man who is flushing ambuscades. And
+yet accident overtook him. For God demands more from us than mere
+righteousness.</p>
+<p>He cut through the hills to Market Saffron along a lane-road
+with which he was unfamiliar. It began to go up hill. He explained
+to Mr. Direck how admirably his engine would climb hills on the top
+gear.</p>
+<p>They took a curve and the hill grew steeper, and Mr. Direck
+opened the throttle.</p>
+<a name="Page_94"></a>
+<p>They rounded another corner, and still more steeply the hill
+rose before them.</p>
+<p>The engine began to make a chinking sound, and the car lost
+pace. And then Mr. Britling saw a pleading little white board with
+the inscription "Concealed Turning." For the moment he thought a
+turning might be concealed anywhere. He threw out his clutch and
+clapped on his brake. Then he repented of what he had done. But the
+engine, after three Herculean throbs, ceased to work. Mr. Britling
+with a convulsive clutch at his steering wheel set the electric
+hooter snarling, while one foot released the clutch again and the
+other, on the accelerator, sought in vain for help. Mr. Direck felt
+they were going back, back, in spite of all this vocalisation. He
+clutched at the emergency brake. But he was too late to avoid
+misfortune. With a feeling like sitting gently in butter, the car
+sank down sideways and stopped with two wheels in the ditch.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling said they were in the ditch&mdash;said it with
+quite unnecessary violence....</p>
+<p>This time two cart horses and a retinue of five men were
+necessary to restore Gladys to her self-respect....</p>
+<p>After that they drove on to Market Saffron, and got there in
+time for lunch, and after lunch Mr. Direck explored the church and
+the churchyard and the parish register....</p>
+<p>After lunch Mr. Britling became more cheerful about his driving.
+The road from Market Saffron to Blandish, whence one turns off to
+Matching's Easy, is the London and Norwich high road; it is an old
+Roman Stane Street and very straightforward and honest in its
+stretches. You can see the cross roads half a mile away, and the
+low hedges give you no chance of a surprise. Everybody is cheered
+by such a road, and everybody drives more confidently and quickly,
+and Mr. Britling particularly was heartened by it and gradually let
+out Gladys from the almost excessive restriction that had hitherto
+marked the day. "On a<a name="Page_95"></a> road like this nothing
+can happen," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Unless you broke an axle or burst a tyre," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"My man at Matching's Easy is most careful in his inspection,"
+said Mr. Britling, putting the accelerator well down and watching
+the speed indicator creep from forty to forty-five. "He went over
+the car not a week ago. And it's not one month old&mdash;in use
+that is."</p>
+<p>Yet something did happen.</p>
+<p>It was as they swept by the picturesque walls under the big old
+trees that encircle Brandismead Park. It was nothing but a slight
+miscalculation of distances. Ahead of them and well to the left,
+rode a postman on a bicycle; towards them, with that curious effect
+of implacable fury peculiar to motor cycles, came a motor cyclist.
+First Mr. Britling thought that he would not pass between these
+two, then he decided that he would hurry up and do so, then he
+reverted to his former decision, and then it seemed to him that he
+was going so fast that he must inevitably run down the postman. His
+instinct not to do that pulled the car sharply across the path of
+the motor cyclist. "Oh, my God!" cried Mr. Britling. "My God!"
+twisted his wheel over and distributed his feet among his levers
+dementedly.</p>
+<p>He had an imperfectly formed idea of getting across right in
+front of the motor cyclist, and then they were going down the brief
+grassy slope between the road and the wall, straight at the wall,
+and still at a good speed. The motor cyclist smacked against
+something and vanished from the problem. The wall seemed to rush up
+at them and then&mdash;collapse. There was a tremendous concussion.
+Mr. Direck gripped at his friend the emergency brake, but had only
+time to touch it before his head hit against the frame of the glass
+wind-screen, and a curtain fell upon everything....</p>
+<p>He opened his eyes upon a broken wall, a crumpled motor car, and
+an undamaged motor cyclist in the aviator's<a name="Page_96"></a>
+cap and thin oilskin overalls dear to motor cyclists. Mr. Direck
+stared and then, still stunned and puzzled, tried to raise himself.
+He became aware of acute pain.</p>
+<p>"Don't move for a bit," said the motor cyclist. "Your arm and
+side are rather hurt, I think...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>In the course of the next twelve hours Mr. Direck was to make a
+discovery that was less common in the days before the war than it
+has been since. He discovered that even pain and injury may be
+vividly interesting and gratifying.</p>
+<p>If any one had told him he was going to be stunned for five or
+six minutes, cut about the brow and face and have a bone in his
+wrist put out, and that as a consequence he would find himself
+pleased and exhilarated, he would have treated the prophecy with
+ridicule; but here he was lying stiffly on his back with his wrist
+bandaged to his side and smiling into the darkness even more
+brightly than he had smiled at the Essex landscape two days before.
+The fact is pain hurts or irritates, but in itself it does not make
+a healthily constituted man miserable. The expectation of pain, the
+certainty of injury may make one hopeless enough, the reality
+rouses our resistance. Nobody wants a broken bone or a delicate
+wrist, but very few people are very much depressed by getting one.
+People can be much more depressed by smoking a hundred cigarettes
+in three days or losing one per cent. of their capital.</p>
+<p>And everybody had been most delightful to Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>He had had the monopoly of damage. Mr. Britling, holding on to
+the steering wheel, had not even been thrown out. "Unless I'm
+internally injured," he said, "I'm not hurt at all. My liver
+perhaps&mdash;bruised a little...."</p>
+<p>Gladys had been abandoned in the ditch, and they had been very
+kindly brought home by a passing automobile.<a name="Page_97"></a>
+Cecily had been at the Dower House at the moment of the rueful
+arrival. She had seen how an American can carry injuries. She had
+made sympathy and helpfulness more delightful by expressed
+admiration.</p>
+<p>"She's a natural born nurse," said Mr. Direck, and then rather
+in the tone of one who addressed a public meeting: "But this sort
+of thing brings out all the good there is in a woman."</p>
+<p>He had been quite explicit to them and more particularly to her,
+when they told him he must stay at the Dower House until his arm
+was cured. He had looked the application straight into her pretty
+eyes.</p>
+<p>"If I'm to stay right here just as a consequence of that little
+shake up, may be for a couple of weeks, may be three, and if you're
+coming to do a bit of a talk to me ever and again, then I tell you
+I don't call this a misfortune. It isn't a misfortune. It's right
+down sheer good luck...."</p>
+<p>And now he lay as straight as a mummy, with his soul filled with
+radiance of complete mental peace. After months of distress and
+confusion, he'd got straight again. He was in the middle of a real
+good story, bright and clean. He knew just exactly what he
+wanted.</p>
+<p>"After all," he said, "it's true. There's ideals. <i>She's</i>
+an ideal. Why, I loved her before ever I set eyes on Mamie. I loved
+her before I was put into pants. That old portrait, there it was
+pointing my destiny.... It's affinity.... It's natural
+selection....</p>
+<p>"Well, I don't know what she thinks of me yet, but I do know
+very well what she's <i>got</i> to think of me. She's got to think
+all the world of me&mdash;if I break every limb of my body making
+her do it.</p>
+<p>"I'd a sort of feeling it was right to go in that old
+automobile.</p>
+<p>"Say what you like, there's a Guidance...."</p>
+<p>He smiled confidentially at the darkness as if they shared a
+secret.</p>
+<a name="Page_98"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_FOURTH"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE FOURTH</h2>
+<h2>MR. BRITLING IN SOLILOQUY</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Very different from the painful contentment of the bruised and
+broken Mr. Direck was the state of mind of his unwounded host. He
+too was sleepless, but sleepless without exaltation. The day had
+been too much for him altogether; his head, to borrow an admirable
+American expression, was "busy."</p>
+<p>How busy it was, a whole chapter will be needed to
+describe....</p>
+<p>The impression Mr. Britling had made upon Mr. Direck was one of
+indefatigable happiness. But there were times when Mr. Britling was
+called upon to pay for his general cheerful activity in lump sums
+of bitter sorrow. There were nights&mdash;and especially after
+seasons of exceptional excitement and nervous activity&mdash;when
+the reckoning would be presented and Mr. Britling would welter
+prostrate and groaning under a stormy sky of
+unhappiness&mdash;active insatiable unhappiness&mdash;a beating
+with rods.</p>
+<p>The sorrows of the sanguine temperament are brief but furious;
+the world knows little of them. The world has no need to reckon
+with them. They cause no suicides and few crimes. They hurry past,
+smiting at their victim as they go. None the less they are misery.
+Mr. Britling in these moods did not perhaps experience the grey and
+hopeless desolations of the melancholic nor the red damnation of
+the choleric, but he saw a world that bristled with misfortune and
+error, with poisonous thorns and traps and swampy places and
+incurable blunderings. An almost<a name="Page_99"></a>
+insupportable remorse for being Mr. Britling would pursue
+him&mdash;justifying itself upon a hundred counts....</p>
+<p>And for being such a Britling!...</p>
+<p>Why&mdash;he revived again that bitter question of a thousand
+and one unhappy nights&mdash;why was he such a fool? Such a hasty
+fool? Why couldn't he look before he leapt? Why did he take risks?
+Why was he always so ready to act upon the supposition that all was
+bound to go well? (He might as well have asked why he had quick
+brown eyes.)</p>
+<p>Why, for instance, hadn't he adhered to the resolution of the
+early morning? He had begun with an extremity of caution....</p>
+<p>It was a characteristic of these moods of Mr. Britling that they
+produced a physical restlessness. He kept on turning over and then
+turning over again, and sitting up and lying back, like a martyr on
+a gridiron....</p>
+<p>This was just the latest instance of a life-long trouble. Will
+there ever be a sort of man whose thoughts are quick and his acts
+slow? Then indeed we shall have a formidable being. Mr. Britling's
+thoughts were quick and sanguine and his actions even more eager
+than his thoughts. Already while he was a young man Mr. Britling
+had found his acts elbow their way through the hurry of his ideas
+and precipitate humiliations. Long before his reasons were
+marshalled, his resolutions were formed. He had attempted a
+thousand remonstrances with himself; he had sought to remedy the
+defects in his own character by written inscriptions in his bedroom
+and memoranda inside his watch case. "Keep steady!" was one of
+them. "Keep the End in View." And, "Go steadfastly, coherently,
+continuously; only so can you go where you will." In distrusting
+all impulse, scrutinising all imagination, he was persuaded lay his
+one prospect of escape from the surprise of countless miseries.
+Otherwise he danced among glass bombs and barbed wire.</p>
+<p>There had been a time when he could exhort himself<a name=
+"Page_100"></a> to such fundamental charge and go through phases of
+the severest discipline. Always at last to be taken by surprise
+from some unexpected quarter. At last he had ceased to hope for any
+triumph so radical. He had been content to believe that in recent
+years age and a gathering habit of wisdom had somewhat slowed his
+leaping purpose. That if he hadn't overcome he had at least to a
+certain extent minimised it. But this last folly was surely the
+worst. To charge through this patient world with&mdash;how much did
+the car weigh? A ton certainly and perhaps more&mdash;reckless of
+every risk. Not only to himself but others. At this thought, he
+clutched the steering wheel again. Once more he saw the bent back
+of the endangered cyclist, once more he felt rather than saw the
+seething approach of the motor bicycle, and then through a long
+instant he drove helplessly at the wall....</p>
+<p>Hell perhaps is only one such incident, indefinitely
+prolonged....</p>
+<p>Anything might have been there in front of him. And indeed now,
+out of the dreamland to which he could not escape something had
+come, something that screamed sharply....</p>
+<p>"Good God!" he cried, "if I had hit a child! I might have hit a
+child!" The hypothesis flashed into being with the thought, tried
+to escape and was caught. It was characteristic of Mr. Britling's
+nocturnal imagination that he should individualise this child quite
+sharply as rather plain and slender, with reddish hair, staring
+eyes, and its ribs crushed in a vivid and dreadful manner, pinned
+against the wall, mixed up with some bricks, only to be extracted,
+oh! <i>horribly</i>.</p>
+<p>But this was not fair! He had hurt no child! He had merely
+pitched out Mr. Direck and broken his arm....</p>
+<p>It wasn't his merit that the child hadn't been there!</p>
+<p>The child might have been there!</p>
+<p>Mere luck.</p>
+<a name="Page_101"></a>
+<p>He lay staring in despair&mdash;as an involuntary God might
+stare at many a thing in this amazing universe&mdash;staring at the
+little victim his imagination had called into being only to
+destroy....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>If he had not crushed a child other people had. Such things
+happened. Vicariously at any rate he had crushed many
+children....</p>
+<p>Why are children ever crushed?</p>
+<p>And suddenly all the pain and destruction and remorse of all the
+accidents in the world descended upon Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>No longer did he ask why am I such a fool, but why are we all
+such fools? He became Man on the automobile of civilisation,
+crushing his thousands daily in his headlong and yet aimless
+career....</p>
+<p>That was a trick of Mr. Britling's mind. It had this tendency to
+spread outward from himself to generalised issues. Many minds are
+like that nowadays. He was not so completely individualised as
+people are supposed to be individualised&mdash;in our law, in our
+stories, in our moral judgments. He had a vicarious factor. He
+could slip from concentrated reproaches to the liveliest remorse
+for himself as The Automobilist in General, or for himself as
+England, or for himself as Man. From remorse for smashing his guest
+and his automobile he could pass by what was for him the most
+imperceptible of transitions to remorse for every accident that has
+ever happened through the error of an automobilist since
+automobiles began. All that long succession of blunderers became
+Mr. Britling. Or rather Mr. Britling became all that vast
+succession of blunderers.</p>
+<p>These fluctuating lapses from individuation made Mr. Britling a
+perplexity to many who judged only by the old personal standards.
+At times he seemed a monster of cantankerous self-righteousness,
+whom nobody could please<a name="Page_102"></a> or satisfy, but
+indeed when he was most pitiless about the faults of his race or
+nation he was really reproaching himself, and when he seemed more
+egotistical and introspective and self-centred he was really
+ransacking himself for a clue to that same confusion of purposes
+that waste the hope and strength of humanity. And now through the
+busy distresses of the night it would have perplexed a watching
+angel to have drawn the line and shown when Mr. Britling, was
+grieving for his own loss and humiliation and when he was grieving
+for these common human weaknesses of which he had so large a
+share.</p>
+<p>And this double refraction of his mind by which a concentrated
+and individualised Britling did but present a larger impersonal
+Britling beneath, carried with it a duplication of his conscience
+and sense of responsibility. To his personal conscience he was
+answerable for his private honour and his debts and the Dower House
+he had made and so on, but to his impersonal conscience he was
+answerable for the whole world. The world from the latter point of
+view was his egg. He had a subconscious delusion that he had laid
+it. He had a subconscious suspicion that he had let it cool and
+that it was addled. He had an urgency to incubate it. The variety
+and interest of his talk was largely due to that persuasion, it was
+a perpetual attempt to spread his mental feathers over the task
+before him....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>After this much of explanation it is possible to go on to the
+task which originally brought Mr. Direck to Matching's Easy, the
+task that Massachusetts society had sent him upon, the task of
+organising the mental unveiling of Mr. Britling. Mr. Direck saw Mr.
+Britling only in the daylight, and with an increasing distraction
+of the attention towards Miss Cecily Corner. We may see him rather
+<i>more</i> clearly in the darkness, without any distraction except
+his own.</p>
+<a name="Page_103"></a>
+<p>Now the smashing of Gladys was not only the source of a series
+of reproaches and remorses directly arising out of the smash; it
+had also a wide system of collateral consequences, which were also
+banging and blundering their way through the Britling mind. It was
+extraordinarily inconvenient in quite another direction that the
+automobile should be destroyed. It upset certain plans of Mr.
+Britling's in a direction growing right out from all the Dower
+House world in which Mr. Direck supposed him to be completely set
+and rooted. There were certain matters from which Mr. Britling had
+been averting his mind most strenuously throughout the week-end.
+Now, there was no averting his mind any more.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was entangled in a love affair. It was, to be
+exact, and disregarding minor affinities, his eighth love affair.
+And the new automobile, so soon as he could drive it efficiently,
+was to have played quite a solvent and conclusive part in certain
+entangled complications of this relationship.</p>
+<p>A man of lively imagination and quick impulses naturally has
+love affairs as he drives himself through life, just as he
+naturally has accidents if he drives an automobile.</p>
+<p>And the peculiar relations that existed between Mr. Britling and
+Mrs. Britling tended inevitably to make these love affairs
+troublesome, undignified and futile. Especially when they were
+viewed from the point of view of insomnia.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling's first marriage had been a passionately happy one.
+His second was by comparison a marriage in neutral tint. There is
+much to be said for that extreme Catholic theory which would make
+marriage not merely lifelong but eternal. Certainly Mr. Britling
+would have been a finer if not a happier creature if his
+sentimental existence could have died with his first wife or
+continued only in his love for their son. He had married in the
+glow of youth, he had had two years of clean and simple loving,
+helping, quarrelling and the happy ending of<a name="Page_104"></a>
+quarrels. Something went out of him into all that, which could not
+be renewed again. In his first extremity of grief he knew that
+perfectly well&mdash;and then afterwards he forgot it. While there
+is life there is imagination, which makes and forgets and goes
+on.</p>
+<p>He met Edith under circumstances that did not in any way recall
+his lost Mary. He met her, as people say, "socially"; Mary, on the
+other hand, had been a girl at Newnham while he was a fellow of
+Pembroke, and there had been something of accident and something of
+furtiveness in their lucky discovery of each other. There had been
+a flush in it; there was dash in it. But Edith he saw and chose and
+had to woo. There was no rushing together; there was solicitation
+and assent. Edith was a Bachelor of Science of London University
+and several things like that, and she looked upon the universe
+under her broad forehead and broad-waving brown hair with quiet
+watchful eyes that had nothing whatever to hide, a thing so
+incredible to Mr. Britling that he had loved and married her very
+largely for the serenity of her mystery. And for a time after their
+marriage he sailed over those brown depths plumbing furiously.</p>
+<p>Of course he did not make his former passion for Mary at all
+clear to her. Indeed, while he was winning Edith it was by no means
+clear to himself. He was making a new emotional drama, and
+consciously and subconsciously he dismissed a hundred reminiscences
+that sought to invade the new experience, and which would have been
+out of key with it. And without any deliberate intention to that
+effect he created an atmosphere between himself and Edith in which
+any discussion of Mary was reduced to a minimum, and in which Hugh
+was accepted rather than explained. He contrived to believe that
+she understood all sorts of unsayable things; he invented miracles
+of quite uncongenial mute mutuality....</p>
+<p>It was over the chess-board that they first began to discover
+their extensive difficulties of sympathy. Mr. Britling's<a name=
+"Page_105"></a> play was characterised by a superficial brilliance,
+much generosity and extreme unsoundness; he always moved directly
+his opponent had done so&mdash;and then reflected on the situation.
+His reflection was commonly much wiser than his moves. Mrs.
+Britling was, as it were, a natural antagonist to her husband; she
+was as calm as he was irritable. She was never in a hurry to move,
+and never disposed to make a concession. Quietly, steadfastly, by
+caution and deliberation, without splendour, without error, she had
+beaten him at chess until it led to such dreadful fits of anger
+that he had to renounce the game altogether. After every such
+occasion he would be at great pains to explain that he had merely
+been angry with himself. Nevertheless he felt, and would not let
+himself think (while she concluded from incidental heated phrases),
+that that was not the complete truth about the outbreak.</p>
+<p>Slowly they got through the concealments of that specious
+explanation. Temperamentally they were incompatible.</p>
+<p>They were profoundly incompatible. In all things she was
+defensive. She never came out; never once had she surprised him
+halfway upon the road to her. He had to go all the way to her and
+knock and ring, and then she answered faithfully. She never
+surprised him even by unkindness. If he had a cut finger she would
+bind it up very skilfully and healingly, but unless he told her she
+never discovered he had a cut finger. He was amazed she did not
+know of it before it happened. He piped and she did not dance. That
+became the formula of his grievance. For several unhappy years she
+thwarted him and disappointed him, while he filled her with dumb
+inexplicable distresses. He had been at first so gay an activity,
+and then he was shattered; fragments of him were still as gay and
+attractive as ever, but between were outbreaks of anger, of
+hostility, of something very like malignity. Only very slowly did
+they realise the truth of their<a name="Page_106"></a> relationship
+and admit to themselves that the fine bud of love between them had
+failed to flower, and only after long years were they able to
+delimit boundaries where they had imagined union, and to
+become&mdash;allies. If it had been reasonably possible for them to
+part without mutual injury and recrimination they would have done
+so, but two children presently held them, and gradually they had to
+work out the broad mutual toleration of their later relations. If
+there was no love and delight between them there was a real
+habitual affection and much mutual help. She was proud of his
+steady progress to distinction, proud of each intimation of respect
+he won; she admired and respected his work; she recognised that he
+had some magic, of liveliness and unexpectedness that was precious
+and enviable. So far as she could help him she did. And even when
+he knew that there was nothing behind it, that it was indeed little
+more than an imaginative inertness, he could still admire and
+respect her steady dignity and her consistent honourableness. Her
+practical capacity was for him a matter for continual
+self-congratulation. He marked the bright order of her household,
+her flowering borders, the prosperous high-born roses of her garden
+with a wondering appreciation. He had never been able to keep
+anything in order. He relied more and more upon her. He showed his
+respect for her by a scrupulous attention to her dignity, and his
+confidence by a franker and franker emotional neglect. Because she
+expressed so little he succeeded in supposing she felt little, and
+since nothing had come out of the brown depths of her eyes he saw
+fit at last to suppose no plumb-line would ever find anything
+there. He pursued his interests; he reached out to this and that;
+he travelled; she made it a matter of conscience to let him go
+unhampered; she felt, she thought&mdash;unrecorded; he did, and he
+expressed and re-expressed and over-expressed, and started this and
+that with quick irrepressible activity, and so there had
+accumulated about them the various items of the life to whose more
+ostensible<a name="Page_107"></a> accidents Mr. Direck was now for
+an indefinite period joined.</p>
+<p>It was in the nature of Mr. Britling to incur things; it was in
+the nature of Mrs. Britling to establish them. Mr. Britling had
+taken the Dower House on impulse, and she had made it a delightful
+home. He had discovered the disorderly delights of mixed Sunday
+hockey one weekend at Pontings that had promised to be dull, and
+she had made it an institution.... He had come to her with his
+orphan boy and a memory of a passionate first loss that sometimes,
+and more particularly at first, he seemed to have forgotten
+altogether, and at other times was only too evidently lamenting
+with every fibre of his being. She had taken the utmost care of the
+relics of her duskily pretty predecessor that she found in
+unexpected abundance in Mr. Britling's possession, and she had done
+her duty by her sometimes rather incomprehensible stepson. She
+never allowed herself to examine the state of her heart towards
+this youngster; it is possible that she did not perceive the
+necessity for any such examination....</p>
+<p>So she went through life, outwardly serene and dignified, one of
+a great company of rather fastidious, rather unenterprising women
+who have turned for their happiness to secondary things, to those
+fair inanimate things of household and garden which do not turn
+again and rend one, to aestheticisms and delicacies, to order and
+seemliness. Moreover she found great satisfaction in the health and
+welfare, the growth and animation of her own two little boys. And
+no one knew, and perhaps even she had contrived to forget, the
+phases of astonishment and disillusionment, of doubt and bitterness
+and secret tears, that spread out through the years in which she
+had slowly realised that this strange, fitful, animated man who had
+come to her, vowing himself hers, asking for her so urgently and
+persuasively, was ceasing, had ceased, to love her, that his heart
+had escaped her, that she had missed it; she never dreamt that she
+had hurt it, and that after its<a name="Page_108"></a> first
+urgent, tumultuous, incomprehensible search for her it had hidden
+itself bitterly away....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The mysterious processes of nature that had produced Mr.
+Britling had implanted in him an obstinate persuasion that
+somewhere in the world, from some human being, it was still
+possible to find the utmost satisfaction for every need and
+craving. He could imagine as existing, as waiting for him, he knew
+not where, a completeness of understanding, a perfection of
+response, that would reach all the gamut of his feelings and
+sensations from the most poetical to the most entirely physical, a
+beauty of relationship so transfiguring that not only would
+she&mdash;it went without saying that this completion was a
+woman&mdash;be perfectly beautiful in its light but, what was
+manifestly more incredible, that he too would be perfectly
+beautiful and quite at his ease.... In her presence there could be
+no self-reproaches, no lapses, no limitations, nothing but
+happiness and the happiest activities.... To such a persuasion half
+the imaginative people in the world succumb as readily and
+naturally as ducklings take to water. They do not doubt its truth
+any more than a thirsty camel doubts that presently it will come to
+a spring.</p>
+<p>This persuasion is as foolish as though a camel hoped that some
+day it would drink from such a spring that it would never thirst
+again. For the most part Mr. Britling ignored its presence in his
+mind, and resisted the impulses it started. But at odd times, and
+more particularly in the afternoon and while travelling and in
+between books, Mr. Britling so far succumbed to this strange
+expectation of a wonder round the corner that he slipped the
+anchors of his humour and self-contempt and joined the great
+cruising brotherhood of the Pilgrims of Love....</p>
+<p>In fact&mdash;though he himself had never made a
+reckoning<a name="Page_109"></a> of it&mdash;he had been upon eight
+separate cruises. He was now upon the eighth....</p>
+<p>Between these various excursions&mdash;they took him round and
+about the world, so to speak, they cast him away on tropical
+beaches, they left him dismasted on desolate seas, they involved
+the most startling interventions and the most inconvenient
+consequences&mdash;there were interludes of penetrating philosophy.
+For some years the suspicion had been growing up in Mr. Britling's
+mind that in planting this persuasion in his being, the mysterious
+processes of Nature had been, perhaps for some purely biological
+purpose, pulling, as people say, his leg, that there were not these
+perfect responses, that loving a woman is a thing one does
+thoroughly once for all&mdash;or so&mdash;and afterwards recalls
+regrettably in a series of vain repetitions, and that the career of
+the Pilgrim of Love, so soon as you strip off its credulous
+glamour, is either the most pitiful or the most vulgar and vile of
+perversions from the proper conduct of life. But this suspicion had
+not as yet grown to prohibitive dimensions with him, it was not
+sufficient to resist the seasons of high tide, the sudden promise
+of the salt-edged breeze, the invitation of the hovering sea-bird;
+and he was now concealing beneath the lively surface of activities
+with which Mr. Direck was now familiar, a very extensive system of
+distresses arising out of the latest, the eighth of these
+digressional adventures....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling had got into it very much as he had got into the
+ditch on the morning before his smash. He hadn't thought the affair
+out and he hadn't looked carefully enough. And it kept on
+developing in just the ways he would rather that it didn't.</p>
+<p>The seventh affair had been very disconcerting. He had made a
+fool of himself with quite a young girl; he blushed to think how
+young; it hadn't gone very far, but it had made his nocturnal
+reflections so disagreeable that he had&mdash;by no means for the
+first time&mdash;definitely and<a name="Page_110"></a> forever
+given up these foolish dreams of love. And when Mrs. Harrowdean
+swam into his circle, she seemed just exactly what was wanted to
+keep his imagination out of mischief. She came bearing flattery to
+the pitch of adoration. She was the brightest and cleverest of
+young widows. She wrote quite admirably criticism in the
+<i>Scrutator</i> and the <i>Sectarian</i>, and occasionally poetry
+in the <i>Right Review</i>&mdash;when she felt disposed to do so.
+She had an intermittent vein of high spirits that was almost better
+than humour and made her quickly popular with most of the people
+she met, and she was only twenty miles away in her pretty house and
+her absurd little jolly park.</p>
+<p>There was something, she said, in his thought and work that was
+like walking in mountains. She came to him because she wanted to
+clamber about the peaks and glens of his mind.</p>
+<p>It was natural to reply that he wasn't by any means the serene
+mountain elevation she thought him, except perhaps for a kind of
+loneliness....</p>
+<p>She was a great reader of eighteenth century memoirs, and some
+she conveyed to him. Her mental quality was all in the vein of the
+friendships of Rousseau and Voltaire, and pleasantly and trippingly
+she led him along the primrose path of an intellectual liaison. She
+came first to Matching's Easy, where she was sweet and bright and
+vividly interested and a great contrast to Mrs. Britling, and then
+he and she met in London, and went off together with a fine sense
+of adventure for a day at Richmond, and then he took some work with
+him to her house and stayed there....</p>
+<p>Then she went away into Scotland for a time and he wanted her
+again tremendously and clamoured for her eloquently, and then it
+was apparent and admitted between them that they were admirably in
+love, oh! immensely in love.</p>
+<p>The transitions from emotional mountaineering to ardent
+intimacies were so rapid and impulsive that each<a name=
+"Page_111"></a> phase obliterated its predecessor, and it was only
+with a vague perplexity that Mr. Britling found himself transferred
+from the r&ocirc;le of a mountainous objective for pretty little
+pilgrims to that of a sedulous lover in pursuit of the happiness of
+one of the most uncertain, intricate, and entrancing of feminine
+personalities. This was not at all his idea of the proper relations
+between men and women, but Mrs. Harrowdean had a way of challenging
+his gallantry. She made him run about for her; she did not demand
+but she commanded presents and treats and surprises; she even
+developed a certain jealousy in him. His work began to suffer from
+interruptions. Yet they had glowing and entertaining moments
+together that could temper his rebellious thoughts with the threat
+of irreparable loss. "One must love, and all things in life are
+imperfect," was how Mr. Britling expressed his reasons for
+submission. And she had a hold upon him too in a certain facile
+pitifulness. She was little; she could be stung sometimes by the
+slightest touch and then her blue eyes would be bright with
+tears.</p>
+<p>Those possible tears could weigh at times even more than those
+possible lost embraces.</p>
+<p>And there was Oliver.</p>
+<p>Oliver was a person Mr. Britling had never seen. He grew into
+the scheme of things by insensible gradations. He was a government
+official in London; he was, she said, extraordinarily dull, he was
+lacking altogether in Mr. Britling's charm and interest, but he was
+faithful and tender and true. And considerably younger than Mr.
+Britling. He asked nothing but to love. He offered honourable
+marriage. And when one's heart was swelling unendurably one could
+weep in safety on his patient shoulder. This patient shoulder of
+Oliver's ultimately became Mr. Britling's most exasperating
+rival.</p>
+<p>She liked to vex him with Oliver. She liked to vex him
+generally. Indeed in this by no means abnormal love affair, there
+was a very strong antagonism. She seemed<a name="Page_112"></a> to
+resent the attraction Mr. Britling had for her and the emotions and
+pleasure she had with him. She seemed under the sway of an
+instinctive desire to make him play heavily for her, in time, in
+emotion, in self-respect. It was intolerable to her that he could
+take her easily and happily. That would be taking her cheaply. She
+valued his gifts by the bother they cost him, and was determined
+that the path of true love should not, if she could help it, run
+smooth. Mr. Britling on the other hand was of the school of polite
+and happy lovers. He thought it outrageous to dispute and
+contradict, and he thought that making love was a cheerful,
+comfortable thing to be done in a state of high good humour and
+intense mutual appreciation. This levity offended the lady's pride.
+She drew unfavourable contrasts with Oliver. If Oliver lacked charm
+he certainly did not lack emotion. He desired sacrifice, it seemed,
+almost more than satisfactions. Oliver was a person of the most
+exemplary miserableness; he would weep copiously and frequently.
+She could always make him weep when she wanted to do so. By holding
+out hopes and then dashing them if by no other expedient. Why did
+Mr. Britling never weep? She wept.</p>
+<p>Some base streak of competitiveness in Mr. Britling's nature
+made it seem impossible that he should relinquish the lady to
+Oliver. Besides, then, what would he do with his dull days, his
+afternoons, his need for a properly demonstrated affection?</p>
+<p>So Mr. Britling trod the path of his eighth digression, rather
+overworked in the matter of flowers and the selection of small
+jewellery, stalked by the invisible and indefatigable Oliver,
+haunted into an unwilling industry of attentions&mdash;attentions
+on the model of the professional lover of the French
+novels&mdash;by the memory and expectation of tearful scenes. "Then
+you don't love me! And it's all spoilt. I've risked talk and my
+reputation.... I was a fool ever to dream of making love
+beautifully...."</p>
+<a name="Page_113"></a>
+<p>Exactly like running your car into a soft wet ditch when you
+cannot get out and you cannot get on. And your work and your
+interests waiting and waiting for you!...</p>
+<p>The car itself was an outcome of the affair. It was Mrs.
+Harrowdean's idea, she thought chiefly of pleasant expeditions to
+friendly inns in remote parts of the country, inns with a flavour
+of tacit complicity, but it fell in very pleasantly with Mr.
+Britling's private resentment at the extraordinary inconvenience of
+the railway communications between Matching's Easy and her station
+at Pyecrafts, which involved a journey to Liverpool Street and a
+long wait at a junction. And now the car was smashed up&mdash;just
+when he had acquired skill enough to take it over to Pyecrafts
+without shame, and on Tuesday or Wednesday at latest he would have
+to depart in the old way by the London train....</p>
+<p>Only the most superficial mind would assert nowadays that man is
+a reasonable creature. Man is an unreasonable creature, and it was
+entirely unreasonable and human for Mr. Britling during his
+nocturnal self-reproaches to mix up his secret resentment at his
+infatuation for Mrs. Harrowdean with his ill-advised attack upon
+the wall of Brandismead Park. He ought never to have bought that
+car; he ought never to have been so ready to meet Mrs. Harrowdean
+more than half-way.</p>
+<p>What exacerbated his feeling about Mrs. Harrowdean was a new
+line she had recently taken with regard to Mrs. Britling. From her
+first rash assumption that Mr. Britling was indifferent to his
+wife, she had come to realise that on the contrary he was in some
+ways extremely tender about his wife. This struck her as an
+outrageous disloyalty. Instead of appreciating a paradox she
+resented an infidelity. She smouldered with perplexed resentment
+for some days, and then astonished her lover by a series of
+dissertations of a hostile and devastating nature upon the lady of
+the Dower House.</p>
+<a name="Page_114"></a>
+<p>He tried to imagine he hadn't heard all that he had heard, but
+Mrs. Harrowdean had a nimble pen and nimbler afterthoughts, and
+once her mind had got to work upon the topic she developed her
+offensive in half-a-dozen brilliant letters.... On the other hand
+she professed a steadily increasing passion for Mr. Britling. And
+to profess passion for Mr. Britling was to put him under a sense of
+profound obligation&mdash;because indeed he was a modest man. He
+found himself in an emotional quandary.</p>
+<p>You see, if Mrs. Harrowdean had left Mrs. Britling alone
+everything would have been quite tolerable. He considered Mrs.
+Harrowdean a charming human being, and altogether better than he
+deserved. Ever so much better. She was all initiative and response
+and that sort of thing. And she was so discreet. She had her own
+reputation to think about, and one or two of her
+predecessors&mdash;God rest the ashes of those fires!&mdash;had not
+been so discreet. Yet one could not have this sort of thing going
+on behind Edith's back. All sorts of things one might have going on
+behind Edith's back, but not this writing and saying of perfectly
+beastly things about Edith. Nothing could alter the fact that Edith
+was his honour....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Throughout the week-end Mr. Britling had kept this trouble well
+battened down. He had written to Mrs. Harrowdean a brief ambiguous
+note saying, "I am thinking over all that you have said," and after
+that he had scarcely thought about her at all. Or at least he had
+always contrived to be much more vividly thinking about something
+else. But now in these night silences the suppressed trouble burst
+hatches and rose about him.</p>
+<p>What a mess he had made of the whole scheme of his emotional
+life! There had been a time when he had started out as gaily with
+his passions and his honour as he had started out with Gladys to go
+to Market Saffron.<a name="Page_115"></a> He had as little taste
+for complications as he had for ditches. And now his passions and
+his honour were in a worse case even than poor muddy smashed up
+Gladys as the cart-horses towed her off, for she at any rate might
+be repaired. But he&mdash;he was a terribly patched fabric of
+explanations now. Not indeed that he had ever stooped to
+explanations. But there he was! Far away, like a star seen down the
+length of a tunnel, was that first sad story of a love as clean as
+starlight. It had been all over by eight-and-twenty and he could
+find it in his heart to grieve that he had ever given a thought to
+love again. He should have lived a decent widower.... Then Edith
+had come into his life, Edith that honest and unconscious
+defaulter. And there again he should have stuck to his
+disappointment. He had stuck to it&mdash;nine days out of every
+ten. It's the tenth day, it's the odd seductive moment, it's the
+instant of confident pride&mdash;and there is your sanguine
+temperament in the ditch.</p>
+<p>He began to recapitulate items in the catalogue of his
+escapades, and the details of his automobile misadventures mixed
+themselves up with the story of his heart steering. For example
+there was that tremendous Siddons affair. He had been taking the
+corner of a girlish friendship and he had taken it altogether too
+far. What a frightful mess that had been! When once one is off the
+road anything may happen, from a crumpled mud-guard to the car on
+the top of you. And there was his forty miles an hour spurt with
+the great and gifted Delphine Marquise&mdash;for whom he was to
+have written a play and been a perfect Annunzio. Until Willersley
+appeared&mdash;very like the motor-cyclist&mdash;buzzing in the
+opposite direction. And then had ensued angers,
+humiliations....</p>
+<p>Had every man this sort of crowded catalogue? Was every
+forty-five-year-old memory a dark tunnel receding from the star of
+youth? It is surely a pity that life cannot end at thirty. It comes
+to one clean and in perfect order....</p>
+<a name="Page_116"></a>
+<p>Is experience worth having?</p>
+<p>What a clean, straight thing the spirit of youth is. It is like
+a bright new spear. It is like a finely tempered sword. The figure
+of his boy took possession of his mind, his boy who looked out on
+the world with his mother's dark eyes, the slender son of that
+whole-hearted first love. He was a being at once fine and simple,
+an intimate mystery. Must he in his turn get dented and wrinkled
+and tarnished?</p>
+<p>The boy was in trouble. What was the trouble?</p>
+<p>Was it some form of the same trouble that had so tangled and
+tainted and scarred the private pride of his father? And how was it
+possible for Mr. Britling, disfigured by heedless misadventures,
+embarrassed by complications and concealments, to help this honest
+youngster out of his perplexities? He imagined possible forms of
+these perplexities. Graceless forms. Ugly forms. Such forms as only
+the nocturnal imagination would have dared present....</p>
+<p>Oh, why had he been such a Britling? Why was he still such a
+Britling?</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling sat up in his bed and beat at the bedclothes with
+his fists. He uttered uncompleted vows, "From this hour forth ...
+from this hour forth...."</p>
+<p>He must do something, he felt. At any rate he had his
+experiences. He could warn. He could explain away. Perhaps he might
+help to extricate, if things had got to that pitch.</p>
+<p>Should he write to his son? For a time he revolved a long,
+tactful letter in his mind. But that was impossible. Suppose the
+trouble was something quite different? It would have to be a letter
+in the most general terms....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It was in the doubly refracting nature of Mr. Britling's mind
+that while he was deploring his inefficiency in<a name=
+"Page_117"></a> regard to his son, he was also deploring the
+ineffectiveness of all his generation of parents. Quite insensibly
+his mind passed over to the generalised point of view.</p>
+<p>In his talks with Mr. Direck, Mr. Britling could present England
+as a great and amiable spectacle of carelessness and relaxation,
+but was it indeed an amiable spectacle? The point that Mr. Direck
+had made about the barn rankled in his thoughts. His barn was a
+barn no longer, his farmyard held no cattle; he was just living
+laxly in the buildings that ancient needs had made, he was living
+on the accumulated prosperity of former times, the spendthrift heir
+of toiling generations. Not only was he a pampered, undisciplined
+sort of human being; he was living in a pampered, undisciplined
+sort of community. The two things went together.... This confounded
+Irish business, one could laugh at it in the daylight, but was it
+indeed a thing to laugh at? We were drifting lazily towards a real
+disaster. We had a government that seemed guided by the principles
+of Mr. Micawber, and adopted for its watchword "Wait and see." For
+months now this trouble had grown more threatening. Suppose
+presently that civil war broke out in Ireland! Suppose presently
+that these irritated, mishandled suffragettes did some desperate
+irreconcilable thing, assassinated for example! The bomb in
+Westminster Abbey the other day might have killed a dozen
+people.... Suppose the smouldering criticism of British rule in
+India and Egypt were fanned by administrative indiscretions into a
+flame....</p>
+<p>And then suppose Germany had made trouble....</p>
+<p>Usually Mr. Britling kept his mind off Germany. In the daytime
+he pretended Germany meant nothing to England. He hated alarmists.
+He hated disagreeable possibilities. He declared the idea of a
+whole vast nation waiting to strike at us incredible. Why should
+they? You cannot have seventy million lunatics.... But in the
+darkness of the night one cannot dismiss things in this<a name=
+"Page_118"></a> way. Suppose, after all, their army was more than a
+parade, their navy more than a protest?</p>
+<p>We might be caught&mdash;It was only in the vast melancholia of
+such occasions that Mr. Britling would admit such possibilities,
+but we might be caught by some sudden declaration of war.... And
+how should we face it?</p>
+<p>He recalled the afternoon's talk at Claverings and such samples
+of our governmental machinery as he chanced to number among his
+personal acquaintance. Suppose suddenly the enemy struck! With
+Raeburn and his friends to defend us! Or if the shock tumbled them
+out of power, then with these vituperative Tories, these spiteful
+advocates of weak tyrannies and privileged pretences in the place
+of them. There was no leadership in England. In the lucid darkness
+he knew that with a terrible certitude. He had a horrible vision of
+things disastrously muffled; of Lady Frensham and her <i>Morning
+Post</i> friends first garrulously and maliciously "patriotic,"
+screaming her way with incalculable mischiefs through the storm,
+and finally discovering that the Germans were the real aristocrats
+and organising our national capitulation on that understanding. He
+knew from talk he had heard that the navy was weak in mines and
+torpedoes, unprovided with the great monitors needed for a war with
+Germany; torn by doctrinaire feuds; nevertheless the sea power was
+our only defence. In the whole country we might muster a military
+miscellany of perhaps three hundred thousand men. And he had no
+faith in their equipment, in their direction. General French, the
+one man who had his entire confidence, had been forced to resign
+through some lawyer's misunderstanding about the Irish difficulty.
+He did not believe any plans existed for such a war as Germany
+might force upon us, any calculation, any foresight of the thing at
+all.</p>
+<p>Why had we no foresight? Why had we this wilful blindness to
+disagreeable possibilities? Why did we lie<a name="Page_119"></a>
+so open to the unexpected crisis? Just what he said of himself he
+said also of his country. It was curious to remember that. To
+realise how closely Dower House could play the microcosm to the
+whole Empire....</p>
+<p>It became relevant to the trend of his thoughts that his son had
+through his mother a strong strain of the dark Irish in his
+composition.</p>
+<p>How we had wasted Ireland! The rich values that lay in Ireland,
+the gallantry and gifts, the possible friendliness, all these
+things were being left to the Ulster politicians and the Tory women
+to poison and spoil, just as we left India to the traditions of the
+chattering army women and the repressive instincts of our
+mandarins. We were too lazy, we were too negligent. We passed our
+indolent days leaving everything to somebody else. Was this the
+incurable British, just as it was the incurable Britling,
+quality?</p>
+<p>Was the whole prosperity of the British, the far-flung empire,
+the securities, the busy order, just their good luck? It was a
+question he had asked a hundred times of his national as of his
+personal self. No doubt luck had favoured him. He was prosperous,
+and he was still only at the livelier end of middle age. But was
+there not also a personal factor, a meritorious factor? Luck had
+favoured the British with a well-placed island, a hardening
+climate, accessible minerals, but then too was there not also a
+national virtue? Once he had believed in that, in a certain
+gallantry, a noble levity, an underlying sound sense. The last ten
+years of politics had made him doubt that profoundly. He clung to
+it still, but without confidence. In the night that dear persuasion
+left him altogether.... As for himself he had a certain brightness
+and liveliness of mind, but the year of his fellowship had been a
+soft year, he had got on to <i>The Times</i> through something very
+like a misapprehension, and it was the chances of a dinner and a
+duchess that had given him the opportunity of the Kahn show. He'd
+dropped into good<a name="Page_120"></a> things that suited him.
+That at any rate was the essence of it. And these lucky chances had
+been no incentive to further effort. Because things had gone easily
+and rapidly with him he had developed indolence into a philosophy.
+Here he was just over forty, and explaining to the world,
+explaining all through the week-end to this American&mdash;until
+even God could endure it no longer and the smash stopped
+him&mdash;how excellent was the backwardness of Essex and English
+go-as-you-please, and how through good temper it made in some
+mysterious way for all that was desirable. A fat English doctrine.
+<i>Punch</i> has preached it for forty years.</p>
+<p>But this wasn't what he had always been. He thought of the
+strenuous intentions of his youth, before he had got into this
+turmoil of amorous experiences, while he was still out there with
+the clean star of youth. As Hugh was....</p>
+<p>In those days he had had no amiable doctrine of compromise. He
+had truckled to no "domesticated God," but talked of the "pitiless
+truth"; he had tolerated no easygoing pseudo-aristocratic social
+system, but dreamt of such a democracy "mewing its mighty youth" as
+the world had never seen. He had thought that his brains were to do
+their share in building up this great national <i>imago</i>,
+winged, divine, out of the clumsy, crawling, snobbish,
+comfort-loving caterpillar of Victorian England. With such dreams
+his life had started, and the light of them, perhaps, had helped
+him to his rapid success. And then his wife had died, and he had
+married again and become somehow more interested in his income, and
+then the rather expensive first of the eight experiences had
+drained off so much of his imaginative energy, and the second had
+drained off so much, and there had been quarrels and feuds, and the
+way had been lost, and the days had passed. He hadn't failed.
+Indeed he counted as a success among his generation. He alone, in
+the night watches, could gauge the quality of that success. He was
+widely known,<a name="Page_121"></a> reputably known; he prospered.
+Much had come, oh! by a mysterious luck, but everything was doomed
+by his invincible defects. Beneath that hollow, enviable show there
+ached waste. Waste, waste, waste&mdash;his heart, his imagination,
+his wife, his son, his country&mdash;his automobile....</p>
+<p>Then there flashed into his mind a last straw of disagreeable
+realisation.</p>
+<p>He hadn't as yet insured his automobile! He had meant to do so.
+The papers were on his writing-desk.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>On these black nights, when the personal Mr. Britling would lie
+awake thinking how unsatisfactorily Mr. Britling was going on, and
+when the impersonal Mr. Britling would be thinking how
+unsatisfactorily his universe was going on, the whole mental
+process had a likeness to some complex piece of orchestral music
+wherein the organ deplored the melancholy destinies of the race
+while the piccolo lamented the secret trouble of Mrs. Harrowdean;
+the big drum thundered at the Irish politicians, and all the
+violins bewailed the intellectual laxity of the university system.
+Meanwhile the trumpets prophesied wars and disasters, the cymbals
+ever and again inserted a clashing jar about the fatal delay in the
+automobile insurance, while the triangle broke into a plangent solo
+on the topic of a certain rotten gate-post he always forgot in the
+daytime, and how in consequence the cows from the glebe farm got
+into the garden and ate Mrs. Britling's carnations.</p>
+<p>Time after time he had promised to see to that gatepost....</p>
+<p>The organ <i>motif</i> battled its way to complete predominance.
+The lesser themes were drowned or absorbed. Mr. Britling returned
+from the r&ocirc;le of an incompetent automobilist to the
+r&ocirc;le of a soul naked in space and time wrestling with giant
+questions. These cosmic solicitudes,<a name="Page_122"></a> it may
+be, are the last penalty of irreligion. Was Huxley right, and was
+all humanity, even as Mr. Britling, a careless, fitful thing,
+playing a tragically hopeless game, thinking too slightly, moving
+too quickly, against a relentless antagonist?</p>
+<p>Or is the whole thing just witless, accidentally cruel perhaps,
+but not malignant? Or is it wise, and merely refusing to pamper us?
+Is there somewhere in the immensities some responsive kindliness,
+some faint hope of toleration and assistance, something sensibly on
+our side against death and mechanical cruelty? If so, it certainly
+refuses to pamper us.... But if the whole thing is cruel, perhaps
+also it is witless and will-less? One cannot imagine the ruler of
+everything a devil&mdash;that would be silly. So if at the worst it
+is inanimate then anyhow we have our poor wills and our poor wits
+to pit against it. And manifestly then, the good of life, the
+significance of any life that is not mere receptivity, lies in the
+disciplined and clarified will and the sharpened and tempered mind.
+And what for the last twenty years&mdash;for all his lectures and
+writings&mdash;had he been doing to marshal the will and harden the
+mind which were his weapons against the Dark? He was ready enough
+to blame others&mdash;dons, politicians, public apathy, but what
+was he himself doing?</p>
+<p>What was he doing now?</p>
+<p>Lying in bed!</p>
+<p>His son was drifting to ruin, his country was going to the
+devil, the house was a hospital of people wounded by his
+carelessness, the country roads choked with his smashed (and
+uninsured) automobiles, the cows were probably lined up along the
+borders and munching Edith's carnations at this very moment, his
+pocketbook and bureau were stuffed with venomous insults about
+her&mdash;and he was just lying in bed!</p>
+<p>Suddenly Mr. Britling threw back his bedclothes and felt for the
+matches on his bedside table.</p>
+<p>Indeed this was by no means the first time that his
+brain<a name="Page_123"></a> had become a whirring torment in his
+skull. Previous experiences had led to the most careful provision
+for exactly such states. Over the end of the bed hung a light, warm
+pyjama suit of llama-wool, and at the feet of it were two tall
+boots of the same material that buckled to the middle of his calf.
+So protected, Mr. Britling proceeded to make himself tea. A Primus
+stove stood ready inside the fender of his fireplace, and on it was
+a brightly polished brass kettle filled with water; a little table
+carried a tea-caddy, a tea-pot, a lemon and a glass. Mr. Britling
+lit the stove and then strolled to his desk. He was going to write
+certain "Plain Words about Ireland." He lit his study lamp and
+meditated beside it until a sound of water boiling called him to
+his tea-making.</p>
+<p>He returned to his desk stirring the lemon in his glass of tea.
+He would write the plain common sense of this Irish situation. He
+would put things so plainly that this squabbling folly would
+<i>have</i> to cease. It should be done austerely, with a sort of
+ironical directness. There should be no abuse, no bitterness, only
+a deep passion of sanity.</p>
+<p>What is the good of grieving over a smashed automobile?</p>
+<p>He sipped his tea and made a few notes on his writing pad. His
+face in the light of his shaded reading lamp had lost its
+distraught expression, his hand fingered his familiar fountain
+pen....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The next morning Mr. Britling came into Mr. Direck's room. He
+was pink from his morning bath, he was wearing a cheerful
+green-and-blue silk dressing gown, he had shaved already, he showed
+no trace of his nocturnal vigil. In the bathroom he had whistled
+like a bird. "Had a good night?" he said. "That's famous. So did I.
+And the wrist and arm didn't even ache enough to keep you
+awake?"</p>
+<p>"I thought I heard you talking and walking about," said Mr.
+Direck.</p>
+<a name="Page_124"></a>
+<p>"I got up for a little bit and worked. I often do that. I hope I
+didn't disturb you. Just for an hour or so. It's so delightfully
+quiet in the night...."</p>
+<p>He went to the window and blinked at the garden outside. His two
+younger sons appeared on their bicycles returning from some early
+expedition. He waved a hand of greeting. It was one of those summer
+mornings when attenuated mist seems to fill the very air with
+sunshine dust.</p>
+<p>"This is the sunniest morning bedroom in the house," he said.
+"It's south-east."</p>
+<p>The sunlight slashed into the masses of the blue cedar outside
+with a score of golden spears.</p>
+<p>"The Dayspring from on High," he said.... "I thought of rather a
+useful pamphlet in the night.</p>
+<p>"I've been thinking about your luggage at that hotel," he went
+on, turning to his guest again. "You'll have to write and get it
+packed up and sent down here&mdash;</p>
+<p>"No," he said, "we won't let you go until you can hit out with
+that arm and fell a man. Listen!"</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck could not distinguish any definite sound.</p>
+<p>"The smell of frying rashers, I mean," said Mr. Britling. "It's
+the clarion of the morn in every proper English home....</p>
+<p>"You'd like a rasher, coffee?</p>
+<p>"It's good to work in the night, and it's good to wake in the
+morning," said Mr. Britling, rubbing his hands together. "I suppose
+I wrote nearly two thousand words. So quiet one is, so
+concentrated. And as soon as I have had my breakfast I shall go on
+with it again."</p>
+<a name="Page_125"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_I_CHAPTER_THE_FIFTH"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE FIFTH</h2>
+<h2>THE COMING OF THE DAY</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It was quite characteristic of the state of mind of England in
+the summer of 1914 that Mr. Britling should be mightily concerned
+about the conflict in Ireland, and almost deliberately negligent of
+the possibility of a war with Germany.</p>
+<p>The armament of Germany, the hostility of Germany, the
+consistent assertion of Germany, the world-wide clash of British
+and German interests, had been facts in the consciousness of
+Englishmen for more than a quarter of a century. A whole generation
+had been born and brought up in the threat of this German war. A
+threat that goes on for too long ceases to have the effect of a
+threat, and this overhanging possibility had become a fixed and
+scarcely disturbing feature of the British situation. It kept the
+navy sedulous and Colonel Rendezvous uneasy; it stimulated a small
+and not very influential section of the press to a series of
+reminders that bored Mr. Britling acutely, it was the excuse for an
+agitation that made national service ridiculous, and quite
+subconsciously it affected his attitude to a hundred things. For
+example, it was a factor in his very keen indignation at the Tory
+levity in Ireland, in his disgust with many things that irritated
+or estranged Indian feeling. It bored him; there it was, a danger,
+and there was no denying it, and yet he believed firmly that it was
+a mine that would never be fired, an avalanche that would never
+fall. It was a nuisance, a stupidity, that kept Europe drilling and
+wasted enormous sums on unavoidable preparations; it hung up
+everything like a noisy argument in a drawing-room, but that
+human<a name="Page_126"></a> weakness and folly would ever let the
+mine actually explode he did not believe. He had been in France in
+1911, he had seen how close things had come then to a conflict, and
+the fact that they had not come to a conflict had enormously
+strengthened his natural disposition to believe that at bottom
+Germany was sane and her militarism a bluff.</p>
+<p>But the Irish difficulty was a different thing. There, he felt,
+was need for the liveliest exertions. A few obstinate people in
+influential positions were manifestly pushing things to an
+outrageous point....</p>
+<p>He wrote through the morning&mdash;and as the morning progressed
+the judicial calm of his opening intentions warmed to a certain
+regrettable vigour of phrasing about our politicians, about our
+political ladies, and our hand-to-mouth press....</p>
+<p>He came down to lunch in a frayed, exhausted condition, and was
+much afflicted by a series of questions from Herr Heinrich. For it
+was an incurable characteristic of Herr Heinrich that he asked
+questions; the greater part of his conversation took the form of
+question and answer, and his thirst for information was as marked
+as his belief that German should not simply be spoken but spoken
+"out loud." He invariably prefaced his inquiries with the word
+"Please," and he insisted upon ascribing an omniscience to his
+employer that it was extremely irksome to justify after a strenuous
+morning of enthusiastic literary effort. He now took the
+opportunity of a lull in the solicitudes and congratulations that
+had followed Mr. Direck's appearance&mdash;and Mr. Direck was so
+little shattered by his misadventure that with the assistance of
+the kindly Teddy he had got up and dressed and come down to
+lunch&mdash;to put the matter that had been occupying his mind all
+the morning, even to the detriment of the lessons of the Masters
+Britling.</p>
+<p>"Please!" he said, going a deeper shade of pink and partly
+turning to Mr. Britling.</p>
+<a name="Page_127"></a>
+<p>A look of resignation came into Mr. Britling's eyes. "Yes?" he
+said.</p>
+<p>"I do not think it will be wise to take my ticket for the
+Esperanto Conference at Boulogne. Because I think it is probable to
+be war between Austria and Servia, and that Russia may make war on
+Austria."</p>
+<p>"That may happen. But I think it improbable."</p>
+<p>"If Russia makes war on Austria, Germany will make war on
+Russia, will she not?"</p>
+<p>"Not if she is wise," said Mr. Britling, "because that would
+bring in France."</p>
+<p>"That is why I ask. If Germany goes to war with France I should
+have to go to Germany to do my service. It will be a great
+inconvenience to me."</p>
+<p>"I don't imagine Germany will do anything so frantic as to
+attack Russia. That would not only bring in France but
+ourselves."</p>
+<p>"England?"</p>
+<p>"Of course. We can't afford to see France go under. The thing is
+as plain as daylight. So plain that it cannot possibly happen....
+Cannot.... Unless Germany wants a universal war."</p>
+<p>"Thank you," said Herr Heinrich, looking obedient rather than
+reassured.</p>
+<p>"I suppose now," said Mr. Direck after a pause, "that there
+isn't any strong party in Germany that wants a war. That young
+Crown Prince, for example."</p>
+<p>"They keep him in order," said Mr. Britling a little irritably.
+"They keep him in order....</p>
+<p>"I used to be an alarmist about Germany," said Mr. Britling,
+"but I have come to feel more and more confidence in the sound
+common sense of the mass of the German population, and in the
+Emperor too if it comes to that. He is&mdash;if Herr Heinrich will
+permit me to agree with his own German comic papers&mdash;sometimes
+a little theatrical, sometimes a little egotistical, but in his
+operatic, boldly<a name="Page_128"></a> coloured way he means
+peace. I am convinced he means peace...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>After lunch Mr. Britling had a brilliant idea for the ease and
+comfort of Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>It seemed as though Mr. Direck would be unable to write any
+letters until his wrist had mended. Teddy tried him with a
+typewriter, but Mr. Direck was very awkward with his left hand, and
+then Mr. Britling suddenly remembered a little peculiarity he had
+which it was possible that Mr. Direck might share unconsciously,
+and that was his gift of looking-glass writing with his left hand.
+Mr. Britling had found out quite by chance in his schoolboy days
+that while his right hand had been laboriously learning to write,
+his left hand, all unsuspected, had been picking up the same
+lesson, and that by taking a pencil in his left hand and writing
+from right to left, without watching what he was writing, and then
+examining the scrawl in a mirror, he could reproduce his own
+handwriting in exact reverse. About three people out of five have
+this often quite unsuspected ability. He demonstrated his gift, and
+then Miss Cecily Corner, who had dropped in in a casual sort of way
+to ask about Mr. Direck, tried it, and then Mr. Direck tried it.
+And they could all do it. And then Teddy brought a sheet of copying
+carbon, and so Mr. Direck, by using the carbon reversed under his
+paper, was restored to the world of correspondence again.</p>
+<p>They sat round a little table under the cedar trees amusing
+themselves with these experiments, and after that Cecily and Mr.
+Britling and the two small boys entertained themselves by drawing
+pigs with their eyes shut, and then Mr. Britling and Teddy played
+hard at Badminton until it was time for tea. And Cecily sat by Mr.
+Direck and took an interest in his accident, and he told her about
+summer holidays in the Adirondacks and how he loved to travel. She
+said she would love to travel. He said that<a name="Page_129"></a>
+so soon as he was better he would go on to Paris and then into
+Germany. He was extraordinarily curious about this Germany and its
+tremendous militarism. He'd far rather see it than Italy, which
+was, he thought, just all art and ancient history. His turn was for
+modern problems. Though of course he didn't intend to leave out
+Italy while he was at it. And then their talk was scattered, and
+there was great excitement because Herr Heinrich had lost his
+squirrel.</p>
+<p>He appeared coming out of the house into the sunshine, and so
+distraught that he had forgotten the protection of his hat. He was
+very pink and deeply moved.</p>
+<p>"But what shall I do without him?" he cried. "He has gone!"</p>
+<p>The squirrel, Mr. Direck gathered, had been bought by Mrs.
+Britling for the boys some month or so ago; it had been christened
+"Bill" and adored and then neglected, until Herr Heinrich took it
+over. It had filled a place in his ample heart that the none too
+demonstrative affection of the Britling household had left empty.
+He abandoned his pursuit of philology almost entirely for the
+cherishing and adoration of this busy, nimble little creature. He
+carried it off to his own room, where it ran loose and took the
+greatest liberties with him and his apartment. It was an
+extraordinarily bold and savage little beast even for a squirrel,
+but Herr Heinrich had set his heart and his very large and patient
+will upon the establishment of sentimental relations. He believed
+that ultimately Bill would let himself be stroked, that he would
+make Bill love him and understand him, and that his would be the
+only hand that Bill would ever suffer to touch him. In the
+meanwhile even the untamed Bill was wonderful to watch. One could
+watch him forever. His front paws were like hands, like a
+musician's hands, very long and narrow. "He would be a musician if
+he could only make his fingers go apart, because when I play my
+violin he listens. He is attentive."</p>
+<a name="Page_130"></a>
+<p>The entire household became interested in Herr Heinrich's
+attacks upon Bill's affection. They watched his fingers with
+particular interest because it was upon those that Bill vented his
+failures to respond to the stroking advances.</p>
+<p>"To-day I have stroked him once and he has bitten me three
+times," Herr Heinrich reported. "Soon I will stroke him three times
+and he shall not bite me at all.... Also yesterday he climbed up me
+and sat on my shoulder, and suddenly bit my ear. It was not hard he
+bit, but sudden.</p>
+<p>"He does not mean to bite," said Herr Heinrich. "Because when he
+has bit me he is sorry. He is ashamed.</p>
+<p>"You can see he is ashamed."</p>
+<p>Assisted by the two small boys, Herr Heinrich presently got a
+huge bough of oak and brought it into his room, converting the
+entire apartment into the likeness of an aviary. "For this," said
+Herr Heinrich, looking grave and diplomatic through his glasses,
+"Billy will be very grateful. And it will give him confidence with
+me. It will make him feel we are in the forest together."</p>
+<p>Mrs. Britling came to console her husband in the matter.</p>
+<p>"It is not right that the bedroom should be filled with trees.
+All sorts of dust and litter came in with it."</p>
+<p>"If it amuses him," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"But it makes work for the servants."</p>
+<p>"Do they complain?"</p>
+<p>"No."</p>
+<p>"Things will adjust themselves. And it is amusing that he should
+do such a thing...."</p>
+<p>And now Billy had disappeared, and Herr Heinrich was on the
+verge of tears. It was so ungrateful of Billy. Without a word.</p>
+<p>"They leave my window open," he complained to Mr. Direck. "Often
+I have askit them not to. And of course he did not understand. He
+has out climbit by the ivy.<a name="Page_131"></a> Anything may
+have happened to him. Anything. He is not used to going out alone.
+He is too young.</p>
+<p>"Perhaps if I call&mdash;"</p>
+<p>And suddenly he had gone off round the house crying: "Beelee!
+Beelee! Here is an almond for you! An almond, Beelee!"</p>
+<p>"Makes me want to get up and help," said Mr. Direck. "It's a
+tragedy."</p>
+<p>Everybody else was helping. Even the gardener and his boy
+knocked off work and explored the upper recesses of various
+possible trees.</p>
+<p>"He is too young," said Herr Heinrich, drifting back.... And
+then presently: "If he heard my voice I am sure he would show
+himself. But he does not show himself."</p>
+<p>It was clear he feared the worst....</p>
+<p>At supper Billy was the sole topic of conversation, and
+condolence was in the air. The impression that on the whole he had
+displayed rather a brutal character was combated by Herr Heinrich,
+who held that a certain brusqueness was Billy's only fault, and
+told anecdotes, almost sacred anecdotes, of the little creature's
+tenderer, nobler side. "When I feed him always he says, 'Thank
+you,'" said Herr Heinrich. "He never fails." He betrayed darker
+thoughts. "When I went round by the barn there was a cat that sat
+and looked at me out of a laurel bush," he said. "I do not like
+cats."</p>
+<p>Mr. Lawrence Carmine, who had dropped in, was suddenly reminded
+of that lugubrious old ballad, "The Mistletoe Bough," and recited
+large worn fragments of it impressively. It tells of how a
+beautiful girl hid away in a chest during a Christmas game of
+hide-and-seek, and how she was found, a dried vestige, years
+afterwards. It took a very powerful hold upon Herr Heinrich's
+imagination. "Let us now," he said, "make an examination of every
+box and cupboard and drawer. Marking each as we go...."</p>
+<a name="Page_132"></a>
+<p>When Mr. Britling went to bed that night, after a long gossip
+with Carmine about the Bramo Samaj and modern developments of
+Indian thought generally, the squirrel was still undiscovered.</p>
+<p>The worthy modern thinker undressed slowly, blew out his candle
+and got into bed. Still meditating deeply upon the God of the
+Tagores, he thrust his right hand under his pillow according to his
+usual practice, and encountered something soft and warm and active.
+He shot out of bed convulsively, lit his candle, and lifted his
+pillow discreetly.</p>
+<p>He discovered the missing Billy looking crumpled and
+annoyed.</p>
+<p>For some moments there was a lively struggle before Billy was
+gripped. He chattered furiously and bit Mr. Britling twice. Then
+Mr. Britling was out in the passage with the wriggling lump of warm
+fur in his hand, and paddling along in the darkness to the door of
+Herr Heinrich. He opened it softly.</p>
+<p>A startled white figure sat up in bed sharply.</p>
+<p>"Billy," said Mr. Britling by way of explanation, dropped his
+capture on the carpet, and shut the door on the touching
+reunion.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>A day was to come when Mr. Britling was to go over the history
+of that sunny July with incredulous minuteness, trying to trace the
+real succession of events that led from the startling crime at
+Sarajevo to Europe's last swift rush into war. In a sense it was
+untraceable; in a sense it was so obvious that he was amazed the
+whole world had not watched the coming of disaster. The plain fact
+of the case was that there was no direct connection; the Sarajevo
+murders were dropped for two whole weeks out of the general
+consciousness, they went out of the papers, they ceased to be
+discussed; then they were picked up again and used as an excuse for
+war. Germany, armed so as to be a threat to all the world, weary at
+last of her<a name="Page_133"></a> mighty vigil, watching the
+course of events, decided that her moment had come, and snatched
+the dead archduke out of his grave again to serve her tremendous
+ambition.</p>
+<p>It may well have seemed to the belligerent German patriot that
+all her possible foes were confused, divided within themselves, at
+an extremity of distraction and impotence. The British Isles seemed
+slipping steadily into civil war. Threat was met by counter-threat,
+violent fool competed with violent fool for the admiration of the
+world, the National Volunteers armed against the Ulster men;
+everything moved on with a kind of mechanical precision from parade
+and meeting towards the fatal gun-running of Howth and the first
+bloodshed in Dublin streets. That wretched affray, far more than
+any other single thing, must have stiffened Germany in the course
+she had chosen. There can be no doubt of it; the mischief makers of
+Ireland set the final confirmation upon the European war. In
+England itself there was a summer fever of strikes; Liverpool was
+choked by a dockers' strike, the East Anglian agricultural
+labourers were in revolt, and the building trade throughout the
+country was on the verge of a lockout. Russia seemed to be in the
+crisis of a social revolution. From Baku to St. Petersburg there
+were insurrectionary movements in the towns, and on the
+23rd&mdash;the very day of the Austrian ultimatum&mdash;Cossacks
+were storming barbed wire entanglements in the streets of the
+capital. The London Stock Exchange was in a state of panic
+disorganisation because of a vast mysterious selling of securities
+from abroad. And France, France it seemed was lost to all other
+consideration in the enthralling confrontations and denunciations
+of the Caillaux murder trial, the trial of the wife of her ex-prime
+Minister for the murder of a blackmailing journalist. It was a case
+full of the vulgarest sexual violence. Before so piquant a
+spectacle France it seemed could have no time nor attention for the
+revelation of M. Humbert, the Reporter of the Army Committee,
+proclaiming that the artillery was short of<a name="Page_134"></a>
+ammunition, that her infantry had boots "thirty years old" and not
+enough of those....</p>
+<p>Such were the appearances of things. Can it be wondered if it
+seemed to the German mind that the moment for the triumphant
+assertion of the German predominance in the world had come? A day
+or so before the Dublin shooting, the murder of Sarajevo had been
+dragged again into the foreground of the world's affairs by an
+ultimatum from Austria to Serbia of the extremest violence. From
+the hour when the ultimatum was discharged the way to Armageddon
+lay wide and unavoidable before the feet of Europe. After the
+Dublin conflict there was no turning back. For a week Europe was
+occupied by proceedings that were little more than the recital of a
+formula. Austria could not withdraw her unqualified threats without
+admitting error and defeat, Russia could not desert Serbia without
+disgrace, Germany stood behind Austria, France was bound to Russia
+by a long confederacy of mutual support, and it was impossible for
+England to witness the destruction of France or the further
+strengthening of a loud and threatening rival. It may be that
+Germany counted on Russia giving way to her, it may be she counted
+on the indecisions and feeble perplexities of England, both these
+possibilities were in the reckoning, but chiefly she counted on
+war. She counted on war, and since no nation in all the world had
+ever been so fully prepared in every way for war as she was, she
+also counted on victory.</p>
+<p>One writes "Germany." That is how one writes of nations, as
+though they had single brains and single purposes. But indeed while
+Mr. Britling lay awake and thought of his son and Lady Frensham and
+his smashed automobile and Mrs. Harrowdean's trick of abusive
+letter-writing and of God and evil and a thousand perplexities, a
+multitude of other brains must also have been busy, lying also in
+beds or sitting in studies or watching in guard-rooms or chatting
+belatedly in caf&eacute;s or smoking-rooms or pacing the bridges of
+battleships or walking<a name="Page_135"></a> along in city or
+country, upon this huge possibility the crime of Sarajevo had just
+opened, and of the state of the world in relation to such
+possibilities. Few women, one guesses, heeded what was happening,
+and of the men, the men whose decision to launch that implacable
+threat turned the destinies of the world to war, there is no reason
+to believe that a single one of them had anything approaching the
+imaginative power needed to understand fully what it was they were
+doing. We have looked for an hour or so into the seething pot of
+Mr. Britling's brain and marked its multiple strands, its
+inconsistencies, its irrational transitions. It was but a specimen.
+Nearly every brain of the select few that counted in this cardinal
+determination of the world's destinies, had its streak of personal
+motive, its absurd and petty impulses and deflections. One man
+decided to say <i>this</i> because if he said <i>that</i> he would
+contradict something he had said and printed four or five days ago;
+another took a certain line because so he saw his best opportunity
+of putting a rival into a perplexity. It would be strange if one
+could reach out now and recover the states of mind of two such
+beings as the German Kaiser and his eldest son as Europe stumbled
+towards her fate through the long days and warm, close nights of
+that July. Here was the occasion for which so much of their lives
+had been but the large pretentious preparation, coming right into
+their hands to use or forgo, here was the opportunity that would
+put them into the very forefront of history forever; this
+journalist emperor with the paralysed arm, this common-fibred, sly,
+lascivious son. It is impossible that they did not dream of glory
+over all the world, of triumphant processions, of a world-throne
+that would outshine Caesar's, of a godlike elevation, of acting
+Divus Caesar while yet alive. And being what they were they must
+have imagined spectators, and the young man, who was after all a
+young man of particularly poor quality, imagined no doubt certain
+women onlookers, certain humiliated and astonished friends,
+and<a name="Page_136"></a> thought of the clothes he would wear and
+the gestures he would make. The nickname his English cousins had
+given this heir to all the glories was the "White Rabbit." He was
+the backbone of the war party at court. And presently he stole
+bric-&agrave;-brac. That will help posterity to the proper values
+of things in 1914. And the Teutonic generals and admirals and
+strategists with their patient and perfect plans, who were so
+confident of victory, each within a busy skull must have enacted
+anticipatory dreams of his personal success and marshalled his
+willing and unwilling admirers. Readers of histories and memoirs as
+most of this class of men are, they must have composed little
+eulogistic descriptions of the part themselves were to play in the
+opening drama, imagined pleasing vindications and interesting
+documents. Some of them perhaps saw difficulties, but few foresaw
+failure. For all this set of brains the thing came as a choice to
+take or reject; they could make war or prevent it. And they chose
+war.</p>
+<p>It is doubtful if any one outside the directing intelligence of
+Germany and Austria saw anything so plain. The initiative was with
+Germany. The Russian brains and the French brains and the British
+brains, the few that were really coming round to look at this
+problem squarely, had a far less simple set of problems and
+profounder uncertainties. To Mr. Britling's mind the Round Table
+Conference at Buckingham Palace was typical of the disunion and
+indecision that lasted up to the very outbreak of hostilities. The
+solemn violence of Sir Edward Carson was intensely antipathetic to
+Mr. Britling, and in his retrospective inquiries he pictured to
+himself that dark figure with its dropping under-lip, seated, heavy
+and obstinate, at that discussion, still implacable though the King
+had but just departed after a little speech that was packed with
+veiled intimations of imminent danger...</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling had no mercy in his mind for the treason of
+obstinate egotism and for persistence in a mistaken<a name=
+"Page_137"></a> course. His own temperamental weaknesses lay in
+such different directions. He was always ready to leave one trail
+for another; he was always open to conviction, trusting to the
+essentials of his character for an ultimate consistency. He hated
+Carson in those days as a Scotch terrier might hate a bloodhound,
+as something at once more effective and impressive, and
+exasperatingly, infinitely less intelligent.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Thus&mdash;a vivid fact as yet only in a few hundred skulls or
+so&mdash;the vast catastrophe of the Great War gathered behind the
+idle, dispersed and confused spectacle of an indifferent world,
+very much as the storms and rains of late September gathered behind
+the glow and lassitudes of August, and with scarcely more of set
+human intention. For the greater part of mankind the European
+international situation was at most something in the papers, no
+more important than the political disturbances in South Africa,
+where the Herzogites were curiously uneasy, or the possible trouble
+between Turkey and Greece. The things that really interested people
+in England during the last months of peace were boxing and the
+summer sales. A brilliant young Frenchman, Carpentier, who had
+knocked out Bombardier Wells, came over again to defeat Gunboat
+Smith, and did so to the infinite delight of France and the whole
+Latin world, amidst the generous applause of Anglo-Saxondom. And
+there was also a British triumph over the Americans at polo, and a
+lively and cultured newspaper discussion about a proper motto for
+the arms of the London County Council. The trial of Madame Caillaux
+filled the papers with animated reports and vivid pictures; Gregori
+Rasputin was stabbed and became the subject of much lively gossip
+about the Russian Court; and Ulivi, the Italian impostor who
+claimed he could explode mines by means of an "ultra-red" ray, was
+exposed and fled with a lady, very<a name="Page_138"></a>
+amusingly. For a few days all the work at Woolwich Arsenal was held
+up because a certain Mr. Entwhistle, having refused to erect a
+machine on a concrete bed laid down by non-unionists, was rather
+uncivilly dismissed, and the Irish trouble pounded along its
+tiresome mischievous way. People gave a divided attention to these
+various topics, and went about their individual businesses.</p>
+<p>And at Dower House they went about their businesses. Mr.
+Direck's arm healed rapidly; Cecily Corner and he talked of their
+objects in life and Utopias and the books of Mr. Britling, and he
+got down from a London bookseller Baedeker's guides for Holland and
+Belgium, South Germany and Italy; Herr Heinrich after some doubt
+sent in his application form and his preliminary deposit for the
+Esperanto Conference at Boulogne, and Billy consented to be stroked
+three times but continued to bite with great vigour and
+promptitude. And the trouble about Hugh, Mr. Britling's eldest son,
+resolved itself into nothing of any vital importance, and settled
+itself very easily.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>After Hugh had cleared things up and gone back to London Mr.
+Britling was inclined to think that such a thing as apprehension
+was a sin against the general fairness and integrity of life.</p>
+<p>Of all things in the world Hugh was the one that could most
+easily rouse Mr. Britling's unhappy aptitude for distressing
+imaginations. Hugh was nearer by far to his heart and nerves than
+any other creature. In the last few years Mr. Britling, by the
+light of a variety of emotional excursions in other directions, had
+been discovering this. Whatever Mr. Britling discovered he talked
+about; he had evolved from his realisation of this tenderness,
+which was without an effort so much tenderer than all the subtle
+and tremendous feelings he had attempted in his&mdash;excursions,
+the theory that he had expounded to Mr. Direck that it is only
+through our children that we are able to<a name="Page_139"></a>
+achieve disinterested love, real love. But that left unexplained
+that far more intimate emotional hold of Hugh than of his very
+jolly little step-brothers. That was a fact into which Mr. Britling
+rather sedulously wouldn't look....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was probably much franker and more open-eyed with
+himself and the universe than a great number of intelligent people,
+and yet there were quite a number of aspects of his relations with
+his wife, with people about him, with his country and God and the
+nature of things, upon which he turned his back with an attentive
+persistence. But a back too resolutely turned may be as indicative
+as a pointing finger, and in this retrogressive way, and tacitly
+even so far as his formal thoughts, his unspoken comments, went,
+Mr. Britling knew that he loved his son because he had lavished the
+most hope and the most imagination upon him, because he was the one
+living continuation of that dear life with Mary, so lovingly stormy
+at the time, so fine now in memory, that had really possessed the
+whole heart of Mr. Britling. The boy had been the joy and marvel of
+the young parents; it was incredible to them that there had ever
+been a creature so delicate and sweet, and they brought
+considerable imagination and humour to the detailed study of his
+minute personality and to the forecasting of his future. Mr.
+Britling's mind blossomed with wonderful schemes for his education.
+All that mental growth no doubt contributed greatly to Mr.
+Britling's peculiar affection, and with it there interwove still
+tenderer and subtler elements, for the boy had a score of Mary's
+traits. But there were other things still more conspicuously
+ignored. One silent factor in the slow widening of the breach
+between Edith and Mr. Britling was her cool estimate of her
+stepson. She was steadfastly kind to this shock-headed, untidy
+little dreamer, he was extremely well cared for in her hands, she
+liked him and she was amused by him&mdash;it is difficult to
+imagine what more Mr. Britling could have
+expected&mdash;but<a name="Page_140"></a> it was as plain as
+daylight that she felt that this was not the child she would have
+cared to have borne. It was quite preposterous and perfectly
+natural that this should seem to Mr. Britling to be unfair to
+Hugh.</p>
+<p>Edith's home was more prosperous than Mary's; she brought her
+own money to it; the bringing up of her children was a far more
+efficient business than Mary's instinctive proceedings. Hugh had
+very nearly died in his first year of life; some summer infection
+had snatched at him; that had tied him to his father's heart by a
+knot of fear; but no infection had ever come near Edith's own
+nursery. And it was Hugh that Mr. Britling had seen, small and
+green-faced and pitiful under an anaesthetic for some necessary
+small operation to his adenoids. His younger children had never
+stabbed to Mr. Britling's heart with any such pitifulness; they
+were not so thin-skinned as their elder brother, not so assailable
+by the little animosities of dust and germ. And out of such things
+as this evolved a shapeless cloud of championship for Hugh.
+Jealousies and suspicions are latent in every human relationship.
+We go about the affairs of life pretending magnificently that they
+are not so, pretending to the generosities we desire. And in all
+step-relationships jealousy and suspicion are not merely latent,
+they stir.</p>
+<p>It was Mr. Britling's case for Hugh that he was something
+exceptional, something exceptionally good, and that the peculiar
+need there was to take care of him was due to a delicacy of nerve
+and fibre that was ultimately a virtue. The boy was quick, quick to
+hear, quick to move, very accurate in his swift way, he talked
+unusually soon, he began to sketch at an early age with an
+incurable roughness and a remarkable expressiveness. That he was
+sometimes ungainly, often untidy, that he would become so mentally
+preoccupied as to be uncivil to people about him, that he caught
+any malaise that was going, was all a part of that. The sense of
+Mrs. Britling's unexpressed criticisms, the implied contrasts with
+the very jolly, very<a name="Page_141"></a> uninspired younger
+family, kept up a nervous desire in Mr. Britling for evidences and
+manifestations of Hugh's quality. Not always with happy results; it
+caused much mutual irritation, but not enough to prevent the growth
+of a real response on Hugh's part to his father's solicitude. The
+youngster knew and felt that his father was his father just as
+certainly as he felt that Mrs. Britling was not his mother. To his
+father he brought his successes and to his father he appealed.</p>
+<p>But he brought his successes more readily than he brought his
+troubles. So far as he himself was concerned he was disposed to
+take a humorous view of the things that went wrong and didn't come
+off with him, but as a "Tremendous Set-Down for the Proud Parent"
+they resisted humorous treatment....</p>
+<p>Now the trouble that he had been hesitating to bring before his
+father was concerned with that very grave interest of the young,
+his Object in Life. It had nothing to do with those erotic
+disturbances that had distressed his father's imagination. Whatever
+was going on below the surface of Hugh's smiling or thoughtful
+presence in that respect had still to come to the surface and find
+expression. But he was bothered very much by divergent strands in
+his own intellectual composition. Two sets of interests pulled at
+him, one&mdash;it will seem a dry interest to many readers, but for
+Hugh it glittered and fascinated&mdash;was crystallography and
+molecular physics; the other was caricature. Both aptitudes sprang
+no doubt from the same exceptional sensitiveness to form. As a
+schoolboy he exercised both very happily, but now he was getting to
+the age of specialisation, and he was fluctuating very much between
+science and art. After a spell of scientific study he would come
+upon a fatigue period and find nothing in life but absurdities and
+a lark that one could represent very amusingly; after a bout of
+funny drawings his mind went back to his light and crystals and
+films like a Magdalen repenting in a church. After his
+public<a name="Page_142"></a> school he had refused Cambridge and
+gone to University College, London, to work under the great and
+inspiring Professor Cardinal; simultaneously Cardinal had been
+arranging to go to Cambridge, and Hugh had scarcely embarked upon
+his London work when Cardinal was succeeded by the dull,
+conscientious and depressing Pelkingham, at whose touch crystals
+became as puddings, bubble films like cotton sheets, transparency
+vanished from the world, and X rays dwarfed and died. And Hugh
+degenerated immediately into a scoffing trifler who wished to give
+up science for art.</p>
+<p>He gave up science for art after grave consultation with his
+father, and the real trouble that had been fretting him, it seemed,
+was that now he repented and wanted to follow Cardinal to
+Cambridge, and&mdash;a year lost&mdash;go on with science again. He
+felt it was a discreditable fluctuation; he knew it would be a
+considerable expense; and so he took two weeks before he could
+screw himself up to broaching the matter.</p>
+<p>"So <i>that</i> is all," said Mr. Britling, immensely
+relieved.</p>
+<p>"My dear Parent, you didn't think I had backed a bill or forged
+a cheque?"</p>
+<p>"I thought you might have married a chorus girl or something of
+that sort," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Or bought a large cream-coloured motor-car for her on the
+instalment system, which she'd smashed up. No, that sort of thing
+comes later.... I'll just put myself down on the waiting list of
+one of those bits of delight in the Cambridge tobacco
+shops&mdash;and go on with my studies for a year or two...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Though Mr. Britling's anxiety about his son was dispelled, his
+mind remained curiously apprehensive throughout July. He had a
+feeling that things were not going well with the world, a feeling
+he tried in vain to dispel<a name="Page_143"></a> by various
+distractions. Perhaps some subtler subconscious analysis of the
+situation was working out probabilities that his conscious self
+would not face. And when presently he bicycled off to Mrs.
+Harrowdean for flattery, amusement, and comfort generally, he found
+her by no means the exalting confirmation of everything he wished
+to believe about himself and the universe, that had been her
+delightful r&ocirc;le in the early stages of their romantic
+friendship. She maintained her hostility to Edith; she seemed bent
+on making things impossible. And yet there were one or two phases
+of the old sustaining intimacies.</p>
+<p>They walked across her absurd little park to the summer-house
+with the view on the afternoon of his arrival, and they discussed
+the Irish pamphlet which was now nearly finished.</p>
+<p>"Of course," she said, "it will be a wonderful pamphlet."</p>
+<p>There was a reservation in her voice that made him wait.</p>
+<p>"But I suppose all sorts of people could write an Irish
+pamphlet. Nobody but you could write 'The Silent Places.' Oh,
+<i>why</i> don't you finish that great beautiful thing, and leave
+all this world of reality and newspapers, all these Crude, Vulgar,
+Quarrelsome, Jarring things to other people? You have the magic
+gift, you might be a poet, you can take us out of all these horrid
+things that are, away to Beautyland, and you are just content to be
+a critic and a disputer. It's your surroundings. It's your sordid
+realities. It's that Practicality at your elbow. You ought never to
+see a newspaper. You ought never to have an American come within
+ten miles of you. You ought to live on bowls of milk drunk in
+valleys of asphodel."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling, who liked this sort of thing in a way, and yet at
+the same time felt ridiculously distended and altogether
+preposterous while it was going on, answered feebly and
+self-consciously.</p>
+<a name="Page_144"></a>
+<p>"There was your letter in the <i>Nation</i> the other day," she
+said. "Why <i>do</i> you get drawn into arguments? I wanted to rush
+into the <i>Nation</i> and pick you up and wipe the anger off you,
+and carry you out of it all&mdash;into some quiet beautiful
+place."</p>
+<p>"But one <i>has</i> to answer these people," said Mr. Britling,
+rolling along by the side of her like a full moon beside Venus, and
+quite artlessly falling in with the tone of her.</p>
+<p>She repeated lines from "The Silent Places" from memory. She
+threw quite wonderful emotion into her voice. She made the words
+glow. And he had only shown her the thing once....</p>
+<p>Was he indeed burying a marvellous gift under the dust of
+current affairs? When at last in the warm evening light they
+strolled back from the summer-house to dinner he had definitely
+promised her that he would take up and finish "The Silent
+Places."... And think over the Irish pamphlet again before he
+published it....</p>
+<p>Pyecrafts was like a crystal casket of finer soil withdrawn from
+the tarred highways of the earth....</p>
+<p>And yet the very next day this angel enemy of controversies
+broke out in the most abominable way about Edith, and he had to
+tell her more plainly than he had done hitherto, that he could not
+tolerate that sort of thing. He wouldn't have Edith guyed. He
+wouldn't have Edith made to seem base. And at that there was much
+trouble between them, and tears and talk of Oliver....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling found himself unable to get on either with "The
+Silent Places" or the pamphlet, and he was very unhappy....</p>
+<p>Afterwards she repented very touchingly, and said that if only
+he would love her she would swallow a thousand Ediths. He waived a
+certain disrespect in the idea of her swallowing Edith, and they
+had a beautiful reconciliation and talked of exalted things, and in
+the evening he worked quite well upon "The Silent Places" and
+thought<a name="Page_145"></a> of half-a-dozen quite wonderful
+lines, and in the course of the next day he returned to Dower House
+and Mr. Direck and considerable piles of correspondence and the
+completion of the Irish pamphlet.</p>
+<p>But he was restless. He was more restless in his house than he
+had ever been. He could not understand it. Everything about him was
+just as it had always been, and yet it was unsatisfactory, and it
+seemed more unstable than anything had ever seemed before. He was
+bored by the solemn development of the Irish dispute; he was
+irritated by the smouldering threat of the Balkans; he was
+irritated by the suffragettes and by a string of irrational little
+strikes; by the general absence of any main plot as it were to hold
+all these wranglings and trivialities together.... At the Dower
+House the most unpleasant thoughts would come to him. He even had
+doubts whether in "The Silent Places," he had been plagiarising,
+more or less unconsciously, from Henry James's "Great Good
+Place."...</p>
+<p>On the twenty-first of July Gladys came back repaired and
+looking none the worse for her misadventure. Next day he drove her
+very carefully over to Pyecrafts, hoping to drug his uneasiness
+with the pretence of a grand passion and the praises of "The Silent
+Places," that beautiful work of art that was so free from any taint
+of application, and alas! he found Mrs. Harrowdean in an evil mood.
+He had been away from her for ten days&mdash;ten whole days. No
+doubt Edith had manoeuvred to keep him. She hadn't! <i>Hadn't</i>
+she? How was he, poor simple soul! to tell that she hadn't? That
+was the prelude to a stormy afternoon.</p>
+<p>The burthen of Mrs. Harrowdean was that she was wasting her
+life, that she was wasting the poor, good, patient Oliver's life,
+that for the sake of friendship she was braving the worst
+imputations and that he treated her cavalierly, came when he wished
+to do so, stayed away heartlessly, never thought she needed
+<i>little</i> treats, <i>little</i><a name="Page_146"></a>
+attentions, <i>little</i> presents. Did he think she could settle
+down to her poor work, such as it was, in neglect and loneliness?
+He forgot women were dear little tender things, and had to be made
+happy and <i>kept</i> happy. Oliver might not be clever and
+attractive but he did at least in his clumsy way understand and try
+and do his duty....</p>
+<p>Towards the end of the second hour of such complaints the spirit
+of Mr. Britling rose in revolt. He lifted up his voice against her,
+he charged his voice with indignant sorrow and declared that he had
+come over to Pyecrafts with no thought in his mind but sweet and
+loving thoughts, that he had but waited for Gladys to be ready
+before he came, that he had brought over the manuscript of "The
+Silent Places" with him to polish and finish up, that "for days and
+days" he had been longing to do this in the atmosphere of the dear
+old summer-house with its distant view of the dear old sea, and
+that now all that was impossible, that Mrs. Harrowdean had made it
+impossible and that indeed she was rapidly making everything
+impossible....</p>
+<p>And having delivered himself of this judgment Mr. Britling, a
+little surprised at the rapid vigour of his anger, once he had let
+it loose, came suddenly to an end of his words, made a renunciatory
+gesture with his arms, and as if struck with the idea, rushed out
+of her room and out of the house to where Gladys stood waiting. He
+got into her and started her up, and after some trouble with the
+gear due to the violence of his emotion, he turned her round and
+departed with her&mdash;crushing the corner of a small bed of
+snapdragon as he turned&mdash;and dove her with a sulky
+sedulousness back to the Dower House and newspapers and
+correspondence and irritations, and that gnawing and irrational
+sense of a hollow and aimless quality in the world that he had
+hoped Mrs. Harrowdean would assuage. And the further he went from
+Mrs. Harrowdean the harsher and unjuster it seemed to him that he
+had been to her.</p>
+<a name="Page_147"></a>
+<p>But he went on because he did not see how he could very well go
+back.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Direck's broken wrist healed sooner than he desired. From
+the first he had protested that it was the sort of thing that one
+can carry about in a sling, that he was quite capable of travelling
+about and taking care of himself in hotels, that he was only
+staying on at Matching's Easy because he just loved to stay on and
+wallow in Mrs. Britling's kindness and Mr. Britling's company.
+While as a matter of fact he wallowed as much as he could in the
+freshness and friendliness of Miss Cecily Corner, and for more than
+a third of this period Mr. Britling was away from home
+altogether.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck, it should be clear by this time, was a man of more
+than European simplicity and directness, and his intentions towards
+the young lady were as simple and direct and altogether honest as
+such intentions can be. It is the American conception of gallantry
+more than any other people's, to let the lady call the tune in
+these affairs; the man's place is to be protective, propitiatory,
+accommodating and clever, and the lady's to be difficult but
+delightful until he catches her and houses her splendidly and gives
+her a surprising lot of pocket-money, and goes about his business;
+and upon these assumptions Mr. Direck went to work. But quite early
+it was manifest to him that Cecily did not recognise his
+assumptions. She was embarrassed when he got down one or two little
+presents of chocolates and flowers for her from London&mdash;-the
+Britling boys were much more appreciative&mdash;she wouldn't let
+him contrive costly little expeditions for her, and she protested
+against compliments and declared she would stay away when he paid
+them. And she was not contented by his general sentiments about
+life, but asked the most direct questions about his occupation and
+his activities. His chief occupation was being the well<a name=
+"Page_148"></a> provided heir of a capable lawyer, and his
+activities in the light of her inquiries struck him as being light
+and a trifle amateurish, qualities he had never felt as any
+drawback about them before. So that he had to rely rather upon
+aspirations and the possibility, under proper inspiration, of a
+more actively serviceable life in future.</p>
+<p>"There's a feeling in the States," he said, "that we've had
+rather a tendency to overdo work, and that there is scope for a
+leisure class to develop the refinement and the wider meanings of
+life."</p>
+<p>"But a leisure class doesn't mean a class that does nothing,"
+said Cecily. "It only means a class that isn't busy in
+business."</p>
+<p>"You're too hard on me," said Mr. Direck with that quiet smile
+of his.</p>
+<p>And then by way of putting her on the defensive he asked her
+what she thought a man in his position ought to do.</p>
+<p>"<i>Something</i>," she said, and in the expansion of this vague
+demand they touched on a number of things. She said that she was a
+Socialist, and there was still in Mr. Direck's composition a streak
+of the old-fashioned American prejudice against the word. He
+associated Socialists with Anarchists and deported aliens. It was
+manifest too that she was deeply read in the essays and
+dissertations of Mr. Britling. She thought everybody, man or woman,
+ought to be chiefly engaged in doing something definite for the
+world at large. ("There's my secretaryship of the Massachusetts
+Modern Thought Society, anyhow," said Mr. Direck.) And she herself
+wanted to be doing something&mdash;it was just because she did not
+know what it was she ought to be doing that she was reading so
+extensively and voraciously. She wanted to lose herself in
+something. Deep in the being of Mr. Direck was the conviction that
+what she ought to be doing was making love in a rapturously
+egotistical manner, and enjoying every scrap of her own delightful
+self and her own<a name="Page_149"></a> delightful
+vitality&mdash;while she had it, but for the purposes of their
+conversation he did not care to put it any more definitely than to
+say that he thought we owed it to ourselves to develop our
+personalities. Upon which she joined issue with great vigour.</p>
+<p>"That is just what Mr. Britling says about you in his 'American
+Impressions,'" she said. "He says that America overdoes the
+development of personalities altogether, that whatever else is
+wrong about America that is where America is most clearly wrong. I
+read that this morning, and directly I read it I thought, 'Yes,
+that's exactly it! Mr. Direck is overdoing the development of
+personalities.'"</p>
+<p>"Me!"</p>
+<p>"Yes. I like talking to you and I don't like talking to you. And
+I see now it is because you keep on talking of my Personality and
+your Personality. That makes me uncomfortable. It's like having
+some one following me about with a limelight. And in a sort of way
+I do like it. I like it and I'm flattered by it, and then I go off
+and dislike it, dislike the effect of it. I find myself trying to
+be what you have told me I am&mdash;sort of acting myself. I want
+to glance at looking-glasses to see if I am keeping it up. It's
+just exactly what Mr. Britling says in his book about American
+women. They act themselves, he says; they get a kind of story and
+explanation about themselves and they are always trying to make it
+perfectly plain and clear to every one. Well, when you do that you
+can't think nicely of other things."</p>
+<p>"We like a clear light on people," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"We don't. I suppose we're shadier," said Cecily.</p>
+<p>"You're certainly much more in half-tones," said Mr. Direck.
+"And I confess it's the half-tones get hold of me. But still you
+haven't told me, Miss Cissie, what you think I ought to do with
+myself. Here I am, you see, very much at your disposal. What sort
+of business do you think it's my duty to go in for?"</p>
+<a name="Page_150"></a>
+<p>"That's for some one with more experience than I have, to tell
+you. You should ask Mr. Britling."</p>
+<p>"I'd rather have it from you."</p>
+<p>"I don't even know for myself," she said.</p>
+<p>"So why shouldn't we start to find out together?" he asked.</p>
+<p>It was her tantalising habit to ignore all such tentatives.</p>
+<p>"One can't help the feeling that one is in the world for
+something more than oneself," she said....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Soon Mr. Direck could measure the time that was left to him at
+the Dower House no longer by days but by hours. His luggage was
+mostly packed, his tickets to Rotterdam, Cologne, Munich, Dresden,
+Vienna, were all in order. And things were still very indefinite
+between him and Cecily. But God has not made Americans clean-shaven
+and firm-featured for nothing, and he determined that matters must
+be brought to some sort of definition before he embarked upon
+travels that were rapidly losing their attractiveness in this
+concentration of his attention....</p>
+<p>A considerable nervousness betrayed itself in his voice and
+manner when at last he carried out his determination.</p>
+<p>"There's just a lil' thing," he said to her, taking advantage of
+a moment when they were together after lunch, "that I'd value now
+more than anything else in the world."</p>
+<p>She answered by a lifted eyebrow and a glance that had not so
+much inquiry in it as she intended.</p>
+<p>"If we could just take a lil' walk together for a bit. Round by
+Claverings Park and all that. See the deer again and the old trees.
+Sort of scenery I'd like to remember when I'm away from it."</p>
+<p>He was a little short of breath, and there was a quite<a name=
+"Page_151"></a> disproportionate gravity about her moment for
+consideration.</p>
+<p>"Yes," she said with a cheerful acquiescence that came a couple
+of bars too late. "Let's. It will be jolly."</p>
+<p>"These fine English afternoons are wonderful afternoons," he
+remarked after a moment or so of silence. "Not quite the splendid
+blaze we get in our summer, but&mdash;sort of glowing."</p>
+<p>"It's been very fine all the time you've been here," she
+said....</p>
+<p>After which exchanges they went along the lane, into the road by
+the park fencing, and so to the little gate that lets one into the
+park, without another word.</p>
+<p>The idea took hold of Mr. Direck's mind that until they got
+through the park gate it would be quite out of order to say
+anything. The lane and the road and the stile and the gate were all
+so much preliminary stuff to be got through before one could get to
+business. But after the little white gate the way was clear, the
+park opened out and one could get ahead without bothering about the
+steering. And Mr. Direck had, he felt, been diplomatically involved
+in lanes and by-ways long enough.</p>
+<p>"Well," he said as he rejoined her after very carefully closing
+the gate. "What I really wanted was an opportunity of just
+mentioning something that happens to be of interest to you&mdash;if
+it does happen to interest you.... I suppose I'd better put the
+thing as simply as possible.... Practically.... I'm just right over
+the head and all in love with you.... I thought I'd like to tell
+you...."</p>
+<p>Immense silences.</p>
+<p>"Of course I won't pretend there haven't been others," Mr.
+Direck suddenly resumed. "There have. One particularly. But I can
+assure you I've never felt the depth and height or anything like
+the sort of Quiet Clear Conviction.... And now I'm just telling you
+these things, Miss Corner, I don't know whether it will interest
+you if I tell you that you're really and truly the very first
+love<a name="Page_152"></a> I ever had as well as my last. I've had
+sent over&mdash;I got it only yesterday&mdash;this lil' photograph
+of a miniature portrait of one of my ancestor's relations&mdash;a
+Corner just as you are. It's here...."</p>
+<p>He had considerable difficulties with his pockets and papers.
+Cecily, mute and flushed and inconvenienced by a preposterous and
+unaccountable impulse to weep, took the picture he handed her.</p>
+<p>"When I was a lil' fellow of fifteen," said Mr. Direck in the
+tone of one producing a melancholy but conclusive piece of
+evidence, "I <i>worshipped</i> that miniature. It seemed to
+me&mdash;the loveliest person.... And&mdash;it's just you...."</p>
+<p>He too was preposterously moved.</p>
+<p>It seemed a long time before Cecily had anything to say, and
+then what she had to say she said in a softened, indistinct voice.
+"You're very kind," she said, and kept hold of the little
+photograph.</p>
+<p>They had halted for the photograph. Now they walked on
+again.</p>
+<p>"I thought I'd like to tell you," said Mr. Direck and became
+tremendously silent.</p>
+<p>Cecily found him incredibly difficult to answer. She tried to
+make herself light and offhand, and to be very frank with him.</p>
+<p>"Of course," she said, "I knew&mdash;I felt somehow&mdash;you
+meant to say something of this sort to me&mdash;when you asked me
+to come with you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Well?" he said.</p>
+<p>"And I've been trying to make my poor brain think of something
+to say to you."</p>
+<p>She paused and contemplated her difficulties....</p>
+<p>"Couldn't you perhaps say something of the same kind&mdash;such
+as I've been trying to say?" said Mr. Direck presently, with a note
+of earnest helpfulness. "I'd be very glad if you could."</p>
+<p>"Not exactly," said Cecily, more careful than ever.</p>
+<a name="Page_153"></a>
+<p>"Meaning?"</p>
+<p>"I think you know that you are the best of friends. I think you
+are, oh&mdash;a Perfect Dear."</p>
+<p>"Well&mdash;that's all right&mdash;so far."</p>
+<p>"That <i>is</i> as far."</p>
+<p>"You don't know whether you love me? That's what you mean to
+say."</p>
+<p>"No.... I feel somehow it isn't that.... Yet...."</p>
+<p>"There's nobody else by any chance?"</p>
+<p>"No." Cecily weighed things. "You needn't trouble about
+that."</p>
+<p>"Only ... only you don't know."</p>
+<p>Cecily made a movement of assent.</p>
+<p>"It's no good pretending I haven't thought about you," she
+said.</p>
+<p>"Well, anyhow I've done my best to give you the idea," said Mr.
+Direck. "I seem now to have been doing that pretty nearly all the
+time."</p>
+<p>"Only what should we do?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck felt this question was singularly artless.
+"Why!&mdash;we'd marry," he said. "And all that sort of thing."</p>
+<p>"Letty has married&mdash;and all that sort of thing," said
+Cecily, fixing her eye on him very firmly because she was colouring
+brightly. "And it doesn't leave Letty very
+much&mdash;forrader."</p>
+<p>"Well now, they have a good time, don't they? I'd have thought
+they have a lovely time!"</p>
+<p>"They've had a lovely time. And Teddy is the dearest husband.
+And they have a sweet little house and a most amusing baby. And
+they play hockey every Sunday. And Teddy does his work. And every
+week is like every other week. It is just heavenly. Just always the
+same heavenly. Every Sunday there is a fresh week of heavenly
+beginning. And this, you see, isn't heaven; it is earth. And they
+don't know it but they are getting<a name="Page_154"></a> bored. I
+have been watching them, and they are getting dreadfully bored.
+It's heart-breaking to watch, because they are almost my dearest
+people. Teddy used to be making perpetual jokes about the house and
+the baby and his work and Letty, and now&mdash;he's made all the
+possible jokes. It's only now and then he gets a fresh one. It's
+like spring flowers and then&mdash;summer. And Letty sits about and
+doesn't sing. They want something new to happen.... And there's Mr.
+and Mrs. Britling. They love each other. Much more than Mrs.
+Britling dreams, or Mr. Britling for the matter of that. Once upon
+a time things were heavenly for them too, I suppose. Until suddenly
+it began to happen to them that nothing new ever happened...."</p>
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Direck, "people can travel."</p>
+<p>"But that isn't <i>real</i> happening," said Cecily.</p>
+<p>"It keeps one interested."</p>
+<p>"But real happening is doing something."</p>
+<p>"You come back to that," said Mr. Direck. "I never met any one
+before who'd quite got that spirit as you have it. I wouldn't alter
+it. It's part of you. It's part of this place. It's what Mr.
+Britling always seems to be saying and never quite knowing he's
+said it. It's just as though all the things that are going on
+weren't the things that ought to be going on&mdash;but something
+else quite different. Somehow one falls into it. It's as if your
+daily life didn't matter, as if politics didn't matter, as if the
+King and the social round and business and all those things weren't
+anything really, and as though you felt there was something
+else&mdash;out of sight&mdash;round the corner&mdash;that you ought
+to be getting at. Well, I admit, that's got hold of me too. And
+it's all mixed up with my idea of you. I don't see that there's
+really a contradiction in it at all. I'm in love with you, all my
+heart's in love with you, what's the good of being shy about it?
+I'd just die for your littlest wish right here now, it's just as
+though I'd got love in my veins instead<a name="Page_155"></a> of
+blood, but that's not taking me away from that other thing. It's
+bringing me round to that other thing. I feel as if without you I
+wasn't up to anything at all, but <i>with</i> you&mdash;We'd not go
+settling down in a cottage or just touring about with a Baedeker
+Guide or anything of that kind. Not for long anyhow. We'd naturally
+settle down side by side and <i>do</i> ..."</p>
+<p>"But what should we do?" asked Cecily.</p>
+<p>There came a hiatus in their talk.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck took a deep breath.</p>
+<p>"You see that old felled tree there. I was sitting on it the day
+before yesterday and thinking of you. Will you come there and sit
+with me on it? When you sit on it you get a view, oh! a perfectly
+lovely English view, just a bit of the house and those clumps of
+trees and the valley away there with the lily pond. I'd love to
+have you in my memory of it...."</p>
+<p>They sat down, and Mr. Direck opened his case. He was shy and
+clumsy about opening it, because he had been thinking dreadfully
+hard about it, and he hated to seem heavy or profound or anything
+but artless and spontaneous to Cecily. And he felt even when he did
+open his case that the effect of it was platitudinous and
+disappointing. Yet when he had thought it out it had seemed very
+profound and altogether living.</p>
+<p>"You see one doesn't want to use terms that have been used in a
+thousand different senses in any way that isn't a perfectly
+unambiguous sense, and at the same time one doesn't want to seem to
+be canting about things or pitching anything a note or two higher
+than it ought legitimately to go, but it seems to me that this sort
+of something that Mr. Britling is always asking for in his essays
+and writings and things, and what you are looking for just as much
+and which seems so important to you that even love itself is a
+secondary kind of thing until you can square the two together, is
+nothing more nor less than Religion&mdash;I don't mean this
+Religion or that Religion but<a name="Page_156"></a> just Religion
+itself, a Big, Solemn, Comprehensive Idea that holds you and me and
+all the world together in one great, grand universal scheme. And
+though it isn't quite the sort of idea of love-making that's been
+popular&mdash;well, in places like Carrierville&mdash;for some
+time, it's the right idea; it's got to be followed out if we don't
+want love-making to be a sort of idle, troublesome game of treats
+and flatteries that is sure as anything to lead right away to
+disappointments and foolishness and unfaithfulness and&mdash;just
+Hell. What you are driving at, according to my interpretation, is
+that marriage has got to be a religious marriage or else you are
+splitting up life, that religion and love are most of life and all
+the power there is in it, and that they can't afford to be
+harnessed in two different directions.... I never had these ideas
+until I came here and met you, but they come up now in my mind as
+though they had always been there.... And that's why you don't want
+to marry in a hurry. And that's why I'm glad almost that you don't
+want to marry in a hurry."</p>
+<p>He considered. "That's why I'll have to go on to Germany and
+just let both of us turn things over in our minds."</p>
+<p>"Yes," said Cecily, weighing his speech. "<i>I</i> think that is
+it. I think that I do want a religious marriage, and that what is
+wrong with Teddy and Letty is that they aren't religious. They
+pretend they are religious somewhere out of sight and round the
+corner.... Only&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He considered her gravely.</p>
+<p>"What <i>is</i> Religion?" she asked.</p>
+<p>Here again there was a considerable pause.</p>
+<p>"Very nearly two-thirds of the papers read before our
+Massachusetts society since my connection with it, have dealt with
+that very question," Mr. Direck began. "And one of our most
+influential members was able to secure the services of a very able
+and highly trained young woman from Michigan University, to make a
+digest of all these representative utterances. We are having it
+printed in<a name="Page_157"></a> a thoroughly artistic mariner, as
+the club book for our autumn season. The drift of her results is
+that religion isn't the same thing as religions. That most
+religions are old and that religion is always new.... Well, putting
+it simply, religion is the perpetual rediscovery of that Great
+Thing Out There.... What the Great Thing is goes by all sorts of
+names, but if you know it's there and if you remember it's there,
+you've got religion.... That's about how she figured it out.... I
+shall send you the book as soon as a copy comes over to me.... I
+can't profess to put it as clearly as she puts it. She's got a real
+analytical mind. But it's one of the most suggestive lil' books
+I've ever seen. It just takes hold of you and <i>makes</i> you
+think."</p>
+<p>He paused and regarded the ground before
+him&mdash;thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>"Life," said Cecily, "has either got to be religious or else it
+goes to pieces.... Perhaps anyhow it goes to pieces...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck endorsed these observations by a slow nodding of the
+head.</p>
+<p>He allowed a certain interval to elapse. Then a vaguely
+apprehended purpose that had been for a time forgotten in these
+higher interests came back to him. He took it up with a breathless
+sense of temerity.</p>
+<p>"Well," he said, "then you don't hate me?"</p>
+<p>She smiled.</p>
+<p>"You don't dislike me or despise me?"</p>
+<p>She was still reassuring.</p>
+<p>"You don't think I'm just a slow American sort of portent?"</p>
+<p>"No."</p>
+<p>"You think, on the whole, I might
+even&mdash;someday&mdash;&mdash;?"</p>
+<p>She tried to meet his eyes with a pleasant frankness, and
+perhaps she was franker than she meant to be.</p>
+<p>"Look here," said Mr. Direck, with a little quiver of<a name=
+"Page_158"></a> emotion softening his mouth. "I'll ask you
+something. We've got to wait. Until you feel clearer. Still....
+Could you bring yourself&mdash;&mdash;? If just once&mdash;I could
+kiss you....</p>
+<p>"I'm going away to Germany," he went on to her silence. "But I
+shan't be giving so much attention to Germany as I supposed I
+should when I planned it out. But somehow&mdash;if I
+felt&mdash;that I'd kissed you...."</p>
+<p>With a delusive effect of calmness the young lady looked first
+over her left shoulder and then over her right and surveyed the
+park about them. Then she stood up. "We can go that way home," she
+said with a movement of her head, "through the little covert."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck stood up too.</p>
+<p>"If I was a poet or a bird," said Mr. Direck, "I should sing.
+But being just a plain American citizen all I can do is just to
+talk about all I'd do if I wasn't...."</p>
+<p>And when they had reached the little covert, with its pathway of
+soft moss and its sheltering screen of interlacing branches, he
+broke the silence by saying, "Well, what's wrong with right here
+and now?" and Cecily stood up to him as straight as a spear, with
+gifts in her clear eyes. He took her soft cool face between his
+trembling hands, and kissed her sweet half-parted lips. When he
+kissed her she shivered, and he held her tighter and would have
+kissed her again. But she broke away from him, and he did not press
+her. And muter than ever, pondering deeply, and secretly trembling
+in the queerest way, these two outwardly sedate young people
+returned to the Dower House....</p>
+<p>And after tea the taxicab from the junction came for him and he
+vanished, and was last seen as a waving hat receding along the top
+of the dog-rose hedge that ran beyond the hockey field towards the
+village.</p>
+<p>"He will see Germany long before I shall," said Herr Heinrich
+with a gust of nostalgia. "I wish almost I had not agreed to go to
+Boulogne."</p>
+<a name="Page_159"></a>
+<p>And for some days Miss Cecily Corner was a very grave and
+dignified young woman indeed. Pondering....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 9</h4>
+<br>
+<p>After the departure of Mr. Direck things international began to
+move forward with great rapidity. It was exactly as if his American
+deliberation had hitherto kept things waiting. Before his postcard
+from Rotterdam reached the Dower House Austria had sent an
+ultimatum to Serbia, and before Cecily had got the letter he wrote
+her from Cologne, a letter in that curiously unformed handwriting
+the stenographer and the typewriter are making an American
+characteristic, Russia was mobilising, and the vast prospect of a
+European war had opened like the rolling up of a curtain on which
+the interests of the former week had been but a trivial embroidery.
+So insistent was this reality that revealed itself that even the
+shooting of the Dublin people after the gun-running of Howth was
+dwarfed to unimportance. The mind of Mr. Britling came round from
+its restless wanderings to a more and more intent contemplation of
+the hurrying storm-clouds that swept out of nothingness to blacken
+all his sky. He watched it, he watched amazed and incredulous, he
+watched this contradiction of all his reiterated confessions of
+faith in German sanity and pacifism, he watched it with all that
+was impersonal in his being, and meanwhile his personal life ran in
+a continually deeper and narrower channel as his intelligence was
+withdrawn from it.</p>
+<p>Never had the double refraction of his mind been more clearly
+defined. On the one hand the Britling of the disinterested
+intelligence saw the habitual peace of the world vanish as the
+daylight vanishes when a shutter falls over the window of a cell;
+and on the other the Britling of the private life saw all the
+pleasant comfort of his relations with Mrs. Harrowdean disappearing
+in a perplexing irrational quarrel. He did not want to lose
+Mrs.<a name="Page_160"></a> Harrowdean; he contemplated their
+breach with a profound and profoundly selfish dismay. It seemed the
+wanton termination of an arrangement of which he was only beginning
+to perceive the extreme and irreplaceable satisfactoriness.</p>
+<p>It wasn't that he was in love with her. He knew almost as
+clearly as though he had told himself as much that he was not. But
+then, on the other hand, it was equally manifest in its subdued and
+ignored way that as a matter of fact she was hardly more in love
+with him. What constituted the satisfactoriness of the whole affair
+was its essential unlovingness and friendly want of emotion. It
+left their minds free to play with all the terms and methods of
+love without distress. She could summon tears and delights as one
+summons servants, and he could act his part as lover with no sense
+of lost control. They supplied in each other's lives a long-felt
+want&mdash;if only, that is, she could control her curious aptitude
+for jealousy and the sexual impulse to vex. There, he felt, she
+broke the convention of their relations and brought in serious
+realities, and this little rift it was that had widened to a now
+considerable breach. He knew that in every sane moment she dreaded
+and wished to heal that breach as much as he did. But the deep
+simplicities of the instincts they had tacitly agreed to bridge
+over washed the piers of their reconciliation away.</p>
+<p>And unless they could restore the bridge things would end, and
+Mr. Britling felt that the ending of things would involve for him
+the most extraordinary exasperation. She would go to Oliver for
+comfort; she would marry Oliver; and he knew her well enough to be
+sure that she would thrust her matrimonial happiness with Oliver
+unsparingly upon his attention; while he, on the other hand, being
+provided with no corresponding Olivette, would be left, a sort of
+emotional celibate, with his slack times and his afternoons and his
+general need for flattery and amusement dreadfully upon his own
+hands. He would be<a name="Page_161"></a> tormented by jealousy. In
+which case&mdash;and here he came to verities&mdash;his work would
+suffer. It wouldn't grip him while all these vague demands she
+satisfied fermented unassuaged.</p>
+<p>And, after the fashion of our still too adolescent world, Mr.
+Britling and Mrs. Harrowdean proceeded to negotiate these extremely
+unromantic matters in the phrases of that simple, honest and
+youthful passionateness which is still the only language available,
+and at times Mr. Britling came very near persuading himself that he
+had something of the passionate love for her that he had once had
+for his Mary, and that the possible loss of her had nothing to do
+with the convenience of Pyecrafts or any discretion in the world.
+Though indeed the only thing in the whole plexus of emotional
+possibility that still kept anything of its youthful freshness in
+his mind was the very strong objection indeed he felt to handing
+her over to anybody else in the world. And in addition he had just
+a touch of fatherly feeling that a younger man would not have had,
+and it made him feel very anxious to prevent her making a fool of
+herself by marrying a man out of spite. He felt that since an
+obstinate lover is apt to be an exacting husband, in the end the
+heavy predominance of Oliver might wring much sincerer tears from
+her than she had ever shed for himself. But that generosity was but
+the bright edge to a mainly possessive jealousy.</p>
+<p>It was Mr. Britling who reopened the correspondence by writing a
+little apology for the corner of the small snapdragon bed, and this
+evoked an admirably touching reply. He replied quite naturally with
+assurances and declarations. But before she got his second letter
+her mood had changed. She decided that if he had really and truly
+been lovingly sorry, instead of just writing a note to her he would
+have rushed over to her in a wild, dramatic state of mind, and
+begged forgiveness on his knees. She wrote therefore a second
+letter to this effect, crossing his second one, and, her literary
+gift getting the<a name="Page_162"></a> better of her, she expanded
+her thesis into a general denunciation of his habitual
+off-handedness with her, to an abandonment of all hope of ever
+being happy with him, to a decision to end the matter once for all,
+and after a decent interval of dignified regrets to summon Oliver
+to the reward of his patience and goodness. The European situation
+was now at a pitch to get upon Mr. Britling's nerves, and he
+replied with a letter intended to be conciliatory, but which
+degenerated into earnest reproaches for her "unreasonableness."
+Meanwhile she had received his second and tenderly eloquent letter;
+it moved her deeply, and having now cleared her mind of much that
+had kept it simmering uncomfortably, she replied with a sweetly
+loving epistle. From this point their correspondence had a kind of
+double quality, being intermittently angry and loving; her third
+letter was tender, and it was tenderly answered in his fourth; but
+in the interim she had received his third and answered it with
+considerable acerbity, to which his fifth was a retort, just
+missing her generous and conclusive fifth. She replied to his fifth
+on a Saturday evening&mdash;it was that eventful Saturday, Saturday
+the First of August, 1914&mdash;by a telegram. Oliver was abroad in
+Holland, engaged in a much-needed emotional rest, and she wired to
+Mr. Britling: "Have wired for Oliver, he will come to me, do not
+trouble to answer this."</p>
+<p>She was astonished to get no reply for two days. She got no
+reply for two days because remarkable things were happening to the
+telegraph wires of England just then, and her message, in the hands
+of a boy scout on a bicycle, reached Mr. Britling's house only on
+Monday afternoon. He was then at Claverings discussing the invasion
+of Belgium that made Britain's participation in the war inevitable,
+and he did not open the little red-brown envelope until about
+half-past six. He failed to mark the date and hours upon it, but he
+perceived that it was essentially a challenge. He was expected, he
+saw, to go over at once<a name="Page_163"></a> with his renovated
+Gladys and end this unfortunate clash forever in one striking and
+passionate scene. His mind was now so full of the war that he found
+this the most colourless and unattractive of obligations. But he
+felt bound by the mysterious code of honour of the illicit love
+affair to play his part. He postponed his departure until after
+supper&mdash;there was no reason why he should be afraid of
+motoring by moonlight if he went carefully&mdash;because Hugh came
+in with Cissie demanding a game of hockey. Hockey offered a nervous
+refreshment, a scampering forgetfulness of the tremendous disaster
+of this war he had always believed impossible, that nothing else
+could do, and he was very glad indeed of the irruption....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 10</h4>
+<br>
+<p>For days the broader side of Mr. Britling's mind, as
+distinguished from its egotistical edge, had been reflecting more
+and more vividly and coherently the spectacle of civilisation
+casting aside the thousand dispersed activities of peace, clutching
+its weapons and setting its teeth, for a supreme struggle against
+militarist imperialism. From the point of view of Matching's Easy
+that colossal crystallising of accumulated antagonisms was for a
+time no more than a confusion of headlines and a rearrangement of
+columns in the white windows of the newspapers through which those
+who lived in the securities of England looked out upon the world.
+It was a display in the sphere of thought and print immeasurably
+remote from the real green turf on which one walked, from the voice
+and the church-bells of Mr. Dimple that sounded their ample
+caresses in one's ears, from the clashing of the stags who were
+beginning to knock the velvet from their horns in the park, or the
+clatter of the butcher's cart and the respectful greeting of the
+butcher boy down the lane. It was the spectacle of the world less
+real even to most imaginations than the world of novels or
+plays.<a name="Page_164"></a> People talked of these things always
+with an underlying feeling that they romanced and
+intellectualised.</p>
+<p>On Thursday, July 23rd, the Austro-Hungarian minister at
+Belgrade presented his impossible ultimatum to the Serbian
+government, and demanded a reply within forty-eight hours. With the
+wisdom of retrospect we know now clearly enough what that meant.
+The Sarajevo crime was to be resuscitated and made an excuse for
+war. But nine hundred and ninety-nine Europeans out of a thousand
+had still no suspicion of what was happening to them. The ultimatum
+figured prominently in the morning papers that came to Matching's
+Easy on Friday, but it by no means dominated the rest of the news;
+Sir Edward Carson's rejection of the government proposals for
+Ulster was given the pride of place, and almost equally conspicuous
+with the Serbian news were the Caillaux trial and the storming of
+the St. Petersburg barricades by Cossacks. Herr Heinrich's
+questions at lunch time received reassuring replies.</p>
+<p>On Saturday Sir Edward Carson was still in the central
+limelight, Russia had intervened and demanded more time for Serbia,
+and the <i>Daily Chronicle</i> declared the day a critical one for
+Europe. Dublin with bayonet charges and bullets thrust Serbia into
+a corner on Monday. No shots had yet been fired in the East, and
+the mischief in Ireland that Germany had counted on was well ahead.
+Sir Edward Grey was said to be working hard for peace.</p>
+<p>"It's the cry of wolf," said Mr. Britling to Herr Heinrich.</p>
+<p>"But at last there did come a wolf," said Herr Heinrich. "I wish
+I had not sent my first moneys to that Conference upon Esperanto. I
+feel sure it will be put off."</p>
+<p>"See!" said Teddy very cheerfully to Herr Heinrich on Tuesday,
+and held up the paper, in which "The Bloodshed in Dublin" had
+squeezed the "War Cloud Lifting" into a quite subordinate
+position.</p>
+<a name="Page_165"></a>
+<p>"What did we tell you?" said Mrs. Britling. "Nobody wants a
+European war."</p>
+<p>But Wednesday's paper vindicated his fears. Germany had
+commanded Russia not to mobilise.</p>
+<p>"Of course Russia will mobilise," said Herr Heinrich.</p>
+<p>"Or else forever after hold her peace," said Teddy.</p>
+<p>"And then Germany will mobilise," said Herr Heinrich, "and all
+my holiday will vanish. I shall have to go and mobilise too. I
+shall have to fight. I have my papers."</p>
+<p>"I never thought of you as a soldier before," said Teddy.</p>
+<p>"I have deferred my service until I have done my thesis," said
+Herr Heinrich. "Now all that will be&mdash;Piff! And my thesis
+three-quarters finished."</p>
+<p>"That is serious," said Teddy.</p>
+<p>"<i>Verdammte Dummheit!</i>" said Herr Heinrich. "Why do they do
+such things?"</p>
+<p>On Thursday, the 30th of July, Caillaux, Carson, strikes, and
+all the common topics of life had been swept out of the front page
+of the paper altogether; the stock exchanges were in a state of
+wild perturbation, and food prices were leaping fantastically.
+Austria was bombarding Belgrade, contrary to the rules of war
+hitherto accepted; Russia was mobilising; Mr. Asquith was, he
+declared, not relaxing his efforts "to do everything possible to
+circumscribe the area of possible conflict," and the Vienna
+Conference of Peace Societies was postponed. "I do not see why a
+conflict between Russia and Austria should involve Western Europe,"
+said Mr. Britling. "Our concern is only for Belgium and
+France."</p>
+<p>But Herr Heinrich knew better. "No," he said. "It is the war. It
+has come. I have heard it talked about in Germany many times. But I
+have never believed that it was obliged to come. Ach! It considers
+no one. So long as Esperanto is disregarded, all these things must
+be."</p>
+<p>Friday brought photographs of the mobilisation in<a name=
+"Page_166"></a> Vienna, and the news that Belgrade was burning.
+Young men in straw hats very like English or French or Belgian
+young men in straw hats were shown parading the streets of Vienna,
+carrying flags and banners portentously, blowing trumpets or waving
+hats and shouting. Saturday saw all Europe mobilising, and Herr
+Heinrich upon Teddy's bicycle in wild pursuit of evening papers at
+the junction. Mobilisation and the emotions of Herr Heinrich now
+became the central facts of the Dower House situation. The two
+younger Britlings mobilised with great vigour upon the playroom
+floor. The elder had one hundred and ninety toy soldiers with a
+considerable equipment of guns and wagons; the younger had a force
+of a hundred and twenty-three, not counting three railway porters
+(with trucks complete), a policeman, five civilians and two ladies.
+Also they made a number of British and German flags out of paper.
+But as neither would allow his troops to be any existing foreign
+army, they agreed to be Redland and Blueland, according to the
+colour of their prevailing uniforms. Meanwhile Herr Heinrich
+confessed almost promiscuously the complication of his distresses
+by a hitherto unexpected emotional interest in the daughter of the
+village publican. She was a placid receptive young woman named Maud
+Hickson, on whom the young man had, it seemed, imposed the more
+poetical name of Marguerite.</p>
+<p>"Often we have spoken together, oh yes, often," he assured Mrs.
+Britling. "And now it must all end. She loves flowers, she loves
+birds. She is most sweet and innocent. I have taught her many words
+in German and several times I have tried to draw her in pencil, and
+now I must go away and never see her any more."</p>
+<p>His implicit appeal to the whole literature of Teutonic
+romanticism disarmed Mrs. Britling's objection that he had no
+business whatever to know the young woman at all.</p>
+<p>"Also," cried Herr Heinrich, facing another aspect of his
+distresses, "how am I to pack my things? Since I<a name=
+"Page_167"></a> have been here I have bought many things, many
+books, and two pairs of white flannel trousers and some shirts and
+a tin instrument that I cannot work, for developing privately Kodak
+films. All this must go into my little portmanteau. And it will not
+go into my little portmanteau!</p>
+<p>"And there is Billy! Who will now go on with the education of
+Billy?"</p>
+<p>The hands of fate paused not for Herr Heinrich's embarrassments
+and distresses. He fretted from his room downstairs and back to his
+room, he went out upon mysterious and futile errands towards the
+village inn, he prowled about the garden. His head and face grew
+pinker and pinker; his eyes were flushed and distressed. Everybody
+sought to say and do kind and reassuring things to him.</p>
+<p>"Ach!" he said to Teddy; "you are a civilian. You live in a free
+country. It is not your war. You can be amused at it...."</p>
+<p>But then Teddy was amused at everything.</p>
+<p>Something but very dimly apprehended at Matching's Easy,
+something methodical and compelling away in London, seemed to be
+fumbling and feeling after Herr Heinrich, and Herr Heinrich it
+appeared was responding. Sunday's post brought the decision.</p>
+<p>"I have to go," he said. "I must go right up to London to-day.
+To an address in Bloomsbury. Then they will tell me how to go to
+Germany. I must pack and I must get the taxi-cab from the junction
+and I must go. Why are there no trains on the branch line on
+Sundays for me to go by it?"</p>
+<p>At lunch he talked politics. "I am entirely opposed to the war,"
+he said. "I am entirely opposed to any war."</p>
+<p>"Then why go?" asked Mr. Britling. "Stay here with us. We all
+like you. Stay here and do not answer your mobilisation
+summons."</p>
+<a name="Page_168"></a>
+<p>"But then I shall lose all my country. I shall lose my papers. I
+shall be outcast. I must go."</p>
+<p>"I suppose a man should go with his own country," Mr. Britling
+reflected.</p>
+<p>"If there was only one language in all the world, none of such
+things would happen," Herr Heinrich declared. "There would be no
+English, no Germans, no Russians."</p>
+<p>"Just Esperantists," said Teddy.</p>
+<p>"Or Idoists," said Herr Heinrich. "I am not convinced of which.
+In some ways Ido is much better."</p>
+<p>"Perhaps there would have to be a war between Ido and Esperanto
+to settle it," said Teddy.</p>
+<p>"Who shall we play skat with when you have gone?" asked Mrs.
+Britling.</p>
+<p>"All this morning," said Herr Heinrich, expanding in the warmth
+of sympathy, "I have been trying to pack and I have been unable to
+pack. My mind is too greatly disordered. I have been told not to
+bring much luggage. Mrs. Britling, please."</p>
+<p>Mrs. Britling became attentive.</p>
+<p>"If I could leave much of my luggage, my clothes, some of them,
+and particularly my violin, it would be much more to my
+convenience. I do not care to be mobilised with my violin. There
+may be much crowding. Then I would but just take my
+rucksack...."</p>
+<p>"If you will leave your things packed up."</p>
+<p>"And afterwards they could be sent."</p>
+<p>But he did not leave them packed up. The taxi-cab, to order
+which he had gone to the junction in the morning on Teddy's
+complaisant machine, came presently to carry him off, and the whole
+family and the first contingent of the usual hockey players
+gathered about it to see him off. The elder boy of the two juniors
+put a distended rucksack upon the seat. Herr Heinrich then shook
+hands with every one.</p>
+<p>"Write and tell us how you get on," cried Mrs. Britling.</p>
+<a name="Page_169"></a>
+<p>"But if England also makes war!"</p>
+<p>"Write to Reynolds&mdash;let me give you his address; he is my
+agent in New York," said Mr. Britling, and wrote it down.</p>
+<p>"We'll come to the village corner with you, Herr Heinrich,"
+cried the boys.</p>
+<p>"No," said Herr Heinrich, sitting down into the automobile, "I
+will part with you altogether. It is too much...."</p>
+<p>"<i>Auf Wiedersehen!</i>" cried Mr. Britling. "Remember,
+whatever happens there will be peace at last!"</p>
+<p>"Then why not at the beginning?" Herr Heinrich demanded with a
+reasonable exasperation and repeated his maturer verdict on the
+whole European situation; "<i>Verdammte Bummelei!</i>"</p>
+<p>"Go," said Mr. Britling to the taxi driver.</p>
+<p>"<i>Auf Wiedersehen</i>, Herr Heinrich!"</p>
+<p>"<i>Auf Wiedersehen!</i>"</p>
+<p>"Good-bye, Herr Heinrich!"</p>
+<p>"Good luck, Herr Heinrich!"</p>
+<p>The taxi started with a whir, and Herr Heinrich passed out of
+the gates and along the same hungry road that had so recently
+consumed Mr. Direck. "Give him a last send-off," cried Teddy. "One,
+Two, Three! <i>Auf Wiedersehen!</i>"</p>
+<p>The voices, gruff and shrill, sounded raggedly together. The
+dog-rose hedge cut off the sight of the little face. Then the pink
+head bobbed up again. He was standing up and waving the panama hat.
+Careless of sunstroke....</p>
+<p>Then Herr Heinrich had gone altogether....</p>
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Britling, turning away.</p>
+<p>"I do hope they won't hurt him," said a visitor.</p>
+<p>"Oh, they won't put a youngster like that in the fighting line,"
+said Mr. Britling. "He's had no training yet. And he has to wear
+glasses. How can he shoot? They'll make a clerk of him."</p>
+<a name="Page_170"></a>
+<p>"He hasn't packed at all," said Mrs. Britling to her husband.
+"Just come up for an instant and peep at his room.
+It's&mdash;touching."</p>
+<p>It was touching.</p>
+<p>It was more than touching; in its minute, absurd way it was
+symbolical and prophetic, it was the miniature of one small life
+uprooted.</p>
+<p>The door stood wide open, as he had left it open, careless of
+all the little jealousies and privacies of occupation and
+ownership. Even the windows were wide open as though he had needed
+air; he who had always so sedulously shut his windows since first
+he came to England. Across the empty fireplace stretched the great
+bough of oak he had brought in for Billy, but now its twigs and
+leaves had wilted, and many had broken off and fallen on the floor.
+Billy's cage stood empty upon a little table in the corner of the
+room. Instead of packing, the young man had evidently paced up and
+down in a state of emotional elaboration; the bed was disordered as
+though he had several times flung himself upon it, and his books
+had been thrown about the room despairfully. He had made some
+little commencements of packing in a borrowed cardboard box. The
+violin lay as if it lay in state upon the chest of drawers, the
+drawers were all partially open, and in the middle of the floor
+sprawled a pitiful shirt of blue, dropped there, the most flattened
+and broken-hearted of garments. The fireplace contained an
+unsuccessful pencil sketch of a girl's face, torn across....</p>
+<p>Husband and wife regarded the abandoned room in silence for a
+time, and when Mr. Britling spoke he lowered his voice.</p>
+<p>"I don't see Billy," he said.</p>
+<p>"Perhaps he has gone out of the window," said Mrs. Britling also
+in a hushed undertone....</p>
+<p>"Well," said Mr. Britling abruptly and loudly, turning away from
+this first intimation of coming desolations, "let us go down to our
+hockey! He had to go, you<a name="Page_171"></a> know. And Billy
+will probably come back again when he begins to feel
+hungry...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 11</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Monday was a public holiday, the First Monday in August, and the
+day consecrated by long-established custom to the Matching's Easy
+Flower Show in Claverings Park. The day was to live in Mr.
+Britling's memory with a harsh brightness like the brightness of
+that sunshine one sees at times at the edge of a thunderstorm.
+There were tents with the exhibits, and a tent for "Popular
+Refreshments," there was a gorgeous gold and yellow steam
+roundabout with motor-cars and horses, and another in green and
+silver with wonderfully undulating ostriches and lions, and each
+had an organ that went by steam; there were cocoanut shies and many
+ingenious prize-giving shooting and dart-throwing and ring-throwing
+stalls, each displaying a marvellous array of crockery, clocks,
+metal ornaments, and suchlike rewards. There was a race of gas
+balloons, each with a postcard attached to it begging the finder to
+say where it descended, and you could get a balloon for a shilling
+and have a chance of winning various impressive and embarrassing
+prizes if your balloon went far enough&mdash;fish carvers, a
+silver-handled walking-stick, a bog-oak gramophone-record cabinet,
+and things like that. And by a special gate one could go for
+sixpence into the Claverings gardens, and the sixpence would be
+doubled by Lady Homartyn and devoted next winter to the Matching's
+Easy coal club. And Mr. Britling went through all the shows with
+his boys, and finally left them with a shilling each and his
+blessing and paid his sixpence for the gardens and made his way as
+he had promised, to have tea with Lady Homartyn.</p>
+<p>The morning papers had arrived late, and he had been reading
+them and re-reading them and musing over them intermittently until
+his family had insisted upon his coming out to the festivities.
+They said that if for no other<a name="Page_172"></a> reason he
+must come to witness Aunt Wilshire's extraordinary skill at the
+cocoanut shy. She could beat everybody. Well, one must not miss a
+thing like that. The headlines proclaimed, "The Great Powers at
+War; France Invaded by Germany; Germany invaded by Russia; 100,000
+Germans march into Luxemburg; Can England Abstain? Fifty Million
+Loan to be Issued." And Germany had not only violated the Treaty of
+London but she had seized a British ship in the Kiel Canal.... The
+roundabouts were very busy and windily melodious, and the shooting
+gallery kept popping and jingling as people shot and broke bottles,
+and the voices of the young men and women inviting the crowd to try
+their luck at this and that rang loud and clear. Teddy and Letty
+and Cissie and Hugh were developing a quite disconcerting skill at
+the dart-throwing, and were bent upon compiling a complete tea-set
+for the Teddy cottage out of their winnings. There was a score of
+automobiles and a number of traps and gigs about the entrance to
+the portion of the park that had been railed off for the festival,
+the small Britling boys had met some nursery visitors from
+Claverings House and were busy displaying skill and calm upon the
+roundabout ostriches, and less than four hundred miles away with a
+front that reached from Nancy to Li&egrave;ge more than a million
+and a quarter of grey-clad men, the greatest and best-equipped host
+the world had ever seen, were pouring westward to take Paris, grip
+and paralyse France, seize the Channel ports, invade England, and
+make the German Empire the master-state of the earth. Their
+equipment was a marvel of foresight and scientific organisation,
+from the motor kitchens that rumbled in their wake to the
+telescopic sights of the sharp-shooters, the innumerable
+machine-guns of the infantry, the supply of entrenching material,
+the preparations already made in the invaded country....</p>
+<p>"Let's try at the other place for the sugar-basin!" said Teddy,
+hurrying past. "Don't get <i>two</i> sugar-basins," said<a name=
+"Page_173"></a> Cissie breathless in pursuit. "Hugh is trying for a
+sugar-basin at the other place."</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Britling heard a bellicose note.</p>
+<p>"Let's have a go at the bottles," said a cheerful young farmer.
+"Ought to keep up our shooting, these warlike times...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling ran against Hickson from the village inn and learnt
+that he was disturbed about his son being called up as a reservist.
+"Just when he was settling down here. It seems a pity they couldn't
+leave him for a bit."</p>
+<p>"'Tis a noosence," said Hickson, "but anyhow, they give first
+prize to his radishes. He'll be glad to hear they give first prize
+to his radishes. Do you think, Sir, there's very much probability
+of this war? It do seem to be beginning like."</p>
+<p>"It looks more like beginning than it has ever done," said Mr.
+Britling. "It's a foolish business."</p>
+<p>"I suppose if they start in on us we got to hit back at them,"
+said Mr. Hickson. "Postman&mdash;he's got his papers too...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling made his way through the drifting throng towards
+the little wicket that led into the Gardens....</p>
+<p>He was swung round suddenly by a loud bang.</p>
+<p>It was the gun proclaiming the start of the balloon race.</p>
+<p>He stood for some moments watching the scene. The balloon start
+had gathered a little crowd of people, village girls in white
+gloves and cheerful hats, young men in bright ties and ready-made
+Sunday suits, fathers and mothers, boy scouts, children, clerks in
+straw hats, bicyclists and miscellaneous folk. Over their heads
+rose Mr. Cheshunt, the factotum of the estate. He was standing on a
+table and handing the little balloons up into the air one by one.
+They floated up from his hand like many-coloured grapes, some
+rising and falling, some soaring steadily upward, some spinning and
+eddying, drifting eastward before the gentle breeze, a string of
+bubbles against the sky and the big trees that bounded the
+park.<a name="Page_174"></a> Farther away to the right were the
+striped canvas tents of the flower-show, still farther off the
+roundabouts churned out their music, the shooting galleries popped,
+and the swing boats creaked through the air. Cut off from these
+things by a line of fencing lay the open park in which the deer
+grouped themselves under the great trees and regarded the festival
+mistrustfully. Teddy and Hugh appeared breaking away from the
+balloon race cluster, and hurrying back to their dart-throwing. A
+man outside a little tent that stood apart was putting up a
+brave-looking notice, "Unstinted Teas One Shilling." The Teddy
+perambulator was moored against the cocoanut shy, and Aunt Wilshire
+was still displaying her terrible prowess at the cocoanuts. Already
+she had won twenty-seven. Strange children had been impressed by
+her to carry them, and formed her retinue. A wonderful old lady was
+Aunt Wilshire....</p>
+<p>Then across all the sunshine of this artless festival there
+appeared, as if it were writing showing through a picture, "France
+Invaded by Germany; Germany Invaded by Russia."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling turned again towards the wicket, with its
+collectors of tribute, that led into the Gardens.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 12</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The Claverings gardens, and particularly the great rockery, the
+lily pond, and the herbaceous borders, were unusually populous with
+unaccustomed visitors and shy young couples. Mr. Britling had to go
+to the house for instructions, and guided by the under-butler found
+Lady Homartyn hiding away in the walled Dutch garden behind the
+dairy. She had been giving away the prizes of the flower-show, and
+she was resting in a deck chair while a spinster relation presided
+over the tea. Mrs. Britling had fled the outer festival earlier,
+and was sitting by the tea-things. Lady Meade and two or three
+visitors had<a name="Page_175"></a> motored out from Hartleytree to
+assist, and Manning had come in with his tremendous confirmation of
+all that the morning papers had foreshadowed.</p>
+<p>"Have you any news?" asked Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"It's <i>war!</i>" said Mrs. Britling.</p>
+<p>"They are in Luxemburg," said Manning. "That can only mean that
+they are coming through Belgium."</p>
+<p>"Then I was wrong," said Mr. Britling, "and the world is
+altogether mad. And so there is nothing else for us to do but
+win.... Why could they not leave Belgium alone?"</p>
+<p>"It's been in all their plans for the last twenty years," said
+Manning.</p>
+<p>"But it brings us in for certain."</p>
+<p>"I believe they have reckoned on that."</p>
+<p>"Well!" Mr. Britling took his tea and sat down, and for a time
+he said nothing.</p>
+<p>"It is three against three," said one of the visitors, trying to
+count the Powers engaged.</p>
+<p>"Italy," said Manning, "will almost certainly refuse to fight.
+In fact Italy is friendly to us. She is bound to be. This is, to
+begin with, an Austrian war. And Japan will fight for us...."</p>
+<p>"I think," said old Lady Meade, "that this is the suicide of
+Germany. They cannot possibly fight against Russia and France and
+ourselves. Why have they ever begun it?"</p>
+<p>"It may be a longer and more difficult war than people suppose,"
+said Manning. "The Germans reckon they are going to win."</p>
+<p>"Against us all?"</p>
+<p>"Against us all. They are tremendously prepared."</p>
+<p>"It is impossible that Germany should win," said Mr. Britling,
+breaking his silence. "Against her Germany has something more than
+armies; all reason, all instinct&mdash;the three greatest peoples
+in the world."</p>
+<p>"At present very badly supplied with war material."</p>
+<a name="Page_176"></a>
+<p>"That may delay things; it may make the task harder; but it will
+not alter the end. Of course we are going to win. Nothing else is
+thinkable. I have never believed they meant it. But I see now they
+meant it. This insolent arming and marching, this forty years of
+national blustering; sooner or later it had to topple over into
+action...."</p>
+<p>He paused and found they were listening, and he was carried on
+by his own thoughts into further speech.</p>
+<p>"This isn't the sort of war," he said, "that is settled by
+counting guns and rifles. Something that has oppressed us all has
+become intolerable and has to be ended. And it will be ended. I
+don't know what soldiers and politicians think of our prospects,
+but I do know what ordinary reasonable men think of the business. I
+know that all we millions of reasonable civilised onlookers are
+prepared to spend our last shillings and give all our lives now,
+rather than see Germany unbeaten. I know that the same thing is
+felt in America, and that given half a chance, given just one extra
+shake of that foolish mailed fist in the face of America, and
+America also will be in this war by our side. Italy will come in.
+She is bound to come in. France will fight like one man. I'm quite
+prepared to believe that the Germans have countless rifles and
+guns; have got the most perfect maps, spies, plans you can imagine.
+I'm quite prepared to hear that they have got a thousand tremendous
+surprises in equipment up their sleeves. I'm quite prepared for
+sweeping victories for them and appalling disasters for us. Those
+are the first things. What I do know is that the Germans understand
+nothing of the spirit of man; that they do not dream for a moment
+of the devil of resentment this war will arouse. Didn't we all
+trust them not to let off their guns? Wasn't that the essence of
+our liberal and pacific faith? And here they are in the heart of
+Europe letting off their guns?"</p>
+<p>"And such a lot of guns," said Manning.</p>
+<a name="Page_177"></a>
+<p>"Then you think it will be a long war, Mr. Britling?" said Lady
+Meade.</p>
+<p>"Long or short, it will end in the downfall of Germany. But I do
+not believe it will be long. I do not agree with Manning. Even now
+I cannot believe that a whole great people can be possessed by war
+madness. I think the war is the work of the German armaments party
+and of the Court party. They have forced this war on Germany.
+Well&mdash;they must win and go on winning. So long as they win,
+Germany will hold together, so long as their armies are not clearly
+defeated nor their navy destroyed. But once check them and stay
+them and beat them, then I believe that suddenly the spirit of
+Germany will change even as it changed after Jena...."</p>
+<p>"Willie Nixon," said one of the visitors, "who came back from
+Hamburg yesterday, says they are convinced they will have taken
+Paris and St. Petersburg and one or two other little places and
+practically settled everything for us by about Christmas."</p>
+<p>"And London?"</p>
+<p>"I forgot if he said London. But I suppose a London more or less
+hardly matters. They don't think we shall dare come in, but if we
+do they will Zeppelin the fleet and walk through our army&mdash;if
+you can call it an army."</p>
+<p>Manning nodded confirmation.</p>
+<p>"They do not understand," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Sir George Padish told me the same sort of thing," said Lady
+Homartyn. "He was in Berlin in June."</p>
+<p>"Of course the efficiency of their preparations is almost
+incredible," said another of Lady Meade's party.</p>
+<p>"They have thought out and got ready for
+everything&mdash;literally everything."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 13</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling had been a little surprised by the speech he had
+made. He hadn't realised before he began to talk how angry and
+scornful he was at this final coming into<a name="Page_178"></a>
+action of the Teutonic militarism that had so long menaced his
+world. He had always said it would never really fight&mdash;and
+here it was fighting! He was furious with the indignation of an
+apologist betrayed. He had only realised the strength and passion
+of his own belligerent opinions as he had heard them, and as he
+walked back with his wife through the village to the Dower House,
+he was still in the swirl of this self-discovery; he was darkly
+silent, devising fiercely denunciatory phrases against Krupp and
+Kaiser. "Krupp and Kaiser," he grasped that obvious, convenient
+alliteration. "It is all that is bad in medi&aelig;valism allied to
+all that is bad in modernity," he told himself.</p>
+<p>"The world," he said, startling Mrs. Britling with his sudden
+speech, "will be intolerable to live in, it will be unendurable for
+a decent human being, unless we win this war.</p>
+<p>"We must smash or be smashed...."</p>
+<p>His brain was so busy with such stuff that for a time he stared
+at Mrs. Harrowdean's belated telegram without grasping the meaning
+of a word of it. He realised slowly that it was incumbent upon him
+to go over to her, but he postponed his departure very readily in
+order to play hockey. Besides which it would be a full moon, and he
+felt that summer moonlight was far better than sunset and dinner
+time for the declarations he was expected to make. And then he went
+on phrase-making again about Germany until he had actually bullied
+off at hockey.</p>
+<p>Suddenly in the midst of the game he had an amazing thought. It
+came to him like a physical twinge.</p>
+<p>"What the devil are we doing at this hockey?" he asked abruptly
+of Teddy, who was coming up to bully after a goal. "We ought to be
+drilling or shooting against those infernal Germans."</p>
+<p>Teddy looked at him questioningly.</p>
+<p>"Oh, come on!" said Mr. Britling with a gust of impatience, and
+snapped the sticks together.</p>
+<a name="Page_179"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 14</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling started for his moonlight ride about half-past nine
+that night. He announced that he could neither rest nor work, the
+war had thrown him into a fever; the driving of the automobile was
+just the distraction he needed; he might not, he added casually,
+return for a day or so. When he felt he could work again he would
+come back. He filled up his petrol tank by the light of an electric
+torch, and sat in his car in the garage and studied his map of the
+district. His thoughts wandered from the road to Pyecrafts to the
+coast, and to the possible route of a raider. Suppose the enemy
+anticipated a declaration of war! Here he might come, and
+here....</p>
+<p>He roused himself from these speculations to the business in
+hand.</p>
+<p>The evening seemed as light as day, a cool moonshine filled the
+world. The road was silver that flushed to pink at the approach of
+Mr. Britling's headlight, the dark turf at the wayside and the
+bushes on the bank became for a moment an acid green as the glare
+passed. The full moon was climbing up the sky, and so bright that
+scarcely a star was visible in the blue grey of the heavens. Houses
+gleamed white a mile away, and ever and again a moth would flutter
+and hang in the light of the lamps, and then vanish again in the
+night.</p>
+<p>Gladys was in excellent condition for a run, and so was Mr.
+Britling. He went neither fast nor slow, and with a quite
+unfamiliar confidence. Life, which had seemed all day a congested
+confusion darkened by threats, became cool, mysterious and aloof
+and with a quality of dignified reassurance.</p>
+<p>He steered along the narrow road by the black dog-rose hedge,
+and so into the high road towards the village. The village was
+alight at several windows but almost deserted. Out beyond, a
+coruscation of lights burnt like a group of topaz and rubies set in
+the silver shield of the<a name="Page_180"></a> night. The
+festivities of the Flower Show were still in full progress, and the
+reduction of the entrance fee after seven had drawn in every
+lingering outsider. The roundabouts churned out their relentless
+music, and the bottle-shooting galleries popped and crashed. The
+well-patronised ostriches and motorcars flickered round in a
+pulsing rhythm; black, black, black, before the naphtha flares.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling pulled up at the side of the road, and sat for a
+little while watching the silhouettes move hither and thither from
+shadow to shadow across the bright spaces.</p>
+<p>"On the very brink of war&mdash;on the brink of Armageddon," he
+whispered at last. "Do they understand? Do any of us
+understand?"</p>
+<p>He slipped in his gear to starting, and was presently running
+quietly with his engine purring almost inaudibly along the level
+road to Hartleytree. The sounds behind him grew smaller and
+smaller, and died away leaving an immense unruffled quiet under the
+moon. There seemed no motion but his own, no sound but the neat,
+subdued, mechanical rhythm in front of his feet. Presently he ran
+out into the main road, and heedless of the lane that turned away
+towards Pyecrafts, drove on smoothly towards the east and the sea.
+Never before had he driven by night. He had expected a fumbling and
+tedious journey; he found he had come into an undreamt-of silvery
+splendour of motion. For it seemed as though even the automobile
+was running on moonlight that night.... Pyecrafts could wait.
+Indeed the later he got to Pyecrafts the more moving and romantic
+the little comedy of reconciliation would be. And he was in no
+hurry for that comedy. He felt he wanted to apprehend this vast
+summer calm about him, that alone of all the things of the day
+seemed to convey anything whatever of the majestic tragedy that was
+happening to mankind. As one slipped through this still vigil one
+could imagine for the first time the millions<a name=
+"Page_181"></a> away there marching, the wide river valleys,
+villages, cities, mountain-ranges, ports and seas inaudibly
+busy.</p>
+<p>"Even now," he said, "the battleships may be fighting."</p>
+<p>He listened, but the sound was only the low intermittent
+drumming of his cylinders as he ran with his throttle nearly
+closed, down a stretch of gentle hill.</p>
+<p>He felt that he must see the sea. He would follow the road
+beyond the Rodwell villages, and then turn up to the crest of
+Eastonbury Hill. And thither he went and saw in the gap of the low
+hills beyond a V-shaped level of moonlit water that glittered and
+yet lay still. He stopped his car by the roadside, and sat for a
+long time looking at this and musing. And once it seemed to him
+three little shapes like short black needles passed in line ahead
+across the molten silver.</p>
+<p>But that may have been just the straining of the eyes....</p>
+<p>All sorts of talk had come to Mr. Britling's ears about the
+navies of England and France and Germany; there had been public
+disputes of experts, much whispering and discussion in private. We
+had the heavier vessels, the bigger guns, but it was not certain
+that we had the preeminence in science and invention. Were they
+relying as we were relying on Dreadnoughts, or had they their
+secrets and surprises for us? To-night, perhaps, the great ships
+were steaming to conflict....</p>
+<p>To-night all over the world ships must be in flight and ships
+pursuing; ten thousand towns must be ringing with the immediate
+excitement of war....</p>
+<p>Only a year ago Mr. Britling had been lunching on a battleship
+and looking over its intricate machinery. It had seemed to him then
+that there could be no better human stuff in the world than the
+quiet, sunburnt, disciplined men and officers he had met.... And
+our little army, too, must be gathering to-night, the little army
+that had<a name="Page_182"></a> been chastened and reborn in South
+Africa, that he was convinced was individually more gallant and
+self-reliant and capable than any other army in the world. He would
+have sneered or protested if he had heard another Englishman say
+that, but in his heart he held the dear belief....</p>
+<p>And what other aviators in the world could fly as the Frenchmen
+and Englishmen he had met once or twice at Eastchurch and Salisbury
+could fly? These are things of race and national quality. Let the
+German cling to his gasbags. "We shall beat them in the air," he
+whispered. "We shall beat them on the seas. Surely we shall beat
+them on the seas. If we have men enough and guns enough we shall
+beat them on land.... Yet&mdash;For years they have been
+preparing...."</p>
+<p>There was little room in the heart of Mr. Britling that night
+for any love but the love of England. He loved England now as a
+nation of men. There could be no easy victory. Good for us with our
+too easy natures that there could be no easy victory. But victory
+we must have now&mdash;or perish....</p>
+<p>He roused himself with a sigh, restarted his engine, and went on
+to find some turning place. He still had a colourless impression
+that the journey's end was Pyecrafts.</p>
+<p>"We must all do the thing we can," he thought, and for a time
+the course of his automobile along a winding down-hill road held
+his attention so that he could not get beyond it. He turned about
+and ran up over the hill again and down long slopes inland, running
+very softly and smoothly with his lights devouring the road ahead
+and sweeping the banks and hedges beside him, and as he came down a
+little hill through a village he heard a confused clatter and
+jingle of traffic ahead, and saw the danger triangle that warns of
+cross-roads. He slowed down and then pulled up abruptly.</p>
+<p>Riding across the gap between the cottages was a string of
+horsemen, and then a grey cart, and then a team drawing<a name=
+"Page_183"></a> a heavy object&mdash;a gun, and then more horsemen,
+and then a second gun. It was all a dim brown procession in the
+moonlight. A mounted officer came up beside him and looked at him
+and then went back to the cross-roads, but as yet England was not
+troubling about spies. Four more guns passed, and then a string of
+carts and more mounted men, sitting stiffly. Nobody was singing or
+shouting; scarcely a word was audible, and through all the column
+there was an effect of quiet efficient haste. And so they passed,
+and rumbled and jingled and clattered out of the scene, leaving Mr.
+Britling in his car in the dreaming village. He restarted his
+engine once more, and went his way thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>He went so thoughtfully that presently he missed the road to
+Pyecrafts&mdash;if ever he had been on the road to Pyecrafts at
+all&mdash;altogether. He found himself upon a highway running
+across a flattish plain, and presently discovered by the sight of
+the Great Bear, faint but traceable in the blue overhead, that he
+was going due north. Well, presently he would turn south and west;
+that in good time; now he wanted to feel; he wanted to think. How
+could he best help England in the vast struggle for which the empty
+silence and beauty of this night seemed to be waiting? But indeed
+he was not thinking at all, but feeling, feeling wonder, as he had
+never felt it since his youth had passed from him. This war might
+end nearly everything in the world as he had known the world; that
+idea struggled slowly through the moonlight into consciousness, and
+won its way to dominance in his mind.</p>
+<p>The character of the road changed; the hedges fell away, the
+pine trees and pine woods took the place of the black squat shapes
+of the hawthorn and oak and apple. The houses grew rarer and the
+world emptier and emptier, until he could have believed that he was
+the only man awake and out-of-doors in all the slumbering
+land....</p>
+<p>For a time a little thing caught hold of his dreaming mind.
+Continually as he ran on, black, silent birds rose<a name=
+"Page_184"></a> startled out of the dust of the road before him,
+and fluttered noiselessly beyond his double wedge of light. What
+sort of bird could they be? Were they night-jars? Were they
+different kinds of birds snatching at the quiet of the night for a
+dust bath in the sand? This little independent thread of inquiry
+ran through the texture of his mind and died away....</p>
+<p>And at one place there was a great bolting of rabbits across the
+road, almost under his wheels....</p>
+<p>The phrases he had used that afternoon at Claverings came back
+presently into his head. They were, he felt assured, the phrases
+that had to be said now. This war could be seen as the noblest of
+wars, as the crowning struggle of mankind against national
+dominance and national aggression; or else it was a mere struggle
+of nationalities and pure destruction and catastrophe. Its enormous
+significances, he felt, must not be lost in any petty bickering
+about the minor issues of the conflict. But were these enormous
+significances being stated clearly enough? Were they being
+understood by the mass of liberal and pacific thinkers? He drove
+more and more slowly as these questions crowded upon his attention
+until at last he came to a stop altogether.... "Certain things must
+be said clearly," he whispered. "Certain things&mdash;The meaning
+of England.... The deep and long-unspoken desire for kindliness and
+fairness.... Now is the time for speaking. It must be put as
+straight now as her gun-fire, as honestly as the steering of her
+ships."</p>
+<p>Phrases and paragraphs began to shape themselves in his mind as
+he sat with one arm on his steering-wheel.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he roused himself, turned over the map in the map-case
+beside him, and tried to find his position....</p>
+<p>So far as he could judge he had strayed right into
+Suffolk....</p>
+<p>About one o'clock in the morning he found himself in Newmarket.
+Newmarket too was a moonlit emptiness, but as he hesitated at the
+cross-roads he became aware of<a name="Page_185"></a> a policeman
+standing quite stiff and still at the corner by the church.</p>
+<p>"Matching's Easy?" he cried.</p>
+<p>"That road, Sir, until you come to Market Saffron, and then to
+the left...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling had a definite purpose now in his mind, and he
+drove faster, but still very carefully and surely. He was already
+within a mile or so of Market Saffron before he remembered that he
+had made a kind of appointment with himself at Pyecrafts. He stared
+at two conflicting purposes. He turned over certain
+possibilities.</p>
+<p>At the Market Saffron cross-roads he slowed down, and for a
+moment he hung undecided.</p>
+<p>"Oliver," he said, and as he spoke he threw over his
+steering-wheel towards the homeward way.... He finished his
+sentence when he had negotiated the corner safely. "Oliver must
+have her...."</p>
+<p>And then, perhaps fifty yards farther along, and this time
+almost indignantly: "She ought to have married him long
+ago...."</p>
+<p>He put his automobile in the garage, and then went round under
+the black shadow of his cedars to the front door. He had no key,
+and for a long time he failed to rouse his wife by flinging pebbles
+and gravel at her half-open window. But at last he heard her
+stirring and called out to her.</p>
+<p>He explained he had returned because he wanted to write. He
+wanted indeed to write quite urgently. He went straight up to his
+room, lit his reading-lamp, made himself some tea, and changed into
+his nocturnal suit. Daylight found him still writing very earnestly
+at his pamphlet. The title he had chosen was: "And Now War
+Ends."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 15</h4>
+<br>
+<p>In this fashion it was that the great war began in Europe and
+came to one man in Matching's Easy, as it<a name="Page_186"></a>
+came to countless intelligent men in countless pleasant homes that
+had scarcely heeded its coming through all the years of its
+relentless preparation. The familiar scenery of life was drawn
+aside, and War stood unveiled. "I am the Fact," said War, "and I
+stand astride the path of life. I am the threat of death and
+extinction that has always walked beside life, since life began.
+There can be nothing else and nothing more in human life until you
+have reckoned with me."</p>
+<a name="Page_187"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_II"></a>
+<h2>BOOK II</h2>
+<h2>MATCHING'S EASY AT WAR</h2>
+<a name="Page_189"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_II_CHAPTER_THE_FIRST"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE FIRST</h2>
+<h2>ONLOOKERS</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>On that eventful night of the first shots and the first deaths
+Mr. Britling did not sleep until daylight had come. He sat writing
+at this pamphlet of his, which was to hail the last explosion and
+the ending of war. For a couple of hours he wrote with energy, and
+then his energy flagged. There came intervals when he sat still and
+did not write. He yawned and yawned again and rubbed his eyes. The
+day had come and the birds were noisy when he undressed slowly,
+dropping his clothes anyhow upon the floor, and got into
+bed....</p>
+<p>He woke to find his morning tea beside him and the housemaid
+going out of the room. He knew that something stupendous had
+happened to the world, but for a few moments he could not remember
+what it was. Then he remembered that France was invaded by Germany
+and Germany by Russia, and that almost certainly England was going
+to war. It seemed a harsh and terrible fact in the morning light, a
+demand for stresses, a certainty of destruction; it appeared now
+robbed of all the dark and dignified beauty of the night. He
+remembered just the same feeling of unpleasant, anxious expectation
+as he now felt when the Boer War had begun fifteen years ago,
+before the first news came. The first news of the Boer War had been
+the wrecking of a British armoured train near Kimberley. What
+similar story might not the overdue paper tell when presently it
+came?</p>
+<p>Suppose, for instance, that some important division of our Fleet
+had been surprised and overwhelmed....</p>
+<a name="Page_190"></a>
+<p>Suppose the Germans were already crumpling up the French armies
+between Verdun and Belfort, very swiftly and dreadfully....</p>
+<p>Suppose after all that the Cabinet was hesitating, and that
+there would be no war for some weeks, but only a wrangle about
+Belgian neutrality. While the Germans smashed France....</p>
+<p>Or, on the other hand, there might be some amazing, prompt
+success on our part. Our army and navy people were narrow, but in
+their narrow way he believed they were extraordinarily good....</p>
+<p>What would the Irish do?...</p>
+<p>His thoughts were no more than a thorny jungle of unanswerable
+questions through which he struggled in un-progressive circles.</p>
+<p>He got out of bed and dressed in a slow, distraught manner. When
+he reached his braces he discontinued dressing for a time; he
+opened the atlas at Northern France, and stood musing over the
+Belgian border. Then he turned to Whitaker's Almanack to browse
+upon the statistics of the great European armies. He was roused
+from this by the breakfast gong.</p>
+<p>At breakfast there was no talk of anything but war. Hugh was as
+excited as a cat in thundery weather, and the small boys wanted
+information about flags. The Russian and the Serbian flag were in
+dispute, and the flag page of Webster's Dictionary had to be
+consulted. Newspapers and letters were both abnormally late, and
+Mr. Britling, tiring of supplying trivial information to his
+offspring, smoked cigarettes in the garden. He had an idea of
+intercepting the postman. His eyes and ears informed him of the
+approach of Mrs. Faber's automobile. It was an old,
+resolute-looking machine painted red, and driven by a trusted
+gardener; there was no mistaking it.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Faber was in it, and she stopped it outside the gate and
+made signals. Mrs. Britling, attracted by the<a name=
+"Page_191"></a> catastrophic sounds of Mrs. Faber's vehicle, came
+out by the front door, and she and her husband both converged upon
+the caller.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"I won't come in," cried Mrs. Faber, "but I thought I'd tell
+you. I've been getting food."</p>
+<p>"Food?"</p>
+<p>"Provisions. There's going to be a run on provisions. Look at my
+flitch of bacon!"</p>
+<p>"But&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Faber says we have to lay in what we can. This war&mdash;it's
+going to stop everything. We can't tell what will happen. I've got
+the children to consider, so here I am. I was at Hickson's before
+nine...."</p>
+<p>The little lady was very flushed and bright-eyed. Her fair hair
+was disordered, her hat a trifle askew. She had an air of enjoying
+unwonted excitements. "All the gold's being hoarded too," she said,
+with a crow of delight in her voice. "Faber says that probably our
+cheques won't be worth <i>that</i> in a few days. He rushed off to
+London to get gold at his clubs&mdash;while he can. I had to insist
+on Hickson taking a cheque. 'Never,' I said, 'will I deal with you
+again&mdash;never&mdash;unless you do....' Even then he looked at
+me almost as if he thought he wouldn't.</p>
+<p>"It's Famine!" she said, turning to Mr. Britling. "I've laid
+hands on all I can. I've got the children to consider."</p>
+<p>"But why is it famine?" asked Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Oh! it <i>is</i>!" she said.</p>
+<p>"But why?"</p>
+<p>"Faber understands," she said. "Of course it's Famine...."</p>
+<p>"And would you believe me," she went on, going back to Mrs.
+Britling, "that man Hickson stood behind his counter&mdash;where
+I've dealt with him for <i>years</i>, and<a name="Page_192"></a>
+refused absolutely to let me have more than a dozen tins of
+sardines. <i>Refused!</i> Point blank!</p>
+<p>"I was there before nine, and even then Hickson's shop was
+crowded&mdash;<i>crowded</i>, my dear!"</p>
+<p>"What have you got?" said Mr. Britling with an inquiring
+movement towards the automobile.</p>
+<p>She had got quite a lot. She had two sides of bacon, a case of
+sugar, bags of rice, eggs, a lot of flour.</p>
+<p>"What are all these little packets?" said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>Mrs. Faber looked slightly abashed.</p>
+<p>"Cerebos salt," she said. "One gets carried away a little. I
+just got hold of it and carried it out to the car. I thought we
+might have to salt things later."</p>
+<p>"And the jars are pickles?" said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Yes. But look at all my flour! That's what will go
+first...."</p>
+<p>The lady was a little flurried by Mr. Britling's too detailed
+examination of her haul. "What good is blacking?" he asked. She
+would not hear him. She felt he was trying to spoil her morning.
+She declared she must get on back to her home. "Don't say I didn't
+warn you," she said. "I've got no end of things to do. There's
+peas! I want to show cook how to bottle our peas. For this
+year&mdash;it's lucky, we've got no end of peas. I came by here
+just for the sake of telling you." And with that she presently
+departed&mdash;obviously ruffled by Mrs. Britling's lethargy and
+Mr. Britling's scepticism.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling watched her go off with a slowly rising
+indignation.</p>
+<p>"And that," he said, "is how England is going to war! Scrambling
+for food&mdash;at the very beginning."</p>
+<p>"I suppose she is anxious for the children," said Mrs.
+Britling.</p>
+<p>"Blacking!"</p>
+<p>"After all," said Mr. Britling, "if other people are doing that
+sort of thing&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"That's the idea of all panics. We've got not to do<a name=
+"Page_193"></a> it.... The country hasn't even declared war yet!
+Hallo, here we are! Better late than never."</p>
+<p>The head of the postman, bearing newspapers and letters,
+appeared gliding along the top of the hedge as he cycled down the
+road towards the Dower House corner.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>England was not yet at war, but all the stars were marching to
+that end. It was as if an event so vast must needs take its time to
+happen. No doubt was left upon Mr. Britling's mind, though a
+whole-page advertisement in the <i>Daily News</i>, in enormous type
+and of mysterious origin, implored Great Britain not to play into
+the hands of Russia, Russia the Terrible, that bugbear of the
+sentimental Radicals. The news was wide and sweeping, and rather
+inaccurate. The Germans were said to be in Belgium and Holland, and
+they had seized English ships in the Kiel Canal. A moratorium had
+been proclaimed, and the reports of a food panic showed Mrs. Faber
+to be merely one example of a large class of excitable people.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling found the food panic disconcerting. It did not
+harmonise with his leading <i>motif</i> of the free people of the
+world rising against the intolerable burthen of militarism. It
+spoilt his picture....</p>
+<p>Mrs. Britling shared the paper with Mr. Britling, they stood by
+the bed of begonias near the cedar tree and read, and the air was
+full of the cheerful activities of the lawn-mower that was being
+drawn by a carefully booted horse across the hockey field.</p>
+<p>Presently Hugh came flitting out of the house to hear what had
+happened. "One can't work somehow, with all these big things going
+on," he apologised. He secured the <i>Daily News</i> while his
+father and mother read <i>The Times</i>. The voices of the younger
+boys came from the shade of the trees; they had brought all their
+toy soldiers out of doors, and were making entrenched camps in the
+garden.</p>
+<p>"The financial situation is an extraordinary one," said<a name=
+"Page_194"></a> Mr. Britling, concentrating his attention.... "All
+sorts of staggering things may happen. In a social and economic
+system that has grown just anyhow.... Never been planned.... In a
+world full of Mrs. Fabers...."</p>
+<p>"Moratorium?" said Hugh over his <i>Daily News</i>. "In relation
+to debts and so on? Modern side you sent me to, Daddy. I live at
+hand to mouth in etymology. Mors and crematorium&mdash;do we burn
+our bills instead of paying them?"</p>
+<p>"Moratorium," reflected Mr. Britling; "Moratorium. What nonsense
+you talk! It's something that delays, of course. Nothing to do with
+death. Just a temporary stoppage of payments.... Of course there's
+bound to be a tremendous change in values...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"There's bound to be a tremendous change in values."</p>
+<p>On that text Mr. Britling's mind enlarged very rapidly. It
+produced a wonderful crop of possibilities before he got back to
+his study. He sat down to his desk, but he did not immediately take
+up his work. He had discovered something so revolutionary in his
+personal affairs that even the war issue remained for a time in
+suspense.</p>
+<p>Tucked away in the back of Mr. Britling's consciousness was
+something that had not always been there, something warm and
+comforting that made life and his general thoughts about life much
+easier and pleasanter than they would otherwise have been, the
+sense of a neatly arranged investment list, a shrewdly and
+geographically distributed system of holdings in national loans,
+municipal investments, railway debentures, that had amounted
+altogether to rather over five-and-twenty thousand pounds; his and
+Mrs. Britling's, a joint accumulation. This was, so to speak, his
+economic viscera. It sustained him, and kept him going and
+comfortable. When all was well he did not feel its existence; he
+had merely a pleasant sense of general well-being. When here or
+there a security got a<a name="Page_195"></a> little disarranged he
+felt a vague discomfort. Now he became aware of grave disorders. It
+was as if he discovered he had been accidentally eating toadstools,
+and didn't quite know whether they weren't a highly poisonous sort.
+But an analogy may be carried too far....</p>
+<p>At any rate, when Mr. Britling got back to his writing-desk he
+was much too disturbed to resume "And Now War Ends."</p>
+<p>"There's bound to be a tremendous change in values!"</p>
+<p>He had never felt quite so sure as most people about the
+stability of the modern financial system. He did not, he felt,
+understand the working of this moratorium, or the peculiar
+advantage of prolonging the bank holidays. It meant, he supposed, a
+stoppage of payment all round, and a cutting off of the supply of
+ready money. And Hickson the grocer, according to Mrs. Faber, was
+already looking askance at cheques.</p>
+<p>Even if the bank did reopen Mr. Britling was aware that his
+current balance was low; at the utmost it amounted to twenty or
+thirty pounds. He had been expecting cheques from his English and
+American publishers, and the usual <i>Times</i> cheque. Suppose
+these payments were intercepted!</p>
+<p>All these people might, so far as he could understand, stop
+payment under this moratorium! That hadn't at first occurred to
+him. But, of course, quite probably they might refuse to pay his
+account when it fell due.</p>
+<p>And suppose <i>The Times</i> felt his peculiar vein of
+thoughtfulness unnecessary in these stirring days!</p>
+<p>And then if the bank really did lock up his deposit account, and
+his securities became unsaleable!</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling felt like an oyster that is invited to leave its
+shell....</p>
+<p>He sat back from his desk contemplating these things. His
+imagination made a weak attempt to picture a world in which credit
+has vanished and money is of doubtful value. He supposed a large
+number of people would just<a name="Page_196"></a> go on buying and
+selling at or near the old prices by force of habit.</p>
+<p>His mind and conscience made a valiant attempt to pick up "And
+Now War Ends" and go on with it, but before five minutes were out
+he was back at the thoughts of food panic and bankruptcy....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The conflict of interests at Mr. Britling's desk became
+unendurable. He felt he must settle the personal question first. He
+wandered out upon the lawn and smoked cigarettes.</p>
+<p>His first conception of a great convergent movement of the
+nations to make a world peace and an end to militant Germany was
+being obscured by this second, entirely incompatible, vision of a
+world confused and disorganised. Mrs. Fabers in great multitudes
+hoarding provisions, riotous crowds attacking shops, moratorium,
+shut banks and waiting queues. Was it possible for the whole system
+to break down through a shock to its confidence? Without any sense
+of incongruity the dignified pacification of the planet had given
+place in his mind to these more intimate possibilities. He heard a
+rustle behind him, and turned to face his wife.</p>
+<p>"Do you think," she asked, "that there is any chance of a
+shortage of food?"</p>
+<p>"If all the Mrs. Fabers in the world run and grab&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"Then every one must grab. I haven't much in the way of stores
+in the house."</p>
+<p>"H'm," said Mr. Britling, and reflected.... "I don't think we
+must buy stores now."</p>
+<p>"But if we are short."</p>
+<p>"It's the chances of war," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>He reflected. "Those who join a panic make a panic. After all,
+there is just as much food in the world as there was last month.
+And short of burning it the only way<a name="Page_197"></a> of
+getting rid of it is to eat it. And the harvests are good. Why
+begin a scramble at a groaning board?"</p>
+<p>"But people <i>are</i> scrambling! It would be
+awkward&mdash;with the children and everything&mdash;if we ran
+short."</p>
+<p>"We shan't. And anyhow, you mustn't begin hoarding, even if it
+means hardship."</p>
+<p>"Yes. But you won't like it if suddenly there's no sugar for
+your tea."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling ignored this personal application.</p>
+<p>"What is far more serious than a food shortage is the
+possibility of a money panic."</p>
+<p>He paced the lawn with her and talked. He said that even now
+very few people realised the flimsiness of the credit system by
+which the modern world was sustained. It was a huge growth of
+confidence, due very largely to the uninquiring indolence
+of&mdash;everybody. It was sound so long as mankind did, on the
+whole, believe in it; give only a sufficient loss of faith and it
+might suffer any sort of collapse. It might vanish
+altogether&mdash;as the credit system vanished at the breaking up
+of Italy by the Goths&mdash;and leave us nothing but tangible
+things, real property, possession nine points of the law, and that
+sort of thing. Did she remember that last novel of
+Gissing's?&mdash;"Veranilda," it was called. It was a picture of
+the world when there was no wealth at all except what one could
+carry hidden or guarded about with one. That sort of thing came to
+the Roman Empire slowly, in the course of lifetimes, but nowadays
+we lived in a rapider world&mdash;with flimsier institutions.
+Nobody knew the strength or the weakness of credit; nobody knew
+whether even the present shock might not send it smashing down....
+And then all the little life we had lived so far would roll
+away....</p>
+<p>Mrs. Britling, he noted, glanced ever and again at her sunlit
+house&mdash;there were new sunblinds, and she had been happy in her
+choice of a colour&mdash;and listened with a sceptical expression
+to this disquisition.</p>
+<a name="Page_198"></a>
+<p>"A few days ago," said Mr. Britling, trying to make things
+concrete for her, "you and I together were worth five-and-twenty
+thousand pounds. Now we don't know what we are worth; whether we
+have lost a thousand or ten thousand...."</p>
+<p>He examined his sovereign purse and announced he had six pounds.
+"What have you?"</p>
+<p>She had about eighteen pounds in the house.</p>
+<p>"We may have to get along with that for an indefinite time."</p>
+<p>"But the bank will open again presently," she said. "And people
+about here trust us."</p>
+<p>"Suppose they don't?"</p>
+<p>She did not trouble about the hypothesis. "And our investments
+will recover. They always do recover."</p>
+<p>"Everything may recover," he admitted. "But also nothing may
+recover. All this life of ours which has seemed so settled and
+secure&mdash;isn't secure. I have felt that we were fixed here and
+rooted&mdash;for all our lives. Suppose presently things sweep us
+out of it? It's a possibility we may have to face. I feel this
+morning as if two enormous gates had opened in our lives, like the
+gates that give upon an arena, gates giving on a
+darkness&mdash;through which anything might come. Even death.
+Suppose suddenly we were to see one of those great Zeppelins in the
+air, or hear the thunder of guns away towards the coast. And if a
+messenger came upon a bicycle telling us to leave everything and go
+inland...."</p>
+<p>"I see no reason why one should go out to meet things like
+that."</p>
+<p>"But there is no reason why one should not envisage
+them...."</p>
+<p>"The curious thing," said Mr. Britling, pursuing his examination
+of the matter, "is that, looking at these things as one does now,
+as things quite possible, they are not nearly so terrifying and
+devastating to the mind as they would have seemed&mdash;last week.
+I believe I should load<a name="Page_199"></a> you all into Gladys
+and start off westward with a kind of exhilaration...."</p>
+<p>She looked at him as if she would speak, and said nothing. She
+suspected him of hating his home and affecting to care for it out
+of politeness to her....</p>
+<p>"Perhaps mankind tries too much to settle down. Perhaps these
+stirrings up have to occur to save us from our disposition to
+stuffy comfort. There's the magic call of the unknown experience,
+of dangers and hardships. One wants to go. But unless some push
+comes one does not go. There is a spell that keeps one to the lair
+and the old familiar ways. Now I am afraid&mdash;and at the same
+time I feel that the spell is broken. The magic prison is suddenly
+all doors. You may call this ruin, bankruptcy, invasion, flight;
+they are doors out of habit and routine.... I have been doing
+nothing for so long, except idle things and discursive things."</p>
+<p>"I thought that you managed to be happy here. You have done a
+lot of work."</p>
+<p>"Writing is recording, not living. But now I feel suddenly that
+we are living intensely. It is as if the whole quality of life was
+changing. There are such times. There are times when the spirit of
+life changes altogether. The old world knew that better than we do.
+It made a distinction between weekdays and Sabbaths, and between
+feasts and fasts and days of devotion. That is just what has
+happened now. Week-day rules must be put aside. Before&mdash;oh!
+three days ago, competition was fair, it was fair and tolerable to
+get the best food one could and hold on to one's own. But that
+isn't right now. War makes a Sabbath, and we shut the shops. The
+banks are shut, and the world still feels as though Sunday was
+keeping on...."</p>
+<p>He saw his own way clear.</p>
+<p>"The scale has altered. It does not matter now in the least if
+we are ruined. It does not matter in the least if we have to live
+upon potatoes and run into debt for our<a name="Page_200"></a>
+rent. These now are the most incidental of things. A week ago they
+would have been of the first importance. Here we are face to face
+with the greatest catastrophe and the greatest opportunity in
+history. We have to plunge through catastrophe to opportunity.
+There is nothing to be done now in the whole world except to get
+the best out of this tremendous fusing up of all the settled things
+of life." He had got what he wanted. He left her standing upon the
+lawn and hurried back to his desk....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>When Mr. Britling, after a strenuous morning among high ideals,
+descended for lunch, he found Mr. Lawrence Carmine had come over to
+join him at that meal. Mr. Carmine was standing in the hall with
+his legs very wide apart reading <i>The Times</i> for the fourth
+time. "I can do no work," he said, turning round. "I can't fix my
+mind. I suppose we are going to war. I'd got so used to the war
+with Germany that I never imagined it would happen. Gods! what a
+bore it will be.... And Maxse and all those scaremongers
+cock-a-hoop and 'I told you so.' Damn these Germans!"</p>
+<p>He looked despondent and worried. He followed Mr. Britling
+towards the dining-room with his hands deep in his pockets.</p>
+<p>"It's going to be a tremendous thing," he said, after he had
+greeted Mrs. Britling and Hugh and Aunt Wilshire and Teddy, and
+seated himself at Mr. Britling's hospitable board. "It's going to
+upset everything. We don't begin to imagine all the mischief it is
+going to do."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was full of the heady draught of liberal optimism
+he had been brewing upstairs. "I am not sorry I have lived to see
+this war," he said. "It may be a tremendous catastrophe in one
+sense, but in another it is a huge step forward in human life. It
+is the end of forty years of evil suspense. It is crisis and
+solution."</p>
+<p>"I wish I could see it like that," said Mr. Carmine.</p>
+<a name="Page_201"></a>
+<p>"It is like a thaw&mdash;everything has been in a frozen
+confusion since that Jew-German Treaty of Berlin. And since
+1871."</p>
+<p>"Why not since Schleswig-Holstein?" said Mr. Carmine.</p>
+<p>"Why not? Or since the Treaty of Vienna?"</p>
+<p>"Or since&mdash;One might go back."</p>
+<p>"To the Roman Empire," said Hugh.</p>
+<p>"To the first conquest of all," said Teddy....</p>
+<p>"I couldn't work this morning," said Hugh. "I have been reading
+in the Encyclop&aelig;dia about races and religions in the
+Balkans.... It's very mixed."</p>
+<p>"So long as it could only be dealt with piecemeal," said Mr.
+Britling. "And that is just where the tremendous opportunity of
+this war comes in. Now everything becomes fluid. We can redraw the
+map of the world. A week ago we were all quarrelling bitterly about
+things too little for human impatience. Now suddenly we face an
+epoch. This is an epoch. The world is plastic for men to do what
+they will with it. This is the end and the beginning of an age.
+This is something far greater than the French Revolution or the
+Reformation.... And we live in it...."</p>
+<p>He paused impressively.</p>
+<p>"I wonder what will happen to Albania?" said Hugh, but his
+comment was disregarded.</p>
+<p>"War makes men bitter and narrow," said Mr. Carmine.</p>
+<p>"War narrowly conceived," said Mr. Britling. "But this is an
+indignant and generous war."</p>
+<p>They speculated about the possible intervention of the United
+States. Mr. Britling thought that the attack on Belgium demanded
+the intervention of every civilised power, that all the best
+instincts of America would be for intervention. "The more," he
+said, "the quicker."</p>
+<p>"It would be strange if the last power left out to mediate were
+to be China," said Mr. Carmine. "The one<a name="Page_202"></a>
+people in the world who really believe in peace.... I wish I had
+your confidence, Britling."</p>
+<p>For a time they contemplated a sort of Grand Inquest on Germany
+and militarism, presided over by the Wisdom of the East. Militarism
+was, as it were, to be buried as a suicide at four cross-roads,
+with a stake through its body to prevent any untimely
+resuscitation.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling was in a phase of imaginative release. Such a
+release was one of the first effects of the war upon many educated
+minds. Things that had seemed solid forever were visibly in flux;
+things that had seemed stone were alive. Every boundary, every
+government, was seen for the provisional thing it was. He talked of
+his World Congress meeting year by year, until it ceased to be a
+speculation and became a mere intelligent anticipation; he talked
+of the "manifest necessity" of a Supreme Court for the world. He
+beheld that vision at the Hague, but Mr. Carmine preferred Delhi or
+Samarkand or Alexandria or Nankin. "Let us get away from the
+delusion of Europe anyhow," said Mr. Carmine....</p>
+<p>As Mr. Britling had sat at his desk that morning and surveyed
+the stupendous vistas of possibility that war was opening, the
+catastrophe had taken on a more and more beneficial quality. "I
+suppose that it is only through such crises as these that the world
+can reconstruct itself," I said. And, on the whole that afternoon
+he was disposed to hope that the great military machine would not
+smash itself too easily. "We want the nations to feel the need of
+one another," he said. "Too brief a campaign might lead to a
+squabble for plunder. The Englishman has to learn his dependence on
+the Irishman, the Russian has to be taught the value of education
+and the friendship of the Pole.... Europe will now have to look to
+Asia, and recognise that Indians and Chinamem are also
+'white.'...<a name="Page_203"></a> But these lessons require time
+and stresses if they are to be learnt properly...."</p>
+<p>They discussed the possible duration of the war.</p>
+<p>Mr. Carmine thought it would be a long struggle; Mr. Britling
+thought that the Russians would be in Berlin by the next May. He
+was afraid they might get there before the end of the year. He
+thought that the Germans would beat out their strength upon the
+French and Belgian lines, and never be free to turn upon the
+Russian at all. He was sure they had underrated the strength and
+energy of the French and of ourselves. "The Russians meanwhile," he
+said, "will come on, slowly, steadily, inevitably...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>That day of vast anticipations drew out into the afternoon. It
+was a day&mdash;obsessed. It was the precursor of a relentless
+series of doomed and fettered days. There was a sense of enormous
+occurrences going on just out of sound and sight&mdash;behind the
+mask of Essex peacefulness. From this there was no escape. It made
+all other interests fitful. Games of Badminton were begun and
+abruptly truncated by the arrival of the evening papers;
+conversations started upon any topic whatever returned to the war
+by the third and fourth remark....</p>
+<p>After lunch Mr. Britling and Mr. Carmine went on talking.
+Nothing else was possible. They repeated things they had already
+said. They went into things more thoroughly. They sat still for a
+time, and then suddenly broke out with some new
+consideration....</p>
+<p>It had been their custom to play skat with Herr Heinrich, who
+had shown them the game very explicitly and thoroughly. But there
+was no longer any Herr Heinrich&mdash;and somehow German games were
+already out of fashion. The two philosophers admitted that they had
+already considered skat to be complicated without subtlety, and
+that its chief delight for them had been the pink<a name=
+"Page_204"></a> earnestness of Herr Heinrich, his inability to
+grasp their complete but tacit comprehension of its innocent
+strategy, and his invariable ill-success to bring off the coups
+that flashed before his imagination.</p>
+<p>He would survey the destructive counter-stroke with unconcealed
+surprise. He would verify his first impression by craning towards
+it and adjusting his glasses on his nose. He had a characteristic
+way of doing this with one stiff finger on either side of his
+sturdy nose.</p>
+<p>"It is very fortunate for you that you have played that card,"
+he would say, growing pinker and pinker with hasty cerebration. "Or
+else&mdash;yes"&mdash;a glance at his own cards&mdash;"it would
+have been altogether bad for you. I had taken only a very small
+risk.... Now I must&mdash;"</p>
+<p>He would reconsider his hand.</p>
+<p>"<i>Zo!</i>" he would say, dashing down a card....</p>
+<p>Well, he had gone and skat had gone. A countless multitude of
+such links were snapping that day between hundreds of thousands of
+English and German homes.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 9</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The imminence of war produced a peculiar exaltation in Aunt
+Wilshire. She developed a point of view that was entirely her
+own.</p>
+<p>It was Mr. Britling's habit, a habit he had set himself to
+acquire after much irritating experience, to disregard Aunt
+Wilshire. She was not, strictly speaking, his aunt; she was one of
+those distant cousins we find already woven into our lives when we
+attain to years of responsibility. She had been a presence in his
+father's household when Mr. Britling was a boy. Then she had been
+called "Jane," or "Cousin Jane," or "Your cousin Wilshire." It had
+been a kindly freak of Mr. Britling's to promote her to Aunty
+rank.</p>
+<p>She eked out a small inheritance by staying with relatives. Mr.
+Britling's earlier memories presented her as a<a name=
+"Page_205"></a> slender young woman of thirty, with a nose upon
+which small boys were forbidden to comment. Yet she commented upon
+it herself, and called his attention to its marked resemblance to
+that of the great Duke of Wellington. "He was, I am told," said
+Cousin Wilshire to the attentive youth, "a great friend of your
+great-grandmother's. At any rate, they were contemporaries. Since
+then this nose has been in the family. He would have been the last
+to draw a veil over it, but other times, other manners. 'Publish,'
+he said, 'and be damned.'"</p>
+<p>She had a knack of exasperating Mr. Britling's father, a knack
+which to a less marked degree she also possessed in relation to the
+son. But Mr. Britling senior never acquired the art of disregarding
+her. Her method&mdash;if one may call the natural expression of a
+personality a method&mdash;was an invincibly superior knowledge, a
+firm and ill-concealed belief that all statements made in her
+hearing were wrong and most of them absurd, and a manner calm,
+assured, restrained. She may have been born with it; it is on
+record that at the age of ten she was pronounced a singularly
+trying child. She may have been born with the air of thinking the
+doctor a muff and knowing how to manage all this business better.
+Mr. Britling had known her only in her ripeness. As a boy, he had
+enjoyed her confidences&mdash;about other people and the general
+neglect of her advice. He grew up rather to like her&mdash;most
+people rather liked her&mdash;and to attach a certain importance to
+her unattainable approval. She was sometimes kind, she was
+frequently absurd....</p>
+<p>With very little children she was quite wise and Jolly....</p>
+<p>So she circulated about a number of houses which at any rate
+always welcomed her coming. In the opening days of each visit she
+performed marvels of tact, and set a watch upon her lips. Then the
+demons of controversy and dignity would get the better of her. She
+would begin to correct, quietly but firmly, she would begin to
+disapprove<a name="Page_206"></a> of the tone and quality of her
+treatment. It was quite common for her visit to terminate in
+speechless rage both on the side of host and of visitor. The
+remarkable thing was that this speechless rage never endured.
+Though she could exasperate she could never offend. Always after an
+interval during which she was never mentioned, people began to
+wonder how Cousin Jane was getting on.... A tentative
+correspondence would begin, leading slowly up to a fresh
+invitation.</p>
+<p>She spent more time in Mr. Britling's house than in any other.
+There was a legend that she had "drawn out" his mind, and that she
+had "stood up" for him against his father. She had certainly
+contradicted quite a number of those unfavourable comments that
+fathers are wont to make about their sons. Though certainly she
+contradicted everything. And Mr. Britling hated to think of her
+knocking about alone in boarding-houses and hydropathic
+establishments with only the most casual chances for
+contradiction.</p>
+<p>Moreover, he liked to see her casting her eye over the morning
+paper. She did it with a manner as though she thought the
+terrestrial globe a great fool, and quite beyond the reach of
+advice. And as though she understood and was rather amused at the
+way in which the newspaper people tried to keep back the real facts
+of the case from her.</p>
+<p>And now she was scornfully entertained at the behaviour of
+everybody in the war crisis.</p>
+<p>She confided various secrets of state to the elder of the
+younger Britlings&mdash;preferably when his father was within
+earshot.</p>
+<p>"None of these things they are saying about the war," she said,
+"really matter in the slightest degree. It is all about a spoilt
+carpet and nothing else in the world&mdash;a madman and a spoilt
+carpet. If people had paid the slightest attention to common sense
+none of this war would have happened. The thing was perfectly well
+known.<a name="Page_207"></a> He was a delicate child, difficult to
+rear and given to screaming fits. Consequently he was never
+crossed, allowed to do everything. Nobody but his grandmother had
+the slightest influence with him. And she prevented him spoiling
+this carpet as completely as he wished to do. The story is
+perfectly well known. It was at Windsor&mdash;at the age of eight.
+After that he had but one thought: war with England....</p>
+<p>"Everybody seemed surprised," she said suddenly at tea to Mr.
+Carmine. "I at least am not surprised. I am only surprised it did
+not come sooner. If any one had asked me I could have told them,
+three years, five years ago."</p>
+<p>The day was one of flying rumours, Germany was said to have
+declared war on Italy, and to have invaded Holland as well as
+Belgium.</p>
+<p>"They'll declare war against the moon next!" said Aunt
+Wilshire.</p>
+<p>"And send a lot of Zeppelins," said the smallest boy. "Herr
+Heinrich told us they can fly thousands of miles."</p>
+<p>"He will go on declaring war until there is nothing left to
+declare war against. That is exactly what he has always done. Once
+started he cannot desist. Often he has had to be removed from the
+dinner-table for fear of injury. <i>Now</i>, it is ultimatums."</p>
+<p>She was much pleased by a headline in the <i>Daily Express</i>
+that streamed right across the page: "The Mad Dog of Europe."
+Nothing else, she said, had come so near her feelings about the
+war.</p>
+<p>"Mark my words," said Aunt Wilshire in her most impressive
+tones. "He is insane. It will be proved to be so. He will end his
+days in an asylum&mdash;as a lunatic. I have felt it myself for
+years and said so in private.... Knowing what I did.... To such
+friends as I could trust not to misunderstand me.... Now at least I
+can speak out.</p>
+<p>"With his moustaches turned up!" exclaimed Aunt<a name=
+"Page_208"></a> Wilshire after an interval of accumulation....
+"They say he has completely lost the use of the joint in his left
+arm, he carries it stiff like a Punch and Judy&mdash;and he wants
+to conquer Europe.... While his grandmother lived there was some
+one to keep him in order. He stood in Awe of her. He hated her, but
+he did not dare defy her. Even his uncle had some influence. Now,
+nothing restrains him.</p>
+<p>"A double-headed mad dog," said Aunt Wilshire. "Him and his
+eagles!... A man like that ought never to have been allowed to make
+a war.... Not even a little war.... If he had been put under
+restraint when I said so, none of these things would have happened.
+But, of course I am nobody.... It was not considered worth
+attending to."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 10</h4>
+<br>
+<p>One remarkable aspect of the English attitude towards the war
+was the disposition to treat it as a monstrous joke. It is a
+disposition traceable in a vast proportion of the British
+literature of the time. In spite of violence, cruelty, injustice,
+and the vast destruction and still vaster dangers of the struggles,
+that disposition held. The English mind refused flatly to see
+anything magnificent or terrible in the German attack, or to regard
+the German Emperor or the Crown Prince as anything more than
+figures of fun. From first to last their conception of the enemy
+was an overstrenuous, foolish man, red with effort, with protruding
+eyes and a forced frightfulness of demeanour. That he might be
+tremendously lethal did not in the least obscure the fact that he
+was essentially ridiculous. And if as the war went on the joke grew
+grimmer, still it remained a joke. The German might make a desert
+of the world; that could not alter the British conviction that he
+was making a fool of himself.</p>
+<p>And this disposition kept coming to the surface throughout the
+afternoon, now in a casual allusion, now in some<a name=
+"Page_209"></a> deliberate jest. The small boys had discovered the
+goose step, and it filled their little souls with amazement and
+delight. That human beings should consent to those ridiculous paces
+seemed to them almost incredibly funny. They tried it themselves,
+and then set out upon a goose-step propaganda. Letty and Cissie had
+come up to the Dower House for tea and news, and they were enrolled
+with Teddy and Hugh. The six of them, chuckling and swaying,
+marched, in vast scissor strides across the lawn. "Left," cried
+Hugh. "Left."</p>
+<p>"Toes <i>out</i> more," said Mr. Lawrence Carmine.</p>
+<p>"Keep stiffer," said the youngest Britling.</p>
+<p>"Watch the Zeppelins and look proud," said Hugh. "With the chest
+out. <i>Zo!</i>"</p>
+<p>Mrs. Britling was so much amused that she went in for her
+camera, and took a snapshot of the detachment. It was a very
+successful snapshot, and a year later Mr. Britling was to find a
+print of it among his papers, and recall the sunshine and the
+merriment....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 11</h4>
+<br>
+<p>That night brought the British declaration of war against
+Germany. To nearly every Englishman that came as a matter of
+course, and it is one of the most wonderful facts in history that
+the Germans were surprised by it. When Mr. Britling, as a sample
+Englishman, had said that there would never be war between Germany
+and England, he had always meant that it was inconceivable to him
+that Germany should ever attack Belgium or France. If Germany had
+been content to fight a merely defensive war upon her western
+frontier and let Belgium alone, there would scarcely have been such
+a thing as a war party in Great Britain. But the attack upon
+Belgium, the westward thrust, made the whole nation flame
+unanimously into war. It settled a question that was in open debate
+up to the very outbreak of the conflict. Up to the last the English
+had cherished the idea that in Germany,<a name="Page_210"></a> just
+as in England, the mass of people were kindly, pacific, and
+detached. That had been the English mistake. Germany was really and
+truly what Germany had been professing to be for forty years, a War
+State. With a sigh&mdash;and a long-forgotten thrill&mdash;England
+roused herself to fight. Even now she still roused herself
+sluggishly. It was going to be an immense thing, but just how
+immense it was going to be no one in England had yet imagined.</p>
+<p>Countless men that day whom Fate had marked for death and wounds
+stared open-mouthed at the news, and smiled with the excitement of
+the headlines, not dreaming that any of these things would come
+within three hundred miles of them. What was war to Matching's
+Easy&mdash;to all the Matching's Easies great and small that make
+up England? The last home that was ever burnt by an enemy within a
+hundred miles of Matching's Easy was burnt by the Danes rather more
+than a thousand years ago.... And the last trace of those
+particular Danes in England were certain horny scraps of indurated
+skin under the heads of the nails in the door of St. Clement Danes
+in London....</p>
+<p>Now again, England was to fight in a war which was to light
+fires in England and bring death to English people on English soil.
+There were inconceivable ideas in August, 1914. Such things must
+happen before they can be comprehended as possible.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 12</h4>
+<br>
+<p>This story is essentially the history of the opening and of the
+realisation of the Great War as it happened to one small group of
+people in Essex, and more particularly as it happened to one human
+brain. It came at first to all these people in a spectacular
+manner, as a thing happening dramatically and internationally, as a
+show, as something in the newspapers, something in the character of
+an historical epoch rather than a personal experience; only by slow
+degrees did it and its consequences invade the common<a name=
+"Page_211"></a> texture of English life. If this story could be
+represented by sketches or pictures the central figure would be Mr.
+Britling, now sitting at his desk by day or by night and writing
+first at his tract "And Now War Ends" and then at other things, now
+walking about his garden or in Claverings park or going to and fro
+in London, in his club reading the ticker or in his hall reading
+the newspaper, with ideas and impressions continually clustering,
+expanding, developing more and more abundantly in his mind,
+arranging themselves, reacting upon one another, building
+themselves into generalisations and conclusions....</p>
+<p>All Mr. Britling's mental existence was soon threaded on the
+war. His more or less weekly <i>Times</i> leader became
+dissertations upon the German point of view; his reviews of books
+and Literary Supplement articles were all oriented more and more
+exactly to that one supreme fact....</p>
+<p>It was rare that he really seemed to be seeing the war; few
+people saw it; for most of the world it came as an illimitable
+multitude of incoherent, loud, and confusing impressions. But all
+the time he was at least doing his utmost to see the war, to
+simplify it and extract the essence of it until it could be
+apprehended as something epic and explicable, as a stateable
+issue....</p>
+<p>Most typical picture of all would be Mr. Britling writing in a
+little circle of orange lamplight, with the blinds of his room open
+for the sake of the moonlight, but the window shut to keep out the
+moths that beat against it. Outside would be the moon and the high
+summer sky and the old church tower dim above the black trees half
+a mile away, with its clock&mdash;which Mr. Britling heard at night
+but never noted by day&mdash;beating its way round the slow
+semicircle of the nocturnal hours. He had always hated conflict and
+destruction, and felt that war between civilised states was the
+quintessential expression of human failure, it was a stupidity that
+stopped progress and all the free variation of humanity, a thousand
+times he had declared<a name="Page_212"></a> it impossible, but
+even now with his country fighting he was still far from realising
+that this was a thing that could possibly touch him more than
+intellectually. He did not really believe with his eyes and
+finger-tips and backbone that murder, destruction, and agony on a
+scale monstrous beyond precedent was going on in the same world as
+that which slumbered outside the black ivy and silver shining
+window-sill that framed his peaceful view.</p>
+<p>War had not been a reality of the daily life of England for more
+than a thousand years. The mental habit of the nation for fifty
+generations was against its emotional recognition. The English were
+the spoilt children of peace. They had never been wholly at war for
+three hundred years, and for over eight hundred years they had not
+fought for life against a foreign power. Spain and France had
+threatened in turn, but never even crossed the seas. It is true
+that England had had her civil dissensions and had made wars and
+conquests in every part of the globe and established an immense
+empire, but that last, as Mr. Britling had told Mr. Direck, was "an
+excursion." She had just sent out younger sons and surplus people,
+emigrants and expeditionary forces. Her own soil had never seen any
+successful foreign invasion; her homeland, the bulk of her
+households, her general life, had gone on untouched by these
+things. Nineteen people out of twenty, the middle class and most of
+the lower class, knew no more of the empire than they did of the
+Argentine Republic or the Italian Renaissance. It did not concern
+them. War that calls upon every man and threatens every life in the
+land, war of the whole national being, was a thing altogether
+outside English experience and the scope of the British
+imagination. It was still incredible, it was still outside the
+range of Mr. Britling's thoughts all through the tremendous onrush
+and check of the German attack in the west that opened the great
+war. Through those two months he was, as it were, a more and more
+excited spectator at a show, a show like a baseball match,<a name=
+"Page_213"></a> a spectator with money on the event, rather than a
+really participating citizen of a nation thoroughly at war....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 13</h4>
+<br>
+<p>After the jolt of the food panic and a brief, financial scare,
+the vast inertia of everyday life in England asserted itself. When
+the public went to the banks for the new paper money, the banks
+tendered gold&mdash;apologetically. The supply of the new notes was
+very insufficient, and there was plenty of gold. After the first
+impression that a universal catastrophe had happened there was an
+effect as if nothing had happened.</p>
+<p>Shops re-opened after the Bank Holiday, in a tentative spirit
+that speedily became assurance; people went about their business
+again, and the war, so far as the mass of British folk were
+concerned, was for some weeks a fever of the mind and intelligence
+rather than a physical and personal actuality. There was a keen
+demand for news, and for a time there was very little news. The
+press did its best to cope with this immense occasion. Led by the
+<i>Daily Express</i>, all the halfpenny newspapers adopted a new
+and more resonant sort of headline, the streamer, a band of
+emphatic type that ran clean across the page and announced
+victories or disconcerting happenings. They did this every day,
+whether there was a great battle or the loss of a trawler to
+announce, and the public mind speedily adapted itself to the new
+pitch.</p>
+<p>There was no invitation from the government and no organisation
+for any general participation in war. People talked unrestrictedly;
+every one seemed to be talking; they waved flags and displayed much
+vague willingness to do something. Any opportunity of service was
+taken very eagerly. Lord Kitchener was understood to have demanded
+five hundred thousand men; the War Office arrangements for
+recruiting, arrangements conceived on a scale altogether too small,
+were speedily overwhelmed by a rush of willing young men. The flow
+had to be checked<a name="Page_214"></a> by raising the physical
+standard far above the national average, and recruiting died down
+to manageable proportions. There was a quite genuine belief that
+the war might easily be too exclusively considered; that for the
+great mass of people it was a disturbing and distracting rather
+than a vital interest. The phase "Business as Usual" ran about the
+world, and the papers abounded in articles in which going on as
+though there was no war at all was demonstrated to be the truest
+form of patriotism. "Leave things to Kitchener" was another
+watchword with a strong appeal to the national quality. "Business
+as usual during Alterations to the Map of Europe" was the
+advertisement of one cheerful barber, widely quoted....</p>
+<p>Hugh was at home all through August. He had thrown up his rooms
+in London with his artistic ambitions, and his father was making
+all the necessary arrangements for him to follow Cardinal to
+Cambridge. Meanwhile Hugh was taking up his scientific work where
+he had laid it down. He gave a reluctant couple of hours in the
+afternoon to the mysteries of Little-go Greek, and for the rest of
+his time he was either working at mathematics and mathematical
+physics or experimenting in a little upstairs room that had been
+carved out of the general space of the barn. It was only at the
+very end of August that it dawned upon him or Mr. Britling that the
+war might have more than a spectacular and sympathetic appeal for
+him. Hitherto contemporary history had happened without his
+personal intervention. He did not see why it should not continue to
+happen with the same detachment. The last elections&mdash;and a
+general election is really the only point at which the life of the
+reasonable Englishman becomes in any way public&mdash;had happened
+four years ago, when he was thirteen.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 14</h4>
+<br>
+<p>For a time it was believed in Matching's Easy that the German
+armies had been defeated and very largely<a name="Page_215"></a>
+destroyed at Li&egrave;ge. It was a mistake not confined to
+Matching's Easy.</p>
+<p>The first raiding attack was certainly repulsed with heavy
+losses, and so were the more systematic assaults on August the
+sixth and seventh. After that the news from Li&egrave;ge became
+uncertain, but it was believed in England that some or all of the
+forts were still holding out right up to the German entry into
+Brussels. Meanwhile the French were pushing into their lost
+provinces, occupying Altkirch, Mulhausen and Saarburg; the Russians
+were invading Bukovina and East Prussia; the <i>Goeben</i>, the
+<i>Breslau</i> and the <i>Panther</i> had been sunk by the
+newspapers in an imaginary battle in the Mediterranean, and
+Togoland was captured by the French and British. Neither the force
+nor the magnitude of the German attack through Belgium was
+appreciated by the general mind, and it was possible for Mr.
+Britling to reiterate his fear that the war would be over too soon,
+long before the full measure of its possible benefits could be
+secured. But these apprehensions were unfounded; the lessons the
+war had in store for Mr. Britling were far more drastic than
+anything he was yet able to imagine even in his most exalted
+moods.</p>
+<p>He resisted the intimations of the fall of Brussels and the
+appearance of the Germans at Dinant. The first real check to his
+excessive anticipations of victory for the Allies came with the
+sudden reappearance of Mr. Direck in a state of astonishment and
+dismay at Matching's Easy. He wired from the Strand office, "Coming
+to tell you about things," and arrived on the heels of his
+telegram.</p>
+<p>He professed to be calling upon Mr. and Mrs. Britling, and to a
+certain extent he was; but he had a quick eye for the door or
+windows; his glance roved irrelevantly as he talked. A faint
+expectation of Cissie came in with him and hovered about him, as
+the scent of violets follows the flower.</p>
+<p>He was, however, able to say quite a number of things<a name=
+"Page_216"></a> before Mr. Britling's natural tendency to do the
+telling asserted itself.</p>
+<p>"My word," said Mr. Direck, "but this is <i>some</i> war. It is
+going on regardless of every decent consideration. As an American
+citizen I naturally expected to be treated with some respect, war
+or no war. That expectation has not been realised.... Europe is
+dislocated.... You have no idea here yet how completely Europe is
+dislocated....</p>
+<p>"I came to Europe in a perfectly friendly spirit&mdash;and I
+must say I am surprised. Practically I have been thrown out, neck
+and crop. All my luggage is lost. Away at some one-horse junction
+near the Dutch frontier that I can't even learn the name of.
+There's joy in some German home, I guess, over my shirts; they were
+real good shirts. This tweed suit I have is all the wardrobe I've
+got in the world. All my money&mdash;good American
+notes&mdash;well, they laughed at them. And when I produced English
+gold they suspected me of being English and put me under arrest....
+I can assure you that the English are most unpopular in Germany at
+the present time, thoroughly unpopular.... Considering that they
+are getting exactly what they were asking for, these Germans are
+really remarkably annoyed.... Well, I had to get the American
+consul to advance me money, and I've done more waiting about and
+irregular fasting and travelling on an empty stomach and viewing
+the world, so far as it was permitted, from railway
+sidings&mdash;for usually they made us pull the blinds down when
+anything important was on the track&mdash;than any cow that ever
+came to Chicago.... I was handed as freight&mdash;low grade
+freight.... It doesn't bear recalling."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck assumed as grave and gloomy an expression as the
+facial habits of years would permit.</p>
+<p>"I tell you I never knew there was such a thing as war until
+this happened to me. In America we don't know there is such a
+thing. It's like pestilence and famine;<a name="Page_217"></a>
+something in the story books. We've forgotten it for anything real.
+There's just a few grandfathers go around talking about it. Judge
+Holmes and sage old fellows like him. Otherwise it's just a game
+the kids play at.... And then suddenly here's everybody running
+about in the streets&mdash;hating and threatening&mdash;and nice
+old gentlemen with white moustaches and fathers of families
+scheming and planning to burn houses and kill and hurt and terrify.
+And nice young women, too, looking for an Englishman to spit at; I
+tell you I've been within range and very uncomfortable several
+times.... And what one can't believe is that they are really doing
+these things. There's a little village called Vis&eacute; near the
+Dutch frontier; some old chap got fooling there with a
+fowling-piece; and they've wiped it out. Shot the people by the
+dozen, put them out in rows three deep and shot them, and burnt the
+place. Short of scalping, Red Indians couldn't have done worse.
+Respectable German soldiers....</p>
+<p>"No one in England really seems to have any suspicion what is
+going on in Belgium. You hear stories&mdash;People tell them in
+Holland. It takes your breath away. They have set out just to cow
+those Belgians. They have started in to be deliberately frightful.
+You do not begin to understand.... Well.... Outrages. The sort of
+outrages Americans have never heard of. That one doesn't speak
+of.... Well.... Rape.... They have been raping women for
+disciplinary purposes on tables in the market-place of
+Li&egrave;ge. Yes, sir. It's a fact. I was told it by a man who had
+just come out of Belgium. Knew the people, knew the place, knew
+everything. People over here do not seem to realise that those
+women are the same sort of women that you might find in Chester or
+Yarmouth, or in Matching's Easy for the matter of that. They still
+seem to think that Continental women are a different sort of
+women&mdash;more amenable to that sort of treatment. They seem to
+think there is some special Providential law against such things
+happening to English<a name="Page_218"></a> people. And it's within
+two hundred miles of you&mdash;even now. And as far as I can see
+there's precious little to prevent it coming nearer...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling thought there were a few little obstacles.</p>
+<p>"I've seen the new British army drilling in London, Mr.
+Britling. I don't know if you have. I saw a whole battalion. And
+they hadn't got half-a-dozen uniforms, and not a single rifle to
+the whole battalion.</p>
+<p>"You don't begin to realise in England what you are up against.
+You have no idea what it means to be in a country where everybody,
+the women, the elderly people, the steady middle-aged men, are
+taking war as seriously as business. They haven't the slightest
+compunction. I don't know what Germany was like before the war, I
+had hardly gotten out of my train before the war began; but Germany
+to-day is one big armed camp. It's all crawling with soldiers. And
+every soldier has his uniform and his boots and his arms and his
+kit.</p>
+<p>"And they're as sure of winning as if they had got London now.
+They mean to get London. They're cocksure they are going to walk
+through Belgium, cocksure they will get to Paris by Sedan day, and
+then they are going to destroy your fleet with Zeppelins and
+submarines and make a dash across the Channel. They say it's
+England they are after, in this invasion of Belgium. They'll just
+down France by the way. They say they've got guns to bombard Dover
+from Calais. They make a boast of it. They know for certain you
+can't arm your troops. They know you can't turn out ten thousand
+rifles a week. They come and talk to any one in the trains, and
+explain just how your defeat is going to be managed. It's just as
+though they were talking of rounding up cattle."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling said they would soon be disillusioned.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck, with the confidence of his authentic observations,
+remarked after a perceptible interval, "I wonder how."</p>
+<a name="Page_219"></a>
+<p>He reverted to the fact that had most struck upon his
+imagination.</p>
+<p>"Grown-up people, ordinary intelligent experienced people,
+taking war seriously, talking of punishing England; it's a
+revelation. A sort of solemn enthusiasm. High and low....</p>
+<p>"And the trainloads of men and the trainloads of guns...."</p>
+<p>"Li&egrave;ge," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Li&egrave;ge was just a scratch on the paint," said Mr. Direck.
+"A few thousand dead, a few score thousand dead, doesn't
+matter&mdash;not a red cent to them. There's a man arrived at the
+Cecil who saw them marching into Brussels. He sat at table with me
+at lunch yesterday. All day it went on, a vast unending river of
+men in grey. Endless waggons, endless guns, the whole manhood of a
+nation and all its stuff, marching....</p>
+<p>"I thought war," said Mr. Direck, "was a thing when most people
+stood about and did the shouting, and a sort of special team did
+the fighting. Well, Germany isn't fighting like that.... I confess
+it, I'm scared.... It's the very biggest thing on record; it's the
+very limit in wars.... I dreamt last night of a grey flood washing
+everything in front of it. You and me&mdash;and Miss
+Corner&mdash;curious thing, isn't it? that she came into
+it&mdash;were scrambling up a hill higher and higher, with that
+flood pouring after us. Sort of splashing into a foam of faces and
+helmets and bayonets&mdash;and clutching hands&mdash;and red
+stuff.... Well, Mr. Britling, I admit I'm a little bit overwrought
+about it, but I can assure you you don't begin to realise in
+England what it is you've butted against...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 15</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Cissie did not come up to the Dower House that afternoon, and so
+Mr. Direck, after some vague and transparent excuses, made his way
+to the cottage.</p>
+<a name="Page_220"></a>
+<p>Here his report become even more impressive. Teddy sat on the
+writing desk beside the typewriter and swung his legs slowly. Letty
+brooded in the armchair. Cissie presided over certain limited
+crawling operations of the young heir.</p>
+<p>"They could have the equal of the whole British Army killed
+three times over and scarcely know it had happened. They're
+<i>all</i> in it. It's a whole country in arms."</p>
+<p>Teddy nodded thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>"There's our fleet," said Letty.</p>
+<p>"Well, <i>that</i> won't save Paris, will it?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck didn't, he declared, want to make disagreeable talk,
+but this was a thing people in England had to face. He felt like
+one of them himself&mdash;"naturally." He'd sort of hurried home to
+them&mdash;it was just like hurrying home&mdash;to tell them of the
+tremendous thing that was going to hit them. He felt like a man in
+front of a flood, a great grey flood. He couldn't hide what he had
+been thinking. "Where's our army?" asked Letty suddenly.</p>
+<p>"Lost somewhere in France," said Teddy. "Like a needle in a
+bottle of hay."</p>
+<p>"What I keep on worrying at is this," Mr. Direck resumed.
+"Suppose they did come, suppose somehow they scrambled over, sixty
+or seventy thousand men perhaps."</p>
+<p>"Every man would turn out and take a shot at them," said
+Letty.</p>
+<p>"But there's no rifles!"</p>
+<p>"There's shot guns."</p>
+<p>"That's exactly what I'm afraid of," said Mr. Direck. "They'd
+massacre....</p>
+<p>"You may be the bravest people on earth," said Mr. Direck, "but
+if you haven't got arms and the other chaps have&mdash;you're just
+as if you were sheep."</p>
+<p>He became gloomily pensive.</p>
+<p>He roused himself to describe his experiences at some length,
+and the extraordinary disturbance of his mind.<a name=
+"Page_221"></a> He related more particularly his attempts to see
+the sights of Cologne during the stir of mobilisation. After a time
+his narrative flow lost force, and there was a general feeling that
+he ought to be left alone with Cissie. Teddy had a letter that must
+be posted; Letty took the infant to crawl on the mossy stones under
+the pear tree. Mr. Direck leant against the window-sill and became
+silent for some moments after the door had closed on Letty.</p>
+<p>"As for you, Cissie," he began at last, "I'm anxious. I'm real
+anxious. I wish you'd let me throw the mantle of Old Glory over
+you."</p>
+<p>He looked at her earnestly.</p>
+<p>"Old Glory?" asked Cissie.</p>
+<p>"Well&mdash;the Stars and Stripes. I want you to be able to
+claim American citizenship&mdash;in certain eventualities. It
+wouldn't be so very difficult. All the world over, Cissie,
+Americans are respected.... Nobody dares touch an American citizen.
+We are&mdash;an inviolate people."</p>
+<p>He paused. "But how?" asked Cissie.</p>
+<p>"It would be perfectly easy&mdash;perfectly."</p>
+<p>"How?"</p>
+<p>"Just marry an American citizen," said Mr. Direck, with his face
+beaming with ingenuous self-approval. "Then you'd be safe, and I'd
+not have to worry."</p>
+<p>"Because we're in for a stiff war!" cried Cissie, and Direck
+perceived he had blundered.</p>
+<p>"Because we may be invaded!" she said, and Mr. Direck's sense of
+error deepened.</p>
+<p>"I vow&mdash;" she began.</p>
+<p>"No!" cried Mr. Direck, and held out a hand.</p>
+<p>There was a moment of crisis.</p>
+<p>"Never will I desert my country&mdash;while she is at war," said
+Cissie, reducing her first fierce intention, and adding as though
+she regretted her concession, "Anyhow."</p>
+<p>"Then it's up to me to end the war, Cissie," said Mr. Direck,
+trying to get her back to a less spirited attitude.</p>
+<p>But Cissie wasn't to be got back so easily. The war<a name=
+"Page_222"></a> was already beckoning to them in the cottage, and
+drawing them down from the auditorium into the arena.</p>
+<p>"This is the rightest war in history," she said. "If I was an
+American I should be sorry to be one now and to have to stand out
+of it. I wish I was a man now so that I could do something for all
+the decency and civilisation the Germans have outraged. I can't
+understand how any man can be content to keep out of this, and
+watch Belgium being destroyed. It is like looking on at a murder.
+It is like watching a dog killing a kitten...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck's expression was that of a man who is suddenly shown
+strange lights upon the world.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 16</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling found Mr. Direck's talk very indigestible.</p>
+<p>He was parting very reluctantly from his dream of a disastrous
+collapse of German imperialism, of a tremendous, decisive
+demonstration of the inherent unsoundness of militarist monarchy,
+to be followed by a world conference of chastened but hopeful
+nations, and&mdash;the Millennium. He tried now to think that Mr.
+Direck had observed badly and misconceived what he saw. An
+American, unused to any sort of military occurrences, might easily
+mistake tens of thousands for millions, and the excitement of a few
+commercial travellers for the enthusiasm of a united people. But
+the newspapers now, with a kindred reluctance, were beginning to
+qualify, bit by bit, their first representation of the German
+attack through Belgium as a vast and already partly thwarted parade
+of incompetence. The Germans, he gathered, were being continually
+beaten in Belgium; but just as continually they advanced. Each
+fresh newspaper name he looked up on the map marked an oncoming
+tide. Alost&mdash;Charleroi. Farther east the French were
+retreating from the Saales Pass. Surely the British, who had now
+been in France for a fortnight, would presently be
+manifest,<a name="Page_223"></a> stemming the onrush; somewhere
+perhaps in Brabant or East Flanders. It gave Mr. Britling an
+unpleasant night to hear at Claverings that the French were very
+ill-equipped; had no good modern guns either at Lille or Maubeuge,
+were short of boots and equipment generally, and rather depressed
+already at the trend of things. Mr. Britling dismissed this as
+pessimistic talk, and built his hopes on the still invisible
+British army, hovering somewhere&mdash;</p>
+<p>He would sit over the map of Belgium, choosing where he would
+prefer to have the British hover....</p>
+<p>Namur fell. The place names continued to shift southward and
+westward. The British army or a part of it came to light abruptly
+at Mons. It had been fighting for thirty-eight hours and defeating
+enormously superior forces of the enemy. That was reassuring until
+a day or so later "the Cambray&mdash;Le Cateau line" made Mr.
+Britling realise that the victorious British had recoiled five and
+twenty miles....</p>
+<p>And then came the Sunday of <i>The Times</i> telegram, which
+spoke of a "retreating and a broken army." Mr. Britling did not see
+this, but Mr. Manning brought over the report of it in a state of
+profound consternation. Things, he said, seemed to be about as bad
+as they could be. The English were retreating towards the coast and
+in much disorder. They were "in the air" and already separated from
+the Trench. They had narrowly escaped "a Sedan" under the
+fortifications of Maubeuge.... Mr. Britling was stunned. He went to
+his study and stared helplessly at maps. It was as if David had
+flung his pebble&mdash;and missed!</p>
+<p>But in the afternoon Mr. Manning telephoned to comfort his
+friend. A reassuring despatch from General French had been
+published and&mdash;all was well&mdash;practically&mdash;and the
+British had been splendid. They had been fighting continuously for
+several days round and about Mons; they had been attacked at odds
+of six to one, and<a name="Page_224"></a> they had repulsed and
+inflicted enormous losses on the enemy. They had established an
+incontestable personal superiority over the Germans. The Germans
+had been mown down in heaps; the British had charged through their
+cavalry like charging through paper. So at last and very gloriously
+for the British, British and German had met in battle. After the
+hard fighting of the 26th about Landrecies, the British had been
+comparatively unmolested, reinforcements covering double the losses
+had joined them and the German advance was definitely checked ...
+Mr. Britling's mind swung back to elation. He took down the entire
+despatch from Mr. Manning's dictation, and ran out with it into the
+garden where Mrs. Britling, with an unwonted expression of anxiety,
+was presiding over the teas of the usual casual Sunday
+gathering.... The despatch was read aloud twice over. After that
+there was hockey and high spirits, and then Mr. Britling went up to
+his study to answer a letter from Mrs. Harrowdean, the first letter
+that had come from her since their breach at the outbreak of the
+war, and which he was now in a better mood to answer than he had
+been hitherto.</p>
+<p>She had written ignoring his silence and absence, or rather
+treating it as if it were an incident of no particular importance.
+Apparently she had not called upon the patient and devoted Oliver
+as she had threatened; at any rate, there were no signs of Oliver
+in her communication. But she reproached Mr. Britling for deserting
+her, and she clamoured for his presence and for kind and
+strengthening words. She was, she said, scared by this war. She was
+only a little thing, and it was all too dreadful, and there was not
+a soul in the world to hold her hand, at least no one who
+understood in the slightest degree how she felt. (But why was not
+Oliver holding her hand?) She was like a child left alone in the
+dark. It was perfectly horrible the way that people were being kept
+in the dark. The stories one heard, "<i>often from quite
+trustworthy sources</i>," were enough to depress and terrify
+any<a name="Page_225"></a> one. Battleship after battleship had
+been sunk by German torpedoes, a thing kept secret from us for no
+earthly reason, and Prince Louis of Battenberg had been discovered
+to be a spy and had been sent to the Tower. Haldane too was a spy.
+Our army in France had been "practically <i>sold</i>" by the
+French. Almost all the French generals were in German pay. The
+censorship and the press were keeping all this back, but what good
+was it to keep it back? It was folly not to trust people! But it
+was all too dreadful for a poor little soul whose only desire was
+to live happily. Why didn't he come along to her and make her feel
+she had protecting arms round her? She couldn't think in the
+daytime: she couldn't sleep at night....</p>
+<p>Then she broke away into the praises of serenity. Never had she
+thought so much of his beautiful "Silent Places" as she did now.
+How she longed to take refuge in some such dreamland from violence
+and treachery and foolish rumours! She was weary of every reality.
+She wanted to fly away into some secret hiding-place and cultivate
+her simple garden there&mdash;as Voltaire had done.... Sometimes at
+night she was afraid to undress. She imagined the sound of guns,
+she imagined landings and frightful scouts "in masks" rushing
+inland on motor bicycles....</p>
+<p>It was an ill-timed letter. The nonsense about Prince Louis of
+Battenberg and Lord Haldane and the torpedoed battleships annoyed
+him extravagantly. He had just sufficient disposition to believe
+such tales as to find their importunity exasperating. The idea of
+going over to Pyecrafts to spend his days in comforting a timid
+little dear obsessed by such fears, attracted him not at all. He
+had already heard enough adverse rumours at Claverings to make him
+thoroughly uncomfortable. He had been doubting whether after all
+his "Examination of War" was really much less of a futility than
+"And Now War Ends"; his mind was full of a sense of
+incomplete<a name="Page_226"></a> statements and unsubstantial
+arguments. He was indeed in a state of extreme intellectual worry.
+He was moreover extraordinarily out of love with Mrs. Harrowdean.
+Never had any affection in the whole history of Mr. Britling's
+heart collapsed so swiftly and completely. He was left incredulous
+of ever having cared for her at all. Probably he hadn't. Probably
+the whole business had been deliberate illusion from first to last.
+The "dear little thing" business, he felt, was all very well as a
+game of petting, but times were serious now, and a woman of her
+intelligence should do something better than wallow in fears and
+elaborate a winsome feebleness. A very unnecessary and tiresome
+feebleness. He came almost to the pitch of writing that to her.</p>
+<p>The despatch from General French put him into a kindlier frame
+of mind. He wrote instead briefly but affectionately. As a
+gentleman should. "How could you doubt our fleet or our army?" was
+the gist of his letter. He ignored completely every suggestion of a
+visit to Pyecrafts that her letter had conveyed. He pretended that
+it had contained nothing of the sort.... And with that she passed
+out of his mind again under the stress of more commanding
+interests....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling's mood of relief did not last through the week. The
+defeated Germans continued to advance. Through a week of deepening
+disillusionment the main tide of battle rolled back steadily
+towards Paris. Lille was lost without a struggle. It was lost with
+mysterious ease.... The next name to startle Mr. Britling as he sat
+with newspaper and atlas following these great events was
+Compi&egrave;gne. "Here!" Manifestly the British were still in
+retreat. Then the Germans were in possession of Laon and Rheims and
+still pressing south. Maubeuge surrounded and cut off for some
+days, had apparently fallen....</p>
+<p>It was on Sunday, September the sixth, that the final
+capitulation of Mr. Britling's facile optimism occurred.</p>
+<a name="Page_227"></a>
+<p>He stood in the sunshine reading the <i>Observer</i> which the
+gardener's boy had just brought from the May Tree. He had spread it
+open on a garden table under the blue cedar, and father and son
+were both reading it, each as much as the other would let him.
+There was fresh news from France, a story of further German
+advances, fighting at Senlis&mdash;"But that is quite close to
+Paris!"&mdash;and the appearance of German forces at
+Nogent-sur-Seine. "Sur Seine!" cried Mr. Britling. "But where can
+that be? South of the Marne? Or below Paris perhaps?"</p>
+<p>It was not marked upon the <i>Observer's</i> map, and Hugh ran
+into the house for the atlas.</p>
+<p>When he returned Mr. Manning was with his father, and they both
+looked grave.</p>
+<p>Hugh opened the map of northern France. "Here it is," he
+said.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling considered the position.</p>
+<p>"Manning says they are at Rouen," he told Hugh. "Our base is to
+be moved round to La Rochelle...."</p>
+<p>He paused before the last distasteful conclusion.</p>
+<p>"Practically," he admitted, taking his dose, "they have got
+Paris. It is almost surrounded now."</p>
+<p>He sat down to the map. Mr. Manning and Hugh stood regarding
+him. He made a last effort to imagine some tremendous strategic
+reversal, some stone from an unexpected sling that should fell this
+Goliath in the midst of his triumph.</p>
+<p>"Russia," he said, without any genuine hope....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 17</h4>
+<br>
+<p>And then it was that Mr. Britling accepted the truth.</p>
+<p>"One talks," he said, "and then weeks and months later one
+learns the meaning of the things one has been saying. I was saying
+a month ago that this is the biggest thing that has happened in
+history. I said that this<a name="Page_228"></a> was the supreme
+call upon the will and resources of England. I said there was not a
+life in all our empire that would not be vitally changed by this
+war. I said all these things; they came through my mouth; I suppose
+there was a sort of thought behind them.... Only at this moment do
+I understand what it is that I said. Now&mdash;let me say it over
+as if I had never said it before; this <i>is</i> the biggest thing
+in history, that we <i>are</i> all called upon to do our utmost to
+resist this tremendous attack upon the peace and freedom of the
+world. Well, doing our utmost does not mean standing about in
+pleasant gardens waiting for the newspaper.... It means the
+abandonment of ease and security....</p>
+<p>"How lazy we English are nowadays! How readily we grasp the
+comforting delusion that excuses us from exertion. For the last
+three weeks I have been deliberately believing that a little
+British army&mdash;they say it is scarcely a hundred thousand
+men&mdash;would somehow break this rush of millions. But it has
+been driven back, as any one not in love with easy dreams might
+have known it would be driven back&mdash;here and then here and
+then here. It has been fighting night and day. It has made the most
+splendid fight&mdash;and the most ineffectual fight.... You see the
+vast swing of the German flail through Belgium. And meanwhile we
+have been standing about talking of the use we would make of our
+victory....</p>
+<p>"We have been asleep," he said. "This country has been
+asleep....</p>
+<p>"At the back of our minds," he went on bitterly, "I suppose we
+thought the French would do the heavy work on land&mdash;while we
+stood by at sea. So far as we thought at all. We're so
+temperate-minded; we're so full of qualifications and
+discretions.... And so leisurely.... Well, France is down. We've
+got to fight for France now over the ruins of Paris. Because you
+and I, Manning, didn't grasp the scale of it, because we indulged
+in generalisations when we ought to have been drilling and<a name=
+"Page_229"></a> working. Because we've been doing 'business as
+usual' and all the rest of that sort of thing, while Western
+civilisation has been in its death agony. If this is to be another
+'71, on a larger scale and against not merely France but all
+Europe, if Prussianism is to walk rough-shod over civilisation, if
+France is to be crushed and Belgium murdered, then life is not
+worth having. Compared with such an issue as that no other issue,
+no other interest matters. Yet what are we doing to decide
+it&mdash;you and I? How can it end in anything but a German triumph
+if you and I, by the million, stand by...."</p>
+<p>He paused despairfully and stared at the map.</p>
+<p>"What ought we to be doing?" asked Mr. Manning.</p>
+<p>"Every man ought to be in training," said Mr. Britling. "Every
+one ought to be participating.... In some way.... At any rate we
+ought not to be taking our ease at Matching's Easy any
+more...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 18</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"It interrupts everything," said Hugh suddenly. "These Prussians
+are the biggest nuisance the world has ever seen."</p>
+<p>He considered. "It's like every one having to run out because
+the house catches fire. But of course we have to beat them. It has
+to be done. And every one has to take a share.</p>
+<p>"Then we can get on with our work again."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling turned his eyes to his eldest son with a startled
+expression. He had been speaking&mdash;generally. For the moment he
+had forgotten Hugh.</p>
+<a name="Page_230"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_II_CHAPTER_THE_SECOND"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE SECOND</h2>
+<h2>TAKING PART</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>There were now two chief things in the mind of Mr. Britling. One
+was a large and valiant thing, a thing of heroic and processional
+quality, the idea of taking up one's share in the great conflict,
+of leaving the Dower House and its circle of habits and activities
+and going out&mdash;. From that point he wasn't quite sure where he
+was to go, nor exactly what he meant to do. His imagination
+inclined to the figure of a volunteer in an improvised uniform
+inflicting great damage upon a raiding invader from behind a hedge.
+The uniform, one presumes, would have been something in the vein of
+the costume in which he met Mr. Direck. With a "brassard." Or he
+thought of himself as working at a telephone or in an office
+engaged upon any useful quasi-administrative work that called for
+intelligence rather than training. Still, of course, with a
+"brassard." A month ago he would have had doubts about the meaning
+of "brassard"; now it seemed to be the very keyword for national
+organisation. He had started for London by the early train on
+Monday morning with the intention of immediate enrolment in any
+such service that offered; of getting, in fact, into his brassard
+at once. The morning papers he bought at the station dashed his
+conviction of the inevitable fall of Paris into hopeful doubts, but
+did not shake his resolution. The effect of rout and pursuit and
+retreat and retreat and retreat had disappeared from the news. The
+German right was being counter-attacked, and seemed in danger of
+getting pinched between Paris and Verdun with the<a name=
+"Page_231"></a> British on its flank. This relieved his mind, but
+it did nothing to modify his new realisation of the tremendous
+gravity of the war. Even if the enemy were held and repulsed a
+little there was still work for every man in the task of forcing
+them back upon their own country. This war was an immense thing, it
+would touch everybody.... That meant that every man must give
+himself. That he had to give himself. He must let nothing stand
+between him and that clear understanding. It was utterly shameful
+now to hold back and not to do one's utmost for civilisation, for
+England, for all the ease and safety one had been
+given&mdash;against these drilled, commanded, obsessed
+millions.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was a flame of exalted voluntaryism, of patriotic
+devotion, that day.</p>
+<p>But behind all this bravery was the other thing, the second
+thing in the mind of Mr. Britling, a fear. He was prepared now to
+spread himself like some valiant turkey-gobbler, every feather at
+its utmost, against the aggressor. He was prepared to go out and
+flourish bayonets, march and dig to the limit of his power, shoot,
+die in a ditch if needful, rather than permit German militarism to
+dominate the world. He had no fear for himself. He was prepared to
+perish upon the battlefield or cut a valiant figure in the military
+hospital. But what he perceived very clearly and did his utmost not
+to perceive was this qualifying and discouraging fact, that the war
+monster was not nearly so disposed to meet him as he was to meet
+the war, and that its eyes were fixed on something beside and
+behind him, that it was already only too evidently stretching out a
+long and shadowy arm past him towards Teddy&mdash;and towards
+Hugh....</p>
+<p>The young are the food of war....</p>
+<p>Teddy wasn't Mr. Britling's business anyhow. Teddy must do as he
+thought proper. Mr. Britling would not even advise upon that. And
+as for Hugh&mdash;</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling did his best to brazen it out.</p>
+<a name="Page_232"></a>
+<p>"My eldest boy is barely seventeen," he said. "He's keen to go,
+and I'd be sorry if he wasn't. He'll get into some cadet corps of
+course&mdash;he's already done something of that kind at school. Or
+they'll take him into the Territorials. But before he's nineteen
+everything will be over, one way or another. I'm afraid, poor chap,
+he'll feel sold...."</p>
+<p>And having thrust Hugh safely into the background of his mind
+as&mdash;juvenile, doing a juvenile share, no sort of man
+yet&mdash;Mr. Britling could give a free rein to his generous
+imaginations of a national uprising. From the idea of a universal
+participation in the struggle he passed by an easy transition to an
+anticipation of all Britain armed and gravely embattled. Across
+gulfs of obstinate reality. He himself was prepared to say, and
+accordingly he felt that the great mass of the British must be
+prepared to say to the government: "Here we are at your disposal.
+This is not a diplomatists' war nor a War Office war; this is a war
+of the whole people. We are all willing and ready to lay aside our
+usual occupations and offer our property and ourselves. Whim and
+individual action are for peace times. Take us and use us as you
+think fit. Take all we possess." When he thought of the government
+in this way, he forgot the governing class he knew. The
+slack-trousered Raeburn, the prim, attentive Philbert, Lady
+Frensham at the top of her voice, stern, preposterous Carson, boozy
+Bandershoot and artful Taper, wily Asquith, the eloquent yet
+unsubstantial George, and the immobile Grey, vanished out of his
+mind; all those representative exponents of the way things are done
+in Great Britain faded in the glow of his imaginative effort; he
+forgot the dreary debates, the floundering newspapers, the
+"bluffs," the intrigues, the sly bargains of the week-end party,
+the "schoolboy honour" of grown men, the universal weak dishonesty
+in thinking; he thought simply of a simplified and ideal government
+that governed. He thought vaguely of something behind and<a name=
+"Page_233"></a> beyond them, England, the ruling genius of the
+land; something with a dignified assurance and a stable will. He
+imagined this shadowy ruler miraculously provided with schemes and
+statistics against this supreme occasion which had for so many
+years been the most conspicuous probability before the country. His
+mind leaping forwards to the conception of a great nation
+reluctantly turning its vast resources to the prosecution of a
+righteous defensive war, filled in the obvious corollaries of plan
+and calculation. He thought that somewhere "up there" there must be
+people who could count and who had counted everything that we might
+need for such a struggle, and organisers who had schemed and
+estimated down to practicable and manageable details....</p>
+<p>Such lapses from knowledge to faith are perhaps necessary that
+human heroism may be possible....</p>
+<p>His conception of his own share in the great national uprising
+was a very modest one. He was a writer, a footnote to reality; he
+had no trick of command over men, his r&ocirc;le was observation
+rather than organisation, and he saw himself only as an
+insignificant individual dropping from his individuality into his
+place in a great machine, taking a rifle in a trench, guarding a
+bridge, filling a cartridge&mdash;just with a brassard or something
+like that on&mdash;until the great task was done. Sunday night was
+full of imaginations of order, of the countryside standing up to
+its task, of roads cleared and resources marshalled, of the petty
+interests of the private life altogether set aside. And mingling
+with that it was still possible for Mr. Britling, he was still
+young enough, to produce such dreams of personal service, of sudden
+emergencies swiftly and bravely met, of conspicuous daring and
+exceptional rewards, such dreams as hover in the brains of every
+imaginative recruit....</p>
+<p>The detailed story of Mr. Britling's two days' search for some
+easy and convenient ladder into the service of his threatened
+country would be a voluminous one. It<a name="Page_234"></a> would
+begin with the figure of a neatly brushed patriot, with an intent
+expression upon his intelligent face, seated in the Londonward
+train, reading the war news&mdash;the first comforting war news for
+many days&mdash;and trying not to look as though his life was torn
+up by the roots and all his being aflame with devotion; and it
+would conclude after forty-eight hours of fuss, inquiry, talk,
+waiting, telephoning, with the same gentleman, a little fagged and
+with a kind of weary apathy in his eyes, returning by the short cut
+from the station across Claverings park to resume his connection
+with his abandoned roots. The essential process of the interval had
+been the correction of Mr. Britling's temporary delusion that the
+government of the British Empire is either intelligent, instructed,
+or wise.</p>
+<p>The great "Business as Usual" phase was already passing away,
+and London was in the full tide of recruiting enthusiasm. That tide
+was breaking against the most miserable arrangements for enlistment
+it is possible to imagine. Overtaxed and not very competent
+officers, whose one idea of being very efficient was to refuse
+civilian help and be very, very slow and circumspect and very
+dignified and overbearing, sat in dirty little rooms and snarled at
+this unheard-of England that pressed at door and window for
+enrolment. Outside every recruiting office crowds of men and youths
+waited, leaning against walls, sitting upon the pavements, waited
+for long hours, waiting to the end of the day and returning next
+morning, without shelter, without food, many sick with hunger; men
+who had hurried up from the country, men who had thrown up jobs of
+every kind, clerks, shopmen, anxious only to serve England and
+"teach those damned Germans a lesson." Between them and this object
+they had discovered a perplexing barrier; an inattention. As Mr.
+Britling made his way by St. Martin's Church and across Trafalgar
+Square and marked the weary accumulation of this magnificently
+patriotic stuff, he had his first inkling of the imaginative
+insufficiency of the War Office that had<a name="Page_235"></a>
+been so suddenly called upon to organise victory. He was to be more
+fully informed when he reached his club.</p>
+<p>His impression of the streets through which he passed was an
+impression of great unrest. There were noticeably fewer omnibuses
+and less road traffic generally, but there was a quite unusual
+number of drifting pedestrians. The current on the pavements was
+irritatingly sluggish. There were more people standing about, and
+fewer going upon their business. This was particularly the case
+with the women he saw. Many of them seemed to have drifted in from
+the suburbs and outskirts of London in a state of vague
+expectation, unable to stay in their homes.</p>
+<p>Everywhere there were the flags of the Allies; in shop windows,
+over doors, on the bonnets of automobiles, on people's breasts, and
+there was a great quantity of recruiting posters on the hoardings
+and in windows: "Your King and Country Need You" was the chief
+text, and they still called for "A Hundred Thousand Men" although
+the demand of Lord Kitchener had risen to half a million. There
+were also placards calling for men on nearly all the taxicabs. The
+big windows of the offices of the Norddeutscher Lloyd in Cockspur
+Street were boarded up, and plastered thickly with recruiting
+appeals.</p>
+<p>At his club Mr. Britling found much talk and belligerent stir.
+In the hall Wilkins the author was displaying a dummy rifle of bent
+iron rod to several interested members. It was to be used for
+drilling until rifles could be got, and it could be made for
+eighteen pence. This was the first intimation Mr. Britling got that
+the want of foresight of the War Office only began with its
+unpreparedness for recruits. Men were talking very freely in the
+club; one of the temporary effects of the war in its earlier stages
+was to produce a partial thaw in the constitutional British
+shyness; and men who had glowered at Mr. Britling over their
+lunches and had been glowered at by Mr. Britling in silence for
+years now started conversations with him.</p>
+<a name="Page_236"></a>
+<p>"What is a man of my sort to do?" asked a clean-shaven
+barrister.</p>
+<p>"Exactly what I have been asking," said Mr. Britling. "They are
+fixing the upward age for recruits at thirty; it's absurdly low. A
+man well over forty like myself is quite fit to line a trench or
+guard a bridge. I'm not so bad a shot...."</p>
+<p>"We've been discussing home defence volunteers," said the
+barrister. "Anyhow we ought to be drilling. But the War Office sets
+its face as sternly against our doing anything of the sort as
+though we were going to join the Germans. It's absurd. Even if we
+older men aren't fit to go abroad, we could at least release troops
+who could."</p>
+<p>"If you had the rifles," said a sharp-featured man in grey to
+the right of Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"I suppose they are to be got," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>The sharp-featured man indicated by appropriate facial action
+and head-shaking that this was by no means the case.</p>
+<p>"Every dead man, many wounded men, most prisoners," he said,
+"mean each one a rifle lost. We have lost five-and-twenty thousand
+rifles alone since the war began. Quite apart from arming new
+troops we have to replace those rifles with the drafts we send out.
+Do you know what is the maximum weekly output of rifles at the
+present time in this country?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling did not know.</p>
+<p>"Nine thousand."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling suddenly understood the significance of Wilkins and
+his dummy gun.</p>
+<p>The sharp-featured man added with an air of concluding the
+matter: "It's the barrels are the trouble. Complicated machinery.
+We haven't got it and we can't make it in a hurry. And there you
+are!"</p>
+<p>The sharp-featured man had a way of speaking almost as if he was
+throwing bombs. He threw one now. "Zinc," he said.</p>
+<a name="Page_237"></a>
+<p>"We're not short of zinc?" said the lawyer.</p>
+<p>The sharp-featured man nodded, and then became explicit.</p>
+<p>Zinc was necessary for cartridges; it had to be refined zinc and
+very pure, or the shooting went wrong. Well, we had let the
+refining business drift away from England to Belgium and Germany.
+There were just one or two British firms still left.... Unless we
+bucked up tremendously we should get caught short of cartridges....
+At any rate of cartridges so made as to ensure good shooting. "And
+there you are!" said the sharp-featured man.</p>
+<p>But the sharp-featured man did not at that time represent any
+considerable section of public thought. "I suppose after all we can
+get rifles from America," said the lawyer. "And as for zinc, if the
+shortage is known the shortage will be provided for...."</p>
+<p>The prevailing topic in the smoking-room upstairs was the
+inability of the War Office to deal with the flood of recruits that
+was pouring in, and its hostility to any such volunteering as Mr.
+Britling had in mind. Quite a number of members wanted to
+volunteer; there was much talk of their fitness; "I'm fifty-four,"
+said one, "and I could do my twenty-five miles in marching kit far
+better than half those boys of nineteen." Another was thirty-eight.
+"I must hold the business together," he said; "but why anyhow
+shouldn't I learn to shoot and use a bayonet?" The personal pique
+of the rejected lent force to their criticisms of the recruiting
+and general organisation. "The War Office has one incurable
+system," said a big mine-owner. "During peace time it runs all its
+home administration with men who will certainly be wanted at the
+front directly there is a war. Directly war comes, therefore, there
+is a shift all round, and a new untried man&mdash;usually a dug-out
+in an advanced state of decay&mdash;is stuck into the job. Chaos
+follows automatically. The War Office always has done this, and so
+far as one can see it always will. It seems incapable of realising
+that<a name="Page_238"></a> another man will be wanted until the
+first is taken away. Its imagination doesn't even run to that."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling found a kindred spirit in Wilkins.</p>
+<p>Wilkins was expounding his tremendous scheme for universal
+volunteering. Everybody was to be accepted. Everybody was to be
+assigned and registered and&mdash;<i>badged</i>.</p>
+<p>"A brassard," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"It doesn't matter whether we really produce a fighting force or
+not," said Wilkins. "Everybody now is enthusiastic&mdash;and
+serious. Everybody is willing to put on some kind of uniform and
+submit to some sort of orders. And the thing to do is to catch them
+in the willing stage. Now is the time to get the country lined up
+and organised, ready to meet the internal stresses that are bound
+to come later. But there's no disposition whatever to welcome this
+universal offering. It's just as though this war was a treat to
+which only the very select friends of the War Office were to be
+admitted. And I don't admit that the national volunteers would be
+ineffective&mdash;even from a military point of view. There are
+plenty of fit men of our age, and men of proper age who are better
+employed at home&mdash;armament workers for example, and there are
+all the boys under the age. They may not be under the age before
+things are over...."</p>
+<p>He was even prepared to plan uniforms.</p>
+<p>"A brassard," repeated Mr. Britling, "and perhaps coloured
+strips on the revers of a coat."</p>
+<p>"Colours for the counties," said Wilkins, "and if there isn't
+coloured cloth to be got there's&mdash;red flannel. Anything is
+better than leaving the mass of people to mob about...."</p>
+<p>A momentary vision danced before Mr. Britling's eyes of red
+flannel petticoats being torn up in a rapid improvisation of
+soldiers to resist a sudden invasion. Passing washerwomen suddenly
+requisitioned. But one must not let oneself be laughed out of good
+intentions because of<a name="Page_239"></a> ridiculous
+accessories. The idea at any rate was the sound one....</p>
+<p>The vision of what ought to be done shone brightly while Mr.
+Britling and Mr. Wilkins maintained it. But presently under
+discouraging reminders that there were no rifles, no instructors,
+and, above all, the open hostility of the established authorities,
+it faded again....</p>
+<p>Afterwards in other conversations Mr. Britling reverted to more
+modest ambitions.</p>
+<p>"Is there no clerical work, no minor administrative work, a man
+might be used for?" he asked.</p>
+<p>"Any old dug-out," said the man with the thin face, "any old
+doddering Colonel Newcome, is preferred to you in that
+matter...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling emerged from his club about half-past three with
+his mind rather dishevelled and with his private determination to
+do something promptly for his country's needs blunted by a
+perplexing "How?" His search for doors and ways where no doors and
+ways existed went on with a gathering sense of futility.</p>
+<p>He had a ridiculous sense of pique at being left out, like a
+child shut out from a room in which a vitally interesting game is
+being played.</p>
+<p>"After all, it is <i>our</i> war," he said.</p>
+<p>He caught the phrase as it dropped from his lips with a feeling
+that it said more than he intended. He turned it over and examined
+it, and the more he did so the more he was convinced of its truth
+and soundness....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>By night there was a new strangeness about London. The
+authorities were trying to suppress the more brilliant illumination
+of the chief thoroughfares, on account of the possibility of an air
+raid. Shopkeepers were being compelled to pull down their blinds,
+and many of the big standard lights were unlit. Mr. Britling
+thought these precautions were very fussy and unnecessary, and
+likely<a name="Page_240"></a> to lead to accidents amidst the
+traffic. But it gave a Rembrandtesque quality to the London scene,
+turned it into mysterious arrangements of brown shadows and cones
+and bars of light. At first many people were recalcitrant, and here
+and there a restaurant or a draper's window still blazed out and
+broke the gloom. There were also a number of insubordinate
+automobiles with big head-lights. But the police were being
+unusually firm....</p>
+<p>"It will all glitter again in a little time," he told
+himself.</p>
+<p>He heard an old lady who was projecting from an offending
+automobile at Piccadilly Circus in hot dispute with a police
+officer. "Zeppelins indeed!" she said. "What nonsense! As if they
+would <i>dare</i> to come here! Who would <i>let</i> them, I should
+like to know?"</p>
+<p>Probably a friend of Lady Frensham's, he thought.
+Still&mdash;the idea of Zeppelins over London did seem rather
+ridiculous to Mr. Britling. He would not have liked to have been
+caught talking of it himself.... There never had been Zeppelins
+over London. They were gas bags....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>On Wednesday morning Mr. Britling returned to the Dower House,
+and he was still a civilian unassigned.</p>
+<p>In the hall he found a tall figure in khaki standing and reading
+<i>The Times</i> that usually lay upon the hall table. The figure
+turned at Mr. Britling's entry, and revealed the aquiline features
+of Mr. Lawrence Carmine. It was as if his friend had stolen a march
+on him.</p>
+<p>But Carmine's face showed nothing of the excitement and
+patriotic satisfaction that would have seemed natural to Mr.
+Britling. He was white and jaded, as if he had not slept for many
+nights. "You see," he explained almost apologetically of the three
+stars upon his sleeve, "I used to be a captain of volunteers." He
+had been put<a name="Page_241"></a> in charge of a volunteer force
+which had been re-embodied and entrusted with the care of the
+bridges, gasworks, factories and railway tunnels, and with a number
+of other minor but necessary duties round about Easinghampton.
+"I've just got to shut up my house," said Captain Carmine, "and go
+into lodgings. I confess I hate it.... But anyhow it can't last six
+months.... But it's beastly.... Ugh!..."</p>
+<p>He seemed disposed to expand that "Ugh," and then thought better
+of it. And presently Mr. Britling took control of the
+conversation.</p>
+<p>His two days in London had filled him with matter, and he was
+glad to have something more than Hugh and Teddy and Mrs. Britling
+to talk it upon. What was happening now in Great Britain, he
+declared, was <i>adjustment</i>. It was an attempt on the part of a
+great unorganised nation, an attempt, instinctive at present rather
+than intelligent, to readjust its government and particularly its
+military organisation to the new scale of warfare that Germany had
+imposed upon the world. For two strenuous decades the British navy
+had been growing enormously under the pressure of German naval
+preparations, but the British military establishment had
+experienced no corresponding expansion. It was true there had been
+a futile, rather foolishly conducted agitation for universal
+military service, but there had been no accumulation of material,
+no preparation of armament-making machinery, no planning and no
+foundations for any sort of organisation that would have
+facilitated the rapid expansion of the fighting forces of a country
+in a time of crisis. Such an idea was absolutely antagonistic to
+the mental habits of the British military caste. The German method
+of incorporating all the strength and resources of the country into
+one national fighting machine was quite strange to the British
+military mind&mdash;still. Even after a month of war. War had
+become the comprehensive business of the German nation; to the
+British it<a name="Page_242"></a> was an incidental adventure. In
+Germany the nation was militarised, in England the army was
+specialised. The nation for nearly every practical purpose got
+along without it. Just as political life had also become
+specialised.... Now suddenly we wanted a government to speak for
+every one, and an army of the whole people. How were we to find
+it?</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling dwelt upon this idea of the specialised character
+of the British army and navy and government. It seemed to him to be
+the clue to everything that was jarring in the London spectacle.
+The army had been a thing aloof, for a special end. It had
+developed all the characteristics of a caste. It had very high
+standards along the lines of its specialisation, but it was
+inadaptable and conservative. Its exclusiveness was not so much a
+deliberate culture as a consequence of its detached function. It
+touched the ordinary social body chiefly through three other
+specialised bodies, the court, the church, and the stage. Apart
+from that it saw the great unofficial civilian world as something
+vague, something unsympathetic, something possibly antagonistic,
+which it comforted itself by snubbing when it dared and tricking
+when it could, something that projected members of Parliament
+towards it and was stingy about money. Directly one grasped how
+apart the army lived from the ordinary life of the community, from
+industrialism or from economic necessities, directly one understood
+that the great mass of Englishmen were simply "outsiders" to the
+War Office mind, just as they were "outsiders" to the political
+clique, one began to realise the complete unfitness of either
+government or War Office for the conduct of so great a national
+effort as was now needed. These people "up there" did not know
+anything of the broad mass of English life at all, they did not
+know how or where things were made; when they wanted things they
+just went to a shop somewhere and got them. This was the necessary
+psychology of a small army under a clique government.
+Nothing<a name="Page_243"></a> else was to be expected. But
+now&mdash;somehow&mdash;the nation had to take hold of the
+government that it had neglected so long....</p>
+<p>"You see," said Mr. Britling, repeating a phrase that was
+becoming more and more essential to his thoughts, "this is
+<i>our</i> war....</p>
+<p>"Of course," said Mr. Britling, "these things are not going to
+be done without a conflict. We aren't going to take hold of our
+country which we have neglected so long without a lot of internal
+friction. But in England we can make these readjustments without
+revolution. It is our strength....</p>
+<p>"At present England is confused&mdash;but it's a healthy
+confusion. It's astir. We have more things to defeat than just
+Germany....</p>
+<p>"These hosts of recruits&mdash;weary, uncared for, besieging the
+recruiting stations. It's symbolical.... Our tremendous reserves of
+will and manhood. Our almost incredible insufficiency of
+direction....</p>
+<p>"Those people up there have no idea of the Will that surges up
+in England. They are timid little manoeuvring people, afraid of
+property, afraid of newspapers, afraid of trade-unions. They aren't
+leading us against the Germans; they are just being shoved against
+the Germans by necessity...."</p>
+<p>From this Mr. Britling broke away into a fresh addition to his
+already large collection of contrasts between England and Germany.
+Germany was a nation which has been swallowed up and incorporated
+by an army and an administration; the Prussian military system had
+assimilated to itself the whole German life. It was a State in a
+state of repletion, a State that had swallowed all its people.
+Britain was not a State. It was an unincorporated people. The
+British army, the British War Office, and the British
+administration had assimilated nothing; they were little old
+partial things; the British nation lay outside them, beyond their
+understanding and<a name="Page_244"></a> tradition; a formless new
+thing, but a great thing; and now this British nation, this real
+nation, the "outsiders," had to take up arms. Suddenly all the
+underlying ideas of that outer, greater English life beyond
+politics, beyond the services, were challenged, its tolerant good
+humour, its freedom, and its irresponsibility. It was not simply
+English life that was threatened; it was all the latitudes of
+democracy, it was every liberal idea and every liberty. It was
+civilisation in danger. The uncharted liberal system had been taken
+by the throat; it had to "make good" or perish....</p>
+<p>"I went up to London expecting to be told what to do. There is
+no one to tell any one what to do.... Much less is there any one to
+compel us what to do....</p>
+<p>"There's a War Office like a college during a riot, with its
+doors and windows barred; there's a government like a cockle boat
+in an Atlantic gale....</p>
+<p>"One feels the thing ought to have come upon us like the sound
+of a trumpet. Instead, until now, it has been like a great noise,
+that we just listened to, in the next house.... And now slowly the
+nation awakes. London is just like a dazed sleeper waking up out of
+a deep sleep to fire and danger, tumult and cries for help, near at
+hand. The streets give you exactly that effect. People are looking
+about and listening. One feels that at any moment, in a pause, in a
+silence, there may come, from far away, over the houses, faint and
+little, the boom of guns or the small outcries of little French or
+Belgian villages in agony...."</p>
+<p>Such was the gist of Mr. Britling's discourse.</p>
+<p>He did most of the table talk, and all that mattered. Teddy was
+an assenting voice, Hugh was silent and apparently a little
+inattentive, Mrs. Britling was thinking of the courses and the
+servants and the boys, and giving her husband only half an ear,
+Captain Carmine said little and seemed to be troubled by some
+disagreeable preoccupation. Now and then he would endorse or
+supplement<a name="Page_245"></a> the things Mr. Britling was
+saying. Thrice he remarked: "People still do not begin to
+understand."...</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It was only when they sat together in the barn court out of the
+way of Mrs. Britling and the children that Captain Carmine was able
+to explain his listless bearing and jaded appearance. He was
+suffering from a bad nervous shock. He had hardly taken over his
+command before one of his men had been killed&mdash;and killed in a
+manner that had left a scar upon his mind.</p>
+<p>The man had been guarding a tunnel, and he had been knocked down
+by one train when crossing the line behind another. So it was that
+the bomb of Sarajevo killed its first victim in Essex. Captain
+Carmine had found the body. He had found the body in a cloudy
+moonlight; he had almost fallen over it; and his sensations and
+emotions had been eminently disagreeable. He had had to drag the
+body&mdash;it was very dreadfully mangled&mdash;off the permanent
+way, the damaged, almost severed head had twisted about very
+horribly in the uncertain light, and afterwards he had found his
+sleeves saturated with blood. He had not noted this at the time,
+and when he had discovered it he had been sick. He had thought the
+whole thing more horrible and hateful than any nightmare, but he
+had succeeded in behaving with a sufficient practicality to set an
+example to his men. Since this had happened he had not had an hour
+of dreamless sleep.</p>
+<p>"One doesn't expect to be called upon like that," said Captain
+Carmine, "suddenly here in England.... When one is smoking after
+supper...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling listened to this experience with distressed brows.
+All his talking and thinking became to him like the open page of a
+monthly magazine. Across it this bloody smear, this thing of red
+and black, was dragged....</p>
+<a name="Page_246"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The smear was still bright red in Mr. Britling's thoughts when
+Teddy came to him.</p>
+<p>"I must go," said Teddy, "I can't stop here any longer."</p>
+<p>"Go where?"</p>
+<p>"Into khaki. I've been thinking of it ever since the war began.
+Do you remember what you said when we were bullying off at hockey
+on Bank Holiday&mdash;the day before war was declared?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling had forgotten completely; he made an effort. "What
+did I say?"</p>
+<p>"You said, 'What the devil are we doing at this hockey? We ought
+to be drilling or shooting against those confounded Germans!' ...
+I've never forgotten it.... I ought to have done it before. I've
+been a scout-master. In a little while they will want officers. In
+London, I'm told, there are a lot of officers' training corps
+putting men through the work as quickly as possible.... If I could
+go...."</p>
+<p>"What does Letty think?" said Mr. Britling after a pause. This
+was right, of course&mdash;the only right thing&mdash;and yet he
+was surprised.</p>
+<p>"She says if you'd let her try to do my work for a time...."</p>
+<p>"She <i>wants</i> you to go?"</p>
+<p>"Of course she does," said Teddy. "She wouldn't like me to be a
+shirker.... But I can't unless you help."</p>
+<p>"I'm quite ready to do that," said Mr. Britling. "But somehow I
+didn't think it of you. I hadn't somehow thought of
+<i>you</i>&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"What <i>did</i> you think of me?" asked Teddy.</p>
+<p>"It's bringing the war home to us.... Of course you ought to
+go&mdash;if you want to go."</p>
+<a name="Page_247"></a>
+<p>He reflected. It was odd to find Teddy in this mood, strung up
+and serious and businesslike. He felt that in the past he had done
+Teddy injustice; this young man wasn't as trivial as he had thought
+him....</p>
+<p>They fell to discussing ways and means; there might have to be a
+loan for Teddy's outfit, if he did presently secure a commission.
+And there were one or two other little matters.... Mr. Britling
+dismissed a ridiculous fancy that he was paying to send Teddy away
+to something that neither that young man nor Letty understood
+properly....</p>
+<p>The next day Teddy vanished Londonward on his bicycle. He was
+going to lodge in London in order to be near his training. He was
+zealous. Never before had Teddy been zealous. Mrs. Teddy came to
+the Dower House for the correspondence, trying not to look
+self-conscious and important.</p>
+<p>Two Mondays later a very bright-eyed, excited little boy came
+running to Mr. Britling, who was smoking after lunch in the rose
+garden. "Daddy!" squealed the small boy. "Teddy! In khaki!"</p>
+<p>The other junior Britling danced in front of the hero, who was
+walking beside Mrs. Britling and trying not to be too aggressively
+a soldierly figure. He looked a very man in khaki and more of a boy
+than ever. Mrs. Teddy came behind, quietly elated.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling had a recurrence of that same disagreeable fancy
+that these young people didn't know exactly what they were going
+into. He wished he was in khaki himself; then he fancied this
+compunction wouldn't trouble him quite so much.</p>
+<p>The afternoon with them deepened his conviction that they really
+didn't in the slightest degree understand. Life had been so good to
+them hitherto, that even the idea of Teddy's going off to the war
+seemed a sort of fun to them. It was just a thing he was doing, a
+serious,<a name="Page_248"></a> seriously amusing, and very
+creditable thing. It involved his dressing up in these unusual
+clothes, and receiving salutes in the street.... They discussed
+every possible aspect of his military outlook with the zest of
+children, who recount the merits of a new game. They were putting
+Teddy through his stages at a tremendous pace. In quite a little
+time he thought he would be given the chance of a commission.</p>
+<p>"They want subalterns badly. Already they've taken nearly a
+third of our people," he said, and added with the wistfulness of
+one who glances at inaccessible delights: "one or two may get out
+to the front quite soon."</p>
+<p>He spoke as a young actor might speak of a star part. And with a
+touch of the quality of one who longs to travel in strange
+lands.... One must be patient. Things come at last....</p>
+<p>"If I'm killed she gets eighty pounds a year," Teddy explained
+among many other particulars.</p>
+<p>He smiled&mdash;the smile of a confident immortal at this
+amusing idea.</p>
+<p>"He's my little annuity," said Letty, also smiling, "dead or
+alive."</p>
+<p>"We'll miss Teddy in all sorts of ways," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"It's only for the duration of the war," said Teddy. "And
+Letty's very intelligent. I've done my best to chasten the evil in
+her."</p>
+<p>"If you think you're going to get back your job after the war,"
+said Letty, "you're very much mistaken. I'm going to raise the
+standard."</p>
+<p>"<i>You</i>!" said Teddy, regarding her coldly, and proceeded
+ostentatiously to talk of other things.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"Hugh's going to be in khaki too," the elder junior told Teddy.
+"He's too young to go out in Kitchener's<a name="Page_249"></a>
+army, but he's joined the Territorials. He went off on Thursday....
+I wish Gilbert and me was older...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling had known his son's purpose since the evening of
+Teddy's announcement.</p>
+<p>Hugh had come to his father's study as he was sitting musing at
+his writing-desk over the important question whether he should
+continue his "Examination of War" uninterruptedly, or whether he
+should not put that on one side for a time and set himself to state
+as clearly as possible the not too generally recognised misfit
+between the will and strength of Britain on the one hand and her
+administrative and military organisation on the other. He felt that
+an enormous amount of human enthusiasm and energy was being refused
+and wasted; that if things went on as they were going there would
+continue to be a quite disastrous shortage of gear, and that some
+broadening change was needed immediately if the swift exemplary
+victory over Germany that his soul demanded was to be ensured.
+Suppose he were to write some noisy articles at once, an article,
+for instance, to be called "The War of the Mechanics" or "The War
+of Gear," and another on "Without Civil Strength there is no
+Victory." If he wrote such things would they be noted or would they
+just vanish indistinguishably into the general mental tumult? Would
+they be audible and helpful shouts, or just waste of shouting?...
+That at least was what he supposed himself to be thinking; it was,
+at any rate, the main current of his thinking; but all the same,
+just outside the circle of his attention a number of other things
+were dimly apprehended, bobbing up and down in the flood and ready
+at the slightest chance to swirl into the centre of his thoughts.
+There was, for instance, Captain Carmine in the moonlight lugging
+up a railway embankment something horrible, something loose and wet
+and warm that had very recently been a man. There was Teddy,
+serious and patriotic&mdash;filling a futile penman with
+incredulous respect. There was<a name="Page_250"></a> the
+thin-faced man at the club, and a curious satisfaction he had
+betrayed in the public disarrangement. And there was Hugh.
+Particularly there was Hugh, silent but watchful. The boy never
+babbled. He had his mother's gift of deep dark silences. Out of
+which she was wont to flash, a Black Princess waving a sword. He
+wandered for a little while among memories.... But Hugh didn't come
+out like that, though it always seemed possible he
+might&mdash;perhaps he didn't come out because he was a son.
+Revelation to his father wasn't his business.... What was he
+thinking of it all? What was he going to do? Mr. Britling was
+acutely anxious that his son should volunteer; he was almost
+certain that he would volunteer, but there was just a little shadow
+of doubt whether some extraordinary subtlety of mind mightn't have
+carried the boy into a pacifist attitude. No! that was impossible.
+In the face of Belgium.... But as greatly&mdash;and far more deeply
+in the warm flesh of his being&mdash;did Mr. Britling desire that
+no harm, no evil should happen to Hugh....</p>
+<p>The door opened, and Hugh came in....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling glanced over his shoulder with an affectation of
+indifference. "Hal-<i>lo!</i>" he said. "What do you want?"</p>
+<p>Hugh walked awkwardly to the hearthrug.</p>
+<p>"Oh!" he said in an off-hand tone; "I suppose I've got to go
+soldiering for a bit. I just thought&mdash;I'd rather like to go
+off with a man I know to-morrow...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling's manner remained casual.</p>
+<p>"It's the only thing to do now, I'm afraid," he said.</p>
+<p>He turned in his chair and regarded his son. "What do you mean
+to do? O.T.C.?"</p>
+<p>"I don't think I should make much of an officer. I hate giving
+orders to other people. We thought we'd just go together into the
+Essex Regiment as privates...."</p>
+<p>There was a little pause. Both father and son had rehearsed this
+scene in their minds several times, and<a name="Page_251"></a> now
+they found that they had no use for a number of sentences that had
+been most effective in these rehearsals. Mr. Britling scratched his
+cheek with the end of his pen. "I'm glad you want to go, Hugh," he
+said.</p>
+<p>"I <i>don't</i> want to go," said Hugh with his hands deep in
+his pockets. "I want to go and work with Cardinal. But this job has
+to be done by every one. Haven't you been saying as much all
+day?... It's like turning out to chase a burglar or suppress a mad
+dog. It's like necessary sanitation...."</p>
+<p>"You aren't attracted by soldiering?"</p>
+<p>"Not a bit. I won't pretend it, Daddy. I think the whole
+business is a bore. Germany seems to me now just like some heavy
+horrible dirty mass that has fallen across Belgium and France.
+We've got to shove the stuff back again. That's all...."</p>
+<p>He volunteered some further remarks to his father's silence.</p>
+<p>"You know I can't get up a bit of tootle about this business,"
+he said. "I think killing people or getting killed is a thoroughly
+nasty habit.... I expect my share will be just drilling and fatigue
+duties and route marches, and loafing here in England...."</p>
+<p>"You can't possibly go out for two years," said Mr. Britling, as
+if he regretted it.</p>
+<p>A slight hesitation appeared in Hugh's eyes. "I suppose not," he
+said.</p>
+<p>"Things ought to be over by then&mdash;anyhow," Mr. Britling
+added, betraying his real feelings.</p>
+<p>"So it's really just helping at the furthest end of the shove,"
+Hugh endorsed, but still with that touch of reservation in his
+manner....</p>
+<p>The pause had the effect of closing the theoretical side of the
+question. "Where do you propose to enlist?" said Mr. Britling,
+coming down to practical details.</p>
+<a name="Page_252"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The battle of the Marne passed into the battle of the Aisne, and
+then the long lines of the struggle streamed north-westward until
+the British were back in Belgium failing to clutch Menin and then
+defending Ypres. The elation of September followed the bedazzlement
+and dismay of August into the chapter of forgotten moods; and Mr.
+Britling's sense of the magnitude, the weight and duration of this
+war beyond all wars, increased steadily. The feel of it was less
+and less a feeling of crisis and more and more a feeling of new
+conditions. It wasn't as it had seemed at first, the end of one
+human phase and the beginning of another; it was in itself a phase.
+It was a new way of living. And still he could find no real point
+of contact for himself with it all except the point of his pen.
+Only at his writing-desk, and more particularly at night, were the
+great presences of the conflict his. Yet he was always desiring
+some more personal and physical participation.</p>
+<p>Hugh came along one day in October in an ill-fitting uniform,
+looking already coarser in fibre and with a nose scorched red by
+the autumnal sun. He said the life was rough, but it made him feel
+extraordinarily well; perhaps man was made to toil until he dropped
+asleep from exhaustion, to fast for ten or twelve hours and then
+eat like a wolf. He was acquiring a taste for Woodbine cigarettes,
+and a heady variety of mineral waters called Monsters. He feared
+promotion; he felt he could never take the high line with other
+human beings demanded of a corporal. He was still trying to read a
+little chemistry and crystallography, but it didn't "go with the
+life." In the scanty leisure of a recruit in training it was more
+agreeable to lie about and write doggerel verses and draw
+caricatures of the men in one's platoon. Invited to choose what he
+liked by his family, he demanded a large tuckbox such as he used to
+have at school, only "<i>much</i><a name="Page_253"></a> larger,"
+and a big tin of insect powder. It must be able to kill
+ticks....</p>
+<p>When he had gone, the craving for a personal share in the
+nation's physical exertions became overpowering in Mr. Britling. He
+wanted, he felt, to "get his skin into it." He had decided that the
+volunteer movement was a hopeless one. The War Office, after a
+stout resistance to any volunteer movement at all, decided to
+recognise it in such a manner as to make it ridiculous. The
+volunteers were to have no officers and no uniforms that could be
+remotely mistaken for those of the regulars, so that in the event
+of an invasion the Germans would be able to tell what they had to
+deal with miles away. Wilkins found his conception of a whole
+nation, all enrolled, all listed and badged according to capacity,
+his dream of every one falling into place in one great voluntary
+national effort, treated as the childish dreaming of that most
+ignorant of all human types, a "novelist." <i>Punch</i> was
+delicately funny about him; he was represented as wearing a
+preposterous cocked hat of his own design, designing cocked hats
+for every one. Wilkins was told to "shut up" in a multitude of
+anonymous letters, and publicly and privately to "leave things to
+Kitchener." To bellow in loud clear tones "leave things to
+Kitchener," and to depart for the theatre or the river or an
+automobile tour, was felt very generally at that time to be the
+proper conduct for a patriot. There was a very general persuasion
+that to become a volunteer when one ought to be just modestly doing
+nothing at all, was in some obscure way a form of
+disloyalty....</p>
+<p>So Mr. Britling was out of conceit with volunteering, and
+instead he went and was duly sworn and entrusted with the badge of
+a special constable. The duties of a special constable were chiefly
+not to understand what was going on in the military sphere, and to
+do what he was told in the way of watching and warding conceivably
+vulnerable points. He had also to be available in the event<a name=
+"Page_254"></a> of civil disorder. Mr. Britling was provided with a
+truncheon and sent out to guard various culverts, bridges, and
+fords in the hilly country to the north-westward of Matching's
+Easy. It was never very clear to him what he would do if he found a
+motor-car full of armed enemies engaged in undermining a culvert,
+or treacherously deepening some strategic ford. He supposed he
+would either engage them in conversation, or hit them with his
+truncheon, or perhaps do both things simultaneously. But as he
+really did not believe for a moment that any human being was likely
+to tamper with the telegraphs, telephones, ways and appliances
+committed to his care, his uncertainty did not trouble him very
+much. He prowled the lonely lanes and paths in the darkness, and
+became better acquainted with a multitude of intriguing little
+cries and noises that came from the hedges and coverts at night.
+One night he rescued a young leveret from a stoat, who seemed more
+than half inclined to give him battle for its prey until he cowed
+and defeated it with the glare of his electric torch....</p>
+<p>As he prowled the countryside under the great hemisphere of
+Essex sky, or leant against fences or sat drowsily upon gates or
+sheltered from wind and rain under ricks or sheds, he had much time
+for meditation, and his thoughts went down and down below his first
+surface impressions of the war. He thought no longer of the rights
+and wrongs of this particular conflict but of the underlying forces
+in mankind that made war possible; he planned no more ingenious
+treaties and conventions between the nations, and instead he faced
+the deeper riddles of essential evil and of conceivable changes in
+the heart of man. And the rain assailed him and thorns tore him,
+and the soaked soft meadows bogged and betrayed his wandering feet,
+and the little underworld of the hedges and ditches hissed and
+squealed in the darkness and pursued and fled, and devoured or were
+slain.</p>
+<p>And one night in April he was perplexed by a<a name=
+"Page_255"></a> commotion among the pheasants and a barking of
+distant dogs, and then to his great astonishment he heard noises
+like a distant firework display and saw something like a phantom
+yellowish fountain-pen in the sky far away to the east lit
+intermittently by a quivering search-light and going very swiftly.
+And after he had rubbed his eyes and looked again, he realised that
+he was looking at a Zeppelin&mdash;a Zeppelin flying Londonward
+over Essex.</p>
+<p>And all that night was wonder....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>While Mr. Britling was trying to find his duty in the routine of
+a special constable, Mrs. Britling set to work with great energy to
+attend various classes and qualify herself for Red Cross work. And
+early in October came the great drive of the Germans towards
+Antwerp and the sea, the great drive that was apparently designed
+to reach Calais, and which swept before it multitudes of Flemish
+refugees. There was an exodus of all classes from Antwerp into
+Holland and England, and then a huge process of depopulation in
+Flanders and the Pas de Calais. This flood came to the eastern and
+southern parts of England and particularly to London, and there
+hastily improvised organisations distributed it to a number of
+local committees, each of which took a share of the refugees, hired
+and furnished unoccupied houses for the use of the penniless, and
+assisted those who had means into comfortable quarters. The
+Matching's Easy committee found itself with accommodation for sixty
+people, and with a miscellaneous bag of thirty individuals
+entrusted to its care, who had been part of the load of a little
+pirate steam-boat from Ostend. There were two Flemish peasant
+families, and the rest were more or less middle-class refugees from
+Antwerp. They were brought from the station to the Tithe barn at
+Claverings, and there distributed, under the personal supervision
+of Lady Homartyn and her<a name="Page_256"></a> agent, among those
+who were prepared for their entertainment. There was something like
+competition among the would-be hosts; everybody was glad of the
+chance of "doing something," and anxious to show these Belgians
+what England thought of their plucky little country. Mr. Britling
+was proud to lead off a Mr. Van der Pant, a neat little bearded man
+in a black tail-coat, a black bowler hat, and a knitted muffler,
+with a large rucksack and a conspicuously foreign-looking bicycle,
+to the hospitalities of Dower House. Mr. Van der Pant had escaped
+from Antwerp at the eleventh hour, he had caught a severe cold and,
+it would seem, lost his wife and family in the process; he had much
+to tell Mr. Britling, and in his zeal to tell it he did not at once
+discover that though Mr. Britling knew French quite well he did not
+know it very rapidly.</p>
+<p>The dinner that night at the Dower House marked a distinct fresh
+step in the approach of the Great War to the old habits and
+securities of Matching's Easy. The war had indeed filled every
+one's mind to the exclusion of all other topics since its very
+beginning; it had carried off Herr Heinrich to Germany, Teddy to
+London, and Hugh to Colchester, it had put a special brassard round
+Mr. Britling's arm and carried him out into the night, given Mrs.
+Britling several certificates, and interrupted the frequent visits
+and gossip of Mr. Lawrence Carmine; but so far it had not
+established a direct contact between the life of Matching's Easy
+and the grim business of shot, shell, and bayonet at the front. But
+now here was the Dower House accomplishing wonderful idioms in
+Anglo-French, and an animated guest telling them&mdash;sometimes
+one understood clearly and sometimes the meaning was
+clouded&mdash;of men blown to pieces under his eyes, of fragments
+of human beings lying about in the streets; there was trouble over
+the expression <i>omoplate d'une femme</i>, until one of the
+youngsters got the dictionary and found out it was the
+shoulder-blade of a woman; of pools<a name="Page_257"></a> of
+blood&mdash;everywhere&mdash;and of flight in the darkness.</p>
+<p>Mr. Van der Pant had been in charge of the dynamos at the
+Antwerp Power Station, he had been keeping the electrified wires in
+the entanglements "alive," and he had stuck to his post until the
+German high explosives had shattered his wires and rendered his
+dynamos useless. He gave vivid little pictures of the noises of the
+bombardment, of the dead lying casually in the open spaces, of the
+failure of the German guns to hit the bridge of boats across which
+the bulk of the defenders and refugees escaped. He produced a
+little tourist's map of the city of Antwerp, and dotted at it with
+a pencil-case. "The&mdash;what do you call?&mdash;<i>obus</i>, ah,
+shells! fell, so and so and so." Across here he had fled on his
+<i>b&eacute;cane</i>, and along here and here. He had carried off
+his rifle, and hid it with the rifles of various other Belgians
+between floor and ceiling of a house in Zeebrugge. He had found the
+pirate steamer in the harbour, its captain resolved to extract the
+uttermost fare out of every refugee he took to London. When they
+were all aboard and started they found there was no food except the
+hard ration biscuits of some Belgian soldiers. They had portioned
+this out like shipwrecked people on a raft.... The <i>mer</i> had
+been <i>calme</i>; thank Heaven! All night they had been pumping.
+He had helped with the pumps. But Mr. Van der Pant hoped still to
+get a reckoning with the captain of that ship.</p>
+<p>Mr. Van der Pant had had shots at various Zeppelins. When the
+Zeppelins came to Antwerp everybody turned out on the roofs and
+shot at them. He was contemptuous of Zeppelins. He made derisive
+gestures to express his opinion of them. They could do nothing
+unless they came low, and if they came low you could hit them. One
+which ventured down had been riddled; it had had to drop all its
+bombs&mdash;luckily they fell in an open field&mdash;in order to
+make its lame escape. It was all nonsense to say, as the English
+papers did, that they took part in<a name="Page_258"></a> the final
+bombardment. Not a Zeppelin.... So he talked, and the Britling
+family listened and understood as much as they could, and replied
+and questioned in Anglo-French. Here was a man who but a few days
+ago had been steering his bicycle in the streets of Antwerp to
+avoid shell craters, pools of blood, and the torn-off arms and
+shoulder-blades of women. He had seen houses flaring, set afire by
+incendiary bombs, and once at a corner he had been knocked off his
+bicycle by the pouff of a bursting shell.... Not only were these
+things in the same world with us, they were sitting at our
+table.</p>
+<p>He told one grim story of an invalid woman unable to move, lying
+in bed in her <i>appartement</i>, and of how her husband went out
+on the balcony to look at the Zeppelin. There was a great noise of
+shooting. Ever and again he would put his head back into the room
+and tell her things, and then after a time he was silent and looked
+in no more. She called to him, and called again. Becoming
+frightened, she raised herself by a great effort and peered through
+the glass. At first she was too puzzled to understand what had
+happened. He was hanging over the front of the balcony, with his
+head twisted oddly. Twisted and shattered. He had been killed by
+shrapnel fired from the outer fortifications....</p>
+<p>These are the things that happen in histories and stories. They
+do not happen at Matching's Easy....</p>
+<p>Mr. Van der Pant did not seem to be angry with the Germans. But
+he manifestly regarded them as people to be killed. He denounced
+nothing that they had done; he related. They were just an evil
+accident that had happened to Belgium and mankind. They had to be
+destroyed. He gave Mr. Britling an extraordinary persuasion that
+knives were being sharpened in every cellar in Brussels and Antwerp
+against the day of inevitable retreat, of a resolution to
+exterminate the invader that was far too deep to be vindictive....
+And the man was most amazingly unconquered. Mr. Britling
+perceived<a name="Page_259"></a> the label on his habitual dinner
+wine with a slight embarrassment. "Do you care," he asked, "to
+drink a German wine? This is Berncasteler from the Moselle." Mr.
+Van der Pant reflected. "But it is a good wine," he said. "After
+the peace it will be Belgian.... Yes, if we are to be safe in the
+future from such a war as this, we must have our boundaries right
+up to the Rhine."</p>
+<p>So he sat and talked, flushed and, as it were, elated by the
+vividness of all that he had undergone. He had no trace of tragic
+quality, no hint of subjugation. But for his costume and his
+trimmed beard and his language he might have been a Dubliner or a
+Cockney.</p>
+<p>He was astonishingly cut off from all his belongings. His house
+in Antwerp was abandoned to the invader; valuables and cherished
+objects very skilfully buried in the garden; he had no change of
+clothing except what the rucksack held. His only footwear were the
+boots he came in. He could not get on any of the slippers in the
+house, they were all too small for him, until suddenly Mrs.
+Britling bethought herself of Herr Heinrich's pair, still left
+unpacked upstairs. She produced them, and they fitted exactly. It
+seemed only poetical justice, a foretaste of national
+compensations, to annex them to Belgium forthwith....</p>
+<p>Also it became manifest that Mr. Van der Pant was cut off from
+all his family. And suddenly he became briskly critical of the
+English way of doing things. His wife and child had preceded him to
+England, crossing by Ostend and Folkestone a fortnight ago; her
+parents had come in August; both groups had been seized upon by
+improvised British organisations and very thoroughly and completely
+lost. He had written to the Belgian Embassy and they had referred
+him to a committee in London, and the committee had begun its
+services by discovering a Madame Van der Pant hitherto unknown to
+him at Camberwell, and displaying a certain suspicion and hostility
+when he said she would not do. There had<a name="Page_260"></a>
+been some futile telegrams. "What," asked Mr. Van der Pant, "ought
+one to do?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling temporised by saying he would "make inquiries," and
+put Mr. Van der Pant off for two days. Then he decided to go up to
+London with him and "make inquiries on the spot." Mr. Van der Pant
+did not discover his family, but Mr. Britling discovered the
+profound truth of a comment of Herr Heinrich's which he had
+hitherto considered utterly trivial, but which had nevertheless
+stuck in his memory. "The English," Herr Heinrich had said, "do not
+understanding indexing. It is the root of all good
+organisation."</p>
+<p>Finally, Mr. Van der Pant adopted the irregular course of asking
+every Belgian he met if they had seen any one from his district in
+Antwerp, if they had heard of the name of "Van der Pant," if they
+had encountered So-and-so or So-and-so. And by obstinacy and good
+fortune he really got on to the track of Madame Van der Pant; she
+had been carried off into Kent, and a day later the Dower House was
+the scene of a happy reunion. Madame was a slender lady, dressed
+well and plainly, with a Belgian common sense and a Catholic
+reserve, and Andr&eacute; was like a child of wax, delicate and
+charming and unsubstantial. It seemed incredible that he could ever
+grow into anything so buoyant and incessant as his father. The
+Britling boys had to be warned not to damage him. A sitting-room
+was handed over to the Belgians for their private use, and for a
+time the two families settled into the Dower House side by side.
+Anglo-French became the table language of the household. It
+hampered Mr. Britling very considerably. And both families set
+themselves to much unrecorded observation, much unspoken mutual
+criticism, and the exercise of great patience. It was tiresome for
+the English to be tied to a language that crippled all spontaneous
+talk; these linguistic gymnastics were fun to begin with, but soon
+they became very troublesome; and the Belgians<a name=
+"Page_261"></a> suspected sensibilities in their hosts and a vast
+unwritten code of etiquette that did not exist; at first they were
+always waiting, as it were, to be invited or told or included; they
+seemed always deferentially backing out from intrusions. Moreover,
+they would not at first reveal what food they liked or what they
+didn't like, or whether they wanted more or less.... But these
+difficulties were soon smoothed away, they Anglicised quickly and
+cleverly. Andr&eacute; grew bold and cheerful, and lost his first
+distrust of his rather older English playmates. Every day at lunch
+he produced a new, carefully prepared piece of English, though for
+some time he retained a marked preference for "Good morning,
+Saire," and "Thank you very mush," over all other locutions, and
+fell back upon them on all possible and many impossible occasions.
+And he could do some sleight-of-hand tricks with remarkable skill
+and humour, and fold paper with quite astonishing results.
+Meanwhile Mr. Van der Pant sought temporary employment in England,
+went for long rides upon his bicycle, exchanged views with Mr.
+Britling upon a variety of subjects, and became a wonderful player
+of hockey.</p>
+<p>He played hockey with an extraordinary zest and nimbleness.
+Always he played in the tail coat, and the knitted muffler was
+never relinquished; he treated the game entirely as an occasion for
+quick tricks and personal agility; he bounded about the field like
+a kitten, he pirouetted suddenly, he leapt into the air and came
+down in new directions; his fresh-coloured face was alive with
+delight, the coat tails and the muffler trailed and swished about
+breathlessly behind his agility. He never passed to other players;
+he never realised his appointed place in the game; he sought simply
+to make himself a leaping screen about the ball as he drove it
+towards the goal. But Andr&eacute; he would not permit to play at
+all, and Madame played like a lady, like a Madonna, like a saint
+carrying the instrument of her martyrdom. The game<a name=
+"Page_262"></a> and its enthusiasms flowed round her and receded
+from her; she remained quite valiant but tolerant, restrained;
+doing her best to do the extraordinary things required of her, but
+essentially a being of passive dignities, living chiefly for them;
+Letty careering by her, keen and swift, was like a creature of a
+different species....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling cerebrated abundantly about these contrasts.</p>
+<p>"What has been blown in among us by these German shells," he
+said, "is essentially a Catholic family. Blown clean out of its
+setting.... We who are really&mdash;Neo-Europeans....</p>
+<p>"At first you imagine there is nothing separating us but
+language. Presently you find that language is the least of our
+separations. These people are people living upon fundamentally
+different ideas from ours, ideas far more definite and complete
+than ours. You imagine that home in Antwerp as something much more
+rounded off, much more closed in, a cell, a real social unit, a
+different thing altogether from this place of meeting. Our boys
+play cheerfully with all comers; little Andr&eacute; hasn't learnt
+to play with any outside children at all. We must seem incredibly
+<i>open</i> to these Van der Pants. A house without sides.... Last
+Sunday I could not find out the names of the two girls who came on
+bicycles and played so well. They came with Kitty Westropp. And Van
+der Pant wanted to know how they were related to us. Or how was it
+they came?...</p>
+<p>"Look at Madame. She's built on a fundamentally different plan
+from any of our womenkind here. Tennis, the bicycle, co-education,
+the two-step, the higher education of women.... Say these things
+over to yourself, and think of her. It's like talking of a nun in
+riding breeches. She's a specialised woman, specialising in
+womanhood, her sphere is the home. Soft, trailing, draping skirts,
+slow movements, a veiled face; for no Oriental veil could be more
+effectual than her beautiful<a name="Page_263"></a> Catholic quiet.
+Catholicism invented the invisible purdah. She is far more akin to
+that sweet little Indian lady with the wonderful robes whom Carmine
+brought over with her tall husband last summer, than she is to
+Letty or Cissie. She, too, undertook to play hockey. And played it
+very much as Madame Van der Pant played it....</p>
+<p>"The more I see of our hockey," said Mr. Britling, "the more
+wonderful it seems to me as a touchstone of character and culture
+and breeding...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Manning, to whom he was delivering this discourse, switched
+him on to a new track by asking what he meant by
+"Neo-European."</p>
+<p>"It's a bad phrase," said Mr. Britling. "I'll withdraw it. Let
+me try and state exactly what I have in mind. I mean something that
+is coming up in America and here and the Scandinavian countries and
+Russia, a new culture, an escape from the Levantine religion and
+the Catholic culture that came to us from the Mediterranean. Let me
+drop Neo-European; let me say Northern. We are Northerners. The
+key, the heart, the nucleus and essence of every culture is its
+conception of the relations of men and women; and this new culture
+tends to diminish the specialisation of women as women, to let them
+out from the cell of the home into common citizenship with men.
+It's a new culture, still in process of development, which will
+make men more social and co-operative and women bolder, swifter,
+more responsible and less cloistered. It minimises instead of
+exaggerating the importance of sex....</p>
+<p>"And," said Mr. Britling, in very much the tones in which a
+preacher might say "Sixthly," "it is just all this Northern
+tendency that this world struggle is going to release. This war is
+pounding through Europe, smashing up homes, dispersing and mixing
+homes, setting Madame Van der Pant playing hockey, and Andr&eacute;
+climbing trees with my young ruffians; it is killing young
+men<a name="Page_264"></a> by the million, altering the proportions
+of the sexes for a generation, bringing women into business and
+office and industry, destroying the accumulated wealth that kept so
+many of them in refined idleness, flooding the world with strange
+doubts and novel ideas...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 9</h4>
+<br>
+<p>But the conflict of manners and customs that followed the
+invasion of the English villages by French and Belgian refugees did
+not always present the immigrants as Catholics and the hosts as
+"Neo-European." In the case of Mr. Dimple it was the other way
+round. He met Mr. Britling in Claverings park and told him his
+troubles....</p>
+<p>"Of course," he said, "we have to do our Utmost for Brave Little
+Belgium. I would be the last to complain of any little
+inconvenience one may experience in doing that. Still, I must
+confess I think you and dear Mrs. Britling are fortunate,
+exceptionally fortunate, in the Belgians you have got. My
+guests&mdash;it's unfortunate&mdash; the man is some sort of
+journalist and quite&mdash;oh! much too much&mdash;an Atheist. An
+open positive one. Not simply Honest Doubt. I'm quite prepared for
+honest doubt nowadays. You and I have no quarrel over that. But he
+is aggressive. He makes remarks about miracles, quite derogatory
+remarks, and not always in French. Sometimes he almost speaks
+English. And in front of my sister. And he goes out, he says,
+looking for a Caf&eacute;. He never finds a Caf&eacute;, but he
+certainly finds every public house within a radius of miles. And he
+comes back smelling dreadfully of beer. When I drop a Little Hint,
+he blames the beer. He says it is not good beer&mdash;our good
+Essex beer! He doesn't understand any of our simple ways. He's
+sophisticated. The girls about here wear Belgian flags&mdash;and
+air their little bits of French. And he takes it as an
+encouragement. Only yesterday<a name="Page_265"></a> there was a
+scene. It seems he tried to kiss the Hickson girl at the
+inn&mdash;Maudie.... And his wife; a great big slow woman&mdash;in
+every way she is&mdash;Ample; it's dreadful even to seem to
+criticise, but I do so <i>wish</i> she would not see fit to sit
+down and nourish her baby in my poor old bachelor
+drawing-room&mdash;often at the most <i>unseasonable</i> times.
+And&mdash;so lavishly...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling attempted consolations.</p>
+<p>"But anyhow," said Mr. Dimple, "I'm better off than poor dear
+Mrs. Bynne. She secured two milliners. She insisted upon them. And
+their clothes were certainly beautifully made&mdash;even my poor
+old unworldly eye could tell that. And she thought two milliners
+would be so useful with a large family like hers. They certainly
+<i>said</i> they were milliners. But it seems&mdash;I don't know
+what we shall do about them.... My dear Mr. Britling, those young
+women are anything but milliners&mdash;anything but
+milliners...."</p>
+<p>A faint gleam of amusement was only too perceptible through the
+good man's horror.</p>
+<p>"Sirens, my dear Mr. Britling. Sirens. By profession."...</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 10</h4>
+<br>
+<p>October passed into November, and day by day Mr. Britling was
+forced to apprehend new aspects of the war, to think and rethink
+the war, to have his first conclusions checked and tested, twisted
+askew, replaced. His thoughts went far and wide and
+deeper&mdash;until all his earlier writing seemed painfully shallow
+to him, seemed a mere automatic response of obvious comments to the
+stimulus of the war's surprise. As his ideas became subtler and
+profounder, they became more difficult to express; he talked less;
+he became abstracted and irritable at table. To two people in
+particular Mr. Britling found his real ideas inexpressible, to Mr.
+Direck and to Mr. Van der Pant.</p>
+<a name="Page_266"></a>
+<p>Each of these gentlemen brought with him the implication or the
+intimation of a critical attitude towards England. It was all very
+well for Mr. Britling himself to be critical of England; that is an
+Englishman's privilege. To hear Mr. Van der Pant questioning
+British efficiency or to suspect Mr. Direck of high, thin American
+superiorities to war, was almost worse than to hear Mrs. Harrowdean
+saying hostile things about Edith. It roused an even acuter
+protective emotion.</p>
+<p>In the case of Mr. Van der Pant matters were complicated by the
+difficulty of the language, which made anything but the crudest
+statements subject to incalculable misconception.</p>
+<p>Mr. Van der Pant had not the extreme tactfulness of his so
+typically Catholic wife; he made it only too plain that he thought
+the British postal and telegraph service slow and slack, and the
+management of the Great Eastern branch lines wasteful and
+inefficient. He said the workmen in the fields and the workmen he
+saw upon some cottages near the junction worked slowlier and with
+less interest than he had ever seen any workman display in all his
+life before. He marvelled that Mr. Britling lit his house with
+acetylene and not electric light. He thought fresh eggs were
+insanely dear, and his opinion of Matching's Easy pig-keeping was
+uncomplimentary. The roads, he said, were not a means of getting
+from place to place, they were a <i>d&eacute;dale</i>; he drew
+derisive maps with his finger on the table-cloth of the lane system
+about the Dower House. He was astonished that there was no
+Caf&eacute; in Matching's Easy; he declared that the "public house"
+to which he went with considerable expectation was no public house
+at all; it was just a sly place for drinking beer.... All these
+were things Mr. Britling might have remarked himself; from a
+Belgian refugee he found them intolerable.</p>
+<p>He set himself to explain to Mr. Van der Pant firstly that these
+things did not matter in the slightest degree, the<a name=
+"Page_267"></a> national attention, the national interest ran in
+other directions; and secondly that they were, as a matter of fact
+and on the whole, merits slightly disguised. He produced a pleasant
+theory that England is really not the Englishman's field, it is his
+breeding place, his resting place, a place not for efficiency but
+good humour. If Mr. Van der Pant were to make inquiries he would
+find there was scarcely a home in Matching's Easy that had not sent
+some energetic representative out of England to become one of the
+English of the world. England was the last place in which English
+energy was spent. These hedges, these dilatory roads were full of
+associations. There was a road that turned aside near Market
+Saffron to avoid Turk's wood; it had been called Turk's wood first
+in the fourteenth century after a man of that name. He quoted
+Chesterton's happy verses to justify these winding lanes.</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"The road turned first towards the left,</p>
+<p>Where Perkin's quarry made the cleft;</p>
+<p>The path turned next towards the right,</p>
+<p>Because the mastiff used to bite...."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>And again:</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"And I should say they wound about</p>
+<p>To find the town of Roundabout,</p>
+<p>The merry town of Roundabout</p>
+<p>That makes the world go round."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>If our easy-going ways hampered a hard efficiency, they did at
+least develop humour and humanity. Our diplomacy at any rate had
+not failed us....</p>
+<p>He did not believe a word of this stuff. His deep irrational
+love for England made him say these things.... For years he had
+been getting himself into hot water because he had been writing and
+hinting just such criticisms as Mr. Van der Pant expressed so
+bluntly.... But he wasn't going to accept foreign help in
+dissecting his mother....</p>
+<p>And another curious effect that Mr. Van der Pant had upon Mr.
+Britling was to produce an obstinate confidence<a name=
+"Page_268"></a> about the war and the nearness of the German
+collapse. He would promise Mr. Van der Pant that he should be back
+in Antwerp before May; that the Germans would be over the Rhine by
+July. He knew perfectly well that his ignorance of all the military
+conditions was unqualified, but still he could not restrain himself
+from this kind of thing so soon as he began to speak Entente
+Cordiale&mdash;Anglo-French, that is to say. Something in his
+relationship to Mr. Van der Pant obliged him to be acutely and
+absurdly the protecting British.... At times he felt like a
+conscious bankrupt talking off the hour of disclosure. But indeed
+all that Mr. Britling was trying to say against the difficulties of
+a strange language and an alien temperament, was that the honour of
+England would never be cleared until Belgium was restored and
+avenged....</p>
+<p>While Mr. Britling was patrolling unimportant roads and
+entertaining Mr. Van der Pant with discourses upon the nearness of
+victory and the subtle estimableness of all that was indolent,
+wasteful and evasive in English life, the war was passing from its
+first swift phases into a slower, grimmer struggle. The German
+retreat ended at the Aisne, and the long outflanking manoeuvres of
+both hosts towards the Channel began. The English attempts to
+assist Belgium in October came too late for the preservation of
+Antwerp, and after a long and complicated struggle in Flanders the
+British failed to outflank the German right, lost Ghent, Menin and
+the Belgian coast, but held Ypres and beat back every attempt of
+the enemy to reach Dunkirk and Calais. Meanwhile the smaller German
+colonies and islands were falling to the navy, the Australian
+battleship <i>Sydney</i> smashed the <i>Emden</i> at Cocos Island,
+and the British naval disaster of Coronel was wiped out by the
+battle of the Falklands. The Russians were victorious upon their
+left and took Lemberg, and after some vicissitudes of fortune
+advanced to Przemysl, occupying the larger part of Galicia; but
+the<a name="Page_269"></a> disaster of Tannenberg had broken their
+progress in East Prussia, and the Germans were pressing towards
+Warsaw. Turkey had joined the war, and suffered enormous losses in
+the Caucasus. The Dardanelles had been shelled for the first time,
+and the British were at Basra on the Euphrates.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 11</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The Christmas of 1914 found England, whose landscape had
+hitherto been almost as peaceful and soldierless as Massachusetts,
+already far gone along the path of transformation into a country
+full of soldiers and munition makers and military supplies. The
+soldiers came first, on the well-known and greatly admired British
+principle of "first catch your hare" and then build your kitchen.
+Always before, Christmas had been a time of much gaiety and
+dressing up and prancing and two-stepping at the Dower House, but
+this year everything was too uncertain to allow of any gathering of
+guests. Hugh got leave for the day after Christmas, but Teddy was
+tied; and Cissie and Letty went off with the small boy to take
+lodgings near him. The Van der Pants had hoped to see an English
+Christmas at Matching's Easy, but within three weeks of Christmas
+Day Mr. Van der Pant found a job that he could do in Nottingham,
+and carried off his family. The two small boys cheered their hearts
+with paper decorations, but the Christmas Tree was condemned as too
+German, and it was discovered that Santa Claus had suddenly become
+Old Father Christmas again. The small boys discovered that the
+price of lead soldiers had risen, and were unable to buy electric
+torches, on which they had set their hearts. There was to have been
+a Christmas party at Claverings, but at the last moment Lady
+Homartyn had to hurry off to an orphan nephew who had been
+seriously wounded near Ypres, and the light of Claverings was
+darkened.</p>
+<p>Soon after Christmas there were rumours of an<a name=
+"Page_270"></a> impending descent of the Headquarters staff of the
+South-Eastern army upon Claverings. Then Mr. Britling found Lady
+Homartyn back from France, and very indignant because after all the
+Headquarters were to go to Lady Wensleydale at Ladyholt. It was,
+she felt, a reflection upon Claverings. Lady Homartyn became still
+more indignant when presently the new armies, which were gathering
+now all over England like floods in a low-lying meadow, came
+pouring into the parishes about Claverings to the extent of a
+battalion and a Territorial battery. Mr. Britling heard of their
+advent only a day or two before they arrived; there came a bright
+young officer with an orderly, billeting; he was much exercised to
+get, as he expressed it several times, a quart into a pint bottle.
+He was greatly pleased with the barn. He asked the size of it and
+did calculations. He could "stick twenty-five men into
+it&mdash;easy." It would go far to solve his problems. He could
+manage without coming into the house at all. It was a ripping
+place. "No end."</p>
+<p>"But beds," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Lord! they don't want <i>beds</i>," said the young
+officer....</p>
+<p>The whole Britling family, who were lamenting the loss of their
+Belgians, welcomed the coming of the twenty-five with great
+enthusiasm. It made them feel that they were doing something useful
+once more. For three days Mrs. Britling had to feed her new
+lodgers&mdash;the kitchen motors had as usual gone astray&mdash;and
+she did so in a style that made their boastings about their billet
+almost insufferable to the rest of their battery. The billeting
+allowance at that time was ninepence a head, and Mr. Britling,
+ashamed of making a profit out of his country, supplied not only
+generous firing and lighting, but unlimited cigarettes, cards and
+games, illustrated newspapers, a cocoa supper with such little
+surprises as sprats and jam roly-poly, and a number of more
+incidental comforts. The men arrived fasting under the command
+of<a name="Page_271"></a> two very sage middle-aged corporals, and
+responded to Mrs. Britling's hospitalities by a number of good
+resolutions, many of which they kept. They never made noises after
+half-past ten, or at least only now and then when a singsong broke
+out with unusual violence; they got up and went out at five or six
+in the morning without a sound; they were almost inconveniently
+helpful with washing-up and tidying round.</p>
+<p>In quite a little time Mrs. Britling's mind had adapted itself
+to the spectacle of half-a-dozen young men in khaki breeches and
+shirts performing their toilets in and about her scullery, or
+improvising an unsanctioned game of football between the hockey
+goals. These men were not the miscellaneous men of the new armies;
+they were the earlier Territorial type with no heroics about them;
+they came from the midlands; and their two middle-aged corporals
+kept them well in hand and ruled them like a band of brothers. But
+they had an illegal side, that developed in directions that set Mr.
+Britling theorising. They seemed, for example, to poach by nature,
+as children play and sing. They possessed a promiscuous white dog.
+They began to add rabbits to their supper menu, unaccountable
+rabbits. One night there was a mighty smell of frying fish from the
+kitchen, and the cook reported trout. "Trout!" said Mr. Britling to
+one of the corporals; "now where did you chaps get trout?"</p>
+<p>The "fisherman," they said, had got them with a hair noose. They
+produced the fisherman, of whom they were manifestly proud. It was,
+he explained, a method of fishing he had learnt when in New York
+Harbour. He had been a stoker. He displayed a confidence in Mr.
+Britling that made that gentleman an accessory after his offence,
+his very serious offence against pre-war laws and customs. It was
+plain that the trout were the trout that Mr. Pumshock, the
+stock-broker and amateur gentleman, had preserved so carefully in
+the Easy. Hitherto the countryside had been forced to regard Mr.
+Pumshock's trout with<a name="Page_272"></a> an almost
+superstitious respect. A year ago young Snooker had done a month
+for one of those very trout. But now things were different.</p>
+<p>"But I don't really fancy fresh-water fish," said the fisherman.
+"It's just the ketchin' of 'em I like...."</p>
+<p>And a few weeks later the trumpeter, an angel-faced freckled
+child with deep-blue eyes, brought in a dozen partridge eggs which
+he wanted Mary to cook for him....</p>
+<p>The domesticity of the sacred birds, it was clear, was no longer
+safe in England....</p>
+<p>Then again the big guns would go swinging down the road and into
+Claverings park, and perform various exercises with commendable
+smartness and a profound disregard for Lady Homartyn's known
+objection to any departure from the public footpath....</p>
+<p>And one afternoon as Mr. Britling took his constitutional walk,
+a reverie was set going in his mind by the sight of a
+neglected-looking pheasant with a white collar. The world of
+Matching's Easy was getting full now of such elderly birds. Would
+<i>that</i> go on again after the war? He imagined his son Hugh as
+a grandfather, telling the little ones about parks and preserves
+and game laws, and footmen and butlers and the marvellous game of
+golf, and how, suddenly, Mars came tramping through the land in
+khaki and all these things faded and vanished, so that presently it
+was discovered they were gone....</p>
+<a name="Page_273"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_II_CHAPTER_THE_THIRD"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE THIRD</h2>
+<h2>MALIGNITY</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>And while the countryside of England changed steadily from its
+lax pacific amenity to the likeness of a rather slovenly armed
+camp, while long-fixed boundaries shifted and dissolved and a great
+irreparable wasting of the world's resources gathered way, Mr.
+Britling did his duty as a special constable, gave his eldest son
+to the Territorials, entertained Belgians, petted his soldiers in
+the barn, helped Teddy to his commission, contributed to war
+charities, sold out securities at a loss and subscribed to the War
+Loan, and thought, thought endlessly about the war.</p>
+<p>He could think continuously day by day of nothing else. His mind
+was as caught as a galley slave, as unable to escape from tugging
+at this oar. All his universe was a magnetic field which oriented
+everything, whether he would have it so or not, to this one polar
+question.</p>
+<p>His thoughts grew firmer and clearer; they went deeper and
+wider. His first superficial judgments were endorsed and deepened
+or replaced by others. He thought along the lonely lanes at night;
+he thought at his desk; he thought in bed; he thought in his bath;
+he tried over his thoughts in essays and leading articles and
+reviewed them and corrected them. Now and then came relaxation and
+lassitude, but never release. The war towered over him like a
+vigilant teacher, day after day, week after week, regardless of
+fatigue and impatience, holding a rod in its hand.</p>
+<a name="Page_274"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Certain things had to be forced upon Mr. Britling because they
+jarred so greatly with his habits of mind that he would never have
+accepted them if he could have avoided doing so.</p>
+<p>Notably he would not recognise at first the extreme bitterness
+of this war. He would not believe that the attack upon Britain and
+Western Europe generally expressed the concentrated emotion of a
+whole nation. He thought that the Allies were in conflict with a
+system and not with a national will. He fought against the
+persuasion that the whole mass of a great civilised nation could be
+inspired by a genuine and sustained hatred. Hostility was an
+uncongenial thing to him; he would not recognise that the greater
+proportion of human beings are more readily hostile than friendly.
+He did his best to believe&mdash;in his "And Now War Ends" he did
+his best to make other people believe&mdash;that this war was the
+perverse exploit of a small group of people, of limited but
+powerful influences, an outrage upon the general geniality of
+mankind. The cruelty, mischief, and futility of war were so obvious
+to him that he was almost apologetic in asserting them. He believed
+that war had but to begin and demonstrate its quality among the
+Western nations in order to unify them all against its repetition.
+They would exclaim: "But we can't do things like this to one
+another!" He saw the aggressive imperialism of Germany called to
+account even by its own people; a struggle, a collapse, a
+liberal-minded conference of world powers, and a universal
+resumption of amiability upon a more assured basis of security. He
+believed&mdash;and many people in England believed with
+him&mdash;that a great section of the Germans would welcome
+triumphant Allies as their liberators from intolerable political
+obsessions.</p>
+<p>The English because of their insularity had been political
+amateurs for endless generations. It was their<a name=
+"Page_275"></a> supreme vice, it was their supreme virtue, to be
+easy-going. They had lived in an atmosphere of comedy, and denied
+in the whole tenor of their lives that life is tragic. Not even the
+Americans had been more isolated. The Americans had had their
+Indians, their negroes, their War of Secession. Until the Great War
+the Channel was as broad as the Atlantic for holding off every
+vital challenge. Even Ireland was away&mdash;a four-hour crossing.
+And so the English had developed to the fullest extent the virtues
+and vices of safety and comfort; they had a hatred of science and
+dramatic behaviour; they could see no reason for exactness or
+intensity; they disliked proceeding "to extremes." Ultimately
+everything would turn out all right. But they knew what it is to be
+carried into conflicts by energetic minorities and the trick of
+circumstances, and they were ready to understand the case of any
+other country which has suffered that fate. All their habits
+inclined them to fight good-temperedly and comfortably, to quarrel
+with a government and not with a people. It took Mr. Britling at
+least a couple of months of warfare to understand that the Germans
+were fighting in an altogether different spirit.</p>
+<p>The first intimations of this that struck upon his mind were the
+news of the behaviour of the Kaiser and the Berlin crowd upon the
+declaration of war, and the violent treatment of the British
+subjects seeking to return to their homes. Everywhere such people
+had been insulted and ill-treated. It was the spontaneous
+expression of a long-gathered bitterness. While the British
+ambassador was being howled out of Berlin, the German ambassador to
+England was taking a farewell stroll, quite unmolested, in St.
+James's Park.... One item that struck particularly upon Mr.
+Britling's imagination was the story of the chorus of young women
+who assembled on the railway platform of the station through which
+the British ambassador was passing to sing&mdash;to his drawn
+blinds&mdash;"Deutschland, Deutschland &uuml;ber Alles." Mr.
+Britling<a name="Page_276"></a> could imagine those young people,
+probably dressed more or less uniformly in white, with flushed
+faces and shining eyes, letting their voices go, full throated, in
+the modern German way....</p>
+<p>And then came stories of atrocities, stories of the shooting of
+old men and the butchery of children by the wayside, stories of
+wounded men bayoneted or burnt alive, of massacres of harmless
+citizens, of looting and filthy outrages....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling did his utmost not to believe these things. They
+contradicted his habitual world. They produced horrible strains in
+his mind. They might, he hoped, be misreported so as to seem more
+violent or less justifiable than they were. They might be the acts
+of stray criminals, and quite disconnected from the normal
+operations of the war. Here and there some weak-minded officer may
+have sought to make himself terrible.... And as for the bombardment
+of cathedrals and the crime of Louvain, well, Mr. Britling was
+prepared to argue that Gothic architecture is not sacrosanct if
+military necessity cuts through it.... It was only after the war
+had been going on some months that Mr. Britling's fluttering,
+unwilling mind was pinned down by official reports and a cloud of
+witnesses to a definite belief in the grim reality of systematic
+rape and murder, destruction, dirtiness and abominable compulsions
+that blackened the first rush of the Prussians into Belgium and
+Champagne....</p>
+<p>They came hating and threatening the lands they outraged. They
+sought occasion to do frightful deeds.... When they could not be
+frightful in the houses they occupied, then to the best of their
+ability they were destructive and filthy. The facts took Mr.
+Britling by the throat....</p>
+<p>The first thing that really pierced Mr. Britling with the
+conviction that there was something essentially different in the
+English and the German attitude towards the war was the sight of a
+bale of German comic papers<a name="Page_277"></a> in the study of
+a friend in London. They were filled with caricatures of the Allies
+and more particularly of the English, and they displayed a force
+and quality of passion&mdash;an incredible force and quality of
+passion. Their amazing hate and their amazing filthiness alike
+overwhelmed Mr. Britling. There was no appearance of national pride
+or national dignity, but a bellowing patriotism and a limitless
+desire to hurt and humiliate. They spat. They were red in the face
+and they spat. He sat with these violent sheets in his
+hands&mdash;<i>ashamed</i>.</p>
+<p>"But I say!" he said feebly. "It's the sort of thing that might
+come out of a lunatic asylum...."</p>
+<p>One incredible craving was manifest in every one of them. The
+German caricaturist seemed unable to represent his enemies except
+in extremely tight trousers or in none; he was equally unable to
+represent them without thrusting a sword or bayonet, spluttering
+blood, into the more indelicate parts of their persons. This was
+the <i>leit-motif</i> of the war as the German humorists presented
+it. "But," said Mr. Britling, "these things can't represent
+anything like the general state of mind in Germany."</p>
+<p>"They do," said his friend.</p>
+<p>"But it's blind fury&mdash;at the dirt-throwing stage."</p>
+<p>"The whole of Germany is in that blind fury," said his friend.
+"While we are going about astonished and rather incredulous about
+this war, and still rather inclined to laugh, that's the state of
+mind of Germany.... There's a sort of deliberation in it. They
+think it gives them strength. They <i>want</i> to foam at the
+mouth. They do their utmost to foam more. They write themselves up.
+Have you heard of the 'Hymn of Hate'?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling had not.</p>
+<p>"There was a translation of it in last week's
+<i>Spectator</i>.... This is the sort of thing we are trying to
+fight in good temper and without extravagance. Listen,
+Britling!</p>
+<a name="Page_278"></a>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"<i>You</i> will we hate with a lasting hate;</p>
+<p>We will never forgo our hate&mdash;</p>
+<p>Hate by water and hate by land,</p>
+<p>Hate of the head and hate of the hand,</p>
+<p>Hate of the hammer and hate of the crown,</p>
+<p>Hate of seventy millions, choking down;</p>
+<p>We love as one, we hate as one,</p>
+<p>We have <i>one</i> foe, and one alone&mdash;</p>
+<p>ENGLAND!"</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>He read on to the end.</p>
+<p>"Well," he said when he had finished reading, "what do you think
+of it?"</p>
+<p>"I want to feel his bumps," said Mr. Britling after a pause.
+"It's incomprehensible."</p>
+<p>"They're singing that up and down Germany. Lissauer, I hear, has
+been decorated...."</p>
+<p>"It's&mdash;stark malignity," said Mr. Britling. "What have we
+done?"</p>
+<p>"It's colossal. What is to happen to the world if these people
+prevail?"</p>
+<p>"I can't believe it&mdash;even with this evidence before me....
+No! I want to feel their bumps...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"You see," said Mr. Britling, trying to get it into focus, "I
+have known quite decent Germans. There must be some sort of
+misunderstanding.... I wonder what makes them hate us. There seems
+to me no reason in it."</p>
+<p>"I think it is just thoroughness," said his friend. "They are at
+war. To be at war is to hate."</p>
+<p>"That isn't at all my idea."</p>
+<p>"We're not a thorough people. When we think of anything, we also
+think of its opposite. When we adopt an opinion we also take in a
+provisional idea that it is probably nearly as wrong as it is
+right. We are&mdash;atmospheric. They are concrete.... All this
+filthy, vile, unjust and cruel stuff is honest genuine war. We
+pretend war does not hurt. They know better.... The<a name=
+"Page_279"></a> Germans are a simple honest people. It is their
+virtue. Possibly it is their only virtue...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling was only one of a multitude who wanted to feel the
+bumps of Germany at that time. The effort to understand a people
+who had suddenly become incredible was indeed one of the most
+remarkable facts in English intellectual life during the opening
+phases of the war. The English state of mind was unlimited
+astonishment. There was an enormous sale of any German books that
+seemed likely to illuminate the mystery of this amazing
+concentration of hostility; the works of Bernhardi, Treitschke,
+Nietzsche, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, became the material of
+countless articles and interminable discussions. One saw little
+clerks on the way to the office and workmen going home after their
+work earnestly reading these remarkable writers. They were asking,
+just as Mr. Britling was asking, what it was the British Empire had
+struck against. They were trying to account for this wild storm of
+hostility that was coming at them out of Central Europe.</p>
+<p>It was a natural next stage to this, when after all it became
+manifest that instead of there being a liberal and reluctant
+Germany at the back of imperialism and Junkerdom, there was
+apparently one solid and enthusiastic people, to suppose that the
+Germans were in some distinctive way evil, that they were racially
+more envious, arrogant, and aggressive than the rest of mankind.
+Upon that supposition a great number of English people settled.
+They concluded that the Germans had a peculiar devil of their
+own&mdash;and had to be treated accordingly. That was the second
+stage in the process of national apprehension, and it was marked by
+the first beginnings of a spy hunt, by the first denunciation of
+naturalised aliens, and by some anti-German rioting among the mixed
+alien population<a name="Page_280"></a> in the East End. Most of
+the bakers in the East End of London were Germans, and for some
+months after the war began they went on with their trade
+unmolested. Now many of these shops were wrecked.... It was only in
+October that the British gave these first signs of a sense that
+they were fighting not merely political Germany but the
+Germans.</p>
+<p>But the idea of a peculiar malignity in the German quality as a
+key to the broad issue of the war was even less satisfactory and
+less permanent in Mr. Britling's mind than his first crude
+opposition of militarism and a peaceful humanity as embodied
+respectively in the Central Powers and the Russo-Western alliance.
+It led logically to the conclusion that the extermination of the
+German peoples was the only security for the general amiability of
+the world, a conclusion that appealed but weakly to his essential
+kindliness. After all, the Germans he had met and seen were neither
+cruel nor hate-inspired. He came back to that obstinately. From the
+harshness and vileness of the printed word and the unclean picture,
+he fell back upon the flesh and blood, the humanity and sterling
+worth, of&mdash;as a sample&mdash;young Heinrich.</p>
+<p>Who was moreover a thoroughly German young German&mdash;a
+thoroughly Prussian young Prussian.</p>
+<p>At times young Heinrich alone stood between Mr. Britling and the
+belief that Germany and the whole German race was essentially
+wicked, essentially a canting robber nation. Young Heinrich became
+a sort of advocate for his people before the tribunal of Mr.
+Britling's mind. (And on his shoulder sat an absurdly pampered
+squirrel.) s fresh, pink, sedulous face, very earnest, adjusting
+his glasses, saying "Please," intervened and insisted upon an
+arrest of judgment....</p>
+<p>Since the young man's departure he had sent two postcards of
+greeting directly to the "Familie Britling," and one letter through
+the friendly intervention of Mr. Britling's American publisher.
+Once also he sent a message<a name="Page_281"></a> through a friend
+in Norway. The postcards simply recorded stages in the passage of a
+distraught pacifist across Holland to his enrolment. The letter by
+way of America came two months later. He had been converted into a
+combatant with extreme rapidity. He had been trained for three
+weeks, had spent a fortnight in hospital with a severe cold, and
+had then gone to Belgium as a transport driver&mdash;his father had
+been a horse-dealer and he was familiar with horses. "If anything
+happens to me," he wrote, "please send my violin at least very
+carefully to my mother." It was characteristic that he reported
+himself as very comfortably quartered in Courtrai with "very nice
+people." The niceness involved restraints. "Only never," he added,
+"do we talk about the war. It is better not to do so." He mentioned
+the violin also in the later communication through Norway. Therein
+he lamented the lost fleshpots of Courtrai. He had been in Posen,
+and now he was in the Carpathians, up to his knees in snow and
+"very uncomfortable...."</p>
+<p>And then abruptly all news from him ceased.</p>
+<p>Month followed month, and no further letter came.</p>
+<p>"Something has happened to him. Perhaps he is a
+prisoner...."</p>
+<p>"I hope our little Heinrich hasn't got seriously damaged.... He
+may be wounded...."</p>
+<p>"Or perhaps they stop his letters.... Very probably they stop
+his letters."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling would sit in his armchair and stare at his fire,
+and recall conflicting memories of Germany&mdash;of a pleasant
+land, of friendly people. He had spent many a jolly holiday there.
+So recently as 1911 all the Britling family had gone up the Rhine
+from Rotterdam, had visited a string of great cities and stayed for
+a cheerful month of sunshine at Neunkirchen in the Odenwald.</p>
+<p>The little village perches high among the hills and<a name=
+"Page_282"></a> woods, and at its very centre is the inn and the
+linden tree and&mdash;Adam Meyer. Or at least Adam Meyer <i>was</i>
+there. Whether he is there now, only the spirit of change can tell;
+if he live to be a hundred no friendly English will ever again come
+tramping along by the track of the Blaue Breiecke or the Weisse
+Streiche to enjoy his hospitality; there are rivers of blood
+between, and a thousand memories of hate....</p>
+<p>It was a village distended with hospitalities. Not only the inn
+but all the houses about the place of the linden tree, the
+shoe-maker's, the post-mistress's, the white house beyond, every
+house indeed except the pastor's house, were full of Adam Meyer's
+summer guests. And about it and over it went and soared Adam Meyer,
+seeing they ate well, seeing they rested well, seeing they had
+music and did not miss the moonlight&mdash;a host who forgot profit
+in hospitality, an inn-keeper with the passion of an artist for his
+inn.</p>
+<p>Music, moonlight, the simple German sentiment, the hearty German
+voices, the great picnic in a Stuhl Wagen, the orderly round games
+the boys played with the German children, and the tramps and
+confidences Hugh had with Kurt and Karl, and at last a crowning
+jollification, a dance, with some gipsy musicians whom Mr. Britling
+discovered, when the Germans taught the English various
+entertaining sports with baskets and potatoes and forfeits and the
+English introduced the Germans to the licence of the two-step. And
+everybody sang "Britannia, Rule the Waves," and "Deutschland,
+Deutschland &uuml;ber Alles," and Adam Meyer got on a chair and
+made a tremendous speech more in dialect than ever, and there was
+much drinking of beer and sirops in the moonlight under the
+linden....</p>
+<p>Afterwards there had been a periodic sending of postcards and
+greetings, which indeed only the war had ended.</p>
+<p>Right pleasant people those Germans had been, sun and green-leaf
+lovers, for whom "Frisch Auf" seemed the most natural of national
+cries. Mr. Britling thought of the individual Germans who had made
+up the assembly,<a name="Page_283"></a> of the men's amusingly
+fierce little hats of green and blue with an inevitable feather
+thrust perkily into the hatband behind, of the kindly plumpnesses
+behind their turned-up moustaches, of the blonde, sedentary women,
+very wise about the comforts of life and very kind to the children,
+of their earnest pleasure in landscape and Art and Great Writers,
+of their general frequent desire to sing, of their plasticity under
+the directing hands of Adam Meyer. He thought of the mellow south
+German landscape, rolling away broad and fair, of the little clean
+red-roofed townships, the old castles, the big prosperous farms,
+the neatly marked pedestrian routes, the hospitable inns, and the
+artless abundant Aussichtthurms....</p>
+<p>He saw all those memories now through a veil of indescribable
+sadness&mdash;as of a world lost, gone down like the cities of
+Lyonesse beneath deep seas....</p>
+<p>Right pleasant people in a sunny land! Yet here pressing
+relentlessly upon his mind were the murders of Vis&eacute;, the
+massacres of Dinant, the massacres of Louvain, murder red-handed
+and horrible upon an inoffensive people, foully invaded, foully
+treated; murder done with a sickening cant of righteousness and
+racial pretension....</p>
+<p>The two pictures would not stay steadily in his mind together.
+When he thought of the broken faith that had poured those
+slaughtering hosts into the decent peace of Belgium, that had
+smashed her cities, burnt her villages and filled the pretty gorges
+of the Ardennes with blood and smoke and terror, he was flooded
+with self-righteous indignation, a self-righteous indignation that
+was indeed entirely Teutonic in its quality, that for a time
+drowned out his former friendship and every kindly disposition
+towards Germany, that inspired him with destructive impulses, and
+obsessed him with a desire to hear of death and more death and yet
+death in every German town and home....</p>
+<a name="Page_284"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It will be an incredible thing to the happier reader of a coming
+age&mdash;if ever this poor record of experience reaches a reader
+in the days to come&mdash;to learn how much of the mental life of
+Mr. Britling was occupied at this time with the mere horror and
+atrocity of warfare. It is idle and hopeless to speculate now how
+that future reader will envisage this war; it may take on broad
+dramatic outlines, it may seem a thing, just, logical, necessary,
+the burning of many barriers, the destruction of many obstacles.
+Mr. Britling was too near to the dirt and pain and heat for any
+such broad landscape consolations. Every day some new detail of
+evil beat into his mind. Now it would be the artless story of some
+Belgian refugee. There was a girl from Alost in the village for
+example, who had heard the fusillade that meant the shooting of
+citizens, the shooting of people she had known, she had seen the
+still blood-stained wall against which two murdered cousins had
+died, the streaked sand along which their bodies had been dragged;
+three German soldiers had been quartered in her house with her and
+her invalid mother, and had talked freely of the massacres in which
+they had been employed. One of them was in civil life a young
+schoolmaster, and he had had, he said, to kill a woman and a baby.
+The girl had been incredulous. Yes, he had done so! Of course he
+had done so! His officer had made him do it, had stood over him. He
+could do nothing but obey. But since then he had been unable to
+sleep, unable to forget.</p>
+<p>"We had to punish the people," he said. "They had fired on
+us."</p>
+<p>And besides, his officer had been drunk. It had been impossible
+to argue. His officer had an unrelenting character at all
+times....</p>
+<p>Over and over again Mr. Britling would try to imagine that young
+schoolmaster soldier at Alost. He imagined<a name="Page_285"></a>
+with a weak staring face and watery blue eyes behind his glasses,
+and that memory of murder....</p>
+<p>Then again it would be some incident of death and mutilation in
+Antwerp, that Van der Pant described to him. The Germans in Belgium
+were shooting women frequently, not simply for grave spying but for
+trivial offences.... Then came the battleship raid on Whitby and
+Scarborough, and the killing among other victims of a number of
+children on their way to school. This shocked Mr. Britling
+absurdly, much more than the Belgian crimes had done. They were
+<i>English</i> children. At home!... The drowning of a great number
+of people on a torpedoed ship full of refugees from Flanders filled
+his mind with pitiful imaginings for days. The Zeppelin raids, with
+their slow crescendo of blood-stained futility, began before the
+end of 1914.... It was small consolation for Mr. Britling to
+reflect that English homes and women and children were, after all,
+undergoing only the same kind of experience that our ships have
+inflicted scores of times in the past upon innocent people in the
+villages of Africa and Polynesia....</p>
+<p>Each month the war grew bitterer and more cruel. Early in 1915
+the Germans began their submarine war, and for a time Mr.
+Britling's concern was chiefly for the sailors and passengers of
+the ships destroyed. He noted with horror the increasing
+indisposition of the German submarines to give any notice to their
+victims; he did not understand the grim reasons that were turning
+every submarine attack into a desperate challenge of death. For the
+Germans under the seas had pitted themselves against a sea power
+far more resourceful, more steadfast and skilful, sterner and more
+silent, than their own. It was not for many months that Mr.
+Britling learnt the realities of the submarine blockade. Submarine
+after submarine went out of the German harbours into the North Sea,
+never to return. No prisoners were reported, no boasting was
+published by the British fishers of men; U boat<a name=
+"Page_286"></a> after U boat vanished into a chilling mystery....
+Only later did Mr. Britling begin to hear whispers and form ideas
+of the noiseless, suffocating grip that sought through the waters
+for its prey.</p>
+<p>The <i>Falaba</i> crime, in which the German sailors were
+reported to have jeered at the drowning victims in the water, was
+followed by the sinking of the <i>Lusitania</i>. At that a wave of
+real anger swept through the Empire. Hate was begetting hate at
+last. There were violent riots in Great Britain and in South
+Africa. Wretched little German hairdressers and bakers and so forth
+fled for their lives, to pay for the momentary satisfaction of the
+Kaiser and Herr Ballin. Scores of German homes in England were
+wrecked and looted; hundreds of Germans maltreated. War is war.
+Hard upon the <i>Lusitania</i> storm came the publication of the
+Bryce Report, with its relentless array of witnesses, its
+particulars of countless acts of cruelty and arrogant unreason and
+uncleanness in Belgium and the occupied territory of France. Came
+also the gasping torture of "gas," the use of flame jets, and a new
+exacerbation of the savagery of the actual fighting. For a time it
+seemed as though the taking of prisoners along the western front
+would cease. Tales of torture and mutilation, tales of the kind
+that arise nowhere and out of nothing, and poison men's minds to
+the most pitiless retaliations, drifted along the opposing
+fronts....</p>
+<p>The realities were evil enough without any rumours. Over various
+dinner-tables Mr. Britling heard this and that first-hand testimony
+of harshness and spite. One story that stuck in his memory was of
+British prisoners on the journey into Germany being put apart at a
+station from their French companions in misfortune, and forced to
+"run the gauntlet" back to their train between the fists and
+bayonets of files of German soldiers. And there were convincing
+stories of the same prisoners robbed of overcoats in bitter
+weather, baited with dogs, separated from their countrymen, and
+thrust among Russians and Poles<a name="Page_287"></a> with whom
+they could hold no speech. So Lissauer's Hate Song bore its fruit
+in a thousand cruelties to wounded and defenceless men. The English
+had cheated great Germany of another easy victory like that of '71.
+They had to be punished. That was all too plainly the psychological
+process. At one German station a woman had got out of a train and
+crossed a platform to spit on the face of a wounded Englishman....
+And there was no monopoly of such things on either side. At some
+journalistic gathering Mr. Britling met a little white-faced,
+resolute lady who had recently been nursing in the north of France.
+She told of wounded men lying among the coal of coal-sheds, of a
+shortage of nurses and every sort of material, of an absolute
+refusal to permit any share in such things to reach the German
+"swine." ... "Why have they come here? Let our own boys have it
+first. Why couldn't they stay in their own country? Let the filth
+die."</p>
+<p>Two soldiers impressed to carry a wounded German officer on a
+stretcher had given him a "joy ride," pitching him up and down as
+one tosses a man in a blanket. "He was lucky to get off with
+that."...</p>
+<p>"All <i>our</i> men aren't angels," said a cheerful young
+captain back from the front. "If you had heard a little group of
+our East London boys talking of what they meant to do when they got
+into Germany, you'd feel anxious...."</p>
+<p>"But that was just talk," said Mr. Britling weakly, after a
+pause....</p>
+<p>There were times when Mr. Britling's mind was imprisoned beyond
+any hope of escape amidst such monstrous realities....</p>
+<p>He was ashamed of his one secret consolation. For nearly two
+years yet Hugh could not go out to it. There would surely be peace
+before that....</p>
+<a name="Page_288"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Tormenting the thought of Mr. Britling almost more acutely than
+this growing tale of stupidly inflicted suffering and waste and
+sheer destruction was the collapse of the British mind from its
+first fine phase of braced-up effort into a state of bickering
+futility.</p>
+<p>Too long had British life been corrupted by the fictions of
+loyalty to an uninspiring and alien Court, of national piety in an
+official Church, of freedom in a politician-rigged State, of
+justice in an economic system where the advertiser, the sweater and
+usurer had a hundred advantages over the producer and artisan, to
+maintain itself now steadily at any high pitch of heroic endeavour.
+It had bought its comfort with the demoralisation of its servants.
+It had no completely honest organs; its spirit was clogged by its
+accumulated insincerities. Brought at last face to face with a
+bitter hostility and a powerful and unscrupulous enemy, an enemy
+socialistic, scientific and efficient to an unexampled degree, it
+seemed indeed to be inspired for a time by an unwonted energy and
+unanimity. Youth and the common people shone. The sons of every
+class went out to fight and die, full of a splendid dream of this
+war. Easy-going vanished from the foreground of the picture. But
+only to creep back again as the first inspiration passed. Presently
+the older men, the seasoned politicians, the owners and hucksters,
+the charming women and the habitual consumers, began to recover
+from this blaze of moral exaltation. Old habits of mind and
+procedure reasserted themselves. The war which had begun so
+dramatically missed its climax; there was neither heroic swift
+defeat nor heroic swift victory. There was indecision; the most
+trying test of all for an undisciplined people. There were great
+spaces of uneventful fatigue. Before the Battle of the Yser had
+fully developed the dramatic quality had gone out of the war. It
+had ceased to be either a tragedy or a triumph; for both sides
+it<a name="Page_289"></a> became a monstrous strain and wasting. It
+had become a wearisome thrusting against a pressure of
+evils....</p>
+<p>Under that strain the dignity of England broke, and revealed a
+malignity less focussed and intense than the German, but perhaps
+even more distressing. No paternal government had organised the
+British spirit for patriotic ends; it became now peevish and
+impatient, like some ill-trained man who is sick, it directed
+itself no longer against the enemy alone but fitfully against
+imagined traitors and shirkers; it wasted its energies in a
+deepening and spreading net of internal squabbles and accusations.
+Now it was the wily indolence of the Prime Minister, now it was the
+German culture of the Lord Chancellor, now the imaginative
+enterprise of the First Lord of the Admiralty that focussed a
+vindictive campaign. There began a hunt for spies and of suspects
+of German origin in every quarter except the highest; a
+denunciation now of "traitors," now of people with imaginations,
+now of scientific men, now of the personal friend of the
+Commander-in-Chief, now of this group and then of that group....
+Every day Mr. Britling read his three or four newspapers with a
+deepening disappointment.</p>
+<p>When he turned from the newspaper to his post, he would find the
+anonymous letter-writer had been busy....</p>
+<p>Perhaps Mr. Britling had remarked that Germans were after all
+human beings, or that if England had listened to Matthew Arnold in
+the 'eighties our officers by this time might have added efficiency
+to their courage and good temper. Perhaps he had himself put a
+touch of irritant acid into his comment. Back flared the hate. "Who
+are <i>you</i>, Sir? What are <i>you</i>, Sir? What right have
+<i>you</i>, Sir? What claim have <i>you</i>, Sir?"...</p>
+<a name="Page_290"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"Life had a wrangling birth. On the head of every one of us
+rests the ancestral curse of fifty million murders."</p>
+<p>So Mr. Britling's thoughts shaped themselves in words as he
+prowled one night in March, chill and melancholy, across a rushy
+meadow under an overcast sky. The death squeal of some little beast
+caught suddenly in a distant copse had set loose this train of
+thought. "Life struggling under a birth curse?" he thought. "How
+nearly I come back at times to the Christian theology!... And then,
+Redemption by the shedding of blood."</p>
+<p>"Life, like a rebellious child, struggling out of the control of
+the hate which made it what it is."</p>
+<p>But that was Mr. Britling's idea of Gnosticism, not of orthodox
+Christianity. He went off for a time into faded reminiscences of
+theological reading. What had been the Gnostic idea? That the God
+of the Old Testament was the Devil of the New? But that had been
+the idea of the Manich&aelig;ans!...</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling, between the black hedges, came back presently from
+his attempts to recall his youthful inquiries into man's ancient
+speculations, to the enduring riddles that have outlasted a
+thousand speculations. Has hate been necessary, and is it still
+necessary, and will it always be necessary? Is all life a war
+forever? The rabbit is nimble, lives keenly, is prevented from
+degenerating into a diseased crawling eater of herbs by the
+incessant ferret. Without the ferret of war, what would life
+become?... War is murder truly, but is not Peace decay?</p>
+<p>It was during these prowling nights in the first winter of the
+war that Mr. Britling planned a new writing that was to go whole
+abysses beneath the facile superficiality of "And Now War Ends." It
+was to be called the "Anatomy of Hate." It was to deal very
+faithfully with the function of hate as a corrective to
+inefficiency. So<a name="Page_291"></a> long as men were slack, men
+must be fierce. This conviction pressed upon him....</p>
+<p>In spite of his detestation of war Mr. Britling found it
+impossible to maintain that any sort of peace state was better than
+a state of war. If wars produced destructions and cruelties, peace
+could produce indolence, perversity, greedy accumulation and
+selfish indulgences. War is discipline for evil, but peace may be
+relaxation from good. The poor man may be as wretched in peace time
+as in war time. The gathering forces of an evil peace, the
+malignity and waste of war, are but obverse and reverse of the
+medal of ill-adjusted human relationships. Was there no Greater
+Peace possible; not a mere recuperative pause in killing and
+destruction, but a phase of noble and creative living, a phase of
+building, of discovery, of beauty and research? He remembered, as
+one remembers the dead, dreams he had once dreamt of the great
+cities, the splendid freedoms, of a coming age, of marvellous
+enlargements of human faculty, of a coming science that would be
+light and of art that could be power....</p>
+<p>But would that former peace have ever risen to that?...</p>
+<p>After all, had such visions ever been more than idle dreams? Had
+the war done more than unmask reality?...</p>
+<p>He came to a gate and leant over it.</p>
+<p>The darkness drizzled about him; he turned up his collar and
+watched the dim shapes of trees and hedges gather out of the night
+to meet the dismal dawn. He was cold and hungry and weary.</p>
+<p>He may have drowsed; at least he had a vision, very real and
+plain, a vision very different from any dream of Utopia.</p>
+<p>It seemed to him that suddenly a mine burst under a great ship
+at sea, that men shouted and women sobbed and cowered, and flares
+played upon the rain-pitted black waves; and then the picture
+changed and showed a battle<a name="Page_292"></a> upon land, and
+searchlights were flickering through the rain and shells flashed
+luridly, and men darkly seen in silhouette against red flames ran
+with fixed bayonets and slipped and floundered over the mud, and at
+last, shouting thinly through the wind, leapt down into the enemy
+trenches....</p>
+<p>And then he was alone again staring over a wet black field
+towards a dim crest of shapeless trees.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 9</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Abruptly and shockingly, this malignity of warfare, which had
+been so far only a festering cluster of reports and stories and
+rumours and suspicions, stretched out its arm into Essex and struck
+a barb of grotesque cruelty into the very heart of Mr. Britling.
+Late one afternoon came a telegram from Filmington-on-Sea, where
+Aunt Wilshire had been recovering her temper in a boarding-house
+after a round of visits in Yorkshire and the moorlands. And she had
+been "very seriously injured" by an overnight German air raid. It
+was a raid that had not been even mentioned in the morning's
+papers. She had asked to see him.</p>
+<p>It was, ran the compressed telegraphic phrase, "advisable to
+come at once."</p>
+<p>Mrs. Britling helped him pack a bag, and came with him to the
+station in order to drive the car back to the Dower House; for the
+gardener's boy who had hitherto attended to these small duties had
+now gone off as an unskilled labourer to some munition works at
+Chelmsford. Mr. Britling sat in the slow train that carried him
+across country to the junction for Filmington, and failed
+altogether to realise what had happened to the old lady. He had an
+absurd feeling that it was characteristic of her to intervene in
+affairs in this manner. She had always been so tough and unbent an
+old lady that until he saw her he could not imagine her as being
+really seriously and pitifully hurt....</p>
+<a name="Page_293"></a>
+<p>But he found her in the hospital very much hurt indeed. She had
+been smashed in some complicated manner that left the upper part of
+her body intact, and lying slantingly upon pillows. Over the horror
+of bandaged broken limbs and tormented flesh below sheets and a
+counterpane were drawn. Morphia had been injected, he understood,
+to save her from pain, but presently it might be necessary for her
+to suffer. She lay up in her bed with an effect of being enthroned,
+very white and still, her strong profile with its big nose and her
+straggling hair and a certain dignity gave her the appearance of
+some very important, very old man, of an aged pope for instance,
+rather than of an old woman. She had made no remark after they had
+set her and dressed her and put her to bed except "send for Hughie
+Britling, The Dower House, Matching's Easy. He is the best of the
+bunch." She had repeated the address and this commendation firmly
+over and over again, in large print as it were, even after they had
+assured her that a telegram had been despatched.</p>
+<p>In the night, they said, she had talked of him.</p>
+<p>He was not sure at first that she knew of his presence.</p>
+<p>"Here I am, Aunt Wilshire," he said.</p>
+<p>She gave no sign.</p>
+<p>"Your nephew Hugh."</p>
+<p>"Mean and preposterous," she said very distinctly.</p>
+<p>But she was not thinking of Mr. Britling. She was talking of
+something else.</p>
+<p>She was saying: "It should not have been known I was here. There
+are spies everywhere. Everywhere. There is a spy now&mdash;or a
+lump very like a spy. They pretend it is a hot-water bottle.
+Pretext.... Oh, yes! I admit&mdash;absurd. But I have been pursued
+by spies. Endless spies. Endless, endless spies. Their devices are
+almost incredible.... He has never forgiven me....</p>
+<p>"All this on account of a carpet. A palace carpet. Over which I
+had no control. I spoke my mind. He<a name="Page_294"></a> knew I
+knew of it. I never concealed it. So I was hunted. For years he had
+meditated revenge. Now he has it. But at what a cost! And they call
+him Emperor. Emperor!</p>
+<p>"His arm is withered; his son&mdash;imbecile. He will
+die&mdash;without dignity...."</p>
+<p>Her voice weakened, but it was evident she wanted to say
+something more.</p>
+<p>"I'm here," said Mr. Britling. "Your nephew Hughie."</p>
+<p>She listened.</p>
+<p>"Can you understand me?" he asked.</p>
+<p>She became suddenly an earnest, tender human being. "My dear!"
+she said, and seemed to search for something in her mind and failed
+to find it.</p>
+<p>"You have always understood me," she tried.</p>
+<p>"You have always been a good boy to me, Hughie," she said,
+rather vacantly, and added after some moments of still reflection,
+"<i>au fond</i>."</p>
+<p>After that she was silent for some minutes, and took no notice
+of his whispers.</p>
+<p>Then she recollected what had been in her mind. She put out a
+hand that sought for Mr. Britling's sleeve.</p>
+<p>"Hughie!"</p>
+<p>"I'm here, Auntie," said Mr. Britling. "I'm here."</p>
+<p>"Don't let him get at <i>your</i> Hughie.... Too good for it,
+dear. Oh! much&mdash;much too good.... People let these wars and
+excitements run away with them.... They put too much into them....
+They aren't&mdash;they aren't worth it. Don't let him get at your
+Hughie."</p>
+<p>"No!"</p>
+<p>"You understand me, Hughie?"</p>
+<p>"Perfectly, Auntie."</p>
+<p>"Then don't forget it. Ever."</p>
+<p>She had said what she wanted to say. She had made her testament.
+She closed her eyes. He was amazed to find this grotesque old
+creature had suddenly become<a name="Page_295"></a> beautiful, in
+that silvery vein of beauty one sometimes finds in very old men.
+She was exalted as great artists will sometimes exalt the portraits
+of the aged. He was moved to kiss her forehead.</p>
+<p>There came a little tug at his sleeve.</p>
+<p>"I think that is enough," said the nurse, who had stood
+forgotten at his elbow.</p>
+<p>"But I can come again?"</p>
+<p>"Perhaps."</p>
+<p>She indicated departure by a movement of her hand.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 10</h4>
+<br>
+<p>The next day Aunt Wilshire was unconscious of her visitor.</p>
+<p>They had altered her position so that she lay now horizontally,
+staring inflexibly at the ceiling and muttering queer old
+disconnected things.</p>
+<p>The Windsor Castle carpet story was still running through her
+mind, but mixed up with it now were scraps of the current newspaper
+controversies about the conduct of the war. And she was still
+thinking of the dynastic aspects of the war. And of spies. She had
+something upon her mind about the King's more German aunts.</p>
+<p>"As a precaution," she said, "as a precaution. Watch them
+all.... The Princess Christian.... Laying foundation stones....
+Cement.... Guns. Or else why should they always be laying
+foundation stones?... Always.... Why?... Hushed up....</p>
+<p>"None of these things," she said, "in the newspapers. They ought
+to be."</p>
+<p>And then after an interval, very distinctly, "The Duke of
+Wellington. My ancestor&mdash;in reality.... Publish and be
+damned."</p>
+<p>After that she lay still....</p>
+<p>The doctors and nurses could hold out only very faint<a name=
+"Page_296"></a> hopes to Mr. Britling's inquiries; they said indeed
+it was astonishing that she was still alive.</p>
+<p>And about seven o'clock that evening she died....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 11</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling, after he had looked at his dead cousin for the
+last time, wandered for an hour or so about the silent little
+watering-place before he returned to his hotel. There was no one to
+talk to and nothing else to do but to think of her death.</p>
+<p>The night was cold and bleak, but full of stars. He had already
+mastered the local topography, and he knew now exactly where all
+the bombs that had been showered upon the place had fallen. Here
+was the corner of blackened walls and roasted beams where three
+wounded horses had been burnt alive in a barn, here the row of
+houses, some smashed, some almost intact, where a mutilated child
+had screamed for two hours before she could be rescued from the
+debris that had pinned her down, and taken to the hospital.
+Everywhere by the dim light of the shaded street lamps he could see
+the black holes and gaps of broken windows; sometimes abundant,
+sometimes rare and exceptional, among otherwise uninjured
+dwellings. Many of the victims he had visited in the little cottage
+hospital where Aunt Wilshire had just died. She was the eleventh
+dead. Altogether fifty-seven people had been killed or injured in
+this brilliant German action. They were all civilians, and only
+twelve were men.</p>
+<p>Two Zeppelins had come in from over the sea, and had been fired
+at by an anti-aircraft gun coming on an automobile from Ipswich.
+The first intimation the people of the town had had of the raid was
+the report of this gun. Many had run out to see what was happening.
+It was doubtful if any one had really seen the Zeppelins, though
+every one testified to the sound of their engines. Then suddenly
+the bombs had come streaming down.<a name="Page_297"></a> Only six
+had made hits upon houses or people; the rest had fallen ruinously
+and very close together on the local golf links, and at least half
+had not exploded at all and did not seem to have been released to
+explode.</p>
+<p>A third at least of the injured people had been in bed when
+destruction came upon them.</p>
+<p>The story was like a page from some fantastic romance of Jules
+Verne's; the peace of the little old town, the people going to bed,
+the quiet streets, the quiet starry sky, and then for ten minutes
+an uproar of guns and shells, a clatter of breaking glass, and then
+a fire here, a fire there, a child's voice pitched high by pain and
+terror, scared people going to and fro with lanterns, and the sky
+empty again, the raiders gone....</p>
+<p>Five minutes before, Aunt Wilshire had been sitting in the
+boarding-house drawing-room playing a great stern "Patience," the
+Emperor Patience ("Napoleon, my dear!&mdash;not that Potsdam
+creature") that took hours to do. Five minutes later she was a
+thing of elemental terror and agony, bleeding wounds and shattered
+bones, plunging about in the darkness amidst a heap of wreckage.
+And already the German airmen were buzzing away to sea again, proud
+of themselves, pleased no doubt&mdash;like boys who have thrown a
+stone through a window, beating their way back to thanks and
+rewards, to iron crosses and the proud embraces of delighted Fraus
+and Fr&auml;uleins....</p>
+<p>For the first time it seemed to Mr. Britling he really saw the
+immediate horror of war, the dense cruel stupidity of the business,
+plain and close. It was as if he had never perceived anything of
+the sort before, as if he had been dealing with stories, pictures,
+shows and representations that he knew to be shams. But that this
+dear, absurd old creature, this thing of home, this being of
+familiar humours and familiar irritations, should be torn to
+pieces, left in torment like a smashed mouse over which an
+automobile has passed, brought the whole business to a raw<a name=
+"Page_298"></a> and quivering focus. Not a soul among all those who
+had been rent and torn and tortured in this agony of millions, but
+was to any one who understood and had been near to it, in some way
+lovable, in some way laughable, in some way worthy of respect and
+care. Poor Aunt Wilshire was but the sample thrust in his face of
+all this mangled multitude, whose green-white lips had sweated in
+anguish, whose broken bones had thrust raggedly through red
+dripping flesh.... The detested features of the German Crown Prince
+jerked into the centre of Mr. Britling's picture. The young man
+stood in his dapper uniform and grinned under his long nose,
+carrying himself jauntily, proud of his extreme importance to so
+many lives....</p>
+<p>And for a while Mr. Britling could do nothing but rage.</p>
+<p>"Devils they are!" he cried to the stars.</p>
+<p>"Devils! Devilish fools rather. Cruel blockheads. Apes with all
+science in their hands! My God! but <i>we will teach them a lesson
+yet!</i>..."</p>
+<p>That was the key of his mood for an hour of aimless wandering,
+wandering that was only checked at last by a sentinel who turned
+him back towards the town....</p>
+<p>He wandered, muttering. He found great comfort in scheming
+vindictive destruction for countless Germans. He dreamt of swift
+armoured aeroplanes swooping down upon the flying airship, and
+sending it reeling earthward, the men screaming. He imagined a
+shattered Zeppelin staggering earthward in the fields behind the
+Dower House, and how he would himself run out with a spade and
+smite the Germans down. "Quarter indeed! Kamerad! Take <i>that</i>,
+you foul murderer!"</p>
+<p>In the dim light the sentinel saw the retreating figure of Mr.
+Britling make an extravagant gesture, and wondered what it might
+mean. Signalling? What ought an intelligent sentry to do? Let fly
+at him? Arrest him?... Take no notice?...</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was at that moment killing Count Zeppelin and
+beating out his brains. Count Zeppelin was<a name="Page_299"></a>
+killed that night and the German Emperor was assassinated; a score
+of lesser victims were offered up to the <i>manes</i> of Aunt
+Wilshire; there were memorable cruelties before the wrath and
+bitterness of Mr. Britling was appeased. And then suddenly he had
+had enough of these thoughts; they were thrust aside, they vanished
+out of his mind.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 12</h4>
+<br>
+<p>All the while that Mr. Britling had been indulging in these
+imaginative slaughterings and spending the tears and hate that had
+gathered in his heart, his reason had been sitting apart and above
+the storm, like the sun waiting above thunder, like a wise nurse
+watching and patient above the wild passions of a child. And all
+the time his reason had been maintaining silently and firmly,
+without shouting, without speech, that the men who had made this
+hour were indeed not devils, were no more devils than Mr. Britling
+was a devil, but sinful men of like nature with himself, hard,
+stupid, caught in the same web of circumstance. "Kill them in your
+passion if you will," said reason, "but understand. This thing was
+done neither by devils nor fools, but by a conspiracy of foolish
+motives, by the weak acquiescences of the clever, by a crime that
+was no man's crime but the natural necessary outcome of the
+ineffectiveness, the blind motives and muddleheadedness of all
+mankind."</p>
+<p>So reason maintained her thesis, like a light above the head of
+Mr. Britling at which he would not look, while he hewed airmen to
+quivering rags with a spade that he had sharpened, and stifled
+German princes with their own poison gas, given slowly and as
+painfully as possible. "And what of the towns <i>our</i> ships have
+bombarded?" asked reason unheeded. "What of those Tasmanians
+<i>our</i> people utterly swept away?"</p>
+<p>"What of French machine-guns in the Atlas?" reason pressed the
+case. "Of Himalayan villages burning?<a name="Page_300"></a> Of the
+things we did in China? Especially of the things we did in
+China...."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling gave no heed to that.</p>
+<p>"The Germans in China were worse than we were," he threw
+out....</p>
+<p>He was maddened by the thought of the Zeppelin making off, high
+and far in the sky, a thing dwindling to nothing among the stars,
+and the thought of those murderers escaping him. Time after time he
+stood still and shook his fist at Bo&ouml;tes, slowly sweeping up
+the sky....</p>
+<p>And at last, sick and wretched, he sat down on a seat upon the
+deserted parade under the stars, close to the soughing of the
+invisible sea below....</p>
+<p>His mind drifted back once more to those ancient heresies of the
+Gnostics and the Manich&aelig;ans which saw the God of the World as
+altogether evil, which sought only to escape by the utmost
+abstinences and evasions and perversions from the black wickedness
+of being. For a while his soul sank down into the uncongenial
+darknesses of these creeds of despair. "I who have loved life," he
+murmured, and could have believed for a time that he wished he had
+never had a son....</p>
+<p>Is the whole scheme of nature evil? Is life in its essence
+cruel? Is man stretched quivering upon the table of the eternal
+vivisector for no end&mdash;and without pity?</p>
+<p>These were thoughts that Mr. Britling had never faced before the
+war. They came to him now, and they came only to be rejected by the
+inherent quality of his mind. For weeks, consciously and
+subconsciously, his mind had been grappling with this riddle. He
+had thought of it during his lonely prowlings as a special
+constable; it had flung itself in monstrous symbols across the dark
+canvas of his dreams. "Is there indeed a devil of pure cruelty?
+Does any creature, even the very cruellest of creatures, really
+apprehend the pain it causes, or inflict it for the sake of the
+infliction?" He summoned a score of memories, a score of
+imaginations, to bear their<a name="Page_301"></a> witness before
+the tribunal of his mind. He forgot cold and loneliness in this
+speculation. He sat, trying all Being, on this score, under the
+cold indifferent stars.</p>
+<p>He thought of certain instances of boyish cruelty that had
+horrified him in his own boyhood, and it was clear to him that
+indeed it was not cruelty, it was curiosity, dense textured, thick
+skinned, so that it could not feel even the anguish of a blinded
+cat. Those boys who had wrung his childish soul to nigh intolerable
+misery, had not indeed been tormenting so much as observing
+torment, testing life as wantonly as one breaks thin ice in the
+early days of winter. In very much cruelty the real motive is
+surely no worse than that obtuse curiosity; a mere step of
+understanding, a mere quickening of the nerves and mind, makes it
+impossible. But that is not true of all or most cruelty. Most
+cruelty has something else in it, something more than the clumsy
+plunging into experience of the hobbledehoy; it is vindictive or
+indignant; it is never tranquil and sensuous; it draws its
+incentive, however crippled and monstrous the justification may be,
+from something punitive in man's instinct, something therefore that
+implies a sense, however misguided, of righteousness and
+vindication. That factor is present even in spite; when some vile
+or atrocious thing is done out of envy or malice, that envy and
+malice has in it always&mdash;<i>always?</i> Yes, always&mdash;a
+genuine condemnation of the hated thing as an unrighteous thing, as
+an unjust usurpation, as an inexcusable privilege, as a sinful
+overconfidence. Those men in the airship?&mdash;he was coming to
+that. He found himself asking himself whether it was possible for a
+human being to do any cruel act without an excuse&mdash;or, at
+least, without the feeling of excusability. And in the case of
+these Germans and the outrages they had committed and the
+retaliations they had provoked, he perceived that always there was
+the element of a perceptible if inadequate justification. Just as
+there would be if presently he were to maltreat a fallen
+German<a name="Page_302"></a> airman. There was anger in their
+vileness. These Germans were an unsubtle people, a people in the
+worst and best sense of the words, plain and honest; they were
+prone to moral indignation; and moral indignation is the mother of
+most of the cruelty in the world. They perceived the indolence of
+the English and Russians, they perceived their disregard of science
+and system, they could not perceive the longer reach of these
+greater races, and it seemed to them that the mission of Germany
+was to chastise and correct this laxity. Surely, they had argued,
+God was not on the side of those who kept an untilled field. So
+they had butchered these old ladies and slaughtered these children
+just to show us the consequences:</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p>"All along of dirtiness, all along of mess,</p>
+<p>All along of doing things rather more or less."</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>The very justification our English poet has found for a thousand
+overbearing actions in the East! "Forget not order and the real,"
+that was the underlying message of bomb and gas and submarine.
+After all, what right had we English <i>not</i> to have a gun or an
+aeroplane fit to bring down that Zeppelin ignominiously and
+conclusively? Had we not undertaken Empire? Were we not the leaders
+of great nations? Had we indeed much right to complain if our
+imperial pose was flouted? "There, at least," said Mr. Britling's
+reason, "is one of the lines of thought that brought that unseen
+cruelty out of the night high over the houses of Filmington-on-Sea.
+That, in a sense, is the cause of this killing. Cruel it is and
+abominable, yes, but is it altogether cruel? Hasn't it, after all,
+a sort of stupid rightness?&mdash;isn't it a stupid reaction to an
+indolence at least equally stupid?"</p>
+<p>What was this rightness that lurked below cruelty? What was the
+inspiration of this pressure of spite, this anger that was aroused
+by ineffective gentleness and kindliness? Was it indeed an
+altogether evil thing; was it not rather an impulse, blind as yet,
+but in its ultimate<a name="Page_303"></a> quality <i>as good as
+mercy</i>, greater perhaps in its ultimate values than mercy?</p>
+<p>This idea had been gathering in Mr. Britling's mind for many
+weeks; it had been growing and taking shape as he wrote, making
+experimental beginnings for his essay, "The Anatomy of Hate." Is
+there not, he now asked himself plainly, a creative and corrective
+impulse behind all hate? Is not this malignity indeed only the
+ape-like precursor of the great disciplines of a creative
+state?</p>
+<p>The invincible hopefulness of his sanguine temperament had now
+got Mr. Britling well out of the pessimistic pit again. Already he
+had been on the verge of his phrase while wandering across the
+rushy fields towards Market Saffron; now it came to him again like
+a legitimate monarch returning from exile.</p>
+<p>"When hate shall have become creative energy....</p>
+<p>"Hate which passes into creative power; gentleness which is
+indolence and the herald of euthanasia....</p>
+<p>"Pity is but a passing grace; for mankind will not always be
+pitiful."</p>
+<p>But meanwhile, meanwhile.... How long were men so to mingle
+wrong with right, to be energetic without mercy and kindly without
+energy?...</p>
+<p>For a time Mr. Britling sat on the lonely parade under the stars
+and in the sound of the sea, brooding upon these ideas.</p>
+<p>His mind could make no further steps. It had worked for its
+spell. His rage had ebbed away now altogether. His despair was no
+longer infinite. But the world was dark and dreadful still. It
+seemed none the less dark because at the end there was a gleam of
+light. It was a gleam of light far beyond the limits of his own
+life, far beyond the life of his son. It had no balm for these
+sufferings. Between it and himself stretched the weary generations
+still to come, generations of bickering and accusation, greed and
+faintheartedness, and half truth and<a name="Page_304"></a> the
+hasty blow. And all those years would be full of pitiful things,
+such pitiful things as the blackened ruins in the town behind, the
+little grey-faced corpses, the lives torn and wasted, the hopes
+extinguished and the gladness gone....</p>
+<p>He was no longer thinking of the Germans as diabolical. They
+were human; they had a case. It was a stupid case, but our case,
+too, was a stupid case. How stupid were all our cases! What was it
+we missed? Something, he felt, very close to us, and very elusive.
+Something that would resolve a hundred tangled oppositions....</p>
+<p>His mind hung at that. Back upon his consciousness came crowding
+the horrors and desolations that had been his daily food now for
+three quarters of a year. He groaned aloud. He struggled against
+that renewed envelopment of his spirit. "Oh, blood-stained fools!"
+he cried, "oh, pitiful, tormented fools!</p>
+<p>"Even that vile airship was a ship of fools!</p>
+<p>"We are all fools still. Striving apes, irritated beyond measure
+by our own striving, easily moved to anger."</p>
+<p>Some train of subconscious suggestion brought a long-forgotten
+speech back into Mr. Britling's mind, a speech that is full of that
+light which still seeks so mysteriously and indefatigably to break
+through the darkness and thickness of the human mind.</p>
+<p>He whispered the words. No unfamiliar words could have had the
+same effect of comfort and conviction.</p>
+<p>He whispered it of those men whom he still imagined flying far
+away there eastward, through the clear freezing air beneath the
+stars, those muffled sailors and engineers who had caused so much
+pain and agony in this little town.</p>
+<p>"<i>Father, forgive them, for they know not what they
+do.</i>"</p>
+<a name="Page_305"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_II_CHAPTER_THE_FOURTH"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE FOURTH</h2>
+<h2>IN THE WEB OF THE INEFFECTIVE</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Hugh's letters were becoming a very important influence upon Mr.
+Britling's thought. Hugh had always been something of a
+letter-writer, and now what was perhaps an inherited desire to set
+things down was manifest. He had been accustomed to decorate his
+letters from school with absurd little sketches&mdash;sometimes his
+letters had been all sketches&mdash;and now he broke from drawing
+to writing and back to drawing in a way that pleased his father
+mightily. The father loved this queer trick of caricature; he did
+not possess it himself, and so it seemed to him the most wonderful
+of all Hugh's little equipment of gifts. Mr. Britling used to carry
+these letters about until their edges got grimy; he would show them
+to any one he felt capable of appreciating their youthful
+freshness; he would quote them as final and conclusive evidence to
+establish this or that. He did not dream how many thousands of
+mothers and fathers were treasuring such documents. He thought
+other sons were dull young men by comparison with Hugh.</p>
+<p>The earlier letters told much of the charms of discipline and
+the open air. "All the bother about what one has to do with oneself
+is over," wrote Hugh. "One has disposed of oneself. That has the
+effect of a great relief. Instead of telling oneself that one ought
+to get up in the morning, a bugle tells you that.... And there's no
+nonsense about it, no chance of lying and arguing about it with
+oneself.... I begin to see the sense of men going into monasteries
+and putting themselves under rules. One<a name="Page_306"></a> is
+carried along in a sort of moral automobile instead of trudging the
+road...."</p>
+<p>And he was also sounding new physical experiences.</p>
+<p>"Never before," he declared, "have I known what fatigue is. It's
+a miraculous thing. One drops down in one's clothes on any hard old
+thing and sleeps...."</p>
+<p>And in his early letters he was greatly exercised by the
+elementary science of drill and discipline, and the discussion of
+whether these things were necessary. He began by assuming that
+their importance was overrated. He went on to discover that they
+constituted the very essentials of all good soldiering. "In a
+crisis," he concluded, "there is no telling what will get hold of a
+man, his higher instincts or his lower. He may show courage of a
+very splendid sort&mdash;or a hasty discretion. A habit is much
+more trustworthy than an instinct. So discipline sets up a habit of
+steady and courageous bearing. If you keep your head you are at
+liberty to be splendid. If you lose it, the habit will carry you
+through."</p>
+<p>The young man was also very profound upon the effects of the
+suggestion of various exercises upon the mind.</p>
+<p>"It is surprising how bloodthirsty one feels in a bayonet
+charge. We have to shout; we are encouraged to shout. The effect is
+to paralyse one's higher centres. One ceases to
+question&mdash;anything. One becomes a 'bayoneteer.' As I go
+bounding forward I imagine fat men, succulent men ahead, and I am
+filled with the desire to do them in neatly. This sort of
+thing&mdash;"</p>
+<p>A sketch of slaughter followed, with a large and valiant Hugh
+leaving a train of fallen behind him.</p>
+<p>"Not like this. This is how I used to draw it in my innocent
+childhood, but it is incorrect. More than one German on the bayonet
+at a time is an incumbrance. And it would be swank&mdash;a thing we
+detest in the army."</p>
+<p>The second sketch showed the same brave hero with half a dozen
+of the enemy skewered like cat's-meat.</p>
+<p>"As for the widows and children, I disregard 'em."</p>
+<a name="Page_307"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>But presently Hugh began to be bored.</p>
+<p>"Route marching again," he wrote. "For no earthly reason than
+that they can do nothing else with us. We are getting no decent
+musketry training because there are no rifles. We are wasting half
+our time. If you multiply half a week by the number of men in the
+army you will see we waste centuries weekly.... If most of these
+men here had just been enrolled and left to go about their business
+while we trained officers and instructors and got equipment for
+them, and if they had then been put through their paces as rapidly
+as possible, it would have been infinitely better for the
+country.... In a sort of way we are keeping raw; in a sort of way
+we are getting stale.... I get irritated by this. I feel we are not
+being properly done by.</p>
+<p>"Half our men are educated men, reasonably educated, but we are
+always being treated as though we were too stupid for words....</p>
+<p>"No good grousing, I suppose, but after Statesminster and a
+glimpse of old Cardinal's way of doing things, one gets a kind of
+toothache in the mind at the sight of everything being done twice
+as slowly and half as well as it need be."</p>
+<p>He went off at a tangent to describe the men in his platoon.
+"The best man in our lot is an ex-grocer's assistant, but in order
+to save us from vain generalisations it happens that the worst
+man&mdash;a moon-faced creature, almost incapable of lacing up his
+boots without help and objurgation&mdash;is also an ex-grocer's
+assistant. Our most offensive member is a little cad with a snub
+nose, who has read Kipling and imagines he is the nearest thing
+that ever has been to Private Ortheris. He goes about looking for
+the other two of the Soldiers Three; it is rather like an unpopular
+politician trying to form a ministry. And he is conscientiously
+foul-mouthed. He feels<a name="Page_308"></a> losing a chance of
+saying 'bloody' as acutely as a snob feels dropping an H. He goes
+back sometimes and says the sentence over again and puts the
+'bloody' in. I used to swear a little out of the range of your
+parental ear, but Ortheris has cured me. When he is about I am
+mincing in my speech. I perceive now that cursing is a way of
+chewing one's own dirt. In a platoon there is no elbow-room for
+indifference; you must either love or hate. I have a feeling that
+my first taste of battle will not be with Germans, but with Private
+Ortheris...."</p>
+<p>And one letter was just a picture, a parody of the well-known
+picture of the bivouac below and the soldier's dream of return to
+his beloved above. But Master Hugh in the dream was embracing an
+enormous retort, while a convenient galvanometer registered his
+emotion and little tripods danced around him.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Then came a letter which plunged abruptly into criticism.</p>
+<p>"My dear Parent, this is a swearing letter. I must let go to
+somebody. And somehow none of the other chaps are convenient. I
+don't know if I ought to be put against a wall and shot for it, but
+I hereby declare that all the officers of this battalion over and
+above the rank of captain are a constellation of
+incapables&mdash;and several of the captains are herewith included.
+Some of them are men of a pleasant disposition and carefully
+aborted mental powers, and some are men of an unpleasant
+disposition and no mental powers at all. And I believe&mdash;a
+little enlightened by your recent letter to <i>The
+Times</i>&mdash;that they are a fair sample of the entire 'army'
+class which has got to win this war. Usually they are indolent, but
+when they are thoroughly roused they are fussy. The time they
+should spend in enlarging their minds and increasing their military
+efficiency they devote to keeping<a name="Page_309"></a> fit. They
+are, roughly speaking, fit&mdash;for nothing. They cannot move us
+thirty miles without getting half of us left about, without losing
+touch with food and shelter, and starving us for thirty-six hours
+or so in the process, and they cannot count beyond the fingers of
+one hand, not having learnt to use the nose for arithmetical
+operations.... I conclude this war is going to be a sort of Battle
+of Inkerman on a large scale. We chaps in the ranks will have to do
+the job. Leading is 'off.'...</p>
+<p>"All of this, my dear Parent, is just a blow off. I have been
+needlessly starved, and fagged to death and exasperated. We have
+moved five-and-twenty miles across country&mdash;in fifty-seven
+hours. And without food for about eighteen hours. I have been with
+my Captain, who has been billeting us here in Cheasingholt. Oh, he
+is a MUFF! Oh God! oh God of Heaven! what a MUFF! He is afraid of
+printed matter, but he controls himself heroically. He prides
+himself upon having no 'sense of locality, confound it!' Prides
+himself! He went about this village, which is a little dispersed,
+at a slight trot, and wouldn't avail himself of the one-inch map I
+happened to have. He judged the capacity of each room with his eye
+and wouldn't let me measure, even with God's own paces. Not with
+the legs I inherit. 'We'll put five fellahs hea!' he said. 'What
+d'you want to measure the room for? We haven't come to lay down
+carpets.' Then, having assigned men by <i>coup d'oeil</i>, so as to
+congest half the village miserably, he found the other half
+unoccupied and had to begin all over again. 'If you measured the
+floor space first, sir,' I said, 'and made a list of the
+houses&mdash;' 'That isn't the way I'm going to do it,' he said,
+fixing me with a pitiless eye....</p>
+<p>"That isn't the way they are going to do it, Daddy! The sort of
+thing that is done over here in the green army will be done over
+there in the dry. They won't be in time; they'll lose their guns
+where now they lose our kitchens. I'm a mute soldier; I've got to
+do what I'm<a name="Page_310"></a> told; still, I begin to
+understand the Battle of Neuve Chapelle.</p>
+<p>"They say the relations of men and officers in the new army are
+beautiful. Some day I may learn to love my officer&mdash;but not
+just yet. Not till I've forgotten the operations leading up to the
+occupation of Cheasingholt.... He muffs his real job without a
+blush, and yet he would rather be shot than do his bootlaces up
+criss-cross. What I say about officers applies only and solely to
+him really.... How well I understand now the shooting of officers
+by their men.... But indeed, fatigue and exasperation apart, this
+shift has been done atrociously...."</p>
+<p>The young man returned to these criticisms in a later
+letter.</p>
+<p>"You will think I am always carping, but it does seem to me that
+nearly everything is being done here in the most wasteful way
+possible. We waste time, we waste labour, we waste material, oh
+Lord! how we waste our country's money. These aren't, I can assure
+you, the opinions of a conceited young man. It's nothing to be
+conceited about.... We're bored to death by standing about this
+infernal little village. There is nothing to do&mdash;except trail
+after a small number of slatternly young women we despise and hate.
+I <i>don't</i>, Daddy. And I don't drink. Why have I inherited no
+vices? We had a fight here yesterday&mdash;sheer boredom. Ortheris
+has a swollen lip, and another private has a bad black eye. There
+is to be a return match. I perceive the chief horror of warfare is
+boredom....</p>
+<p>"Our feeding here is typical of the whole system. It is a system
+invented not with any idea of getting the best results&mdash;that
+does not enter into the War Office philosophy&mdash;but to have a
+rule for everything, and avoid arguments. There is rather too
+generous an allowance of bread and stuff per man, and there is a
+very fierce but not very efficient system of weighing and checking.
+A rather<a name="Page_311"></a> too generous allowance is, of
+course, a direct incentive to waste or stealing&mdash;as any one
+but our silly old duffer of a War Office would know. The checking
+is for quantity, which any fool can understand, rather than for
+quality. The test for the quality of army meat is the smell. If it
+doesn't smell bad, it is good....</p>
+<p>"Then the raw material is handed over to a cook. He is a common
+soldier who has been made into a cook by a simple ceremony. He is
+told, 'You are a cook.' He does his best to be. Usually he roasts
+or bakes to begin with, guessing when the joint is done, afterwards
+he hacks up what is left of his joints and makes a stew for next
+day. A stew is hacked meat boiled up in a big pot. It has much fat
+floating on the top. After you have eaten your fill you want to sit
+about quiet. The men are fed usually in a large tent or barn. We
+have a barn. It is not a clean barn, and just to make it more like
+a picnic there are insufficient plates, knives and forks. (I tell
+you, no army people can count beyond eight or ten.) The corporals
+after their morning's work have to carve. When they have done
+carving they tell me they feel they have had enough dinner. They
+sit about looking pale, and wander off afterwards to the village
+pub. (I shall probably become a corporal soon.) In these islands
+before the war began there was a surplus of women over men of about
+a million. (See the publications of the Fabian Society, now so
+popular among the young.) None of these women have been trusted by
+the government with the difficult task of cooking and giving out
+food to our soldiers. No man of the ordinary soldier class ever
+cooks anything until he is a soldier.... All food left over after
+the stew or otherwise rendered uneatable by the cook is thrown
+away. We throw away pail-loads. <i>We bury meat</i>....</p>
+<p>"Also we get three pairs of socks. We work pretty hard. We don't
+know how to darn socks. When the heels wear through, come blisters.
+Bad blisters disable a man. Of the million of surplus women (see
+above) the government<a name="Page_312"></a> has not had the
+intelligence to get any to darn our socks. So a certain percentage
+of us go lame. And so on. And so on.</p>
+<p>"You will think all this is awful grousing, but the point I want
+to make&mdash;I hereby to ease my feelings make it now in a fair
+round hand&mdash;is that all this business could be done far better
+and far cheaper if it wasn't left to these absolutely inexperienced
+and extremely exclusive military gentlemen. They think they are
+leading England and showing us all how; instead of which they are
+just keeping us back. Why in thunder are they doing everything? Not
+one of them, when he is at home, is allowed to order the dinner or
+poke his nose into his own kitchen or check the household books....
+The ordinary British colonel is a helpless old gentleman; he ought
+to have a nurse.... This is not merely the trivial grievance of my
+insulted stomach, it is a serious matter for the country. Sooner or
+later the country may want the food that is being wasted in all
+these capers. In the aggregate it must amount to a daily
+destruction of tons of stuff of all sorts. Tons.... Suppose the war
+lasts longer than we reckon!"</p>
+<p>From this point Hugh's letter jumped to a general discussion of
+the military mind.</p>
+<p>"Our officers are beastly good chaps, nearly all of them. That's
+where the perplexity of the whole thing comes in. If only they
+weren't such good chaps! If only they were like the Prussian
+officers to their men, then we'd just take on a revolution as well
+as the war, and make everything tidy at once. But they are decent,
+they are charming.... Only they do not think hard, and they do not
+understand that doing a job properly means doing it as directly and
+thought-outly as you possibly can. They won't worry about things.
+If their tempers were worse perhaps their work might be better.
+They won't use maps or timetables or books of reference. When we
+move to a new place they pick up what they can about it by hearsay;
+not<a name="Page_313"></a> one of our lot has the gumption to
+possess a contoured map or a Michelin guide. They have hearsay
+minds. They are fussy and petty and wasteful&mdash;and, in the way
+of getting things done, pretentious. By their code they're paragons
+of honour. Courage&mdash;they're all right about that; no end of
+it; honesty, truthfulness, and so on&mdash;high. They have a kind
+of horsey standard of smartness and pluck, too, that isn't bad, and
+they have a fine horror of whiskers and being unbuttoned. But the
+mistake they make is to class thinking with whiskers, as a sort of
+fussy sidegrowth. Instead of classing it with unbuttonedupness.
+They hate economy. And preparation....</p>
+<p>"They won't see that inefficiency is a sort of dishonesty. If a
+man doesn't steal sixpence, they think it a light matter if he
+wastes half a crown. Here follows wisdom! <i>From the point of view
+of a nation at war, sixpence is just a fifth part of half a
+crown</i>....</p>
+<p>"When I began this letter I was boiling with indignation,
+complicated, I suspect, by this morning's 'stew'; now I have
+written thus far I feel I'm an ungenerous grumbler.... It is
+remarkable, my dear Parent, that I let off these things to you. I
+like writing to you. I couldn't possibly say the things I can
+write. Heinrich had a confidential friend at Breslau to whom he
+used to write about his Soul. I never had one of those Teutonic
+friendships. And I haven't got a Soul. But I have to write. One
+must write to some one&mdash;and in this place there is nothing
+else to do. And now the old lady downstairs is turning down the
+gas; she always does at half-past ten. She didn't ought. She
+gets&mdash;ninepence each. Excuse the pencil...."</p>
+<p>That letter ended abruptly. The next two were brief and
+cheerful. Then suddenly came a new note.</p>
+<p>"We've got rifles! We're real armed soldiers at last. Every
+blessed man has got a rifle. And they come from Japan! They are of
+a sort of light wood that is like new<a name="Page_314"></a> oak
+and art furniture, and makes one feel that one belongs to the First
+Garden Suburb Regiment; but I believe much can be done with linseed
+oil. And they are real rifles, they go bang. We are a little
+light-headed about them. Only our training and discipline prevent
+our letting fly at incautious spectators on the skyline. I saw a
+man yesterday about half a mile off. I was possessed by the idea
+that I could get him&mdash;right in the middle.... Ortheris, the
+little beast, has got a motor-bicycle, which he calls his
+'b&mdash;&mdash;y oto'&mdash;no one knows why&mdash;and only death
+or dishonourable conduct will save me, I gather, from becoming a
+corporal in the course of the next month...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>A subsequent letter threw fresh light on the career of the young
+man with the "oto." Before the rifle and the "oto," and in spite of
+his fights with some person or persons unknown, Ortheris found
+trouble. Hugh told the story with the unblushing
+<i>savoir-faire</i> of the very young.</p>
+<p>"By the by, Ortheris, following the indications of his creator
+and succumbing to the universal boredom before the rifles came,
+forgot Lord Kitchener's advice and attempted 'seduktion.' With
+painful results which he insists upon confiding to the entire
+platoon. He has been severely smacked and scratched by the proposed
+victim, and warned off the premises (licensed premises) by her
+father and mother&mdash;both formidable persons. They did more than
+warn him off the premises. They had displayed neither a proper
+horror of Don Juan nor a proper respect for the King's uniform.
+Mother, we realise, got hold of him and cuffed him severely. 'What
+the 'ell's a chap to do?' cried Ortheris. 'You can't go 'itting a
+woman back.' Father had set a dog on him. A less ingenuous
+character would be silent about such passages&mdash;I should be too
+egotistical and humiliated altogether&mdash;but that is not his
+quality. He tells<a name="Page_315"></a> us in tones of na&iuml;ve
+wonder. He talks about it and talks about it. 'I don't care what
+the old woman did,' he says, 'not&mdash;reely. What 'urts me about
+it is that I jest made a sort of mistake 'ow <i>she'd</i> tike it.
+You see, I sort of feel I've 'urt and insulted <i>'er</i>. And
+reely I didn't mean to. Swap me, I didn't mean to. Gawd 'elp me. I
+wouldn't 'ave 'ad it 'appened as it 'as 'appened, not for worlds.
+And now I can't get round to 'er, or anyfing, not to explain....
+You chaps may laugh, but you don't know what there is <i>in</i>
+it.... I tell you it worries me something frightful. You think I'm
+just a little cad who took liberties he didn't ought to. (Note of
+anger drowning uncharitable grunts of assent.) 'Ow the 'ell is 'e
+to know <i>when</i> 'e didn't ought to? ... I <i>swear</i> she
+liked me....'</p>
+<p>"This kind of thing goes on for hours&mdash;in the darkness.</p>
+<p>"'I'd got regular sort of fond of 'er.'</p>
+<p>"And the extraordinary thing is it makes me begin to get regular
+fond of Ortheris.</p>
+<p>"I think it is because the affair has surprised him right out of
+acting Ortheris and Tommy Atkins for a bit, into his proper self.
+He's frightfully like some sort of mongrel with a lot of
+wiry-haired terrier and a touch of Airedale in it. A mongrel you
+like in spite of the flavour of all the horrid things he's been
+nosing into. And he's as hard as nails and, my dear daddy! he can't
+box for nuts."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling, with an understanding much quickened by Hugh's
+letters, went about Essex in his automobile, and on one or two
+journeys into Berkshire and Buckinghamshire, and marked the steady
+conversion of the old pacific countryside into an armed camp. He
+was disposed to minimise Hugh's criticisms. He found in them
+something of the harshness of youth, which is far too
+keen-edged<a name="Page_316"></a> to be tolerant with half
+performance and our poor human evasion of perfection's overstrain.
+"Our poor human evasion of perfection's overstrain"; this phrase
+was Mr. Britling's. To Mr. Britling, looking less closely and more
+broadly, the new army was a pride and a marvel.</p>
+<p>He liked to come into some quiet village and note the clusters
+of sturdy khaki-clad youngsters going about their business, the
+tethered horses, the air of subdued bustle, the occasional glimpses
+of guns and ammunition trains. Wherever one went now there were
+soldiers and still more soldiers. There was a steady flow of men
+into Flanders, and presently to Gallipoli, but it seemed to have no
+effect upon the multitude in training at home. He was pleasantly
+excited by the evident increase in the proportion of military
+material upon the railways; he liked the promise and mystery of the
+long lines of trucks bearing tarpaulin-covered wagons and carts and
+guns that he would pass on his way to Liverpool Street station. He
+could apprehend defeat in the silence of the night, but when he saw
+the men, when he went about the land, then it was impossible to
+believe in any end but victory....</p>
+<p>But through the spring and summer there was no victory. The
+"great offensive" of May was checked and abandoned after a series
+of ineffective and very costly attacks between Ypres and Soissons.
+The Germans had developed a highly scientific defensive in which
+machine-guns replaced rifles and a maximum of punishment was
+inflicted upon an assaulting force with a minimum of human loss.
+The War Office had never thought much of machine-guns before, but
+now it thought a good deal. Moreover, the energies of Britain were
+being turned more and more towards the Dardanelles.</p>
+<p>The idea of an attack upon the Dardanelles had a traditional
+attractiveness for the British mind. Old men had been brought up
+from childhood with "forcing the Dardanelles" as a familiar phrase;
+it had none of the<a name="Page_317"></a> flighty novelty and
+vulgarity about it that made an "aerial offensive" seem so
+unwarrantable a proceeding. Forcing the Dardanelles was
+historically British. It made no break with tradition. Soon after
+Turkey entered the war British submarines appeared in the Sea of
+Marmora, and in February a systematic bombardment of the
+Dardanelles began; this was continued intermittently for a month,
+the defenders profiting by their experiences and by spells of bad
+weather to strengthen their works. This first phase of the attack
+culminated in the loss of the <i>Irresistible</i>, <i>Ocean</i>,
+and <i>Bouvet</i>, when on the 17th of March the attacking fleet
+closed in upon the Narrows. After an interlude of six weeks to
+allow of further preparations on the part of the defenders, who
+were now thoroughly alive to what was coming, the Allied armies
+gathered upon the scene, and a difficult and costly landing was
+achieved at two points upon the peninsula of Gallipoli. With that
+began a slow and bloody siege of the defences of the Dardanelles,
+clambering up to the surprise landing of a fresh British army in
+Suvla Bay in August, and its failure in the battle of Anafarta,
+through incompetent commanders and a general sloppiness of leading,
+to cut off and capture Maidos and the Narrows defences....
+Meanwhile the Russian hosts, which had reached their high-water
+mark in the capture of Przemysl, were being forced back first in
+the south and then in the north. The Germans recaptured Lemberg,
+entered Warsaw, and pressed on to take Brest Litowsk. The Russian
+lines rolled back with an impressive effect of defeat, and the
+Germans thrust towards Riga and Petrograd, reaching Vilna about the
+middle of September....</p>
+<p>Day after day Mr. Britling traced the swaying fortunes of the
+conflict, with impatience, with perplexity, but with no loss of
+confidence in the ultimate success of Britain. The country was
+still swarming with troops, and still under summer sunshine. A
+second hay harvest redeemed the<a name="Page_318"></a> scantiness
+of the first, the wheat crops were wonderful, and the great fig
+tree at the corner of the Dower House had never borne so
+bountifully nor such excellent juicy figs....</p>
+<p>And one day in early June while those figs were still only a
+hope, Teddy appeared at the Dower House with Letty, to say good-bye
+before going to the front. He was going out in a draft to fill up
+various gaps and losses; he did not know where. Essex was doing
+well but bloodily over there. Mrs. Britling had tea set out upon
+the lawn under the blue cedar, and Mr. Britling found himself at a
+loss for appropriate sayings, and talked in his confusion almost as
+though Teddy's departure was of no significance at all. He was
+still haunted by that odd sense of responsibility for Teddy. Teddy
+was not nearly so animated as he had been in his pre-khaki days;
+there was a quiet exaltation in his manner rather than a lively
+excitement. He knew now what he was in for. He knew now that war
+was not a lark, that for him it was to be the gravest experience he
+had ever had or was likely to have. There were no more jokes about
+Letty's pension, and a general avoidance of the topics of high
+explosives and asphyxiating gas....</p>
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Britling took the young people to the gate.</p>
+<p>"Good luck!" cried Mr. Britling as they receded.</p>
+<p>Teddy replied with a wave of the hand.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling stood watching them for some moments as they walked
+towards the little cottage which was to be the scene of their
+private parting.</p>
+<p>"I don't like his going," he said. "I hope it will be all right
+with him.... Teddy's so grave nowadays. It's a mean thing, I know,
+it has none of the Roman touch, but I am glad that this can't
+happen with Hugh&mdash;&mdash;" He computed. "Not for a year and
+three months, even if they march him into it upon his very
+birthday....</p>
+<p>"It may all he over by then...."</p>
+<a name="Page_319"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>In that computation he reckoned without Hugh.</p>
+<p>Within a month Hugh was also saying "Good-bye."</p>
+<p>"But how's this?" protested Mr. Britling, who had already
+guessed the answer. "You're not nineteen."</p>
+<p>"I'm nineteen enough for this job," said Hugh. "In fact, I
+enlisted as nineteen."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling said nothing for a little while. Then he spoke with
+a catch in his breath. "I don't blame you," he said. "It
+was&mdash;the right spirit."</p>
+<p>Drill and responsibilities of non-commissioned rank had imposed
+a novel manliness upon the bearing of Corporal Britling. "I always
+classified a little above my age at Statesminster," he said as
+though that cleared up everything.</p>
+<p>He looked at a rosebud as though it interested him. Then he
+remarked rather casually:</p>
+<p>"I thought," he said, "that if I was to go to war I'd better do
+the thing properly. It seemed&mdash;sort of half and half&mdash;not
+to be eligible for the trenches.... I ought to have told
+you...."</p>
+<p>"Yes," Mr. Britling decided.</p>
+<p>"I was shy about it at first.... I thought perhaps the war would
+be over before it was necessary to discuss anything.... Didn't want
+to go into it."</p>
+<p>"Exactly," said Mr. Britling as though that was a complete
+explanation.</p>
+<p>"It's been a good year for your roses," said Hugh.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Hugh was to stop the night. He spent what seemed to him and
+every one a long, shy, inexpressive evening. Only the small boys
+were really natural and animated. They were much impressed and
+excited by his departure, and wanted to ask a hundred questions
+about the life in<a name="Page_320"></a> the trenches. Many of them
+Hugh had to promise to answer when he got there. Then he would see
+just exactly how things were. Mrs. Britling was motherly and
+intelligent about his outfit. "Will you want winter things?" she
+asked....</p>
+<p>But when he was alone with his father after every one had gone
+to bed they found themselves able to talk.</p>
+<p>"This sort of thing seems more to us than it would be to a
+French family," Hugh remarked, standing on the hearthrug.</p>
+<p>"Yes," agreed Mr. Britling. "Their minds would be better
+prepared.... They'd have their appropriate things to say. They have
+been educated by the tradition of service&mdash;and '71."</p>
+<p>Then he spoke&mdash;almost resentfully.</p>
+<p>"The older men ought to go before you boys. Who is to carry on
+if a lot of you get killed?"</p>
+<p>Hugh reflected. "In the stiffest battle that ever can be the
+odds are against getting killed," he said.</p>
+<p>"I suppose they are."</p>
+<p>"One in three or four in the very hottest corners."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling expressed no satisfaction.</p>
+<p>"Every one is going through something of this sort."</p>
+<p>"All the decent people, at any rate," said Mr. Britling....</p>
+<p>"It will be an extraordinary experience. Somehow it seems out of
+proportion&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"With what?"</p>
+<p>"With life generally. As one has known it."</p>
+<p>"It isn't in proportion," Mr. Britling admitted.</p>
+<p>"Incommensurables," said Hugh.</p>
+<p>He considered his phrasing. "It's not," he said, "as though one
+was going into another part of the same world, or turning up
+another side of the world one was used to. It is just as if one had
+been living in a room and one had been asked to step outside.... It
+makes me think of a queer little thing that happened when I was in
+London<a name="Page_321"></a> last winter. I got into Queer
+Company. I don't think I told you. I went to have supper with some
+students in Chelsea. I hadn't been to the place before, but they
+seemed all right&mdash;just people like me&mdash;and everybody. And
+after supper they took me on to some people <i>they</i> didn't know
+very well; people who had to do with some School of Dramatic Art.
+There were two or three young actresses there and a singer and
+people of that sort, sitting about smoking cigarettes, and we began
+talking plays and books and picture shows and all that stuff; and
+suddenly there was a knocking at the door and some one went out and
+found a policeman with a warrant on the landing. They took off our
+host's son.... It had to do with a murder...."</p>
+<p>Hugh paused. "It was the Bedford Mansions mystery. I don't
+suppose you remember about it or read about it at the time. He'd
+killed a man.... It doesn't matter about the particulars anyhow,
+but what I mean is the effect. The effect of a comfortable well-lit
+orderly room and the sense of harmless people&mdash;and then the
+door opening and the policeman and the cold draught flowing in.
+<i>Murder!</i> A girl who seemed to know the people well explained
+to me in whispers what was happening. It was like the opening of a
+trap-door going down into some pit you have always known was there,
+but never really believed in."</p>
+<p>"I know," said Mr. Britling. "I know."</p>
+<p>"That's just how I feel about this war business. There's no real
+death over here. It's laid out and boxed up. And accidents are all
+padded about. If one got a toss from a horse here, you'd be in bed
+and comfortable in no time.... And there; it's like another planet.
+It's outside.... I'm going outside.... Instead of there being no
+death anywhere, it is death everywhere, outside there. We shall be
+using our utmost wits to kill each other. A kind of reverse to this
+world."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling nodded.</p>
+<a name="Page_322"></a>
+<p>"I've never seen a dead body yet. In Dower-House land there
+aren't dead bodies."</p>
+<p>"We've kept things from you&mdash;horrid things of that
+sort."</p>
+<p>"I'm not complaining," said Hugh.... "But&mdash;Master
+Hugh&mdash;the Master Hugh you kept things from&mdash;will never
+come back."</p>
+<p>He went on quickly as his father raised distressed eyes to him.
+"I mean that anyhow <i>this</i> Hugh will never come back. Another
+one may. But I shall have been outside, and it will all be
+different...."</p>
+<p>He paused. Never had Mr. Britling been so little disposed to
+take up the discourse.</p>
+<p>"Like a man," he said, seeking an image and doing no more than
+imitate his son's; "who goes out of a busy lighted room through a
+trap-door into a blizzard, to mend the roof...."</p>
+<p>For some moments neither father nor son said anything more. They
+had a queer sense of insurmountable insufficiency. Neither was
+saying what he had wanted to say to the other, but it was not clear
+to them now what they had to say to one another....</p>
+<p>"It's wonderful," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>Hugh could only manage: "The world has turned right
+over...."</p>
+<p>"The job has to be done," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"The job has to be done," said Hugh.</p>
+<p>The pause lengthened.</p>
+<p>"You'll be getting up early to-morrow," said Mr.
+Britling....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>When Mr. Britling was alone in his own room all the thoughts and
+feelings that had been held up downstairs began to run more and
+more rapidly and abundantly through his mind.</p>
+<a name="Page_323"></a>
+<p>He had a feeling&mdash;every now and again in the last few years
+he had had the same feeling&mdash;as though he was only just
+beginning to discover Hugh. This perpetual rediscovery of one's
+children is the experience of every observant parent. He had always
+considered Hugh as a youth, and now a man stood over him and
+talked, as one man to another. And this man, this very new man,
+mint new and clean and clear, filled Mr. Britling with surprise and
+admiration.</p>
+<p>It was as if he perceived the beauty of youth for the first time
+in Hugh's slender, well balanced, khaki-clad body. There was
+infinite delicacy in his clear complexion, his clear eyes; the
+delicately pencilled eyebrow that was so exactly like his mother's.
+And this thing of brightness and bravery talked as gravely and as
+wisely as any weather-worn, shop-soiled, old fellow....</p>
+<p>The boy was wise.</p>
+<p>Hugh thought for himself; he thought round and through his
+position, not egotistically but with a quality of responsibility.
+He wasn't just hero-worshipping and imitating, just spinning some
+self-centred romance. If he was a fair sample of his generation
+then it was a better generation than Mr. Britling's had
+been....</p>
+<p>At that Mr. Britling's mind went off at a tangent to the
+grievance of the rejected volunteer. It was acutely shameful to him
+that all these fine lads should be going off to death and wounds
+while the men of forty and over lay snug at home. How stupid it was
+to fix things like that! Here were the fathers, who had done their
+work, shot their bolts, returned some value for the costs of their
+education, unable to get training, unable to be of any service,
+shamefully safe, doing April fool work as special constables; while
+their young innocents, untried, all their gathering possibilities
+of service unbroached, went down into the deadly trenches.... The
+war would leave the world a world of cripples and old men and
+children....</p>
+<p>He felt himself as a cowardly brute, fat, wheezy, out of<a name=
+"Page_324"></a> training, sheltering behind this dear one branch of
+Mary's life.</p>
+<p>He writhed with impotent humiliation....</p>
+<p>How stupidly the world is managed.</p>
+<p>He began to fret and rage. He could not lie in peace in his bed;
+he got up and prowled about his room, blundering against chairs and
+tables in the darkness.... We were too stupid to do the most
+obvious things; we were sending all these boys into hardship and
+pitiless danger; we were sending them ill-equipped, insufficiently
+supported, we were sending our children through the fires to
+Moloch, because essentially we English were a world of indolent,
+pampered, sham good-humoured, old and middle-aged men. (So he
+distributed the intolerable load of self-accusation.) Why was he
+doing nothing to change things, to get them better? What was the
+good of an assumed modesty, an effort at tolerance for and
+confidence in these boozy old lawyers, these ranting platform men,
+these stiff-witted officers and hide-bound officials? They were
+butchering the youth of England. Old men sat out of danger
+contriving death for the lads in the trenches. That was the reality
+of the thing. "My son!" he cried sharply in the darkness. His sense
+of our national deficiencies became tormentingly, fantastically
+acute. It was as if all his cherished delusions had fallen from the
+scheme of things.... What was the good of making believe that up
+there they were planning some great counter-stroke that would end
+in victory? It was as plain as daylight that they had neither the
+power of imagination nor the collective intelligence even to
+conceive of a counter-stroke. Any dull mass may resist, but only
+imagination can strike. Imagination! To the end we should not
+strike. We might strike through the air. We might strike across the
+sea. We might strike hard at Gallipoli instead of dribbling
+inadequate armies thither as our fathers dribbled men at the
+Redan.... But the old men would sit at their tables, replete and
+sleepy, and shake<a name="Page_325"></a> their cunning old heads.
+The press would chatter and make odd ambiguous sounds like a
+shipload of monkeys in a storm. The political harridans would get
+the wrong men appointed, would attack every possible leader with
+scandal and abuse and falsehood....</p>
+<p>The spirit and honour and drama had gone out of this war.</p>
+<p>Our only hope now was exhaustion. Our only strategy was to
+barter blood for blood&mdash;trusting that our tank would prove the
+deeper....</p>
+<p>While into this tank stepped Hugh, young and smiling....</p>
+<p>The war became a nightmare vision....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 9</h4>
+<br>
+<p>In the morning Mr. Britling's face was white from his overnight
+brain storm, and Hugh's was fresh from wholesome sleep. They walked
+about the lawn, and Mr. Britling talked hopefully of the general
+outlook until it was time for them to start to the station....</p>
+<p>The little old station-master grasped the situation at once, and
+presided over their last hand-clasp.</p>
+<p>"Good luck, Hugh!" cried Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Good luck!" cried the little old station-master.</p>
+<p>"It's not easy a-parting," he said to Mr. Britling as the train
+slipped down the line. "There's been many a parting hea' since this
+here old war began. Many. And some as won't come back again
+neether."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 10</h4>
+<br>
+<p>For some days Mr. Britling could think of nothing but Hugh, and
+always with a dull pain at his heart. He felt as he had felt long
+ago while he had waited downstairs and Hugh upstairs had been under
+the knife of a surgeon. But this time the operation went on and
+still went on.<a name="Page_326"></a> At the worst his boy had but
+one chance in five of death or serious injury, but for a time he
+could think of nothing but that one chance. He felt it pressing
+upon his mind, pressing him down....</p>
+<p>Then instead of breaking under that pressure, he was released by
+the trick of the sanguine temperament. His mind turned over,
+abruptly, to the four chances out of five. It was like a dislocated
+joint slipping back into place. It was as sudden as that. He found
+he had adapted himself to the prospect of Hugh in mortal danger. It
+had become a fact established, a usual thing. He could bear with it
+and go about his affairs.</p>
+<p>He went up to London, and met other men at the club in the same
+emotional predicament. He realised that it was neither very
+wonderful nor exceptionally tragic now to have a son at the
+front.</p>
+<p>"My boy is in Gallipoli," said one. "It's tough work there."</p>
+<p>"My lad's in Flanders," said Mr. Britling. "Nothing would
+satisfy him but the front. He's three months short of eighteen. He
+misstated his age."</p>
+<p>And they went on to talk newspaper just as if the world was
+where it had always been.</p>
+<p>But until a post card came from Hugh Mr. Britling watched the
+postman like a lovesick girl.</p>
+<p>Hugh wrote more frequently than his father had dared to hope,
+pencilled letters for the most part. It was as if he was beginning
+to feel an inherited need for talk, and was a little at a loss for
+a sympathetic ear. Park, his schoolmate, who had enlisted with him,
+wasn't, it seemed, a theoriser. "Park becomes a martinet," Hugh
+wrote. "Also he is a sergeant now, and this makes rather a gulf
+between us." Mr. Britling had the greatest difficulty in writing
+back. There were many grave deep things he wanted to say, and never
+did. Instead he gave elaborate details of the small affairs of the
+Dower House. Once or twice, with a half-unconscious imitation of
+his boy's<a name="Page_327"></a> style, he took a shot at the
+theological and philosophical hares that Hugh had started. But the
+exemplary letters that he composed of nights from a Father to a Son
+at War were never written down. It was just as well, for there are
+many things of that sort that are good to think and bad to
+say....</p>
+<p>Hugh was not very explicit about his position or daily duties.
+What he wrote now had to pass through the hands of a Censor, and
+any sort of definite information might cause the suppression of his
+letter. Mr. Britling conceived him for the most part as quartered
+some way behind the front, but in a flat, desolated country and
+within hearing of great guns. He assisted his imagination with the
+illustrated papers. Sometimes he put him farther back into pleasant
+old towns after the fashion of Beauvais, and imagined loitering
+groups in the front of caf&eacute;s; sometimes he filled in the
+obvious suggestions of the phrase that all the Pas de Calais was
+now one vast British camp. Then he crowded the picture with
+tethered horses and tents and grey-painted wagons, and Hugh in the
+foreground&mdash;-bare-armed, with a bucket....</p>
+<p>Hugh's letters divided themselves pretty fairly between two main
+topics; the first was the interest of the art of war, the second
+the reaction against warfare. "After one has got over the emotion
+of it," he wrote, "and when one's mind has just accepted and
+forgotten (as it does) the horrors and waste of it all, then I
+begin to perceive that war is absolutely the best game in the
+world. That is the real strength of war, I submit. Not as you put
+it in that early pamphlet of yours; ambition, cruelty, and all
+those things. Those things give an excuse for war, they rush timid
+and base people into war, but the essential matter is the hold of
+the thing itself upon an active imagination. It's such a big game.
+Instead of being fenced into a field and tied down to one set of
+tools as you are in almost every other game, you have all the world
+to play and you may use whatever you can use. You can<a name=
+"Page_328"></a> use every scrap of imagination and invention that
+is in you. And it's wonderful.... But real soldiers aren't cruel.
+And war isn't cruel in its essence. Only in its consequences. Over
+here one gets hold of scraps of talk that light up things. Most of
+the barbarities were done&mdash;it is quite clear&mdash;by an
+excited civilian sort of men, men in a kind of inflamed state. The
+great part of the German army in the early stage of the war was
+really an army of demented civilians. Trained civilians no doubt,
+but civilians in soul. They were nice orderly clean law-abiding men
+suddenly torn up by the roots and flung into quite shocking
+conditions. They felt they were rushing at death, and that decency
+was at an end. They thought every Belgian had a gun behind the
+hedge and a knife in his trouser leg. They saw villages burning and
+dead people, and men smashed to bits. They lived in a kind of
+nightmare. They didn't know what they were doing. They did horrible
+things just as one does them sometimes in dreams...."</p>
+<p>He flung out his conclusion with just his mother's leaping
+consecutiveness. "Conscript soldiers are the ruin of war.... Half
+the Germans and a lot of the French ought never to have been
+brought within ten miles of a battlefield.</p>
+<p>"What makes all this so plain are the diaries the French and
+English have been finding on the dead. You know at the early state
+of the war every German soldier was expected to keep a diary. He
+was ordered to do it. The idea was to keep him interested in the
+war. Consequently, from the dead and wounded our people have got
+thousands.... It helps one to realise that the Germans aren't
+really soldiers at all. Not as our men are. They are obedient,
+law-abiding, intelligent people, who have been shoved into this.
+They have to see the war as something romantic and melodramatic, or
+as something moral, or as tragic fate. They have to bellow songs
+about 'Deutschland,' or drag in 'Gott.' They<a name="Page_329"></a>
+don't take to the game as our men take to the game....</p>
+<p>"I confess I'm taking to the game. I wish at times I had gone
+into the O.T.C. with Teddy, and got a better hold of it. I was too
+high-browed about this war business. I dream now of getting a
+commission....</p>
+<p>"That diary-hunting strategy is just the sort of thing that
+makes this war intellectually fascinating. Everything is being
+thought out and then tried over that can possibly make victory. The
+Germans go in for psychology much more than we do, just as they go
+in for war more than we do, but they don't seem to be really clever
+about it. So they set out to make all their men understand the war,
+while our chaps are singing 'Tipperary.' But what the men put down
+aren't the beautiful things they ought to put down; most of them
+shove down lists of their meals, some of the diaries are all just
+lists of things eaten, and a lot of them have written the most
+damning stuff about outrages and looting. Which the French are
+translating and publishing. The Germans would give anything now to
+get back these silly diaries. And now they have made an order that
+no one shall go into battle with any written papers at all.... Our
+people got so keen on documenting and the value of chance writings
+that one of the principal things to do after a German attack had
+failed had been to hook in the documentary dead, and find out what
+they had on them.... It's a curious sport, this body fishing. You
+have a sort of triple hook on a rope, and you throw it and drag.
+They do the same. The other day one body near Hooghe was hooked by
+both sides, and they had a tug-of-war. With a sharpshooter or so
+cutting in whenever our men got too excited. Several men were hit.
+The Irish&mdash;it was an Irish regiment&mdash;got him&mdash;or at
+least they got the better part of him....</p>
+<p>"Now that I am a sergeant, Park talks to me again about all
+these things, and we have a first lieutenant too keen to resist
+such technical details. They are purely<a name="Page_330"></a>
+technical details. You must take them as that. One does not think
+of the dead body as a man recently deceased, who had perhaps a wife
+and business connections and a weakness for oysters or pale brandy.
+Or as something that laughed and cried and didn't like getting
+hurt. That would spoil everything. One thinks of him merely as a
+uniform with marks upon it that will tell us what kind of stuff we
+have against us, and possibly with papers that will give us a hint
+of how far he and his lot are getting sick of the whole
+affair....</p>
+<p>"There's a kind of hardening not only of the body but of the
+mind through all this life out here. One is living on a different
+level. You know&mdash;just before I came away&mdash;you talked of
+Dower-House-land&mdash;and outside. This is outside. It's
+different. Our men here are kind enough still to little
+things&mdash;kittens or birds or flowers. Behind the front, for
+example, everywhere there are Tommy gardens. Some are quite bright
+little patches. But it's just nonsense to suppose we are tender to
+the wounded up here&mdash;and, putting it plainly, there isn't a
+scrap of pity left for the enemy. Not a scrap. Not a trace of such
+feeling. They were tender about the wounded in the early
+days&mdash;men tell me&mdash;and reverent about the dead. It's all
+gone now. There have been atrocities, gas, unforgettable things.
+Everything is harder. Our people are inclined now to laugh at a man
+who gets hit, and to be annoyed at a man with a troublesome wound.
+The other day, they say, there was a big dead German outside the
+Essex trenches. He became a nuisance, and he was dragged in and
+taken behind the line and buried. After he was buried, a kindly
+soul was putting a board over him with 'Somebody's Fritz' on it,
+when a shell burst close by. It blew the man with the board a dozen
+yards and wounded him, and it restored Fritz to the open air. He
+was lifted clean out. He flew head over heels like a windmill. This
+was regarded as a tremendous joke against the men who had been at
+the pains of burying<a name="Page_331"></a> him. For a time nobody
+else would touch Fritz, who was now some yards behind his original
+grave. Then as he got worse and worse he was buried again by some
+devoted sanitarians, and this time the inscription was 'Somebody's
+Fritz. R.I.P.' And as luck would have it, he was spun up again. In
+pieces. The trench howled with laughter and cries of 'Good old
+Fritz!' 'This isn't the Resurrection, Fritz.'...</p>
+<p>"Another thing that appeals to the sunny humour of the trenches
+as a really delicious practical joke is the trick of the fuses. We
+have two kinds of fuse, a slow-burning fuse such as is used for
+hand-grenades and such-like things, a sort of yard-a-minute fuse,
+and a rapid fuse that goes a hundred yards a second&mdash;for
+firing mines and so on. The latter is carefully distinguished from
+the former by a conspicuous red thread. Also, as you know, it is
+the habit of the enemy and ourselves when the trenches are near
+enough, to enliven each other by the casting of homely but
+effective hand-grenades made out of tins. When a grenade drops in a
+British trench somebody seizes it instantly and throws it back. To
+hoist the German with his own petard is particularly sweet to the
+British mind. When a grenade drops into a German trench everybody
+runs. (At least that is what I am told happens by the men from our
+trenches; though possibly each side has its exceptions.) If the
+bomb explodes, it explodes. If it doesn't, Hans and Fritz presently
+come creeping back to see what has happened. Sometimes the fuse
+hasn't caught properly, it has been thrown by a nervous man; or it
+hasn't burnt properly. Then Hans or Fritz puts in a new fuse and
+sends it back with loving care. To hoist the Briton with his own
+petard is particularly sweet to the German mind.... But here it is
+that military genius comes in. Some gifted spirit on our side
+procured (probably by larceny) a length of mine fuse, the rapid
+sort, and spent a laborious day removing the red thread and making
+it into the likeness of its slow brother. Then bits of<a name=
+"Page_332"></a> it were attached to tin-bombs and shied&mdash;unlit
+of course&mdash;into the German trenches. A long but happy pause
+followed. I can see the chaps holding themselves in. Hans and Fritz
+were understood to be creeping back, to be examining the unlit
+fuse, to be applying a light thereunto, in order to restore it to
+its maker after their custom....</p>
+<p>"A loud bang in the German trenches indicated the moment of
+lighting, and the exit of Hans and Fritz to worlds less
+humorous.</p>
+<p>"The genius in the British trenches went on with the preparation
+of the next surprise bomb&mdash;against the arrival of Kurt and
+Karl....</p>
+<p>"Hans, Fritz, Kurt, Karl, Michael and Wilhelm; it went for quite
+a long time before they grew suspicious....</p>
+<p>"You once wrote that all fighting ought to be done nowadays by
+metal soldiers. I perceive, my dear Daddy, that all real fighting
+is...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 11</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Not all Hugh's letters were concerned with these grim
+technicalities. It was not always that news and gossip came along;
+it was rare that a young man with a commission would condescend to
+talk shop to two young men without one; there were few newspapers
+and fewer maps, and even in France and within sound of guns, Hugh
+could presently find warfare almost as much a bore as it had been
+at times in England. But his criticism of military methods died
+away. "Things are done better out here," he remarked, and "We're
+nearer reality here. I begin to respect my Captain. Who is
+developing a sense of locality. Happily for our prospects." And in
+another place he speculated in an oddly characteristic manner
+whether he was getting used to the army way, whether he was
+beginning to see the sense of the army way, or whether<a name=
+"Page_333"></a> it really was that the army way braced up nearer
+and nearer to efficiency as it got nearer to the enemy. "And here
+one hasn't the haunting feeling that war is after all an
+hallucination. It's already common sense and the business of
+life....</p>
+<p>"In England I always had a sneaking idea that I had 'dressed up'
+in my uniform....</p>
+<p>"I never dreamt before I came here how much war is a business of
+waiting about and going through duties and exercises that were only
+too obviously a means of preventing our discovering just how much
+waiting about we were doing. I suppose there is no great harm in
+describing the place I am in here; it's a kind of scenery that is
+somehow all of a piece with the life we lead day by day. It is a
+village that has been only partly smashed up; it has never been
+fought through, indeed the Germans were never within two miles of
+it, but it was shelled intermittently for months before we made our
+advance. Almost all the houses are still standing, but there is not
+a window left with a square foot of glass in the place. One or two
+houses have been burnt out, and one or two are just as though they
+had been kicked to pieces by a lunatic giant. We sleep in batches
+of four or five on the floors of the rooms; there are very few
+inhabitants about, but the village inn still goes on. It has one
+poor weary billiard-table, very small with very big balls, and the
+cues are without tops; it is The Amusement of the place. Ortheris
+does miracles at it. When he leaves the army he says he's going to
+be a marker, 'a b&mdash;&mdash;y marker.' The country about us is
+flat&mdash;featureless&mdash;desolate. How I long for hills, even
+for Essex mud hills. Then the road runs on towards the front, a
+brick road frightfully worn, lined with poplars. Just at the end of
+the village mechanical transport ends and there is a kind of depot
+from which all the stuff goes up by mules or men or bicycles to the
+trenches. It is the only movement in the place, and I have spent
+hours watching men shift grub or ammunition or<a name=
+"Page_334"></a> lending them a hand. All day one hears guns, a kind
+of thud at the stomach, and now and then one sees an aeroplane,
+very high and small. Just beyond this point there is a group of
+poplars which have been punished by a German shell. They are broken
+off and splintered in the most astonishing way; all split and
+ravelled out like the end of a cane that has been broken and
+twisted to get the ends apart. The choice of one's leisure is to
+watch the A.S.C. or play football, twenty a side, or sit about
+indoors, or stand in the doorway, or walk down to the Estaminet and
+wait five or six deep for the billiard-table. Ultimately one sits.
+And so you get these unconscionable letters."</p>
+<p>"Unconscionable," said Mr. Britling. "Of course&mdash;he will
+grow out of that sort of thing.</p>
+<p>"And he'll write some day, sure enough. He'll write."</p>
+<p>He went on reading the letter.</p>
+<p>"We read, of course. But there never could be a library here big
+enough to keep us going. We can do with all sorts of books, but I
+don't think the ordinary sensational novel is quite the catch it
+was for a lot of them in peace time. Some break towards serious
+reading in the oddest fashion. Old Park, for example, says he wants
+books you can chew; he is reading a cheap edition of 'The Origin of
+Species.' He used to regard Florence Warden and William le Queux as
+the supreme delights of print. I wish you could send him
+Metchnikoff's 'Nature of Man' or Pearson's 'Ethics of Freethought.'
+I feel I am building up his tender mind. Not for me though, Daddy.
+Nothing of that sort for me. These things take people differently.
+What I want here is literary opium. I want something about fauns
+and nymphs in broad low glades. I would like to read Spenser's
+'Faerie Queen.' I don't think I have read it, and yet I have a very
+distinct impression of knights and dragons and sorcerers and wicked
+magic ladies moving through a sort of Pre-Raphaelite tapestry
+scenery&mdash;only with a light on them. I could do with some
+Hewlett of the 'Forest Lovers' kind. Or<a name="Page_335"></a> with
+Joseph Conrad in his Kew Palm-house mood. And there is a book, I
+once looked into it at a man's room in London; I don't know the
+title, but it was by Richard Garnett, and it was all about gods who
+were in reduced circumstances but amidst sunny picturesque scenery.
+Scenery without steel or poles or wire. A thing after the manner of
+Heine's 'Florentine Nights.' Any book about Greek gods would be
+welcome, anything about temples of ivory-coloured stone and purple
+seas, red caps, chests of jewels, and lizards in the sun. I wish
+there was another 'Thais.' The men here are getting a kind of
+newspaper sheet of literature scraps called <i>The Times</i>
+Broadsheets. Snippets, but mostly from good stuff. They're small
+enough to stir the appetite, but not to satisfy it. Rather an
+irritant&mdash;and one wants no irritant.... I used to imagine
+reading was meant to be a stimulant. Out here it has to be an
+anodyne....</p>
+<p>"Have you heard of a book called 'Tom Cringle's Log'?</p>
+<p>"War is an exciting game&mdash;that I never wanted to play. It
+excites once in a couple of months. And the rest of it is dirt and
+muddle and boredom, and smashed houses and spoilt roads and muddy
+scenery and boredom, and the lumbering along of supplies and the
+lumbering back of the wounded and weary&mdash;and boredom, and
+continual vague guessing of how it will end and boredom and boredom
+and boredom, and thinking of the work you were going to do and the
+travel you were going to have, and the waste of life and the waste
+of days and boredom, and splintered poplars and stink, everywhere
+stink and dirt and boredom.... And all because these accursed
+Prussians were too stupid to understand what a boredom they were
+getting ready when they pranced and stuck their chests out and
+earnt the praises of Mr. Thomas Carlyle.... <i>Gott strafe
+Deutschland</i>.... So send me some books, books of dreams, books
+about China and the willow-pattern plate and the golden age and
+fairyland. And send them soon and address them very
+carefully...."</p>
+<a name="Page_336"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 12</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Teddy's misadventure happened while figs were still ripening on
+Mr. Britling's big tree. It was Cissie brought the news to Mr.
+Britling. She came up to the Dower House with a white, scared
+face.</p>
+<p>"I've come up for the letters," she said. "There's bad news of
+Teddy, and Letty's rather in a state."</p>
+<p>"He's not&mdash;&mdash;?" Mr. Britling left the word unsaid.</p>
+<p>"He's wounded and missing," said Cissie.</p>
+<p>"A prisoner!" said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"And wounded. <i>How</i>, we don't know."</p>
+<p>She added: "Letty has gone to telegraph."</p>
+<p>"Telegraph to whom?"</p>
+<p>"To the War Office, to know what sort of wound he has. They tell
+nothing. It's disgraceful."</p>
+<p>"It doesn't say <i>severely</i>?"</p>
+<p>"It says just nothing. Wounded and missing! Surely they ought to
+give us particulars."</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling thought. His first thought was that now news might
+come at any time that Hugh was wounded and missing. Then he set
+himself to persuade Cissie that the absence of "seriously" meant
+that Teddy was only quite bearably wounded, and that if he was also
+"missing" it might be difficult for the War Office to ascertain at
+once just exactly what she wanted to know. But Cissie said merely
+that "Letty was in an awful state," and after Mr. Britling had
+given her a few instructions for his typing, he went down to the
+cottage to repeat these mitigatory considerations to Letty. He
+found her much whiter than her sister, and in a state of cold
+indignation with the War Office. It was clear she thought that
+organisation ought to have taken better care of Teddy. She had a
+curious effect of feeling that something was being kept back from
+her. It was manifest too that she was disposed to regard Mr.
+Britling as biased in favour of the authorities.</p>
+<p>"At any rate," she said, "they could have answered<a name=
+"Page_337"></a> my telegram promptly. I sent it at eight. Two hours
+of scornful silence."</p>
+<p>This fierce, strained, unjust Letty was a new aspect to Mr.
+Britling. Her treatment of his proffered consolations made him feel
+slightly henpecked.</p>
+<p>"And just fancy!" she said. "They have no means of knowing if he
+has arrived safely on the German side. How can they know he is a
+prisoner without knowing that?"</p>
+<p>"But the word is 'missing.'"</p>
+<p>"That <i>means</i> a prisoner," said Letty uncivilly....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 13</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling returned to the Dower House perplexed and
+profoundly disturbed. He had a distressful sense that things were
+far more serious with Teddy than he had tried to persuade Letty
+they were; that "wounded and missing" meant indeed a man abandoned
+to very sinister probabilities. He was distressed for Teddy, and
+still more acutely distressed for Mrs. Teddy, whose every note and
+gesture betrayed suppositions even more sinister than his own. And
+that preposterous sense of liability, because he had helped Teddy
+to get his commission, was more distressful than it had ever been.
+He was surprised that Letty had not assailed him with railing
+accusations.</p>
+<p>And this event had wiped off at one sweep all the protective
+scab of habituation that had gathered over the wound of Hugh's
+departure. He was back face to face with the one evil chance in
+five....</p>
+<p>In the hall there was lying a letter from Hugh that had come by
+the second post. It was a relief even to see it....</p>
+<p>Hugh had had his first spell in the trenches.</p>
+<p>Before his departure he had promised his half brothers a long
+and circumstantial account of what the trenches were really like.
+Here he redeemed his promise. He had<a name="Page_338"></a>
+evidently written with the idea that the letter would be handed
+over to them.</p>
+<p>"Tell the bruddykinses I'm glad they're going to Brinsmead
+school. Later on, I suppose, they will go on to Statesminster. I
+suppose that you don't care to send them so far in these troubled
+times....</p>
+<p>"And now about those trenches&mdash;as I promised. The great
+thing to grasp is that they are narrow. They are a sort of negative
+wall. They are more like giant cracks in the ground than anything
+else.... But perhaps I had better begin by telling how we got
+there. We started about one in the morning ladened up with
+everything you can possibly imagine on a soldier, and in addition I
+had a kettle&mdash;filled with water&mdash;most of the chaps had
+bundles of firewood, and some had extra bread. We marched out of
+our quarters along the road for a mile or more, and then we took
+the fields, and presently came to a crest and dropped into a sort
+of maze of zigzag trenches going up to the front trench. These
+trenches, you know, are much deeper than one's height; you don't
+see anything. It's like walking along a mud-walled passage. You
+just trudge along them in single file. Every now and then some one
+stumbles into a soakaway for rainwater or swears at a soft place,
+or somebody blunders into the man in front of him. This seems to go
+on for hours and hours. It certainly went on for an hour; so I
+suppose we did two or three miles of it. At one place we crossed a
+dip in the ground and a ditch, and the trench was built up with
+sandbags up to the ditch and there was a plank. Overhead there were
+stars, and now and then a sort of blaze thing they send up lit up
+the edges of the trench and gave one a glimpse of a treetop or a
+factory roof far away. Then for a time it was more difficult to go
+on because you were blinded. Suddenly just when you were believing
+that this sort of trudge was going on forever, we were in the
+support trenches behind the firing line, and found the men we were
+relieving ready to come back.</p>
+<a name="Page_339"></a>
+<p>"And the firing line itself? Just the same sort of ditch with a
+parapet of sandbags, but with dug-outs, queer big holes helped out
+with sleepers from a nearby railway track, opening into it from
+behind. Dug-outs vary a good deal. Many are rather like the
+cubby-house we made at the end of the orchard last summer; only the
+walls are thick enough to stand a high explosive shell. The best
+dug-out in our company's bit of front was quite a dressy affair
+with some woodwork and a door got from the ruins of a house twenty
+or thirty yards behind us. It had a stove in it too, and a
+chimbley, and pans to keep water in. It was the best dug-out for
+miles. This house had a well, and there was a special trench ran
+back to that, and all day long there was a coming and going for
+water. There had once been a pump over the well, but a shell had
+smashed that....</p>
+<p>"And now you expect me to tell of Germans and the fight and
+shelling and all sorts of things. <i>I haven't seen a live
+German</i>; I haven't been within two hundred yards of a shell
+burst, there has been no attack and I haven't got the V.C. I have
+made myself muddy beyond describing; I've been working all the
+time, but I've not fired a shot or fought a ha'porth. We were busy
+all the time&mdash;just at work, repairing the parapet, which had
+to be done gingerly because of snipers, bringing our food in from
+the rear in big carriers, getting water, pushing our trench out
+from an angle slantingways forward. Getting meals, clearing up and
+so on takes a lot of time. We make tea in big kettles in the big
+dug-out, which two whole companies use for their cooking, and carry
+them with a pole through the handles to our platoons. We wash up
+and wash and shave. Dinner preparation (and consumption) takes two
+or three hours. Tea too uses up time. It's like camping out and
+picnicking in the park. This first time (and next too) we have been
+mixed with some Sussex men who have been here longer and know the
+business.... It works out that we do most of the fatigue.
+Afterwards<a name="Page_340"></a> we shall go up alone to a pitch
+of our own....</p>
+<p>"But all the time you want to know about the Germans. They are a
+quarter of a mile away at this part, or nearly a quarter of a mile.
+When you snatch a peep at them it is like a low parti-coloured
+stone wall&mdash;only the stones are sandbags. The Germans have
+them black and white, so that you cannot tell which are loopholes
+and which are black bags. Our people haven't been so
+clever&mdash;and the War Office love of uniformity has given us
+only white bags. No doubt it looks neater. But it makes our
+loopholes plain. For a time black sandbags were refused. The
+Germans sniped at us, but not very much. Only one of our lot was
+hit, by a chance shot that came through the sandbag at the top of
+the parapet. He just had a cut in the neck which didn't prevent his
+walking back. They shelled the trenches half a mile to the left of
+us though, and it looked pretty hot. The sandbags flew about. But
+the men lie low, and it looks worse than it is. The weather was
+fine and pleasant, as General French always says. And after three
+days and nights of cramped existence and petty chores, one in the
+foremost trench and two a little way back, and then two days in
+support, we came back&mdash;and here we are again waiting for our
+second Go.</p>
+<p>"The night time is perhaps a little more nervy than the day. You
+get your head up and look about, and see the flat dim country with
+its ruined houses and its lumps of stuff that are dead bodies and
+its long vague lines of sandbags, and the searchlights going like
+white windmill arms and an occasional flare or star shell. And you
+have a nasty feeling of people creeping and creeping all night
+between the trenches....</p>
+<p>"Some of us went out to strengthen a place in the parapet that
+was only one sandbag thick, where a man had been hit during the
+day. We made it four bags thick right up to the top. All the while
+you were doing it, you dreaded to find yourself in the white glare
+of a searchlight,<a name="Page_341"></a> and you had a feeling that
+something would hit you suddenly from behind. I had to make up my
+mind not to look round, or I should have kept on looking round....
+Also our chaps kept shooting over us, within a foot of one's head.
+Just to persuade the Germans that we were not out of the
+trench....</p>
+<p>"Nothing happened to us. We got back all right. It was silly to
+have left that parapet only one bag thick. There's the truth, and
+all of my first time in the trenches.</p>
+<p>"And the Germans?</p>
+<p>"I tell you there was no actual fighting at all. I never saw the
+head of one.</p>
+<p>"But now see what a good bruddykins I am. I have seen a fight, a
+real exciting fight, and I have kept it to the last to tell you
+about.... It was a fight in the air. And the British won. It began
+with a German machine appearing, very minute and high, sailing
+towards our lines a long way to the left. We could tell it was a
+German because of the black cross; they decorate every aeroplane
+with a black Iron Cross on its wings and tail; that our officer
+could see with his glasses. (He let me look.) Suddenly whack,
+whack, whack, came a line of little puffs of smoke behind it, and
+then one in front of it, which meant that our anti-aircraft guns
+were having a go at it. Then, as suddenly, Archibald stopped, and
+we could see the British machine buzzing across the path of the
+German. It was just like two birds circling in the air. Or wasps.
+They buzzed like wasps. There was a little crackling&mdash;like
+brushing your hair in frosty weather. They were shooting at each
+other. Then our lieutenant called out, 'Hit, by Jove!' and handed
+the glasses to Park and instantly wanted them back. He says he saw
+bits of the machine flying off.</p>
+<p>"When he said that you could fancy you saw it too, up there in
+the blue.</p>
+<p>"Anyhow the little machine cocked itself up on end.<a name=
+"Page_342"></a> Rather slowly.... Then down it came like dropping a
+knife....</p>
+<p>"It made you say 'Ooooo!' to see that dive. It came down, seemed
+to get a little bit under control, and then dive down again. You
+could hear the engine roar louder and louder as it came down. I
+never saw anything fall so fast. We saw it hit the ground among a
+lot of smashed-up buildings on the crest behind us. It went right
+over and flew to pieces, all to smithereens....</p>
+<p>"It hurt your nose to see it hit the ground....</p>
+<p>"Somehow&mdash;I was sort of overcome by the thought of the men
+in that dive. I was trying to imagine how they felt it. From the
+moment when they realised they were going.</p>
+<p>"What on earth must it have seemed like at last?</p>
+<p>"They fell seven thousand feet, the men say; some say nine
+thousand feet. A mile and a half!</p>
+<p>"But all the chaps were cheering.... And there was our machine
+hanging in the sky. You wanted to reach up and pat it on the back.
+It went up higher and away towards the German lines, as though it
+was looking for another German. It seemed to go now quite slowly.
+It was an English machine, though for a time we weren't sure; our
+machines are done in tri-colour just as though they were French.
+But everybody says it was English. It was one of our crack fighting
+machines, and from first to last it has put down seven Germans....
+And that's really all the fighting there was. There has been
+fighting here; a month ago. There are perhaps a dozen dead Germans
+lying out still in front of the lines. Little twisted figures, like
+overthrown scarecrows, about a hundred yards away. But that is
+all.</p>
+<p>"No, the trenches have disappointed me. They are a scene of
+tiresome domesticity. They aren't a patch on our quarters in the
+rear. There isn't the traffic. I've not found a single excuse for
+firing my rifle. I don't believe I shall ever fire my rifle at an
+enemy&mdash;ever....</p>
+<a name="Page_343"></a>
+<p>"You've seen Rendezvous' fresh promotion, I suppose? He's one of
+the men the young officers talk about. Everybody believes in him.
+Do you remember how Manning used to hide from him?..."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 14</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling read this through, and then his thoughts went back
+to Teddy's disappearance and then returned to Hugh. The youngster
+was right in the front now, and one had to steel oneself to the
+possibilities of the case. Somehow Mr. Britling had not expected to
+find Hugh so speedily in the firing line, though he would have been
+puzzled to find a reason why this should not have happened. But he
+found he had to begin the lesson of stoicism all over again.</p>
+<p>He read the letter twice, and then he searched for some
+indication of its date. He suspected that letters were sometimes
+held back....</p>
+<p>Four days later this suspicion was confirmed by the arrival of
+another letter from Hugh in which he told of his second spell in
+the trenches. This time things had been much more lively. They had
+been heavily shelled and there had been a German attack. And this
+time he was writing to his father, and wrote more freely. He had
+scribbled in pencil.</p>
+<p>"Things are much livelier here than they were. Our guns are
+getting to work. They are firing in spells of an hour or so, three
+or four times a day, and just when they seem to be leaving off they
+begin again. The Germans suddenly got the range of our trenches the
+day before yesterday, and begun to pound us with high explosive....
+Well, it's trying. You never seem quite to know when the next bang
+is coming, and that keeps your nerves hung up; it seems to tighten
+your muscles and tire you. We've done nothing but lie low all day,
+and I feel as weary as if I had marched twenty miles. Then 'whop,'
+one's near<a name="Page_344"></a> you, and there is a flash and
+everything flies. It's a mad sort of smash-about. One came much too
+close to be pleasant; as near as the old oil jars are from the barn
+court door. It bowled me clean over and sent a lot of gravel over
+me. When I got up there was twenty yards of trench smashed into a
+mere hole, and men lying about, and some of them groaning and one
+three-quarters buried. We had to turn to and get them out as well
+as we could....</p>
+<p>"I felt stunned and insensitive; it was well to have something
+to do....</p>
+<p>"Our guns behind felt for the German guns. It was the damnest
+racket. Like giant lunatics smashing about amidst colossal pots and
+pans. They fired different sorts of shells; stink shells as well as
+Jack Johnsons, and though we didn't get much of that at our corner
+there was a sting of chlorine in the air all through the afternoon.
+Most of the stink shells fell short. We hadn't masks, but we rigged
+up a sort of protection with our handkerchiefs. And it didn't
+amount to very much. It was rather like the chemistry room after
+Heinrich and the kids had been mixing things. Most of the time I
+was busy helping with the men who had got hurt. Suddenly there came
+a lull. Then some one said the Germans were coming, and I had a
+glimpse of them.</p>
+<p>"You don't look at anything steadily while the guns are going.
+When a big gun goes off or a shell bursts anywhere near you, you
+seem neither to see nor hear for a moment. You keep on being
+intermittently stunned. One sees in a kind of flicker in between
+the impacts....</p>
+<p>"Well, there they were. This time I saw them. They were coming
+out and running a little way and dropping, and our shell was
+bursting among them and behind them. A lot of it was going too far.
+I watched what our men were doing, and poured out a lot of
+cartridges ready to my hand and began to blaze away. Half the
+German attack never came out of their trench. If they really
+intended business against us, which I doubt, they were<a name=
+"Page_345"></a> half-hearted in carrying it out. They didn't show
+for five minutes, and they left two or three score men on the
+ground. Whenever we saw a man wriggle we were told to fire at him;
+it might be an unwounded man trying to crawl back. For a time our
+guns gave them beans. Then it was practically over, but about
+sunset their guns got back at us again, and the artillery fight
+went on until it was moonlight. The chaps in our third company
+caught it rather badly, and then our guns seemed to find something
+and get the upper hand....</p>
+<p>"In the night some of our men went out to repair the wire
+entanglements, and one man crawled halfway to the enemy trenches to
+listen. But I had done my bit for the day, and I was supposed to
+sleep in the dug-out. I was far too excited to sleep. All my nerves
+were jumping about, and my mind was like a lot of flying fragments
+flying about very fast....</p>
+<p>"They shelled us again next day and our tea dixy was hit; so
+that we didn't get any tea....</p>
+<p>"I slept thirty hours after I got back here. And now I am slowly
+digesting these experiences. Most of our fellows are. My mind and
+nerves have been rather bumped and bruised by the shelling, but not
+so much as you might think. I feel as though I'd presently not
+think very much of it. Some of our men have got the stun of it a
+lot more than I have. It gets at the older men more. Everybody says
+that. The men of over thirty-five don't recover from a shelling for
+weeks. They go about&mdash;sort of hesitatingly....</p>
+<p>"Life is very primitive here&mdash;which doesn't mean that one
+is getting down to anything fundamental, but only going back to
+something immediate and simple. It's fetching and carrying and
+getting water and getting food and going up to the firing line and
+coming back. One goes on for weeks, and then one day one finds
+oneself crying out, 'What is all this for? When is it to end?' I
+seemed to have something ahead of me before this war<a name=
+"Page_346"></a> began, education, science, work, discoveries; all
+sorts of things; but it is hard to feel that there is anything
+ahead of us here....</p>
+<p>"Somehow the last spell in the fire trench has shaken up my mind
+a lot. I was getting used to the war before, but now I've got back
+to my original amazement at the whole business. I find myself
+wondering what we are really up to, why the war began, why we were
+caught into this amazing routine. It looks, it feels orderly,
+methodical, purposeful. Our officers give us orders and get their
+orders, and the men back there get their orders. Everybody is
+getting orders. Back, I suppose, to Lord Kitchener. It goes on for
+weeks with the effect of being quite sane and intended and the
+right thing, and then, then suddenly it comes whacking into one's
+head, 'But this&mdash;this is utterly <i>mad</i>!' This going to
+and fro and to and fro and to and fro; this monotony which breaks
+ever and again into violence&mdash;violence that never gets
+anywhere&mdash;is exactly the life that a lunatic leads.
+Melancholia and mania.... It's just a collective obsession&mdash;by
+war. The world is really quite mad. I happen to be having just one
+gleam of sanity, that won't last after I have finished this letter.
+I suppose when an individual man goes mad and gets out of the
+window because he imagines the door is magically impossible, and
+dances about in the street without his trousers jabbing at
+passers-by with a toasting-fork, he has just the same sombre sense
+of unavoidable necessity that we have, all of us, when we go off
+with our packs into the trenches....</p>
+<p>"It's only by an effort that I can recall how life felt in the
+spring of 1914. Do you remember Heinrich and his attempt to make a
+table chart of the roses, so that we could sit outside the barn and
+read the names of all the roses in the barn court? Like the
+mountain charts they have on tables in Switzerland. What an
+inconceivable thing that is now! For all I know I shot Heinrich
+the<a name="Page_347"></a> other night. For all I know he is one of
+the lumps that we counted after the attack went back.</p>
+<p>"It's a queer thing, Daddy, but I have a sort of
+<i>seditious</i> feeling in writing things like this. One gets to
+feel that it is wrong to think. It's the effect of discipline. Of
+being part of a machine. Still, I doubt if I ought to think. If one
+really looks into things in this spirit, where is it going to take
+us? Ortheris&mdash;his real name by the by is Arthur
+Jewell&mdash;hasn't any of these troubles. 'The b&mdash;&mdash;y
+Germans butted into Belgium,' he says. 'We've got to 'oof 'em out
+again. That's all abart it. Leastways it's all <i>I</i> know.... I
+don't know nothing about Serbia, I don't know nothing about
+anything, except that the Germans got to stop this sort of gime for
+Everlasting, Amen.'...</p>
+<p>"Sometimes I think he's righter than I am. Sometimes I think he
+is only madder."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 15</h4>
+<br>
+<p>These letters weighed heavily upon Mr. Britling's mind. He
+perceived that this precociously wise, subtle youngster of his was
+now close up to the line of injury and death, going to and fro from
+it, in a perpetual, fluctuating danger. At any time now in the day
+or night the evil thing might wing its way to him. If Mr. Britling
+could have prayed, he would have prayed for Hugh. He began and
+never finished some ineffectual prayers.</p>
+<p>He tried to persuade himself of a Roman stoicism; that he would
+be sternly proud, sternly satisfied, if this last sacrifice for his
+country was demanded from him. He perceived he was merely
+humbugging himself....</p>
+<p>This war had no longer the simple greatness that would make any
+such stern happiness possible....</p>
+<p>The disaster to Teddy and Mrs. Teddy hit him hard. He winced at
+the thought of Mrs. Teddy's white face; the unspoken accusation in
+her eyes. He felt he could<a name="Page_348"></a> never bring
+himself to say his one excuse to her: "I did not keep Hugh back. If
+I had done that, then you might have the right to blame."</p>
+<p>If he had overcome every other difficulty in the way to an
+heroic pose there was still Hugh's unconquerable lucidity of
+outlook. War <i>was</i> a madness....</p>
+<p>But what else was to be done? What else could be done? We could
+not give in to Germany. If a lunatic struggles, sane men must
+struggle too....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling had ceased to write about the war at all. All his
+later writings about it had been abandoned unfinished. He could not
+imagine them counting, affecting any one, producing any effect.
+Indeed he was writing now very intermittently. His contributions to
+<i>The Times</i> had fallen away. He was perpetually thinking now
+about the war, about life and death, about the religious problems
+that had seemed so remote in the days of the peace; but none of his
+thinking would become clear and definite enough for writing. All
+the clear stars of his mind were hidden by the stormy clouds of
+excitement that the daily newspaper perpetually renewed and by the
+daily developments of life. And just as his professional income
+shrank before his mental confusion and impotence, the private
+income that came from his and his wife's investments became
+uncertain. She had had two thousand pounds in the Constantinople
+loan, seven hundred in debentures of the Ottoman railway; he had
+held similar sums in two Hungarian and one Bulgarian loan, in a
+linoleum factory at Rouen and in a Swiss Hotel company. All these
+stopped payments, and the dividends from their other investments
+shrank. There seemed no limit set to the possibilities of shrinkage
+of capital and income. Income tax had leapt to colossal dimensions,
+the cost of most things had risen, and the tangle of life was now
+increased by the need for retrenchments and economies. He decided
+that Gladys, the facetiously named automobile, was a luxury, and
+sold her for a couple of hundred pounds. He lost his<a name=
+"Page_349"></a> gardener, who had gone to higher priced work with a
+miller, and he had great trouble to replace him, so that the garden
+became disagreeably unkempt and unsatisfactory. He had to give up
+his frequent trips to London. He was obliged to defer Statesminster
+for the boys. For a time at any rate they must go as day boys to
+Brinsmead. At every point he met this uncongenial consideration of
+ways and means. For years now he had gone easy, lived with a
+certain self-indulgence. It was extraordinarily vexatious to have
+one's greater troubles for one's country and one's son and one's
+faith crossed and complicated by these little troubles of the extra
+sixpence and the untimely bill.</p>
+<p>What worried his mind perhaps more than anything else was his
+gradual loss of touch with the essential issues of the war. At
+first the militarism, the aggression of Germany, had seemed so bad
+that he could not see the action of Britain and her allies as
+anything but entirely righteous. He had seen the war plainly and
+simply in the phrase, "Now this militarism must end." He had seen
+Germany as a system, as imperialism and junkerism, as a callous
+materialist aggression, as the spirit that makes war, and the
+Allies as the protest of humanity against all these evil
+things.</p>
+<p>Insensibly, in spite of himself, this first version of the war
+was giving place to another. The tawdry, rhetorical German Emperor,
+who had been the great antagonist at the outset, the last upholder
+of C&aelig;sarism, God's anointed with the withered arm and the
+mailed fist, had receded from the foreground of the picture; that
+truer Germany which is thought and system, which is the will to do
+things thoroughly, the Germany of Ostwald and the once rejected
+Hindenburg, was coming to the fore. It made no apology for the
+errors and crimes that had been imposed upon it by its Hohenzollern
+leadership, but it fought now to save itself from the destruction
+and division that would be its inevitable lot if it accepted defeat
+too easily; fought to hold out, fought for a second chance, with
+discipline,<a name="Page_350"></a> with skill and patience, with a
+steadfast will. It fought with science, it fought with economy,
+with machines and thought against all too human antagonists. It
+necessitated an implacable resistance, but also it commanded
+respect. Against it fought three great peoples with as fine a will;
+but they had neither the unity, the habitual discipline, nor the
+science of Germany, and it was the latter defect that became more
+and more the distressful matter of Mr. Britling's thoughts. France
+after her initial experiences, after her first reeling month, had
+risen from the very verge of defeat to a steely splendour of
+resolution, but England and Russia, those twin slack giants, still
+wasted force, were careless, negligent, uncertain. Everywhere up
+and down the scale, from the stupidity of the uniform sandbags and
+Hugh's young officer who would not use a map, to the general
+conception and direction of the war, Mr. Britling's inflamed and
+oversensitised intelligence perceived the same bad qualities for
+which he had so often railed upon his countrymen in the days of the
+peace, that impatience, that indolence, that wastefulness and
+inconclusiveness, that failure to grip issues and do obviously
+necessary things. The same lax qualities that had brought England
+so close to the supreme imbecility of a civil war in Ireland in
+July, 1914, were now muddling and prolonging the war, and
+postponing, it might be for ever, the victory that had seemed so
+certain only a year ago. The politician still intrigued, the
+ineffectives still directed. Against brains used to the utmost
+their fight was a stupid thrusting forth of men and men and yet
+more men, men badly trained, under-equipped, stupidly led. A press
+clamour for invention and scientific initiative was stifled under a
+committee of elderly celebrities and eminent dufferdom; from the
+outset, the Ministry of Munitions seemed under the influence of the
+"business man."...</p>
+<p>It is true that righteousness should triumph over the tyrant and
+the robber, but have carelessness and incapacity any right to
+triumph over capacity and foresight? Men<a name="Page_351"></a>
+were coming now to dark questionings between this intricate choice.
+And, indeed, was our cause all righteousness?</p>
+<p>There surely is the worst doubt of all for a man whose son is
+facing death.</p>
+<p>Were we indeed standing against tyranny for freedom?</p>
+<p>There came drifting to Mr. Britling's ears a confusion of
+voices, voices that told of reaction, of the schemes of employers
+to best the trade unions, of greedy shippers and greedy house
+landlords reaping their harvest, of waste and treason in the very
+households of the Ministry, of religious cant and intolerance at
+large, of self-advertisement written in letters of blood, of
+forestalling and jobbery, of irrational and exasperating
+oppressions in India and Egypt.... It came with a shock to him,
+too, that Hugh should see so little else than madness in the war,
+and have so pitiless a realisation of its essential futility. The
+boy forced his father to see&mdash;what indeed all along he had
+been seeing more and more clearly. The war, even by the standards
+of adventure and conquest, had long since become a monstrous
+absurdity. Some way there must be out of this bloody entanglement
+that was yielding victory to neither side, that was yielding
+nothing but waste and death beyond all precedent. The vast majority
+of people everywhere must be desiring peace, willing to buy peace
+at any reasonable price, and in all the world it seemed there was
+insufficient capacity to end the daily butchery and achieve the
+peace that was so universally desired, the peace that would be
+anything better than a breathing space for further warfare....
+Every day came the papers with the balanced story of battles,
+losses, destructions, ships sunk, towns smashed. And never a
+decision, never a sign of decision.</p>
+<p>One Saturday afternoon Mr. Britling found himself with Mrs.
+Britling at Claverings. Lady Homartyn was in mourning for her two
+nephews, the Glassington boys, who had both been killed, one in
+Flanders, the other in<a name="Page_352"></a> Gallipoli. Raeburn
+was there too, despondent and tired-looking. There were three young
+men in khaki, one with the red of a staff officer; there were two
+or three women whom Mr. Britling had not met before, and Miss
+Sharsper the novelist, fresh from nursing experience among the
+convalescents in the south of France. But he was disgusted to find
+that the gathering was dominated by his old antagonist, Lady
+Frensham, unsubdued, unaltered, rampant over them all, arrogant,
+impudent, insulting. She was in mourning, she had the most splendid
+black furs Mr. Britling had ever seen; her large triumphant profile
+came out of them like the head of a vulture out of its ruff; her
+elder brother was a wounded prisoner in Germany, her second was
+dead; it would seem that hers were the only sacrifices the war had
+yet extorted from any one. She spoke as though it gave her the sole
+right to criticise the war or claim compensation for the war.</p>
+<p>Her incurable propensity to split the country, to make
+mischievous accusations against classes and districts and public
+servants, was having full play. She did her best to provoke Mr.
+Britling into a dispute, and throw some sort of imputation upon his
+patriotism as distinguished from her own noisy and intolerant
+conceptions of "loyalty."</p>
+<p>She tried him first with conscription. She threw out insults at
+the shirkers and the "funk classes." All the middle-class people
+clung on to their wretched little businesses, made any sort of
+excuse....</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was stung to defend them. "A business," he said
+acidly, "isn't like land, which waits and grows rich for its owner.
+And these people can't leave ferrety little agents behind them when
+they go off to serve. Tens of thousands of middle-class men have
+ruined themselves and flung away every prospect they had in the
+world to go to this war."</p>
+<p>"And scores of thousands haven't!" said Lady Frensham. "They are
+the men I'm thinking of."...</p>
+<a name="Page_353"></a>
+<p>Mr. Britling ran through a little list of aristocratic
+stay-at-homes that began with a duke.</p>
+<p>"And not a soul speaks to them in consequence," she said.</p>
+<p>She shifted her attack to the Labour people. They would rather
+see the country defeated than submit to a little discipline.</p>
+<p>"Because they have no faith in the house of lawyers or the house
+of landlords," said Mr. Britling. "Who can blame them?"</p>
+<p>She proceeded to tell everybody what she would do with strikers.
+She would give them "short shrift." She would give them a taste of
+the Prussian way&mdash;homoeopathic treatment. "But of course old
+vote-catching Asquith daren't&mdash;he daren't!" Mr. Britling
+opened his mouth and said nothing; he was silenced. The men in
+khaki listened respectfully but ambiguously; one of the younger
+ladies it seemed was entirely of Lady Frensham's way of thinking,
+and anxious to show it. The good lady having now got her hands upon
+the Cabinet proceeded to deal faithfully with its two-and-twenty
+members. Winston Churchill had overridden Lord Fisher upon the
+question of Gallipoli, and incurred terrible responsibilities. Lord
+Haldane&mdash;she called him "Tubby Haldane"&mdash;was a convicted
+traitor. "The man's a German out and out. Oh! what if he hasn't a
+drop of German blood in his veins? He's a German by
+choice&mdash;which is worse."</p>
+<p>"I thought he had a certain capacity for organisation," said Mr.
+Britling.</p>
+<p>"We don't want his organisation, and we don't want <i>him</i>,"
+said Lady Frensham.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling pleaded for particulars of the late Lord
+Chancellor's treasons. There were no particulars. It was just an
+idea the good lady had got into her head, that had got into a
+number of accessible heads. There was only one strong man in all
+the country now,<a name="Page_354"></a> Lady Frensham insisted.
+That was Sir Edward Carson.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling jumped in his chair.</p>
+<p>"But has he ever done anything?" he cried, "except embitter
+Ireland?"</p>
+<p>Lady Frensham did not hear that question. She pursued her
+glorious theme. Lloyd George, who had once been worthy only of the
+gallows, was now the sole minister fit to put beside her hero. He
+had won her heart by his condemnation of the working man. He was
+the one man who was not afraid to speak out, to tell them they
+drank, to tell them they shirked and loafed, to tell them plainly
+that if defeat came to this country the blame would fall upon
+<i>them</i>!</p>
+<p>"<i>No!</i>" cried Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"Yes," said Lady Frensham. "Upon them and those who have
+flattered and misled them...."</p>
+<p>And so on....</p>
+<p>It presently became necessary for Lady Homartyn to rescue Mr.
+Britling from the great lady's patriotic tramplings. He found
+himself drifting into the autumnal garden&mdash;the show of dahlias
+had never been so wonderful&mdash;in the company of Raeburn and the
+staff officer and a small woman who was presently discovered to be
+remarkably well-informed. They were all despondent. "I think all
+this promiscuous blaming of people is quite the worst&mdash;and
+most ominous&mdash;thing about us just now," said Mr. Britling
+after the restful pause that followed the departure from the
+presence of Lady Frensham.</p>
+<p>"It goes on everywhere," said the staff officer.</p>
+<p>"Is it really&mdash;honest?" said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>Raeburn, after reflection, decided to answer. "As far as it is
+stupid, yes. There's a lot of blame coming; there's bound to be a
+day of reckoning, and I suppose we've all got an instinctive
+disposition to find a scapegoat for our common sins. The Tory press
+is pretty rotten, and there's a strong element of mere personal
+spite&mdash;in the Churchill attacks for example. Personal
+jealousy<a name="Page_355"></a> probably. Our 'old families' seem
+to have got vulgar-spirited imperceptibly&mdash;in a generation or
+so. They quarrel and shirk and lay blame exactly as bad servants
+do&mdash;and things are still far too much in their hands. Things
+are getting muffed, there can be no doubt about that&mdash;not
+fatally, but still rather seriously. And the government&mdash;it
+was human before the war, and we've added no archangels. There's
+muddle. There's mutual suspicion. You never know what newspaper
+office Lloyd George won't be in touch with next. He's honest and
+patriotic and energetic, but he's mortally afraid of old women and
+class intrigues. He doesn't know where to get his backing. He's got
+all a labour member's terror of the dagger at his back. There's a
+lack of nerve, too, in getting rid of prominent officers&mdash;who
+have friends."</p>
+<p>The staff officer nodded.</p>
+<p>"Northcliffe seems to me to have a case," said Mr. Britling.
+"Every one abuses him."</p>
+<p>"I'd stop his <i>Daily Mail</i>," said Raeburn. "I'd leave
+<i>The Times</i>, but I'd stop the <i>Daily Mail</i> on the score
+of its placards alone. It overdoes Northcliffe. It translates him
+into the shrieks and yells of underlings. The plain fact is that
+Northcliffe is scared out of his wits by German
+efficiency&mdash;and in war time when a man is scared out of his
+wits, whether he is honest or not, you put his head in a bag or
+hold a pistol to it to calm him.... What is the good of all this
+clamouring for a change of government? We haven't a change of
+government. It's like telling a tramp to get a change of linen. Our
+men, all our public men, are second-rate men, with the habits of
+advocates. There is nothing masterful in their minds. How can you
+expect the system to produce anything else? But they are doing as
+well as they can, and there is no way of putting in any one else
+now, and there you are."</p>
+<p>"Meanwhile," said Mr. Britling, "our boys&mdash;get killed."</p>
+<p>"They'd get killed all the more if you had&mdash;let us<a name=
+"Page_356"></a> say&mdash;Carson and Lloyd George and Northcliffe
+and Lady Frensham, with, I suppose, Austin Harrison and Horatio
+Bottomley thrown in&mdash;as a Strong Silent Government.... I'd
+rather have Northcliffe as dictator than that.... We can't suddenly
+go back on the past and alter our type. We didn't listen to Matthew
+Arnold. We've never thoroughly turned out and cleaned up our higher
+schools. We've resisted instruction. We've preferred to maintain
+our national luxuries of a bench of bishops and party politics. And
+compulsory Greek and the university sneer. And Lady Frensham. And
+all that sort of thing. And here we are!... Well, damn it, we're in
+for it now; we've got to plough through with it&mdash;with what we
+have&mdash;as what we are."</p>
+<p>The young staff officer nodded. He thought that was "about
+it."</p>
+<p>"You've got no sons," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"I'm not even married," said Raeburn, as though he thanked
+God.</p>
+<p>The little well-informed lady remarked abruptly that she had two
+sons; one was just home wounded from Suvla Bay. What her son told
+her made her feel very grave. She said that the public was still
+quite in the dark about the battle of Anafarta. It had been a
+hideous muddle, and we had been badly beaten. The staff work had
+been awful. Nothing joined up, nothing was on the spot and in time.
+The water supply, for example, had gone wrong; the men had been mad
+with thirst. One regiment which she named had not been supported by
+another; when at last the first came back the two battalions fought
+in the trenches regardless of the enemy. There had been no leading,
+no correlation, no plan. Some of the guns, she declared, had been
+left behind in Egypt. Some of the train was untraceable to this
+day. It was mislaid somewhere in the Levant. At the beginning Sir
+Ian Hamilton had not even been present. He had failed to get there
+in time. It had been the reckless throwing away of an army.<a name=
+"Page_357"></a> And so hopeful an army! Her son declared it meant
+the complete failure of the Dardanelles project....</p>
+<p>"And when one hears how near we came to victory!" she cried, and
+left it at that.</p>
+<p>"Three times this year," said Raeburn, "we have missed victories
+because of the badness of our staff work. It's no good picking out
+scapegoats. It's a question of national habit. It's because the
+sort of man we turn out from our public schools has never learnt
+how to catch trains, get to an office on the minute, pack a
+knapsack properly, or do anything smartly and
+quickly&mdash;anything whatever that he can possibly get done for
+him. You can't expect men who are habitually easy-going to keep
+bucked up to a high pitch of efficiency for any length of time. All
+their training is against it. All their tradition. They hate being
+prigs. An Englishman will be any sort of stupid failure rather than
+appear a prig. That's why we've lost three good fights that we
+ought to have won&mdash;and thousands and thousands of
+men&mdash;and material and time, precious beyond reckoning. We've
+lost a year. We've dashed the spirit of our people."</p>
+<p>"My boy in Flanders," said Mr. Britling, "says about the same
+thing. He says our officers have never learnt to count beyond ten,
+and that they are scared at the sight of a map...."</p>
+<p>"And the war goes on," said the little woman.</p>
+<p>"How long, oh Lord! how long?" cried Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"I'd give them another year," said the staff officer. "Just
+going as we are going. Then something <i>must</i> give way. There
+will be no money anywhere. There'll be no more men.... I suppose
+they'll feel that shortage first anyhow. Russia alone has over
+twenty millions."</p>
+<p>"That's about the size of it," said Raeburn....</p>
+<p>"Do you think, sir, there'll be civil war?" asked the young
+staff officer abruptly after a pause.</p>
+<p>There was a little interval before any one answered this
+surprising question.</p>
+<a name="Page_358"></a>
+<p>"After the peace, I mean," said the young officer.</p>
+<p>"There'll be just the devil to pay," said Raeburn.</p>
+<p>"One thing after another in the country is being pulled up by
+its roots," reflected Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"We've never produced a plan for the war, and it isn't likely we
+shall have one for the peace," said Raeburn, and added: "and Lady
+Frensham's little lot will be doing their level best to sit on the
+safety-valve.... They'll rake up Ireland and Ulster from the very
+start. But I doubt if Ulster will save 'em."</p>
+<p>"We shall squabble. What else do we ever do?"</p>
+<p>No one seemed able to see more than that. A silence fell on the
+little party.</p>
+<p>"Well, thank heaven for these dahlias," said Raeburn, affecting
+the philosopher.</p>
+<p>The young staff officer regarded the dahlias without
+enthusiasm....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 16</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Britling sat one September afternoon with Captain Lawrence
+Carmine in the sunshine of the barn court, and smoked with him and
+sometimes talked and sometimes sat still.</p>
+<p>"When it began I did not believe that this war could be like
+other wars," he said. "I did not dream it. I thought that we had
+grown wiser at last. It seemed to me like the dawn of a great
+clearing up. I thought the common sense of mankind would break out
+like a flame, an indignant flame, and consume all this obsolete
+foolery of empires and banners and militarism directly it made its
+attack upon human happiness. A score of things that I see now were
+preposterous, I thought must happen&mdash;naturally. I thought
+America would declare herself against the Belgian outrage; that she
+would not tolerate the smashing of the great sister
+republic&mdash;if only for the memory of Lafayette. Well&mdash;I
+gather America is<a name="Page_359"></a> chiefly concerned about
+our making cotton contraband. I thought the Balkan States were
+capable of a reasonable give and take; of a common care for their
+common freedom. I see now three German royalties trading in
+peasants, and no men in their lands to gainsay them. I saw this
+war, as so many Frenchmen have seen it, as something that might
+legitimately command a splendid enthusiasm of indignation.... It
+was all a dream, the dream of a prosperous comfortable man who had
+never come to the cutting edge of life. Everywhere cunning,
+everywhere small feuds and hatreds, distrusts, dishonesties,
+timidities, feebleness of purpose, dwarfish imaginations, swarm
+over the great and simple issues.... It is a war now like any other
+of the mobbing, many-aimed cataclysms that have shattered empires
+and devastated the world; it is a war without point, a war that has
+lost its soul, it has become mere incoherent fighting and
+destruction, a demonstration in vast and tragic forms of the
+stupidity and ineffectiveness of our species...."</p>
+<p>He stopped, and there was a little interval of silence.</p>
+<p>Captain Carmine tossed the fag end of his cigar very neatly into
+a tub of hydrangeas. "Three thousand years ago in China," he said,
+"there were men as sad as we are, for the same cause."</p>
+<p>"Three thousand years ahead perhaps," said Mr. Britling, "there
+will still be men with the same sadness.... And yet&mdash;and
+yet.... No. Just now I have no elasticity. It is not in my nature
+to despair, but things are pressing me down. I don't recover as I
+used to recover. I tell myself still that though the way is long
+and hard the spirit of hope, the spirit of creation, the
+generosities and gallantries in the heart of man, must end in
+victory. But I say that over as one repeats a worn-out prayer. The
+light is out of the sky for me. Sometimes I doubt if it will ever
+come back. Let younger men take heart and go on with the world. If
+I could die for<a name="Page_360"></a> the right thing
+now&mdash;instead of just having to live on in this world of
+ineffective struggle&mdash;I would be glad to die now,
+Carmine...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 17</h4>
+<br>
+<p>In these days also Mr. Direck was very unhappy.</p>
+<p>For Cissie, at any rate, had not lost touch with the essential
+issues of the war. She was as clear as ever that German militarism
+and the German attack on Belgium and France was the primary subject
+of the war. And she dismissed all secondary issues. She continued
+to demand why America did not fight. "We fight for Belgium. Won't
+you fight for the Dutch and Norwegian ships? Won't you even fight
+for your own ships that the Germans are sinking?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck attempted explanations that were ill received.</p>
+<p>"You were ready enough to fight the Spaniards when they blew up
+the <i>Maine</i>. But the Germans can sink the <i>Lusitania</i>!
+That's&mdash;as you say&mdash;a different proposition."</p>
+<p>His mind was shot by an extraordinary suspicion that she thought
+the <i>Lusitania</i> an American vessel. But Mr. Direck was
+learning his Cissie, and he did not dare to challenge her on this
+score.</p>
+<p>"You haven't got hold of the American proposition," he said.
+"We're thinking beyond wars."</p>
+<p>"That's what we have been trying to do," said Cissie. "Do you
+think we came into it for the fun of the thing?"</p>
+<p>"Haven't I shown in a hundred ways that I sympathise?"</p>
+<p>"Oh&mdash;sympathy!..."</p>
+<p>He fared little better at Mr. Britling's hands. Mr. Britling
+talked darkly, but pointed all the time only too plainly at
+America. "There's two sorts of liberalism,"<a name="Page_361"></a>
+said Mr. Britling, "that pretend to be the same thing; there's the
+liberalism of great aims and the liberalism of defective moral
+energy...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 18</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It was not until Teddy had been missing for three weeks that
+Hugh wrote about him. The two Essex battalions on the Flanders
+front were apparently wide apart, and it was only from home that
+Hugh learnt what had happened.</p>
+<p>"You can't imagine how things narrow down when one is close up
+against them. One does not know what is happening even within a few
+miles of us, until we get the newspapers. Then, with a little
+reading between the lines and some bold guessing, we fit our little
+bit of experience with a general shape. Of course I've wondered at
+times about Teddy. But oddly enough I've never thought of him very
+much as being out here. It's queer, I know, but I haven't. I can't
+imagine why....</p>
+<p>"I don't know about 'missing.' We've had nothing going on here
+that has led to any missing. All our men have been accounted for.
+But every few miles along the front conditions alter. His lot may
+have been closer up to the enemy, and there may have been a rush
+and a fight for a bit of trench either way. In some parts the
+German trenches are not thirty yards away, and there is mining,
+bomb throwing, and perpetual creeping up and give and take. Here
+we've been getting a bit forward. But I'll tell you about that
+presently. And, anyhow, I don't understand about 'missing.' There's
+very few prisoners taken now. But don't tell Letty that. I try to
+imagine old Teddy in it....</p>
+<p>"Missing's a queer thing. It isn't tragic&mdash;or pitiful. Or
+partly reassuring like 'prisoner.' It just sends one speculating
+and speculating. I can't find any one who knows where the 14th
+Essex are. Things move about<a name="Page_362"></a> here so
+mysteriously that for all I know we may find them in the next
+trench next time we go up. But there <i>is</i> a chance for Teddy.
+It's worth while bucking Letty all you can. And at the same time
+there's odds against him. There plainly and unfeelingly is how
+things stand in my mind. I think chiefly of Letty. I'm glad Cissie
+is with her, and I'm glad she's got the boy. Keep her busy. She was
+frightfully fond of him. I've seen all sorts of things between
+them, and I know that.... I'll try and write to her soon, and I'll
+find something hopeful to tell her.</p>
+<p>"Meanwhile I've got something to tell you. I've been through a
+fight, a big fight, and I haven't got a scratch. I've taken two
+prisoners with my lily hand. Men were shot close to me. I didn't
+mind that a bit. It was as exciting as one of those bitter fights
+we used to have round the hockey goal. I didn't mind anything till
+afterwards. Then when I was in the trench in the evening I trod on
+something slippery&mdash;pah! And after it was all over one of my
+chums got it&mdash;sort of unfairly. And I keep on thinking of
+those two things so much that all the early part is just dreamlike.
+It's more like something I've read in a book, or seen in the
+<i>Illustrated London News</i> than actually been through. One had
+been thinking so often, how will it feel? how shall I behave? that
+when it came it had an effect of being flat and ordinary.</p>
+<p>"They say we hadn't got enough guns in the spring or enough
+ammunition. That's all right now&mdash;anyhow. They started in
+plastering the Germans overnight, and right on until it was just
+daylight. I never heard such a row, and their trenches&mdash;we
+could stand up and look at them without getting a single shot at
+us&mdash;were flying about like the crater of a volcano. We were
+not in our firing trench. We had gone back into some new trenches,
+at the rear&mdash;I think to get out of the way of the counter
+fire. But this morning they weren't doing very much. For once our
+guns were on top. There was a feeling of<a name="Page_363"></a>
+anticipation&mdash;very like waiting for an examination paper to be
+given out; then we were at it. Getting out of a trench to attack
+gives you an odd feeling of being just hatched. Suddenly the world
+is big. I don't remember our gun fire stopping. And then you rush.
+'Come on! Come on!' say the officers. Everybody gives a sort of
+howl and rushes. When you see men dropping, you rush the faster.
+The only thing that checks you at all is the wire twisted about
+everywhere. You don't want to trip over that. The frightening thing
+is the exposure. After being in the trenches so long you feel
+naked. You run like a scared child for the German trench ahead. I
+can't understand the iron nerve of a man who can expose his back by
+turning to run away. And there's a thirsty feeling with one's
+bayonet. But they didn't wait. They dropped rifles and ran. But we
+ran so fast after them that we caught one or two in the second
+trench. I got down into that, heard a voice behind me, and found my
+two prisoners lying artful in a dug-out. They held up their hands
+as I turned. If they hadn't I doubt if I should have done anything
+to them. I didn't feel like it. I felt <i>friendly</i>.</p>
+<p>"Not all the Germans ran. Three or four stuck to their
+machine-guns until they got bayoneted. Both the trenches were
+frightfully smashed about, and in the first one there were little
+knots and groups of dead. We got to work at once shying the
+sandbags over from the old front of the trench to the parados. Our
+guns had never stopped all the time; they were now plastering the
+third line trenches. And almost at once the German shells began
+dropping into us. Of course they had the range to an inch. One
+didn't have any time to feel and think; one just set oneself with
+all one's energy to turn the trench over....</p>
+<p>"I don't remember that I helped or cared for a wounded man all
+the time, or felt anything about the dead except to step over them
+and not on them. I was just<a name="Page_364"></a> possessed by the
+idea that we had to get the trench into a sheltering state before
+they tried to come back. And then stick there. I just wanted to
+win, and there was nothing else in my mind....</p>
+<p>"They did try to come back, but not very much....</p>
+<p>"Then when I began to feel sure of having got hold of the trench
+for good, I began to realise just how tired I was and how high the
+sun had got. I began to look about me, and found most of the other
+men working just as hard as I had been doing. 'We've done it!' I
+said, and that was the first word I'd spoken since I told my two
+Germans to come out of it, and stuck a man with a wounded leg to
+watch them. 'It's a bit of All Right,' said Ortheris, knocking off
+also, and lighting a half-consumed cigarette. He had been wearing
+it behind his ear, I believe, ever since the charge. Against this
+occasion. He'd kept close up to me all the time, I realised. And
+then old Park turned up very cheerful with a weak bayonet jab in
+his forearm that he wanted me to rebandage. It was good to see him
+practically all right too.</p>
+<p>"'I took two prisoners,' I said, and everybody I spoke to I told
+that. I was fearfully proud of it.</p>
+<p>"I thought that if I could take two prisoners in my first charge
+I was going to be some soldier.</p>
+<p>"I had stood it all admirably. I didn't feel a bit shaken. I was
+as tough as anything. I'd seen death and killing, and it was all
+just hockey.</p>
+<p>"And then that confounded Ortheris must needs go and get
+killed.</p>
+<p>"The shell knocked me over, and didn't hurt me a bit. I was a
+little stunned, and some dirt was thrown over me, and when I got up
+on my knees I saw Jewell lying about six yards off&mdash;and his
+legs were all smashed about. Ugh! Pulped!</p>
+<p>"He looked amazed. 'Bloody,' he said, 'bloody.' He fixed his
+eyes on me, and suddenly grinned. You know we'd once had two fights
+about his saying 'bloody,'<a name="Page_365"></a> I think I told
+you at the time, a fight and a return match, he couldn't box for
+nuts, but he stood up like a Briton, and it appealed now to his
+sense of humour that I should be standing there too dazed to
+protest at the old offence. 'I thought <i>you</i> was done in,' he
+said. 'I'm in a mess&mdash;a bloody mess, ain't I? Like a stuck
+pig. Bloody&mdash;right enough. Bloody! I didn't know I 'ad it
+<i>in</i> me.'</p>
+<p>"He looked at me and grinned with a sort of pale satisfaction in
+keeping up to the last&mdash;dying good Ortheris to the finish. I
+just stood up helpless in front of him, still rather dazed.</p>
+<p>"He said something about having a thundering thirst on him.</p>
+<p>"I really don't believe he felt any pain. He would have done if
+he had lived.</p>
+<p>"And then while I was fumbling with my water-bottle, he
+collapsed. He forgot all about Ortheris. Suddenly he said something
+that cut me all to ribbons. His face puckered up just like the face
+of a fretful child which refuses to go to bed. 'I didn't want to be
+aut of it,' he said petulantly. 'And I'm done!' And then&mdash;then
+he just looked discontented and miserable and died&mdash;right off.
+Turned his head a little way over. As if he was impatient at
+everything. Fainted&mdash;and fluttered out.</p>
+<p>"For a time I kept trying to get him to drink....</p>
+<p>"I couldn't believe he was dead....</p>
+<p>"And suddenly it was all different. I began to cry. Like a baby.
+I kept on with the water-bottle at his teeth long after I was
+convinced he was dead. I didn't want him to be aut of it! God knows
+how I didn't. I wanted my dear little Cockney cad back. Oh! most
+frightfully I wanted him back.</p>
+<p>"I shook him. I was like a scared child. I blubbered and howled
+things.... It's all different since he died.</p>
+<p>"My dear, dear Father, I am grieving and grieving&mdash;and it's
+altogether nonsense. And it's all mixed up in<a name=
+"Page_366"></a> my mind with the mess I trod on. And it gets worse
+and worse. So that I don't seem to feel anything really, even for
+Teddy.</p>
+<p>"It's been just the last straw of all this hellish
+foolery....</p>
+<p>"If ever there was a bigger lie, my dear Daddy, than any other,
+it is that man is a reasonable creature....</p>
+<p>"War is just foolery&mdash;lunatic foolery&mdash;hell's
+foolery....</p>
+<p>"But, anyhow, your son is sound and well&mdash;if sorrowful and
+angry. We were relieved that night. And there are rumours that very
+soon we are to have a holiday and a refit. We lost rather heavily.
+We have been praised. But all along, Essex has done well. I can't
+reckon to get back yet, but there are such things as leave for
+eight-and-forty hours or so in England....</p>
+<p>"I shall be glad of that sort of turning round....</p>
+<p>"I'm tired. Oh! I'm tired....</p>
+<p>"I wanted to write all about Jewell to his mother or his
+sweetheart or some one; I wanted to wallow in his praises, to say
+all the things I really find now that I thought about him, but I
+haven't even had that satisfaction. He was a Poor Law child; he was
+raised in one of those awful places between Sutton and Banstead in
+Surrey. I've told you of all the sweethearting he had. 'Soldiers
+Three' was his Bible; he was always singing 'Tipperary,' and he
+never got the tune right nor learnt more than three lines of it. He
+laced all his talk with 'b&mdash;&mdash;y'; it was his jewel, his
+ruby. But he had the pluck of a robin or a squirrel; I never knew
+him scared or anything but cheerful. Misfortunes, humiliations,
+only made him chatty. And he'd starve to have something to give
+away.</p>
+<p>"Well, well, this is the way of war, Daddy. This is what war is.
+Damn the Kaiser! Damn all fools.... Give my love to the Mother and
+the bruddykins and every one...."</p>
+<a name="Page_367"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 19</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It was just a day or so over three weeks after this last letter
+from Hugh that Mr. Direck reappeared at Matching's Easy. He had had
+a trip to Holland&mdash;a trip that was as much a flight from
+Cissie's reproaches as a mission of inquiry. He had intended to go
+on into Belgium, where he had already been doing useful relief work
+under Mr. Hoover, but the confusion of his own feelings had checked
+him and brought him back.</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck's mind was in a perplexity only too common during the
+stresses of that tragic year. He was entangled in a paradox; like a
+large majority of Americans at that time his feelings were quite
+definitely pro-Ally, and like so many in that majority he had a
+very clear conviction that it would be wrong and impossible for the
+United States to take part in the war. His sympathies were
+intensely with the Dower House and its dependent cottage; he would
+have wept with generous emotion to see the Stars and Stripes
+interwoven with the three other great banners of red, white and
+blue that led the world against German imperialism and militarism,
+but for all that his mind would not march to that tune. Against all
+these impulses fought something very fundamental in Mr. Direck's
+composition, a preconception of America that had grown almost
+insensibly in his mind, the idea of America as a polity aloof from
+the Old World system, as a fresh start for humanity, as something
+altogether too fine and precious to be dragged into even the
+noblest of European conflicts. America was to be the beginning of
+the fusion of mankind, neither German nor British nor French nor in
+any way national. She was to be the great experiment in peace and
+reasonableness. She had to hold civilisation and social order out
+of this fray, to be a refuge for all those finer things that die
+under stress and turmoil; it was her task to maintain the standards
+of life and the claims of humanitarianism in the<a name=
+"Page_368"></a> conquered province and the prisoners' compound, she
+had to be the healer and arbitrator, the remonstrance and not the
+smiting hand. Surely there were enough smiting hands.</p>
+<p>But this idea of an America judicial, remonstrating, and aloof,
+led him to a conclusion that scandalised him. If America will not,
+and should not use force in the ends of justice, he argued, then
+America has no right to make and export munitions of war. She must
+not trade in what she disavows. He had a quite exaggerated idea of
+the amount of munitions that America was sending to the Allies, he
+was inclined to believe that they were entirely dependent upon
+their transatlantic supplies, and so he found himself persuaded
+that the victory of the Allies and the honour of America were
+incompatible things. And&mdash;in spite of his ethical
+aloofness&mdash;he loved the Allies. He wanted them to win, and he
+wanted America to abandon a course that he believed was vitally
+necessary to their victory. It was an intellectual dilemma. He hid
+this self-contradiction from Matching's Easy with much the same
+feelings that a curate might hide a poisoned dagger at a
+tea-party....</p>
+<p>It was entirely against his habits of mind to hide
+anything&mdash;more particularly an entanglement with a difficult
+proposition&mdash;but he perceived quite clearly that neither
+Cecily nor Mr. Britling were really to be trusted to listen calmly
+to what, under happier circumstances, might be a profoundly
+interesting moral complication. Yet it was not in his nature to
+conceal; it was in his nature to state.</p>
+<p>And Cecily made things much more difficult. She was pitiless
+with him. She kept him aloof. "How can I let you make love to me,"
+she said, "when our English men are all going to the war, when
+Teddy is a prisoner and Hugh is in the trenches. If I were a
+man&mdash;!"</p>
+<p>She couldn't be induced to see any case for America. England was
+fighting for freedom, and America ought<a name="Page_369"></a> to
+be beside her. "All the world ought to unite against this German
+wickedness," she said.</p>
+<p>"I'm doing all I can to help in Belgium," he protested. "Aren't
+I working? We've fed four million people."</p>
+<p>He had backbone, and he would not let her, he was resolved,
+bully him into a falsehood about his country. America was aloof.
+She was right to be aloof.... At the same time, Cecily's reproaches
+were unendurable. And he could feel he was drifting apart from
+her....</p>
+<p><i>He</i> couldn't make America go to war.</p>
+<p>In the quiet of his London hotel he thought it all out. He sat
+at a writing-table making notes of a perfectly lucid statement of
+the reasonable, balanced liberal American opinion. An instinct of
+caution determined him to test it first on Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>But Mr. Britling realised his worst expectations. He was beyond
+listening.</p>
+<p>"I've not heard from my boy for more than three weeks," said Mr.
+Britling in the place of any salutation. "This morning makes
+three-and-twenty days without a letter."</p>
+<p>It seemed to Mr. Direck that Mr. Britling had suddenly grown ten
+years older. His face was more deeply lined; the colour and texture
+of his complexion had gone grey. He moved restlessly and badly; his
+nerves were manifestly unstrung.</p>
+<p>"It's intolerable that one should be subjected to this ghastly
+suspense. The boy isn't three hundred miles away."</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck made obvious inquiries.</p>
+<p>"Always before he's written&mdash;generally once a
+fortnight."</p>
+<p>They talked of Hugh for a time, but Mr. Britling was fitful and
+irritable and quite prepared to hold Mr. Direck accountable for the
+laxity of the War Office, the treachery of Bulgaria, the ambiguity
+of Roumania or any other barb that chanced to be sticking into his
+sensibilities. They<a name="Page_370"></a> lunched precariously.
+Then they went into the study to smoke.</p>
+<p>There Mr. Direck was unfortunate enough to notice a copy of that
+innocent American publication <i>The New Republic</i>, lying close
+to two or three numbers of <i>The Fatherland</i>, a pro-German
+periodical which at that time inflicted itself upon English writers
+with the utmost determination. Mr. Direck remarked that <i>The New
+Republic</i> was an interesting effort on the part of "<i>la
+Jeunesse Am&eacute;ricaine</i>." Mr. Britling regarded the
+interesting effort with a jaded, unloving eye.</p>
+<p>"You Americans," he said, "are the most extraordinary people in
+the world."</p>
+<p>"Our conditions are exceptional," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"You think they are," said Mr. Britling, and paused, and then
+began to deliver his soul about America in a discourse of
+accumulating bitterness. At first he reasoned and explained, but as
+he went on he lost self-control; he became dogmatic, he became
+denunciatory, he became abusive. He identified Mr. Direck more and
+more with his subject; he thrust the uncivil "You" more and more
+directly at him. He let his cigar go out, and flung it impatiently
+into the fire. As though America was responsible for its going
+out....</p>
+<p>Like many Britons Mr. Britling had that touch of patriotic
+feeling towards America which takes the form of impatient
+criticism. No one in Britain ever calls an American a foreigner. To
+see faults in Germany or Spain is to tap boundless fountains of
+charity; but the faults of America rankle in an English mind almost
+as much as the faults of England. Mr. Britling could explain away
+the faults of England readily enough; our Hanoverian monarchy, our
+Established Church and its deadening effect on education, our
+imperial obligations and the strain they made upon our supplies of
+administrative talent were all very serviceable for that purpose.
+But there in America was the old race, without Crown<a name=
+"Page_371"></a> or Church or international embarrassment, and it
+was still falling short of splendid. His speech to Mr. Direck had
+the rancour of a family quarrel. Let me only give a few sentences
+that were to stick in Mr. Direck's memory.</p>
+<p>"You think you are out of it for good and all. So did we think.
+We were as smug as you are when France went down in '71.... Yours
+is only one further degree of insularity. You think this vacuous
+aloofness of yours is some sort of moral superiority. So did we, so
+did we....</p>
+<p>"It won't last you ten years if we go down....</p>
+<p>"Do you think that our disaster will leave the Atlantic for you?
+Do you fancy there is any Freedom of the Seas possible beyond such
+freedom as we maintain, except the freedom to attack you? For forty
+years the British fleet has guarded all America from European
+attack. Your Monroe doctrine skulks behind it now....</p>
+<p>"I'm sick of this high thin talk of yours about the war.... You
+are a nation of ungenerous onlookers&mdash;watching us throttle or
+be throttled. You gamble on our winning. And we shall win; we shall
+win. And you will profit. And when we have won a victory only one
+shade less terrible than defeat, then you think you will come in
+and tinker with our peace. Bleed us a little more to please your
+hyphenated patriots...."</p>
+<p>He came to his last shaft. "You talk of your New Ideals of
+Peace. You say that you are too proud to fight. But your business
+men in New York give the show away. There's a little printed card
+now in half the offices in New York that tells of the real
+pacificism of America. They're busy, you know. Trade's real good.
+And so as not to interrupt it they stick up this card: 'Nix on the
+war!' Think of it!&mdash;'Nix on the war!' Here is the whole fate
+of mankind at stake, and America's contribution is a little
+grumbling when the Germans sank the <i>Lusitania</i>, and no end of
+grumbling when we hold up a ship or two and some<a name=
+"Page_372"></a> fool of a harbour-master makes an overcharge.
+Otherwise&mdash;'Nix on the war!'...</p>
+<p>"Well, let it be Nix on the war! Don't come here and talk to me!
+You who were searching registers a year ago to find your Essex kin.
+Let it be Nix! Explanations! What do I want with explanations?
+And"&mdash;he mocked his guest's accent and his guest's mode of
+thought&mdash;"dif'cult prap'sitions."</p>
+<p>He got up and stood irresolute. He knew he was being
+preposterously unfair to America, and outrageously uncivil to a
+trusting guest; he knew he had no business now to end the talk in
+this violent fashion. But it was an enormous relief. And to mend
+matters&mdash;<i>No!</i> He was glad he'd said these things....</p>
+<p>He swung a shoulder to Mr. Direck, and walked out of the
+room....</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck heard him cross the hall and slam the door of the
+little parlour....</p>
+<p>Mr. Direck had been stirred deeply by the tragic indignation of
+this explosion, and the ring of torment in Mr. Britling's voice. He
+had stood up also, but he did not follow his host.</p>
+<p>"It's his boy," said Mr. Direck at last, confidentially to the
+writing-desk. "How can one argue with him? It's just hell for
+him...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 20</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mr. Direck took his leave of Mrs. Britling, and went very slowly
+towards the little cottage. But he did not go to the cottage. He
+felt he would only find another soul in torment there.</p>
+<p>"What's the good of hanging round talking?" said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>He stopped at the stile in the lane, and sat thinking deeply.
+"Only one thing will convince her," he said.</p>
+<p>He held out his fingers. "First this," he whispered, "and then
+that. Yes."</p>
+<a name="Page_373"></a>
+<p>He went on as far as the bend from which one sees the cottage,
+and stood for a little time regarding it.</p>
+<p>He returned still more sorrowfully to the junction, and with
+every step he took it seemed to him that he would rather see Cecily
+angry and insulting than not see her at all.</p>
+<p>At the post office he stopped and wrote a letter-card.</p>
+<p>"Dear Cissie," he wrote. "I came down to-day to see
+you&mdash;and thought better of it. I'm going right off to find out
+about Teddy. Somehow I'll get that settled. I'll fly around and do
+that somehow if I have to go up to the German front to do it. And
+when I've got that settled I've got something else in my
+mind&mdash;well, it will wipe out all this little trouble that's
+got so big between us about neutrality. And I love you dearly,
+Cissie."</p>
+<p>That was all the card would hold.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 21</h4>
+<br>
+<p>And then as if it were something that every one in the Dower
+House had been waiting for, came the message that Hugh had been
+killed.</p>
+<p>The telegram was brought up by a girl in a pinafore instead of
+the boy of the old dispensation, for boys now were doing the work
+of youths and youths the work of the men who had gone to the
+war.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling was standing at the front door; he had been
+surveying the late October foliage, touched by the warm light of
+the afternoon, when the messenger appeared. He opened the telegram,
+hoping as he had hoped when he opened any telegram since Hugh had
+gone to the front that it would not contain the exact words he
+read; that it would say wounded, that at the worst it would say
+"missing," that perhaps it might even tell of some pleasant
+surprise, a brief return to home such as the last letter had
+foreshadowed. He read the final, unqualified statement, the terse
+regrets. He stood quite still for a moment or so, staring at the
+words....</p>
+<a name="Page_374"></a>
+<p>It was a mile and a quarter from the post office to the Dower
+House, and it was always his custom to give telegraph messengers
+who came to his house twopence, and he wanted very much to get rid
+of the telegraph girl, who stood expectantly before him holding her
+red bicycle. He felt now very sick and strained; he had a
+conviction that if he did not by an effort maintain his bearing
+cool and dry he would howl aloud. He felt in his pocket for money;
+there were some coppers and a shilling. He pulled it all out
+together and stared at it.</p>
+<p>He had an absurd conviction that this ought to be a sixpenny
+telegram. The thing worried him. He wanted to give the brat
+sixpence, and he had only threepence and a shilling, and he didn't
+know what to do and his brain couldn't think. It would be a
+shocking thing to give her a shilling, and he couldn't somehow give
+just coppers for so important a thing as Hugh's death. Then all
+this problem vanished and he handed the child the shilling. She
+stared at him, inquiring, incredulous. "Is there a reply, Sir,
+please?"</p>
+<p>"No," he said, "that's for you. All of it.... This is a peculiar
+sort of telegram.... It's news of importance...."</p>
+<p>As he said this he met her eyes, and had a sudden persuasion
+that she knew exactly what it was the telegram had told him, and
+that she was shocked at this gala-like treatment of such terrible
+news. He hesitated, feeling that he had to say something else, that
+he was socially inadequate, and then he decided that at any cost he
+must get his face away from her staring eyes. She made no movement
+to turn away. She seemed to be taking him in, recording him, for
+repetition, greedily, with every fibre of her being.</p>
+<p>He stepped past her into the garden, and instantly forgot about
+her existence....</p>
+<a name="Page_375"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 22</h4>
+<br>
+<p>He had been thinking of this possibility for the last few weeks
+almost continuously, and yet now that it had come to him he felt
+that he had never thought about it before, that he must go off
+alone by himself to envisage this monstrous and terrible fact,
+without distraction or interruption.</p>
+<p>He saw his wife coming down the alley between the roses.</p>
+<p>He was wrenched by emotions as odd and unaccountable as the
+emotions of adolescence. He had exactly the same feeling now that
+he had had when in his boyhood some unpleasant admission had to be
+made to his parents. He felt he could not go through a scene with
+her yet, that he could not endure the task of telling her, of being
+observed. He turned abruptly to his left. He walked away as if he
+had not seen her, across his lawn towards the little summer-house
+upon a knoll that commanded the high road. She called to him, but
+he did not answer....</p>
+<p>He would not look towards her, but for a time all his senses
+were alert to hear whether she followed him. Safe in the
+summer-house he could glance back.</p>
+<p>It was all right. She was going into the house.</p>
+<p>He drew the telegram from his pocket again furtively, almost
+guiltily, and re-read it. He turned it over and read it
+again....</p>
+<p><i>Killed.</i></p>
+<p>Then his own voice, hoarse and strange to his ears, spoke his
+thought.</p>
+<p>"My God! how unutterably silly.... Why did I let him go? Why did
+I let him go?"</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 23</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Mrs. Britling did not learn of the blow that had struck them
+until after dinner that night. She was so accustomed to ignore his
+incomprehensible moods that she did<a name="Page_376"></a> not
+perceive that there was anything tragic about him until they sat at
+table together. He seemed heavy and sulky and disposed to avoid
+her, but that sort of moodiness was nothing very strange to her.
+She knew that things that seemed to her utterly trivial, the
+reading of political speeches in <i>The Times</i>, little comments
+on life made in the most casual way, mere movements, could so avert
+him. She had cultivated a certain disregard of such fitful
+darknesses. But at the dinner-table she looked up, and was stabbed
+to the heart to see a haggard white face and eyes of deep despair
+regarding her ambiguously.</p>
+<p>"Hugh!" she said, and then with a chill intimation, "<i>What is
+it?</i>"</p>
+<p>They looked at each other. His face softened and winced.</p>
+<p>"My Hugh," he whispered, and neither spoke for some seconds.</p>
+<p>"<i>Killed</i>," he said, and suddenly stood up whimpering, and
+fumbled with his pocket.</p>
+<p>It seemed he would never find what he sought. It came at last, a
+crumpled telegram. He threw it down before her, and then thrust his
+chair back clumsily and went hastily out of the room. She heard him
+sob. She had not dared to look at his face again.</p>
+<p>"Oh!" she cried, realising that an impossible task had been
+thrust upon her.</p>
+<p>"But what can I <i>say</i> to him?" she said, with the telegram
+in her hand.</p>
+<p>The parlourmaid came into the room.</p>
+<p>"Clear the dinner away!" said Mrs. Britling, standing at her
+place. "Master Hugh is killed...." And then wailing: "Oh! what can
+I <i>say</i>? What can I <i>say</i>?"</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 24</h4>
+<br>
+<p>That night Mrs. Britling made the supreme effort of her life to
+burst the prison of self-consciousness and inhibition in which she
+was confined. Never before in all<a name="Page_377"></a> her life
+had she so desired to be spontaneous and unrestrained; never before
+had she so felt herself hampered by her timidity, her
+self-criticism, her deeply ingrained habit of never letting herself
+go. She was rent by reflected distress. It seemed to her that she
+would be ready to give her life and the whole world to be able to
+comfort her husband now. And she could conceive no gesture of
+comfort. She went out of the dining-room into the hall and
+listened. She went very softly upstairs until she came to the door
+of her husband's room. There she stood still. She could hear no
+sound from within. She put out her hand and turned the handle of
+the door a little way, and then she was startled by the loudness of
+the sound it made and at her own boldness. She withdrew her hand,
+and then with a gesture of despair, with a face of white agony, she
+flitted along the corridor to her own room.</p>
+<p>Her mind was beaten to the ground by this catastrophe, of which
+to this moment she had never allowed herself to think. She had
+never allowed herself to think of it. The figure of her husband,
+like some pitiful beast, wounded and bleeding, filled her mind. She
+gave scarcely a thought to Hugh. "Oh, what can I <i>do</i> for
+him?" she asked herself, sitting down before her unlit bedroom
+fire.... "What can I say or do?"</p>
+<p>She brooded until she shivered, and then she lit her
+fire....</p>
+<p>It was late that night and after an eternity of resolutions and
+doubts and indecisions that Mrs. Britling went to her husband. He
+was sitting close up to the fire with his chin upon his hands,
+waiting for her; he felt that she would come to him, and he was
+thinking meanwhile of Hugh with a slow unprogressive movement of
+the mind. He showed by a movement that he heard her enter the room,
+but he did not turn to look at her. He shrank a little from her
+approach.</p>
+<p>She came and stood beside him. She ventured to touch<a name=
+"Page_378"></a> him very softly, and to stroke his head. "My dear,"
+she said. "My poor dear!</p>
+<p>"It is so dreadful for you," she said, "it is so dreadful for
+you. I know how you loved him...."</p>
+<p>He spread his hands over his face and became very still.</p>
+<p>"My poor dear!" she said, still stroking his hair, "my poor
+dear!"</p>
+<p>And then she went on saying "poor dear," saying it presently
+because there was nothing more had come into her mind. She desired
+supremely to be his comfort, and in a little while she was acting
+comfort so poorly that she perceived her own failure. And that
+increased her failure, and that increased her paralysing sense of
+failure....</p>
+<p>And suddenly her stroking hand ceased. Suddenly the real woman
+cried out from her.</p>
+<p>"I can't <i>reach</i> you!" she cried aloud. "I can't reach you.
+I would do anything.... You! You with your heart half
+broken...."</p>
+<p>She turned towards the door. She moved clumsily, she was blinded
+by her tears.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling uncovered his face. He stood up astonished, and
+then pity and pitiful understanding came storming across his grief.
+He made a step and took her in his arms. "My dear," he said, "don't
+go from me...."</p>
+<p>She turned to him weeping, and put her arms about his neck, and
+he too was weeping.</p>
+<p>"My poor wife!" he said, "my dear wife. If it were not for
+you&mdash;I think I could kill myself to-night. Don't cry, my dear.
+Don't, don't cry. You do not know how you comfort me. You do not
+know how you help me."</p>
+<p>He drew her to him; he put her cheek against his own....</p>
+<p>His heart was so sore and wounded that he could not endure that
+another human being should go wretched. He sat down in his chair
+and drew her upon his knees,<a name="Page_379"></a> and said
+everything he could think of to console her and reassure her and
+make her feel that she was of value to him. He spoke of every
+pleasant aspect of their lives, of every aspect, except that he
+never named that dear pale youth who waited now.... He could wait a
+little longer....</p>
+<p>At last she went from him.</p>
+<p>"Good night," said Mr. Britling, and took her to the door. "It
+was very dear of you to come and comfort me," he said....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 25</h4>
+<br>
+<p>He closed the door softly behind her.</p>
+<p>The door had hardly shut upon her before he forgot her.
+Instantly he was alone again, utterly alone. He was alone in an
+empty world....</p>
+<p>Loneliness struck him like a blow. He had dependents, he had
+cares. He had never a soul to whom he might weep....</p>
+<p>For a time he stood beside his open window. He looked at the
+bed&mdash;but no sleep he knew would come that night&mdash;until
+the sleep of exhaustion came. He looked at the bureau at which he
+had so often written. But the writing there was a shrivelled
+thing....</p>
+<p>This room was unendurable. He must go out. He turned to the
+window, and outside was a troublesome noise of night-jars and a
+distant roaring of stags, black trees, blacknesses, the sky clear
+and remote with a great company of stars.... The stars seemed
+attentive. They stirred and yet were still. It was as if they were
+the eyes of watchers. He would go out to them....</p>
+<p>Very softly he went towards the passage door, and still more
+softly felt his way across the landing and down the staircase. Once
+or twice he paused to listen.</p>
+<p>He let himself out with elaborate precautions....</p>
+<p>Across the dark he went, and suddenly his boy was all about him,
+playing, climbing the cedars, twisting<a name="Page_380"></a>
+miraculously about the lawn on a bicycle, discoursing gravely upon
+his future, lying on the grass, breathing very hard and drawing
+preposterous caricatures. Once again they walked side by side up
+and down&mdash;it was athwart this very spot&mdash;talking gravely
+but rather shyly....</p>
+<p>And here they had stood a little awkwardly, before the boy went
+in to say good-bye to his stepmother and go off with his father to
+the station....</p>
+<p>"I will work to-morrow again," whispered Mr. Britling, "but
+to-night&mdash;to-night.... To-night is yours.... Can you hear me,
+can you hear? Your father ... who had counted on you...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 26</h4>
+<br>
+<p>He went into the far corner of the hockey paddock, and there he
+moved about for a while and then stood for a long time holding the
+fence with both hands and staring blankly into the darkness. At
+last he turned away, and went stumbling and blundering towards the
+rose garden. A spray of creeper tore his face and distressed him.
+He thrust it aside fretfully, and it scratched his hand. He made
+his way to the seat in the arbour, and sat down and whispered a
+little to himself, and then became very still with his arm upon the
+back of the seat and his head upon his arm.</p>
+<a name="Page_381"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_III"></a>
+<h2>BOOK III</h2>
+<h2>THE TESTAMENT OF MATCHING'S EASY</h2>
+<a name="Page_383"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_III_CHAPTER_THE_FIRST"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE FIRST</h2>
+<h2>MRS. TEDDY GOES FOR A WALK</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>All over England now, where the livery of mourning had been a
+rare thing to see, women and children went about in the October
+sunshine in new black clothes. Everywhere one met these fresh
+griefs, mothers who had lost their sons, women who had lost their
+men, lives shattered and hopes destroyed. The dyers had a great
+time turning coloured garments to black. And there was also a
+growing multitude of crippled and disabled men. It was so in
+England, much more was it so in France and Russia, in all the
+countries of the Allies, and in Germany and Austria; away into Asia
+Minor and Egypt, in India and Japan and Italy there was mourning,
+the world was filled with loss and mourning and impoverishment and
+distress.</p>
+<p>And still the mysterious powers that required these things of
+mankind were unappeased, and each day added its quota of
+heart-stabbing messages and called for new mourning, and sent home
+fresh consignments of broken and tormented men.</p>
+<p>Some clung to hopes that became at last almost more terrible
+than black certainties....</p>
+<p>Mrs. Teddy went about the village in a coloured dress bearing
+herself confidently. Teddy had been listed now as "missing, since
+reported killed," and she had had two letters from his comrades.
+They said Teddy had been left behind in the ruins of a farm with
+one or two other wounded, and that when the Canadians retook the
+place these wounded had all been found butchered. None had<a name=
+"Page_384"></a> been found alive. Afterwards the Canadians had had
+to fall back. Mr. Direck had been at great pains to hunt up wounded
+men from Teddy's company, and also any likely Canadians both at the
+base hospital in France and in London, and to get what he could
+from them. He had made it a service to Cissie. Only one of his
+witnesses was quite clear about Teddy, but he, alas! was dreadfully
+clear. There had been only one lieutenant among the men left
+behind, he said, and obviously that must have been Teddy. "He had
+been prodded in half-a-dozen places. His head was nearly severed
+from his body."</p>
+<p>Direck came down and told the story to Cissie. "Shall I tell it
+to her?" he asked.</p>
+<p>Cissie thought. "Not yet," she said....</p>
+<p>Letty's face changed in those pitiful weeks when she was denying
+death. She lost her pretty colour, she became white; her mouth grew
+hard and her eyes had a hard brightness. She never wept, she never
+gave a sign of sorrow, and she insisted upon talking about Teddy,
+in a dry offhand voice. Constantly she referred to his final
+return. "Teddy," she said, "will be surprised at this," or "Teddy
+will feel sold when he sees how I have altered that."</p>
+<p>"Presently we shall see his name in a list of prisoners," she
+said. "He is a wounded prisoner in Germany."</p>
+<p>She adopted that story. She had no justification for it, but she
+would hear no doubts upon it. She presently began to prepare
+parcels to send him. "They want almost everything," she told
+people. "They are treated abominably. He has not been able to write
+to me yet, but I do not think I ought to wait until he asks
+me."</p>
+<p>Cissie was afraid to interfere with this.</p>
+<p>After a time Letty grew impatient at the delay in getting any
+address and took her first parcel to the post office.</p>
+<p>"Unless you know what prison he is at," said the
+postmistress.</p>
+<p>"Pity!" said Letty. "I don't know that. Must it<a name=
+"Page_385"></a> wait for that? I thought the Germans were so
+systematic that it didn't matter."</p>
+<p>The postmistress made tedious explanations that Letty did not
+seem to hear. She stared straight in front of her at nothing. Then
+in a pause in the conversation she picked up her parcel.</p>
+<p>"It's tiresome for him to have to wait," she said. "But it can't
+be long before I know."</p>
+<p>She took the parcel back to the cottage.</p>
+<p>"After all," she said, "it gives us time to get the better sort
+of throat lozenges for him&mdash;the sort the syndicate shop
+doesn't keep."</p>
+<p>She put the parcel conspicuously upon the dresser in the kitchen
+where it was most in the way, and set herself to make a jersey for
+Teddy against the coming of the cold weather.</p>
+<p>But one night the white mask fell for a moment from her
+face.</p>
+<p>Cissie and she had been sitting in silence before the fire. She
+had been knitting&mdash;she knitted very badly&mdash;and Cissie had
+been pretending to read, and had been watching her furtively.
+Cissie eyed the slow, toilsome growth of the slack woolwork for a
+time, and the touch of angry effort in every stroke of the knitting
+needles. Then she was stirred to remonstrance.</p>
+<p>"Poor Letty!" she said very softly. "Suppose after all, he is
+dead?"</p>
+<p>Letty met her with a pitiless stare.</p>
+<p>"He is a prisoner," she said. "Isn't that enough? Why do you jab
+at me by saying that? A wounded prisoner. Isn't that enough
+despicable trickery for God even to play on Teddy&mdash;our Teddy?
+To the very last moment he shall not be dead. Until the war is
+over. Until six months after the war....</p>
+<p>"I will tell you why, Cissie...."</p>
+<p>She leant across the table and pointed her remarks with her
+knitting needles, speaking in a tone of reasonable<a name=
+"Page_386"></a> remonstrance. "You see," she said, "if people like
+Teddy are to be killed, then all our ideas that life is meant for,
+honesty and sweetness and happiness, are wrong, and this world is
+just a place of devils; just a dirty cruel hell. Getting born would
+be getting damned. And so one must not give way to that idea,
+however much it may seem likely that he is dead....</p>
+<p>"You see, if he <i>is</i> dead, then Cruelty is the Law, and
+some one must pay me for his death.... Some one must pay me.... I
+shall wait for six months after the war, dear, and then I shall go
+off to Germany and learn my way about there. And I will murder some
+German. Not just a common German, but a German who belongs to the
+guilty kind. A sacrifice. It ought, for instance, to be
+comparatively easy to kill some of the children of the Crown Prince
+or some of the Bavarian princes. I shall prefer German children. I
+shall sacrifice them to Teddy. It ought not to be difficult to find
+people who can be made directly responsible, the people who
+invented the poison gas, for instance, and kill them, or to kill
+people who are dear to them. Or necessary to them.... Women can do
+that so much more easily than men....</p>
+<p>"That perhaps is the only way in which wars of this kind will
+ever be brought to an end. By women insisting on killing the kind
+of people who make them. Rooting them out. By a campaign of pursuit
+and assassination that will go on for years and years after the war
+itself is over.... Murder is such a little gentle punishment for
+the crime of war.... It would be hardly more than a reproach for
+what has happened. Falling like snow. Death after death. Flake by
+flake. This prince. That statesman. The count who writes so
+fiercely for war.... That is what I am going to do. If Teddy is
+really dead.... We women were ready enough a year or so ago to
+starve and die for the Vote, and that was quite a little thing in
+comparison with this business.... Don't you see what I mean? It's
+so plain and sensible, Cissie.<a name="Page_387"></a> Whenever a
+man sits and thinks whether he will make a war or not, then he will
+think too of women, women with daggers, bombs; of a vengeance that
+will never tire nor rest; of consecrated patient women ready to
+start out upon a pilgrimage that will only end with his death.... I
+wouldn't hurt these war makers. No. In spite of the poison gas. In
+spite of trench feet and the men who have been made blind and the
+wounded who have lain for days, dying slowly in the wet. Women
+ought not to hurt. But I would kill. Like killing dangerous vermin.
+It would go on year by year. Balkan kings, German princes,
+chancellors, they would have schemed for so much&mdash;and come to
+just a rattle in the throat.... And if presently other kings and
+emperors began to prance about and review armies, they too would
+go....</p>
+<p>"Until all the world understood that women would not stand war
+any more forever....</p>
+<p>"Of course I shall do something of the sort. What else is there
+to do now for me?"</p>
+<p>Letty's eyes were bright and intense, but her voice was soft and
+subdued. She went on after a pause in the same casual voice. "You
+see now, Cissie, why I cling to the idea that Teddy is alive. If
+Teddy is alive, then even if he is wounded, he will get some
+happiness out of it&mdash;and all this won't be&mdash;just rot. If
+he is dead then everything is so desperately silly and cruel from
+top to bottom&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She smiled wanly to finish her sentence.</p>
+<p>"But, Letty!" said Cissie, "there is the boy!"</p>
+<p>"I shall leave the boy to you. Compared with Teddy I don't care
+<i>that</i> for the boy. I never did. What is the good of
+pretending? Some women are made like that."</p>
+<p>She surveyed her knitting. "Poor stitches," she said....</p>
+<p>"I'm hard stuff, Cissie. I take after mother more than father.
+Teddy is my darling. All the tenderness of my life is Teddy. If it
+goes, it goes.... I won't<a name="Page_388"></a> crawl about the
+world like all these other snivelling widows. If they've killed my
+man I shall kill. Blood for blood and loss for loss. I shall get
+just as close to the particular Germans who made this war as I can,
+and I shall kill them and theirs....</p>
+<p>"The Women's Association for the Extirpation of the whole breed
+of War Lords," she threw out. "If I <i>do</i> happen to
+hurt&mdash;does it matter?"</p>
+<p>She looked at her sister's shocked face and smiled again.</p>
+<p>"You think I go about staring at nothing," she remarked.... "Not
+a bit of it! I have been planning all sorts of things.... I have
+been thinking how I could get to Germany.... Or one might catch
+them in Switzerland.... I've had all sorts of plans. They can't go
+guarded for ever....</p>
+<p>"Oh, it makes me despise humanity to see how many soldiers and
+how few assassins there are in the world.... After the things we
+have seen. If people did their duty by the dagger there wouldn't be
+such a thing as a War Lord in the world. Not one.... The Kaiser and
+his sons and his sons' sons would know nothing but fear now for all
+their lives. Fear would only cease to pursue as the coffin went
+down into the grave. Fear by sea, fear by land, for the vessel he
+sailed in, the train he travelled in, fear when he slept for the
+death in his dreams, fear when he waked for the death in every
+shadow; fear in every crowd, fear whenever he was alone. Fear would
+stalk him through the trees, hide in the corner of the staircase;
+make all his food taste perplexingly, so that he would want to spit
+it out...."</p>
+<p>She sat very still brooding on that idea for a time, and then
+stood up.</p>
+<p>"What nonsense one talks!" she cried, and yawned. "I wonder why
+poor Teddy doesn't send me a post card or something to tell me his
+address. I tell you what I <i>am</i> afraid of sometimes about him,
+Cissie."</p>
+<a name="Page_389"></a>
+<p>"Yes?" said Cissie.</p>
+<p>"Loss of memory. Suppose a beastly lump of shell or something
+whacked him on the head.... I had a dream of him looking strange
+about the eyes and not knowing me. That, you know, really
+<i>may</i> have happened.... It would be beastly, of
+course...."</p>
+<p>Cissie's eyes were critical, but she had nothing ready to
+say.</p>
+<p>There were some moments of silence.</p>
+<p>"Oh! bed," said Letty. "Though I shall just lie scheming."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Cissie lay awake that night thinking about her sister as if she
+had never thought about her before.</p>
+<p>She began to weigh the concentrated impressions of a thousand
+memories. She and her sister were near in age; they knew each other
+with an extreme intimacy, and yet it seemed to Cissie that night as
+though she did not know Letty at all. A year ago she would have
+been certain she knew everything about her. But the old familiar
+Letty, with the bright complexion, and the wicked eye, with her
+rebellious schoolgirl insistence upon the beautifulness of "Boof'l
+young men," and her frank and glowing passion for Teddy, with her
+delight in humorous mystifications and open-air exercise and all
+the sunshine and laughter of life, this sister Letty, who had been
+so satisfactory and complete and final, had been thrust aside like
+a mask. Cissie no longer knew her sister's eyes. Letty's hand had
+become thin and unfamiliar and a little wrinkled; she was
+sharp-featured and thin-lipped; her acts, which had once been
+predictable, were incomprehensible, and Cissie was thrown back upon
+speculations. In their schooldays Letty had had a streak of intense
+sensibility; she had been easily moved to tears. But never once had
+she wept or given any sign of weeping since Teddy's name had
+appeared in the casualty list.... What was the strength of this
+tragic tension?<a name="Page_390"></a> How far would it carry her?
+Was Letty really capable of becoming a Charlotte Corday? Of
+carrying out a scheme of far-seeing vengeance, of making her way
+through long months and years nearer and nearer to revenge?</p>
+<p>Were such revenges possible?</p>
+<p>Would people presently begin to murder the makers of the Great
+War? What a strange thing it would be in history if so there came a
+punishment and end to the folly of kings!</p>
+<p>Only a little while ago Cissie's imagination might have been
+captured by so romantic a dream. She was still but a year or so out
+of the stage of melodrama. But she was out of it. She was growing
+up now to a subtler wisdom. People, she was beginning to realise,
+do not do these simple things. They make vows of devotion and they
+are not real vows of devotion; they love&mdash;quite
+honestly&mdash;and qualify. There are no great revenges but only
+little mean ones; no life-long vindications except the unrelenting
+vengeance of the law. There is no real concentration of people's
+lives anywhere such as romance demands. There is change, there is
+forgetfulness. Everywhere there is dispersal. Even to the tragic
+story of Teddy would come the modifications of time. Even to the
+wickedness of the German princes would presently be added some
+conflicting aspects. Could Letty keep things for years in her mind,
+hard and terrible, as they were now? Surely they would soften;
+other things would overlay them....</p>
+<p>There came a rush of memories of Letty in a dozen schoolgirl
+adventures, times when she had ventured, and times when she had
+failed; Letty frightened, Letty vexed, Letty launching out to great
+enterprises, going high and hard and well for a time, and then
+failing. She had seen Letty snivelling and dirty; Letty shamed and
+humiliated. She knew her Letty to the soul. Poor Letty! Poor dear
+Letty! With a sudden clearness of vision Cissie realised what was
+happening in her sister's mind. All this tense<a name=
+"Page_391"></a> scheming of revenges was the imaginative play with
+which Letty warded off the black alternative to her hope; it was
+not strength, it was weakness. It was a form of giving way. She
+could not face starkly the simple fact of Teddy's death. That was
+too much for her. So she was building up this dream of a mission of
+judgment against the day when she could resist the facts no longer.
+She was already persuaded, only she would not be persuaded until
+her dream was ready. If this state of suspense went on she might
+establish her dream so firmly that it would at last take complete
+possession of her mind. And by that time also she would have
+squared her existence at Matching's Easy with the elaboration of
+her reverie.</p>
+<p>She would go about the place then, fancying herself preparing
+for this tremendous task she would never really do; she would study
+German maps; she would read the papers about German statesmen and
+rulers; perhaps she would even make weak attempts to obtain a
+situation in Switzerland or in Germany. Perhaps she would buy a
+knife or a revolver. Perhaps presently she would begin to hover
+about Windsor or Sandringham when peace was made, and the German
+cousins came visiting again....</p>
+<p>Into Cissie's mind came the image of the thing that might be;
+Letty, shabby, draggled, with her sharp bright prettiness become
+haggard, an assassin dreamer, still dependent on Mr. Britling,
+doing his work rather badly, in a distraught unpunctual
+fashion.</p>
+<p>She must be told, she must be convinced soon, or assuredly she
+would become an eccentric, a strange character, a Matching's Easy
+Miss Flite....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Cissie could think more clearly of Letty's mind than of her
+own.</p>
+<p>She herself was in a tangle. She had grown to be very<a name=
+"Page_392"></a> fond of Mr. Direck, and to have a profound trust
+and confidence in him, and her fondness seemed able to find no
+expression at all except a constant girding at his and America's
+avoidance of war. She had fallen in love with him when he was
+wearing fancy dress; she was a young woman with a stronger taste
+for body and colour than she supposed; what indeed she resented
+about him, though she did not know it, was that he seemed never
+disposed to carry the spirit of fancy dress into everyday life. To
+begin with he had touched both her imagination and senses, and she
+wanted him to go on doing that. Instead of which he seemed lapsing
+more and more into reiterated assurances of devotion and the flat
+competent discharge of humanitarian duties. Always nowadays he was
+trying to persuade her that what he was doing was the right and
+honourable thing for him to do; what he did not realise, what
+indeed she did not realise, was the exasperation his rightness and
+reasonableness produced in her. When he saw he exasperated her he
+sought very earnestly to be righter and reasonabler and more
+plainly and demonstrably right and reasonable than ever.</p>
+<p>Withal, as she felt and perceived, he was such a good thing,
+such a very good thing; so kind, so trustworthy, with a sort of
+slow strength, with a careful honesty, a big good childishness, a
+passion for fairness. And so helpless in her hands. She could lash
+him and distress him. Yet she could not shake his slowly formed
+convictions.</p>
+<p>When Cissie had dreamt of the lover that fate had in store for
+her in her old romantic days, he was to be <i>perfect</i> always,
+he and she were always to be absolutely in the right (and, if the
+story needed it, the world in the wrong). She had never expected to
+find herself tied by her affections to a man with whom she
+disagreed, and who went contrary to her standards, very much as if
+she was lashed on the back of a very nice elephant that would wince
+to but not obey the goad....</p>
+<a name="Page_393"></a>
+<p>So she nagged him and taunted him, and would hear no word of his
+case. And he wanted dreadfully to discuss his case. He felt that
+the point of conscience about the munitions was particularly fine
+and difficult. He wished she would listen and enter into it more.
+But she thought with that more rapid English flash which is not so
+much thinking as feeling. He loved that flash in her in spite of
+his persuasion of its injustice.</p>
+<p>Her thought that he ought to go to the war made him feel like a
+renegade; but her claim that he was somehow still English held him
+in spite of his reason. In the midst of such perplexities he was
+glad to find one neutral task wherein he could find himself
+whole-heartedly with and for Cissie.</p>
+<p>He hunted up the evidence of Teddy's fate with a devoted
+pertinacity.</p>
+<p>And in the meanwhile the other riddle resolved itself. He had
+had a certain idea in his mind for some time. He discovered one day
+that it was an inspiration. He could keep his conscientious
+objection about America, and still take a line that would satisfy
+Cissie. He took it.</p>
+<p>When he came down to Matching's Easy at her summons to bear his
+convincing witness of Teddy's fate, he came in an unwonted costume.
+It was a costume so wonderful in his imagination that it seemed to
+cry aloud, to sound like a trumpet as he went through London to
+Liverpool Street station; it was a costume like an international
+event; it was a costume that he felt would blare right away to
+Berlin. And yet it was a costume so commonplace, so much the usual
+wear now, that Cissie, meeting him at the station and full of the
+thought of Letty's trouble, did not remark it, felt indeed rather
+than observed that he was looking more strong and handsome than he
+had ever done since he struck upon her imagination in the fantastic
+wrap that Teddy had found for him in the merry days when there was
+no death in the world. And Letty<a name="Page_394"></a> too,
+resistant, incalculable, found no wonder in the wonderful suit.</p>
+<p>He bore his testimony. It was the queer halting telling of a
+patched-together tale....</p>
+<p>"I suppose," said Letty, "if I tell you now that I don't believe
+that that officer was Teddy you will think I am cracked.... But I
+don't."</p>
+<p>She sat staring straight before her for a time after saying
+this. Then suddenly she got up and began taking down her hat and
+coat from the peg behind the kitchen door. The hanging strap of the
+coat was twisted and she struggled with it petulantly until she
+tore it.</p>
+<p>"Where are you going?" cried Cissie.</p>
+<p>Letty's voice over her shoulder was the harsh voice of a
+scolding woman.</p>
+<p>"I'm going out&mdash;anywhere." She turned, coat in hand. "Can't
+I go out if I like?" she asked. "It's a beautiful day.... Mustn't I
+go out?... I suppose you think I ought to take in what you have
+told me in a moment. Just smile and say '<i>Indeed!</i>' ...
+Abandoned!&mdash;while his men retreated! How jolly! And then not
+think of it any more.... Besides, I must go out. You two want to be
+left together. You want to canoodle. Do it while you can!"</p>
+<p>Then she put on coat and hat, jamming her hat down on her head,
+and said something that Cissie did not immediately understand.</p>
+<p>"<i>He'll</i> have his turn in the trenches soon enough. Now
+that he's made up his mind.... He might have done it
+sooner...."</p>
+<p>She turned her back as though she had forgotten them. She stood
+for a moment as though her feet were wooden, not putting her feet
+as she usually put her feet. She took slow, wide, unsure steps. She
+went out&mdash;like something that is mortally injured and still
+walks&mdash;into the autumnal sunshine. She left the door wide open
+behind her.</p>
+<a name="Page_395"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>And Cissie, with eyes full of distress for her sister, had still
+to grasp the fact that Direck was wearing a Canadian
+uniform....</p>
+<p>He stood behind her, ashamed that in such a moment this fact and
+its neglect by every one could be so vivid in his mind.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Cissie's estimate of her sister's psychology had been just. The
+reverie of revenge had not yet taken a grip upon Letty's mind
+sufficiently strong to meet the challenge of this conclusive
+evidence of Teddy's death. She walked out into a world of sunshine
+now almost completely convinced that Teddy was dead, and she knew
+quite well that her dream of some dramatic and terrible vindication
+had gone from her. She knew that in truth she could do nothing of
+that sort....</p>
+<p>She walked out with a set face and eyes that seemed unseeing,
+and yet it was as if some heavy weight had been lifted from her
+shoulders. It was over; there was no more to hope for and there was
+nothing more to fear. She would have been shocked to realise that
+her mind was relieved.</p>
+<p>She wanted to be alone. She wanted to be away from every eye.
+She was like some creature that after a long nightmare incubation
+is at last born into a clear, bleak day. She had to feel herself;
+she had to stretch her mind in this cheerless sunshine, this new
+world, where there was to be no more Teddy and no real revenge nor
+compensation for Teddy. Teddy was past....</p>
+<p>Hitherto she had had an angry sense of being deprived of
+Teddy&mdash;almost as though he were keeping away from her. Now,
+there was no more Teddy to be deprived of....</p>
+<a name="Page_396"></a>
+<p>She went through the straggling village, and across the fields
+to the hillside that looks away towards Mertonsome and its steeple.
+And where the hill begins to fall away she threw herself down under
+the hedge by the path, near by the stile into the lane, and lay
+still. She did not so much think as remain blank, waiting for the
+beginning of impressions....</p>
+<p>It was as it were a blank stare at the world....</p>
+<p>She did not know if it was five minutes or half an hour later
+that she became aware that some one was looking at her. She turned
+with a start, and discovered the Reverend Dimple with one foot on
+the stile, and an expression of perplexity and consternation upon
+his chubby visage.</p>
+<p>Instantly she understood. Already on four different occasions
+since Teddy's disappearance she had seen the good man coming
+towards her, always with a manifest decision, always with the same
+faltering doubt as now. Often in their happy days had she and Teddy
+discussed him and derided him and rejoiced over him. They had
+agreed he was as good as Jane Austen's Mr. Collins. He really was
+very like Mr. Collins, except that he was plumper. And now, it was
+as if he was transparent to her hard defensive scrutiny. She knew
+he was impelled by his tradition, by his sense of fitness, by his
+respect for his calling, to offer her his ministrations and
+consolations, to say his large flat amiabilities over her and pat
+her kindly with his hands. And she knew too that he dreaded her.
+She knew that the dear old humbug knew at the bottom of his heart
+quite certainly that he was a poor old humbug, and that she was in
+his secret. And at the bottom of his heart he found himself too
+honest to force his poor platitudes upon any who would not be glad
+of them. If she could have been glad of them he would have had no
+compunction. He was a man divided against himself; failing to carry
+through his rich pretences, dismayed.</p>
+<a name="Page_397"></a>
+<p>He had been taking his afternoon "constitutional." He had
+discovered her beyond the stile just in time to pull up. Then had
+come a fatal, a preposterous hesitation. She stared at him now,
+with hard, expressionless eyes.</p>
+<p>He stared back at her, until his plump pink face was all
+consternation. He was extraordinarily distressed. It was as if a
+thousand unspoken things had been said between them.</p>
+<p>"No wish," he said, "intrude."</p>
+<p>If he had had the certain balm, how gladly would he have given
+it!</p>
+<p>He broke the spell by stepping back into the lane. He made a
+gesture with his hands, as if he would have wrung them. And then he
+had fled down the lane&mdash;almost at a run.</p>
+<p>"Po' girl," he shouted. "Po' girl," and left her staring.</p>
+<p>Staring&mdash;and then she laughed.</p>
+<p>This was good. This was the sort of thing one could tell Teddy,
+when at last he came back and she could tell him anything. And then
+she realised again; there was no more Teddy, there would be no
+telling. And suddenly she fell weeping.</p>
+<p>"Oh, Teddy, Teddy," she cried through her streaming tears. "How
+could you leave me? How can I bear it?"</p>
+<p>Never a tear had she shed since the news first came, and now she
+could weep, she could weep her grief out. She abandoned herself
+unreservedly to this blessed relief....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>There comes an end to weeping at last, and Letty lay still, in
+the red light of the sinking sun.</p>
+<p>She lay so still that presently a little foraging robin<a name=
+"Page_398"></a> came dirting down to the grass not ten yards away
+and stopped and looked at her. And then it came a hop or so
+nearer.</p>
+<p>She had been lying in a state of passive abandonment, her
+swollen wet eyes open, regardless of everything. But those quick
+movements caught her back to attention. She began to watch the
+robin, and to note how it glanced sidelong at her and appeared to
+meditate further approaches. She made an almost imperceptible
+movement, and straightway the little creature was in a projecting
+spray of berried hawthorn overhead.</p>
+<p>Her tear-washed mind became vaguely friendly. With an
+unconscious comfort it focussed down to the robin. She rolled over,
+sat up, and imitated his friendly "cheep."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Presently she became aware of footsteps rustling through the
+grass towards her.</p>
+<p>She looked over her shoulder and discovered Mr. Britling
+approaching by the field path. He looked white and tired and
+listless, even his bristling hair and moustache conveyed his
+depression; he was dressed in an old tweed knickerbocker suit and
+carrying a big atlas and some papers. He had an effect of
+hesitation in his approach. It was as if he wanted to talk to her
+and doubted her reception for him.</p>
+<p>He spoke without any preface. "Direck has told you?" he said,
+standing over her.</p>
+<p>She answered with a sob.</p>
+<p>"I was afraid it was so, and yet I did not believe it," said Mr.
+Britling. "Until now."</p>
+<p>He hesitated as if he would go on, and then he knelt down on the
+grass a little way from her and seated himself. There was an
+interval of silence.</p>
+<p>"At first it hurts like the devil," he said at last, looking
+away at Mertonsome spire and speaking as if he spoke<a name=
+"Page_399"></a> to no one in particular. "And then it hurts. It
+goes on hurting.... And one can't say much to any one...."</p>
+<p>He said no more for a time. But the two of them comforted one
+another, and knew that they comforted each other. They had a common
+feeling of fellowship and ease. They had been stricken by the same
+thing; they understood how it was with each other. It was not like
+the attempted comfort they got from those who had not loved and
+dreaded....</p>
+<p>She took up a little broken twig and dug small holes in the
+ground with it.</p>
+<p>"It's strange," she said, "but I'm glad I know for sure."</p>
+<p>"I can understand that," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"It stops the nightmares.... It isn't hopes I've had so much as
+fears.... I wouldn't admit he was dead or hurt. Because&mdash;I
+couldn't think it without thinking it&mdash;horrible.
+<i>Now</i>&mdash;"</p>
+<p>"It's final," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"It's definite," she said after a pause. "It's like thinking
+he's asleep&mdash;for good."</p>
+<p>But that did not satisfy her. There was more than this in her
+mind. "It does away with the half and half," she said. "He's dead
+or he is alive...."</p>
+<p>She looked up at Mr. Britling as if she measured his
+understanding.</p>
+<p>"You don't still doubt?" he said.</p>
+<p>"I'm content now in my mind&mdash;in a way. He wasn't anyhow
+there&mdash;unless he was dead. But if I saw Teddy coming over the
+hedge there to me&mdash;It would be just natural.... No, don't
+stare at me. I know really he is dead. And it is a comfort. It is
+peace.... All the thoughts of him being crushed dreadfully or being
+mutilated or lying and screaming&mdash;or things like
+that&mdash;they've gone. He's out of his spoilt body. He's my
+unbroken Teddy again.... Out of sight somewhere.... Unbroken....
+Sleeping."</p>
+<a name="Page_400"></a>
+<p>She resumed her excavation with the little stick, with the tears
+running down her face.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling presently went on with the talk. "For me it came
+all at once, without a doubt or a hope. I hoped until the last that
+nothing would touch Hugh. And then it was like a black shutter
+falling&mdash;in an instant...."</p>
+<p>He considered. "Hugh, too, seems just round the corner at times.
+But at times, it's a blank place....</p>
+<p>"At times," said Mr. Britling, "I feel nothing but astonishment.
+The whole thing becomes incredible. Just as for weeks after the war
+began I couldn't believe that a big modern nation could really go
+to war&mdash;seriously&mdash;with its whole heart.... And they have
+killed Teddy and Hugh....</p>
+<p>"They have killed millions. Millions&mdash;who had fathers and
+mothers and wives and sweethearts...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"Somehow I can't talk about this to Edith. It is ridiculous, I
+know. But in some way I can't.... It isn't fair to her. If I could,
+I would.... Quite soon after we were married I ceased to talk to
+her. I mean talking really and simply&mdash;as I do to you. And
+it's never come back. I don't know why.... And particularly I can't
+talk to her of Hugh.... Little things, little shadows of criticism,
+but enough to make it impossible.... And I go about thinking about
+Hugh, and what has happened to him sometimes... as though I was
+stifling."</p>
+<p>Letty compared her case.</p>
+<p>"I don't want to talk about Teddy&mdash;not a word."</p>
+<p>"That's queer.... But perhaps&mdash;a son is different. Now I
+come to think of it&mdash;I've never talked of Mary.... Not to any
+one ever. I've never thought of that before. But I haven't. I
+couldn't. No. Losing a lover, that's a thing for oneself. I've been
+through that, you<a name="Page_401"></a> see. But a son's more
+outside you. Altogether. And more your own making. It's not losing
+a thing <i>in</i> you; it's losing a hope and a pride.... Once when
+I was a little boy I did a drawing very carefully. It took me a
+long time.... And a big boy tore it up. For no particular reason.
+Just out of cruelty.... That&mdash;that was exactly like losing
+Hugh...."</p>
+<p>Letty reflected.</p>
+<p>"No," she confessed, "I'm more selfish than that."</p>
+<p>"It isn't selfish," said Mr. Britling. "But it's a different
+thing. It's less intimate, and more personally important."</p>
+<p>"I have just thought, 'He's gone. He's gone.' Sometimes, do you
+know, I have felt quite angry with him. Why need he have
+gone&mdash;so soon?"</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling nodded understandingly.</p>
+<p>"I'm not angry. I'm not depressed. I'm just bitterly hurt by the
+ending of something I had hoped to watch&mdash;always&mdash;all my
+life," he said. "I don't know how it is between most fathers and
+sons, but I admired Hugh. I found exquisite things in him. I doubt
+if other people saw them. He was quiet. He seemed clumsy. But he
+had an extraordinary fineness. He was a creature of the most
+delicate and rapid responses.... These aren't my fond delusions. It
+was so.... You know, when he was only a few days old, he would
+start suddenly at any strange sound. He was alive like an
+&AElig;olian harp from the very beginning.... And his hair when he
+was born&mdash;he had a lot of hair&mdash;was like the down on the
+breast of a bird. I remember that now very vividly&mdash;and how I
+used to like to pass my hand over it. It was silk, spun silk.
+Before he was two he could talk&mdash;whole sentences. He had the
+subtlest ear. He loved long words.... And then," he said with tears
+in his voice, "all this beautiful fine structure, this brain, this
+fresh life as nimble as water&mdash;as elastic as a steel spring,
+it is destroyed....</p>
+<p>"I don't make out he wasn't human. Often and often<a name=
+"Page_402"></a> I have been angry with him, and disappointed in
+him. There were all sorts of weaknesses in him. We all knew them.
+And we didn't mind them. We loved him the better. And his odd queer
+cleverness!.... And his profound wisdom. And then all this
+beautiful and delicate fabric, all those clear memories in his dear
+brain, all his whims, his sudden inventions....</p>
+<p>"You know, I have had a letter from his chum Park. He was shot
+through a loophole. The bullet went through his eye and brow....
+Think of it!</p>
+<p>"An amazement ... a blow ... a splattering of blood. Rags of
+tormented skin and brain stuff.... In a moment. What had taken
+eighteen years&mdash;love and care...."</p>
+<p>He sat thinking for an interval, and then went on, "The reading
+and writing alone! I taught him to read myself&mdash;because his
+first governess, you see, wasn't very clever. She was a very good
+methodical sort, but she had no inspiration. So I got up all sorts
+of methods for teaching him to read. But it wasn't necessary. He
+seemed to leap all sorts of difficulties. He leapt to what one was
+trying to teach him. It was as quick as the movement of some wild
+animal....</p>
+<p>"He came into life as bright and quick as this robin looking for
+food....</p>
+<p>"And he's broken up and thrown away.... Like a cartridge case by
+the side of a covert...."</p>
+<p>He choked and stopped speaking. His elbows were on his knees,
+and he put his face between his hands and shuddered and became
+still. His hair was troubled. The end of his stumpy moustache and a
+little roll of flesh stood out at the side of his hand, and made
+him somehow twice as pitiful. His big atlas, from which papers
+projected, seemed forgotten by his side. So he sat for a long time,
+and neither he nor Letty moved or spoke. But they were in the same
+shadow. They found great comfort in one<a name="Page_403"></a>
+another. They had not been so comforted before since their losses
+came upon them.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 9</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It was Mr. Britling who broke silence. And when he drew his
+hands down from his face and spoke, he said one of the most amazing
+and unexpected things she had ever heard in her life.</p>
+<p>"The only possible government in Albania," he said, looking
+steadfastly before him down the hill-side, "is a group of
+republican cantons after the Swiss pattern. I can see no other
+solution that is not offensive to God. It does not matter in the
+least what we owe to Serbia or what we owe to Italy. We have got to
+set this world on a different footing. We have got to set up the
+world at last&mdash;on justice and reason."</p>
+<p>Then, after a pause, "The Treaty of Bucharest was an evil
+treaty. It must be undone. Whatever this German King of Bulgaria
+does, that treaty must be undone and the Bulgarians united again
+into one people. They must have themselves, whatever punishment
+they deserve, they must have nothing more, whatever reward they
+win."</p>
+<p>She could not believe her ears.</p>
+<p>"After this precious blood, after this precious blood, if we
+leave one plot of wickedness or cruelty in the world&mdash;"</p>
+<p>And therewith he began to lecture Letty on the importance of
+international politics&mdash;to every one. How he and she and every
+one must understand, however hard it was to understand.</p>
+<p>"No life is safe, no happiness is safe, there is no chance of
+bettering life until we have made an end to all that causes
+war....</p>
+<p>"We have to put an end to the folly and vanity of kings, and to
+any people ruling any people but themselves.<a name="Page_404"></a>
+There is no convenience, there is no justice in any people ruling
+any people but themselves; the ruling of men by others, who have
+not their creeds and their languages and their ignorances and
+prejudices, that is the fundamental folly that has killed Teddy and
+Hugh&mdash;and these millions. To end that folly is as much our
+duty and business as telling the truth or earning a living...."</p>
+<p>"But how can you alter it?"</p>
+<p>He held out a finger at her. "Men may alter anything if they
+have motive enough and faith enough."</p>
+<p>He indicated the atlas beside him.</p>
+<p>"Here I am planning the real map of the world," he said. "Every
+sort of district that has a character of its own must have its own
+rule; and the great republic of the united states of the world must
+keep the federal peace between them all. That's the plain sense of
+life; the federal world-republic. Why do we bother ourselves with
+loyalties to any other government but that? It needs only that
+sufficient men should say it, and that republic would be here now.
+Why have we loitered so long&mdash;until these tragic punishments
+come? We have to map the world out into its states, and plan its
+government and the way of its tolerations."</p>
+<p>"And you think it will come?"</p>
+<p>"It will come."</p>
+<p>"And you believe that men will listen to such schemes?" said
+Letty.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling, with his eyes far away over the hills, seemed to
+think. "Yes," he said. "Not perhaps to-day&mdash;not steadily. But
+kings and empires die; great ideas, once they are born, can never
+die again. In the end this world-republic, this sane government of
+the world, is as certain as the sunset. Only...."</p>
+<p>He sighed, and turned over a page of his atlas blindly.</p>
+<p>"Only we want it soon. The world is weary of this bloodshed,
+weary of all this weeping, of this wasting of substance and this
+killing of sons and lovers. We want<a name="Page_405"></a> it soon,
+and to have it soon we must work to bring it about. We must give
+our lives. What is left of our lives....</p>
+<p>"That is what you and I must do, Letty. What else is there left
+for us to do?... I will write of nothing else, I will think of
+nothing else now but of safety and order. So that all these dear
+dead&mdash;not one of them but will have brought the great days of
+peace and man's real beginning nearer, and these cruel things that
+make men whimper like children, that break down bright lives into
+despair and kill youth at the very moment when it puts out its
+clean hands to take hold of life&mdash;these cruelties, these
+abominations of confusion, shall cease from the earth forever."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 10</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Letty regarded him, frowning, and with her chin between her
+fists....</p>
+<p>"But do you really believe," said Letty, "that things can be
+better than they are?"</p>
+<p>"But&mdash;<i>Yes!</i>" said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"I don't," said Letty. "The world is cruel. It is just cruel. So
+it will always be."</p>
+<p>"It need not be cruel," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"It is just a place of cruel things. It is all set with knives.
+It is full of diseases and accidents. As for God&mdash;either there
+is no God or he is an idiot. He is a slobbering idiot. He is like
+some idiot who pulls off the wings of flies."</p>
+<p>"No," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>"There is no progress. Nothing gets better. How can <i>you</i>
+believe in God after Hugh? <i>Do</i> you believe in God?"</p>
+<p>"Yes," said Mr. Britling after a long pause; "I do believe in
+God."</p>
+<p>"Who lets these things happen!" She raised herself on her arm
+and thrust her argument at him with her hand. "Who kills my Teddy
+and your Hugh&mdash;and millions."</p>
+<p>"No," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<a name="Page_406"></a>
+<p>"But he <i>must</i> let these things happen. Or why do they
+happen?"</p>
+<p>"No," said Mr. Britling. "It is the theologians who must answer
+that. They have been extravagant about God. They have had silly
+absolute ideas&mdash;that He is all powerful. That He's
+omni-everything. But the common sense of men knows better. Every
+real religious thought denies it. After all, the real God of the
+Christians is Christ, not God Almighty; a poor mocked and wounded
+God nailed on a cross of matter.... Some day He will triumph....
+But it is not fair to say that He causes all things now. It is not
+fair to make out a case against him. You have been misled. It is a
+theologian's folly. God is not absolute; God is finite.... A finite
+God who struggles in his great and comprehensive way as we struggle
+in our weak and silly way&mdash;who is <i>with</i> us&mdash;that is
+the essence of all real religion.... I agree with you so&mdash;Why!
+if I thought there was an omnipotent God who looked down on battles
+and deaths and all the waste and horror of this war&mdash;able to
+prevent these things&mdash;doing them to amuse Himself&mdash;I
+would spit in his empty face...."</p>
+<p>"Any one would...."</p>
+<p>"But it's your teachers and catechisms have set you against
+God.... They want to make out He owns all Nature. And all sorts of
+silly claims. Like the heralds in the Middle Ages who insisted that
+Christ was certainly a great gentleman entitled to bear arms. But
+God is within Nature and necessity. Necessity is a thing beyond
+God&mdash;beyond good and ill, beyond space and time, a mystery
+everlastingly impenetrable. God is nearer than that. Necessity is
+the uttermost thing, but God is the innermost thing. Closer He is
+than breathing and nearer than hands and feet. He is the Other
+Thing than this world. Greater than Nature or Necessity, for he is
+a spirit and they are blind, but not controlling them.... Not
+yet...."</p>
+<a name="Page_407"></a>
+<p>"They always told me He was the maker of Heaven and Earth."</p>
+<p>"That's the Jew God the Christians took over. It's a Quack God,
+a Panacea. It's not my God."</p>
+<p>Letty considered these strange ideas.</p>
+<p>"I never thought of Him like that," she said at last. "It makes
+it all seem different."</p>
+<p>"Nor did I. But I do now.... I have suddenly found it and seen
+it plain. I see it so plain that I am amazed that I have not always
+seen it.... It is, you see, so easy to understand that there is a
+God, and how complex and wonderful and brotherly He is, when one
+thinks of those dear boys who by the thousand, by the hundred
+thousand, have laid down their lives.... Ay, and there were German
+boys too who did the same.... The cruelties, the injustice, the
+brute aggression&mdash;they saw it differently. They laid down
+their lives&mdash;they laid down their lives.... Those dear lives,
+those lives of hope and sunshine....</p>
+<p>"Don't you see that it must be like that, Letty? Don't you see
+that it must be like that?"</p>
+<p>"No," she said, "I've seen things differently from that."</p>
+<p>"But it's so plain to me," said Mr. Britling. "If there was
+nothing else in all the world but our kindness for each other, or
+the love that made you weep in this kind October sunshine, or the
+love I bear Hugh&mdash;if there was nothing else at all&mdash;if
+everything else was cruelty and mockery and filthiness and
+bitterness, it would still be certain that there was a God of love
+and righteousness. If there were no signs of God in all the world
+but the godliness we have seen in those two boys of ours; if we had
+no other light but the love we have between us....</p>
+<p>"You don't mind if I talk like this?" said Mr. Britling. "It's
+all I can think of now&mdash;this God, this God who struggles, who
+was in Hugh and Teddy, clear<a name="Page_408"></a> and plain, and
+how He must become the ruler of the world...."</p>
+<p>"This God who struggles," she repeated. "I have never thought of
+Him like that."</p>
+<p>"Of course He must be like that," said Mr. Britling. "How can
+God be a Person; how can He be anything that matters to man, unless
+He is limited and defined and&mdash;human like ourselves.... With
+things outside Him and beyond Him."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 11</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Letty walked back slowly through the fields of stubble to her
+cottage.</p>
+<p>She had been talking to Mr. Britling for an hour, and her mind
+was full of the thought of this changed and simplified man, who
+talked of God as he might have done of a bird he had seen or of a
+tree he had sheltered under. And all mixed up with this thought of
+Mr. Britling was this strange idea of God who was also a limited
+person, who could come as close as Teddy, whispering love in the
+darkness. She had a ridiculous feeling that God really struggled
+like Mr. Britling, and that with only some indefinable inferiority
+of outlook Mr. Britling loved like God. She loved him for his maps
+and his dreams and the bareness of his talk to her. It was strange
+how the straining thought of the dead Teddy had passed now out of
+her mind. She was possessed by a sense of ending and beginning, as
+though a page had turned over in her life and everything was new.
+She had never given religion any thought but contemptuous thought
+for some years, since indeed her growing intelligence had dismissed
+it as a scheme of inexcusable restraints and empty pretences, a
+thing of discords where there were no discords except of its
+making. She had been a happy Atheist. She had played in the
+sunshine, a natural creature with the completest confidence in the
+essential goodness of the world<a name="Page_409"></a> in which she
+found herself. She had refused all thought of painful and
+disagreeable things. Until the bloody paw of war had wiped out all
+her assurance. Teddy, the playmate, was over, the love game was
+ended for ever; the fresh happy acceptance of life as life; and in
+the place of Teddy was the sorrow of life, the pity of life, and
+this coming of God out of utter remoteness into a conceivable
+relation to her own existence.</p>
+<p>She had left Mr. Britling to his atlas. He lay prone under the
+hedge with it spread before him. His occupation would have seemed
+to her only a little while ago the absurdest imaginable. He was
+drawing boundaries on his maps very carefully in red ink, with a
+fountain pen. But now she understood.</p>
+<p>She knew that those red ink lines of Mr. Britling's might in the
+end prove wiser and stronger than the bargains of the
+diplomats....</p>
+<p>In the last hour he had come very near to her. She found herself
+full of an unwonted affection for him. She had never troubled her
+head about her relations with any one except Teddy before. Now
+suddenly she seemed to be opening out to all the world for
+kindness. This new idea of a friendly God, who had a struggle of
+his own, who could be thought of as kindred to Mr. Britling, as
+kindred to Teddy&mdash;had gripped her imagination. He was behind
+the autumnal sunshine; he was in the little bird that had seemed so
+confident and friendly. Whatever was kind, whatever was tender;
+there was God. And a thousand old phrases she had read and heard
+and given little heed to, that had lain like dry bones in her
+memory, suddenly were clothed in flesh and became alive. This
+God&mdash;if this was God&mdash;then indeed it was not nonsense to
+say that God was love, that he was a friend and companion.... With
+him it might be possible to face a world in which Teddy and she
+would never walk side by side again nor plan any more happiness for
+ever. After all she had been very happy; she had had
+wonderful<a name="Page_410"></a> happiness. She had had far more
+happiness, far more love, in her short years or so than most people
+had in their whole lives. And so in the reaction of her emotions,
+Letty, who had gone out with her head full of murder and revenge,
+came back through the sunset thinking of pity, of the thousand
+kindnesses and tendernesses of Teddy that were, after all, perhaps
+only an intimation of the limitless kindnesses and tendernesses of
+God.... What right had she to a white and bitter grief,
+self-centred and vindictive, while old Britling could still plan an
+age of mercy in the earth and a red-gold sunlight that was warm as
+a smile from Teddy lay on all the world....</p>
+<p>She must go into the cottage and kiss Cissie, and put away that
+parcel out of sight until she could find some poor soldier to whom
+she could send it. She had been pitiless towards Cissie in her
+grief. She had, in the egotism of her sorrow, treated Cissie as she
+might have treated a chair or a table, with no thought that Cissie
+might be weary, might dream of happiness still to come. Cissie had
+still to play the lover, and her man was already in khaki. There
+would be no such year as Letty had had in the days before the war
+darkened the world. Before Cissie's marrying the peace must come,
+and the peace was still far away. And Direck too would have to take
+his chances....</p>
+<p>Letty came through the little wood and over the stile that
+brought her into sight of the cottage. The windows of the cottage
+as she saw it under the bough of the big walnut tree, were afire
+from the sun. The crimson rambler over the porch that she and Teddy
+had planted was still bearing roses. The door was open and people
+were moving in the porch.</p>
+<p>Some one was coming out of the cottage, a stranger, in an
+unfamiliar costume, and behind him was a man in khaki&mdash;but
+that was Mr. Direck! And behind him again was Cissie.</p>
+<p>But the stranger!</p>
+<a name="Page_411"></a>
+<p>He came out of the frame of the porch towards the garden
+gate....</p>
+<p>Who&mdash;who was this stranger?</p>
+<p>It was a man in queer-looking foreign clothes, baggy trousers of
+some soft-looking blue stuff and a blouse, and he had a
+white-bandaged left arm. He had a hat stuck at the back of his
+head, and a beard....</p>
+<p>He was entirely a stranger, a foreigner. Was she going insane?
+Of course he was a stranger!</p>
+<p>And then he moved a step, he made a queer sideways pace, a
+caper, on the path, and instantly he ceased to be strange and
+foreign. He became amazingly, incredibly, familiar by virtue of
+that step....</p>
+<p><i>No!</i></p>
+<p>Her breath stopped. All Letty's being seemed to stop. And this
+stranger who was also incredibly familiar, after he had stared at
+her motionless form for a moment, waved his hat with a
+gesture&mdash;a gesture that crowned and scaled the effect of
+familiarity. She gave no sign in reply.</p>
+<p>No, that familiarity was just a mad freakishness in things.</p>
+<p>This strange man came from Belgium perhaps, to tell something
+about Teddy....</p>
+<p>And then she surprised herself by making a groaning noise, an
+absurd silly noise, just like the noise when one imitates a cow to
+a child. She said "Mooo-oo."</p>
+<p>And she began to run forward, with legs that seemed misfits,
+waving her hands about, and as she ran she saw more and more
+certainly that this wounded man in strange clothing was Teddy. She
+ran faster and still faster, stumbling and nearly falling. If she
+did not get to him speedily the world would burst.</p>
+<p>To hold him, to hold close to him!...</p>
+<p>"Letty! Letty! Just one arm...."</p>
+<p>She was clinging to him and he was holding her....</p>
+<p>It was all right. She had always known it was all right. (Hold
+close to him.) Except just for a little while. But<a name=
+"Page_412"></a> that had been foolishness. Hadn't she always known
+he was alive? And here he was alive! (Hold close to him.) Only it
+was so good to be sure&mdash;after all her torment; to hold him, to
+hang about him, to feel the solid man, kissing her, weeping too,
+weeping together with her. "Teddy my love!"</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 12</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Letty was in the cottage struggling to hear and understand
+things too complicated for her emotion-crowded mind. There was
+something that Mr. Direck was trying to explain about a delayed
+telegram that had come soon after she had gone out. There was much
+indeed that Mr. Direck was trying to explain. What did any
+explanation really matter when you had Teddy, with nothing but a
+strange beard and a bandaged arm between him and yourself? She had
+an absurd persuasion at first that those two strangenesses would
+also presently be set aside, so that Teddy would become just
+exactly what Teddy had always been.</p>
+<p>Teddy had been shot through the upper arm....</p>
+<p>"My hand has gone, dear little Letty. It's my left hand,
+luckily. I shall have to wear a hook like some old pirate...."</p>
+<p>There was something about his being taken prisoner. "That other
+officer"&mdash;that was Mr. Direck's officer&mdash;"had been lying
+there for days." Teddy had been shot through the upper arm, and
+stunned by a falling beam. When he came to he was disarmed, with a
+German standing over him....</p>
+<p>Then afterwards he had escaped. In quite a little time he had
+escaped. He had been in a railway station somewhere in Belgium;
+locked in a waiting-room with three or four French prisoners, and
+the junction had been bombed by French and British aeroplanes.
+Their guard and two of the prisoners had been killed. In the
+confusion the others had got away into the town. There were
+trucks<a name="Page_413"></a> of hay on fire, and a store of petrol
+was in danger. "After that one was bound to escape. One would have
+been shot if one had been found wandering about."</p>
+<p>The bomb had driven some splinters of glass and corrugated iron
+into Teddy's wrist; it seemed a small place at first; it didn't
+trouble him for weeks. But then some dirt got into it.</p>
+<p>In the narrow cobbled street beyond the station he had happened
+upon a woman who knew no English, but who took him to a priest, and
+the priest had hidden him.</p>
+<p>Letty did not piece together the whole story at first. She did
+not want the story very much; she wanted to know about this hand
+and arm.</p>
+<p>There would be queer things in the story when it came to be
+told. There was an old peasant who had made Teddy work in his
+fields in spite of his smashed and aching arm, and who had pointed
+to a passing German when Teddy demurred; there were the people
+called "they" who had at that time organised the escape of
+stragglers into Holland. There was the night watch, those long
+nights in succession before the dash for liberty. But Letty's
+concern was all with the hand. Inside the sling there was something
+that hurt the imagination, something bandaged, a stump. She could
+not think of it. She could not get away from the thought of it.</p>
+<p>"But why did you lose your hand?"</p>
+<p>It was only a little place at first, and then it got
+painful....</p>
+<p>"But I didn't go into a hospital because I was afraid they would
+intern me, and so I wouldn't be able to come home. And I was dying
+to come home. I was&mdash;homesick. No one was ever so homesick.
+I've thought of this place and the garden, and how one looked out
+of the window at the passers-by, a thousand times. I seemed always
+to be seeing them. Old Dimple with his benevolent smile, and Mrs.
+Wolker at the end cottage, and how she used to fetch her beer and
+wink when she caught us looking<a name="Page_414"></a> at her, and
+little Charlie Slobberface sniffing on his way to the pigs and all
+the rest of them. And you, Letty. Particularly you. And how we used
+to lean on the window-sill with our shoulders touching, and your
+cheek just in front of my eyes.... And nothing aching at all in
+one....</p>
+<p>"How I thought of that and longed for that!...</p>
+<p>"And so, you see, I didn't go to the hospital. I kept hoping to
+get to England first. And I left it too long...."</p>
+<p>"Life's come back to me with you!" said Letty. "Until just
+to-day I've believed you'd come back. And to-day&mdash;I
+doubted.... I thought it was all over&mdash;all the real life, love
+and the dear fun of things, and that there was nothing before me,
+nothing before me but just holding out&mdash;and keeping your
+memory.... Poor arm. Poor arm. And being kind to people. And
+pretending you were alive somewhere.... I'll not care about the
+arm. In a little while.... I'm glad you've gone, but I'm gladder
+you're back and can never go again.... And I will be your right
+hand, dear, and your left hand and all your hands. Both my hands
+for your dear lost left one. You shall have three hands instead of
+two...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 13</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Letty stood by the window as close as she could to Teddy in a
+world that seemed wholly made up of unexpected things. She could
+not heed the others, it was only when Teddy spoke to the others, or
+when they spoke to Teddy, that they existed for her.</p>
+<p>For instance, Teddy was presently talking to Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>They had spoken about the Canadians who had come up and relieved
+the Essex men after the fight in which Teddy had been captured. And
+then it was manifest that Mr. Direck was talking of his regiment.
+"I'm not the<a name="Page_415"></a> only American who has gone
+Canadian&mdash;for the duration of the war."</p>
+<p>He had got to his explanation at last.</p>
+<p>"I've told a lie," he said triumphantly. "I've shifted my
+birthplace six hundred miles.</p>
+<p>"Mind you, I don't admit a thing that Cissie has ever said about
+America&mdash;not one thing. You don't understand the sort of
+proposition America is up against. America is the New World, where
+there are no races and nations any more; she is the Melting Pot,
+from which we will cast the better state. I've believed that
+always&mdash;in spite of a thousand little things I believe it now.
+I go back on nothing. I'm not fighting as an American either. I'm
+fighting simply as myself.... I'm not going fighting for England,
+mind you. Don't you fancy that. I don't know I'm so particularly in
+love with a lot of English ways as to do that. I don't see how any
+one can be very much in love with your Empire, with its dead-alive
+Court, its artful politicians, its lords and ladies and snobs, its
+way with the Irish and its way with India, and everybody shifting
+responsibility and telling lies about your common people. I'm not
+going fighting for England. I'm going fighting for Cissie&mdash;and
+justice and Belgium and all that&mdash;but more particularly for
+Cissie. And anyhow I can't look Pa Britling in the face any
+more.... And I want to see those trenches&mdash;close. I reckon
+they're a thing it will be interesting to talk about some day....
+So I'm going," said Mr. Direck. "But chiefly&mdash;it's Cissie.
+See?"</p>
+<p>Cissie had come and stood by the side of him.</p>
+<p>She looked from poor broken Teddy to him and back again.</p>
+<p>"Up to now," she said, "I've wanted you to go...."</p>
+<p>Tears came into her eyes.</p>
+<p>"I suppose I must let you go," she said. "Oh! I'd hate you not
+to go...."</p>
+<a name="Page_416"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 14</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"Good God! how old the Master looks!" cried Teddy suddenly.</p>
+<p>He was standing at the window, and as Mr. Direck came forward
+inquiringly he pointed to the figure of Mr. Britling passing along
+the road towards the Dower House.</p>
+<p>"He does look old. I hadn't noticed," said Mr. Direck.</p>
+<p>"Why, he's gone grey!" cried Teddy, peering. "He wasn't grey
+when I left."</p>
+<p>They watched the knickerbockered figure of Mr. Britling receding
+up the hill, atlas and papers in his hands behind his back.</p>
+<p>"I must go out to him," said Teddy, disengaging himself from
+Letty.</p>
+<p>"No," she said, arresting him with her hand.</p>
+<p>"But he will be glad&mdash;"</p>
+<p>She stood in her husband's way. She had a vision of Mr. Britling
+suddenly called out of his dreams of God ruling the united states
+of the world, to rejoice at Teddy's restoration....</p>
+<p>"No," she said; "it will only make him think again of
+Hugh&mdash;and how he died. Don't go out, Teddy. Not now. What does
+he care for <i>you</i>?... Let him rest from such things.... Leave
+him to dream over his atlas.... He isn't so desolate&mdash;if you
+knew.... I will tell you, Teddy&mdash;when I can....</p>
+<p>"But just now&mdash;No, he will think of Hugh again.... Let him
+go.... He has God and his atlas there.... They're more than you
+think."</p>
+<a name="Page_417"></a>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<a name="BOOK_III_CHAPTER_THE_SECOND"></a>
+<h2>CHAPTER THE SECOND</h2>
+<h2>MR. BRITLING WRITES UNTIL SUNRISE</h2>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 1</h4>
+<br>
+<p>It was some weeks later. It was now the middle of November, and
+Mr. Britling, very warmly wrapped in his thick dressing-gown and
+his thick llama wool pyjamas, was sitting at his night desk, and
+working ever and again at an essay, an essay of preposterous
+ambitions, for the title of it was "The Better Government of the
+World."</p>
+<p>Latterly he had had much sleepless misery. In the day life was
+tolerable, but in the night&mdash;unless he defended himself by
+working, the losses and cruelties of the war came and grimaced at
+him, insufferably. Now he would be haunted by long processions of
+refugees, now he would think of the dead lying stiff and twisted in
+a thousand dreadful attitudes. Then again he would be overwhelmed
+with anticipations of the frightful economic and social dissolution
+that might lie ahead.... At other times he thought of wounds and
+the deformities of body and spirit produced by injuries. And
+sometimes he would think of the triumph of evil. Stupid and
+triumphant persons went about a world that stupidity had desolated,
+with swaggering gestures, with a smiling consciousness of enhanced
+importance, with their scornful hatred of all measured and
+temperate and kindly things turned now to scornful contempt. And
+mingling with the soil they walked on lay the dead body of Hugh,
+face downward. At the back of the boy's head, rimmed by
+blood-stiffened hair&mdash;the hair that had once been "as soft as
+the down of a bird"&mdash;was a big red hole. That hole was always
+pitilessly<a name="Page_418"></a> distinct. They stepped on
+him&mdash;heedlessly. They heeled the scattered stuff of his
+exquisite brain into the clay....</p>
+<p>From all such moods of horror Mr. Britling's circle of lamplight
+was his sole refuge. His work could conjure up visions, like opium
+visions, of a world of order and justice. Amidst the gloom of world
+bankruptcy he stuck to the prospectus of a braver
+enterprise&mdash;reckless of his chances of subscribers....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 2</h4>
+<br>
+<p>But this night even this circle of lamplight would not hold his
+mind. Doubt had crept into this last fastness. He pulled the papers
+towards him, and turned over the portion he had planned.</p>
+<p>His purpose in the book he was beginning to write was to reason
+out the possible methods of government that would give a stabler,
+saner control to the world. He believed still in democracy, but he
+was realising more and more that democracy had yet to discover its
+method. It had to take hold of the consciences of men, it had to
+equip itself with still unformed organisations. Endless years of
+patient thinking, of experimenting, of discussion lay before
+mankind ere this great idea could become reality, and right, the
+proven right thing, could rule the earth.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the world must still remain a scene of blood-stained
+melodrama, of deafening noise, contagious follies, vast irrational
+destructions. One fine life after another went down from study and
+university and laboratory to be slain and silenced....</p>
+<p>Was it conceivable that this mad monster of mankind would ever
+be caught and held in the thin-spun webs of thought?</p>
+<p>Was it, after all, anything but pretension and folly for a man
+to work out plans for the better government of the world?&mdash;was
+it any better than the ambitious scheming of some fly upon the
+wheel of the romantic gods?</p>
+<p>Man has come, floundering and wounding and suffering,<a name=
+"Page_419"></a> out of the breeding darknesses of Time, that will
+presently crush and consume him again. Why not flounder with the
+rest, why not eat, drink, fight, scream, weep and pray, forget
+Hugh, stop brooding upon Hugh, banish all these priggish dreams of
+"The Better Government of the World," and turn to the brighter
+aspects, the funny and adventurous aspects of the war, the
+Chestertonian jolliness, <i>Punch</i> side of things? Think you
+because your sons are dead that there will be no more cakes and
+ale? Let mankind blunder out of the mud and blood as mankind has
+blundered in....</p>
+<p>Let us at any rate keep our precious Sense of Humour....</p>
+<p>He pulled his manuscript towards him. For a time he sat
+decorating the lettering of his title, "The Better Government of
+the World," with little grinning gnomes' heads and waggish
+tails....</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 3</h4>
+<br>
+<p>On the top of Mr. Britling's desk, beside the clock, lay a
+letter, written in clumsy English and with its envelope resealed by
+a label which testified that it had been "OPENED BY CENSOR."</p>
+<p>The friendly go-between in Norway had written to tell Mr.
+Britling that Herr Heinrich also was dead; he had died a wounded
+prisoner in Russia some months ago. He had been wounded and
+captured, after undergoing great hardships, during the great
+Russian attack upon the passes of the Carpathians in the early
+spring, and his wound had mortified. He had recovered partially for
+a time, and then he had been beaten and injured again in some
+struggle between German and Croatian prisoners, and he had sickened
+and died. Before he died he had written to his parents, and once
+again he had asked that the fiddle he had left in Mr. Britling's
+care should if possible be returned to them. It was manifest that
+both for him and them now it had become a symbol with many
+associations.</p>
+<a name="Page_420"></a>
+<p>The substance of this letter invaded the orange circle of the
+lamp; it would have to be answered, and the potentialities of the
+answer were running through Mr. Britling's brain to the exclusion
+of any impersonal composition. He thought of the old parents away
+there in Pomerania&mdash;he believed but he was not quite sure,
+that Heinrich had been an only son&mdash;and of the pleasant
+spectacled figure that had now become a broken and decaying thing
+in a prisoner's shallow grave....</p>
+<p>Another son had gone&mdash;all the world was losing its
+sons....</p>
+<p>He found himself thinking of young Heinrich in the very manner,
+if with a lesser intensity, in which he thought about his own son,
+as of hopes senselessly destroyed. His mind took no note of the
+fact that Heinrich was an enemy, that by the reckoning of a "war of
+attrition" his death was balance and compensation for the death of
+Hugh. He went straight to the root fact that they had been gallant
+and kindly beings, and that the same thing had killed them
+both....</p>
+<p>By no conceivable mental gymnastics could he think of the two as
+antagonists. Between them there was no imaginable issue. They had
+both very much the same scientific disposition; with perhaps more
+dash and inspiration in the quality of Hugh; more docility and
+method in the case of Karl. Until war had smashed them one against
+the other....</p>
+<p>He recalled his first sight of Heinrich at the junction, and how
+he had laughed at the sight of his excessive Teutonism. The
+close-cropped shining fair head surmounted by a yellowish-white
+corps cap had appeared dodging about among the people upon the
+platform, and manifestly asking questions. The face had been very
+pink with the effort of an unaccustomed tongue. The young man had
+been clad in a suit of white flannel refined by a purple line; his
+boots were of that greenish yellow leather that only a German
+student could esteem "chic"; his<a name="Page_421"></a> rucksack
+was upon his back, and the precious fiddle in its case was carried
+very carefully in one hand; this same dead fiddle. The other hand
+held a stick with a carved knob and a pointed end. He had been too
+German for belief. "Herr Heinrich!" Mr. Britling had said, and
+straightway the heels had clashed together for a bow, a bow from
+the waist, a bow that a heedless old lady much burthened with
+garden produce had greatly disarranged. From first to last amidst
+our off-hand English ways Herr Heinrich had kept his bow&mdash;and
+always it had been getting disarranged.</p>
+<p>That had been his constant effect; a little stiff, a little
+absurd, and always clean and pink and methodical. The boys had
+liked him without reserve, Mrs. Britling had liked him; everybody
+had found him a likeable creature. He never complained of anything
+except picnics. But he did object to picnics; to the sudden
+departure of the family to wild surroundings for the consumption of
+cold, knifeless and forkless meals in the serious middle hours of
+the day. He protested to Mr. Britling, respectfully but very
+firmly. It was, he held, implicit in their understanding that he
+should have a cooked meal in the middle of the day. Otherwise his
+Magen was perplexed and disordered. In the evening he could not eat
+with any gravity or profit....</p>
+<p>Their disposition towards under-feeding and a certain lack of
+fine sentiment were the only flaws in the English scheme that Herr
+Heinrich admitted. He certainly found the English unfeeling. His
+heart went even less satisfied than his Magen. He was a being of
+expressive affections; he wanted great friendships, mysterious
+relationships, love. He tried very bravely to revere and to
+understand and be occultly understood by Mr. Britling; he sought
+long walks and deep talks with Hugh and the small boys; he tried to
+fill his heart with Cissie; he found at last marvels of innocence
+and sweetness in the Hickson girl. She wore her hair in a pigtail
+when first he met<a name="Page_422"></a> her, and it made her
+almost Marguerite. This young man had cried aloud for love, warm
+and filling, like the Mittagsessen that was implicit in their
+understanding. And all these Essex people failed to satisfy him;
+they were silent, they were subtle, they slipped through the fat
+yet eager fingers of his heart, so that he fell back at last upon
+himself and his German correspondents and the idealisation of Maud
+Hickson and the moral education of Billy. Billy. Mr. Britling's
+memories came back at last to the figure of young Heinrich with the
+squirrel on his shoulder, that had so often stood in the way of the
+utter condemnation of Germany. That, seen closely, was the stuff of
+one brutal Prussian. What quarrel had we with him?...</p>
+<p>Other memories of Heinrich flitted across Mr. Britling's
+reverie. Heinrich at hockey, running with extreme swiftness and
+little skill, tricked and baffled by Letty, dodged by Hugh, going
+headlong forward and headlong back, and then with a cry flinging
+himself flat on the ground exhausted.... Or again Heinrich very
+grave and very pink, peering through his glasses at his cards at
+Skat.... Or Heinrich in the boats upon the great pond, or Heinrich
+swimming, or Heinrich hiding very, very artfully from the boys
+about the garden on a theory of his own, or Heinrich in strange
+postures, stalking the deer in Claverings Park. For a time he had
+had a great ambition to creep quite close to a deer and
+<i>touch</i> it.... Or Heinrich indexing. He had a passion for
+listing and indexing books, music, any loose classifiable thing.
+His favourite amusement was devising schemes for the indentation of
+dictionary leaves, so that one could turn instantly to the needed
+word. He had bought and cut the edges of three dictionaries; each
+in succession improved upon the other; he had had great hopes of
+patents and wealth arising therefrom.... And his room had been a
+source of strange sounds; his search for music upon the violin. He
+had hoped when he came to Matching's Easy to join<a name=
+"Page_423"></a> "some string quartette." But Matching's Easy
+produced no string quartette. He had to fall back upon the pianola,
+and try to play duets with that. Only the pianola did all the duet
+itself, and in the hands of a small Britling was apt to betray a
+facetious moodiness; sudden alternations between extreme haste and
+extreme lassitude....</p>
+<p>Then there came a memory of Heinrich talking very seriously; his
+glasses magnifying his round blue eyes, talking of his ideas about
+life, of his beliefs and disbeliefs, of his ambitions and prospects
+in life.</p>
+<p>He confessed two principal ambitions. They varied perhaps in
+their absolute dimensions, but they were of equal importance in his
+mind. The first of these was, so soon as he had taken his doctorate
+in philology, to give himself to the perfecting of an International
+Language; it was to combine all the virtues of Esperanto and Ido.
+"And then," said Herr Heinrich, "I do not think there will be any
+more wars&mdash;ever." The second ambition, which was important
+first because Herr Heinrich found much delight in working at it,
+and secondly because he thought it would give him great wealth and
+opportunity for propagating the perfect speech, was the elaboration
+of his system of marginal indentations for dictionaries and
+alphabetical books of reference of all sorts. It was to be so
+complete that one would just stand over the book to be consulted,
+run hand and eye over its edges and open the book&mdash;"at the
+very exact spot." He proposed to follow this business up with a
+quite Germanic thoroughness. "Presently," he said, "I must study
+the machinery by which the edges of books are cut. It is possible I
+may have to invent these also." This was the double-barrelled
+scheme of Herr Heinrich's career. And along it he was to go, and
+incidentally develop his large vague heart that was at present so
+manifestly unsatisfied....</p>
+<p>Such was the brief story of Herr Heinrich.</p>
+<p>That story was over&mdash;just as Hugh's story was over. That
+first volume would never now have a second and<a name=
+"Page_424"></a> a third. It ended in some hasty grave in Russia.
+The great scheme for marginal indices would never be patented, the
+duets with the pianola would never be played again.</p>
+<p>Imagination glimpsed a little figure toiling manfully through
+the slush and snow of the Carpathians; saw it staggering under its
+first experience of shell fire; set it amidst attacks and flights
+and fatigue and hunger and a rush perhaps in the darkness; guessed
+at the wounding blow. Then came the pitiful pilgrimage of the
+prisoners into captivity, captivity in a land desolated,
+impoverished and embittered. Came wounds wrapped in filthy rags,
+pain and want of occupation, and a poor little bent and broken
+Heinrich sitting aloof in a crowded compound nursing a mortifying
+wound....</p>
+<p>He used always to sit in a peculiar attitude with his arms
+crossed on his crossed legs, looking slantingly through his
+glasses....</p>
+<p>So he must have sat, and presently he lay on some rough bedding
+and suffered, untended, in infinite discomfort; lay motionless and
+thought at times, it may be, of Matching's Easy and wondered what
+Hugh and Teddy were doing. Then he became fevered, and the world
+grew bright-coloured and fantastic and ugly for him. Until one day
+an infinite weakness laid hold of him, and his pain grew faint and
+all his thoughts and memories grew faint&mdash;and still
+fainter....</p>
+<p>The violin had been brought into Mr. Britling's study that
+afternoon, and lay upon the further window-seat. Poor little broken
+sherd, poor little fragment of a shattered life! It looked in its
+case like a baby in a coffin.</p>
+<p>"I must write a letter to the old father and mother," Mr.
+Britling thought. "I can't just send the poor little
+fiddle&mdash;without a word. In all this pitiful storm of witless
+hate&mdash;surely there may be one greeting&mdash;not hateful.</p>
+<p>"From my blackness to yours," said Mr. Britling aloud. He would
+have to write it in English. But even if<a name="Page_425"></a>
+they knew no English some one would be found to translate it to
+them. He would have to write very plainly.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 4</h4>
+<br>
+<p>He pushed aside the manuscript of "The Better Government of the
+World," and began to write rather slowly, shaping his letters
+roundly and distinctly:</p>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>Dear Sir,</i></p>
+<p><i>I am writing this letter to you to tell you I am sending back
+the few little things I had kept for your son at his request when
+the war broke out. I am sending them&mdash;</i></p>
+</div>
+<p>Mr. Britling left that blank for the time until he could arrange
+the method of sending to the Norwegian intermediary.</p>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>Especially I am sending his violin, which he had asked me
+thrice to convey to you. Either it is a gift from you or it
+symbolised many things for him that he connected with home and you.
+I will have it packed with particular care, and I will do all in my
+power to ensure its safe arrival.</i></p>
+<p><i>I want to tell you that all the stress and passion of this
+war has not made us here in Matching's Easy forget our friend your
+son. He was one of us, he had our affection, he had friends here
+who are still his friends. We found him honourable and
+companionable, and we share something of your loss. I have got
+together for you a few snapshots I chance to possess in which you
+will see him in the sunshine, and which will enable you perhaps to
+picture a little more definitely than you would otherwise do the
+life he led here. There is one particularly that I have marked. Our
+family is lunching out-of-doors, and you will see that next to your
+son is a youngster, a year or so his junior, who is touching
+glasses with him. I have put a cross over his head. He is my eldest
+son, he <a name="Page_426"></a>was very dear to me, and he too has
+been, killed in this war. They are, you see, smiling very
+pleasantly at each other.</i></p>
+</div>
+<p>While writing this Mr. Britling had been struck by the thought
+of the photographs, and he had taken them out of the little drawer
+into which he was accustomed to thrust them. He picked out the ones
+that showed the young German, but there were others, bright with
+sunshine, that were now charged with acquired significances; there
+were two showing the children and Teddy and Hugh and Cissie and
+Letty doing the goose step, and there was one of Mr. Van der Pant,
+smiling at the front door, in Heinrich's abandoned slippers. There
+were endless pictures of Teddy also. It is the happy instinct of
+the Kodak to refuse those days that are overcast, and the
+photographic record of a life is a chain of all its kindlier
+aspects. In the drawer above these snapshots there were Hugh's
+letters and a miscellany of trivial documents touching on his
+life.</p>
+<p>Mr. Britling discontinued writing and turned these papers over
+and mused. Heinrich's letters and postcards had got in among them,
+and so had a letter of Teddy's....</p>
+<p>The letters reinforced the photographs in their reminder how
+kind and pleasant a race mankind can be. Until the wild asses of
+nationalism came kicking and slaying amidst them, until suspicion
+and jostling greed and malignity poison their minds, until the
+fools with the high explosives blow that elemental goodness into
+shrieks of hate and splashes of blood. How kindly men are&mdash;up
+to the very instant of their cruelties! His mind teemed suddenly
+with little anecdotes and histories of the goodwill of men breaking
+through the ill-will of war, of the mutual help of sorely wounded
+Germans and English lying together in the mud and darkness between
+the trenches, of the fellowship of captors and prisoners,
+of<a name="Page_427"></a> the Saxons at Christmas fraternising with
+the English.... Of that he had seen photographs in one of the daily
+papers....</p>
+<p>His mind came back presently from these wanderings to the task
+before him.</p>
+<p>He tried to picture these Heinrich parents. He supposed they
+were kindly, civilised people. It was manifest the youngster had
+come to him from a well-ordered and gentle-spirited home. But he
+imagined them&mdash;he could not tell why&mdash;as people much
+older than himself. Perhaps young Heinrich had on some occasion
+said they were old people&mdash;he could not remember. And he had a
+curious impulse too to write to them in phrases of consolation; as
+if their loss was more pitiable than his own. He doubted whether
+they had the consolation of his sanguine temperament, whether they
+could resort as readily as he could to his faith, whether in
+Pomerania there was the same consoling possibility of an essay on
+the Better Government of the World. He did not think this very
+clearly, but that was what was at the back of his mind. He went on
+writing.</p>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>If you think that these two boys have both perished, not in
+some noble common cause but one against the other in a struggle of
+dynasties and boundaries and trade routes and tyrannous
+ascendancies, then it seems to me that you must feel as I feel that
+this war is the most tragic and dreadful thing that has ever
+happened to mankind.</i></p>
+</div>
+<p>He sat thinking for some minutes after he had written that, and
+when presently he resumed his writing, a fresh strain of thought
+was traceable even in his opening sentence.</p>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>If you count dead and wounds this is the most dreadful war in
+history; for you as for me, it has been almost the extremity of
+personal tragedy.... Black sorrow.... <a name="Page_428"></a>But is
+it the most dreadful war?</i></p>
+<p><i>I do not think it is. I can write to you and tell you that I
+do indeed believe that our two sons have died not altogether in
+vain. Our pain and anguish may not be wasted&mdash;may be
+necessary. Indeed they may be necessary. Here am I bereaved and
+wretched&mdash;and I hope. Never was the fabric of war so black;
+that I admit. But never was the black fabric of war so threadbare.
+At a thousand points the light is shining through.</i></p>
+</div>
+<p>Mr. Britling's pen stopped.</p>
+<p>There was perfect stillness in the study bedroom.</p>
+<p>"The tinpot style," said Mr. Britling at last in a voice of
+extreme bitterness.</p>
+<p>He fell into an extraordinary quarrel with his style. He forgot
+about those Pomeranian parents altogether in his exasperation at
+his own inexpressiveness, at his incomplete control of these rebel
+words and phrases that came trailing each its own associations and
+suggestions to hamper his purpose with it. He read over the
+offending sentence.</p>
+<p>"The point is that it is true," he whispered. "It is exactly
+what I want to say."...</p>
+<p>Exactly?...</p>
+<p>His mind stuck on that "exactly."... When one has much to say
+style is troublesome. It is as if one fussed with one's uniform
+before a battle.... But that is just what one ought to do before a
+battle.... One ought to have everything in order....</p>
+<p>He took a fresh sheet and made three trial beginnings.</p>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>"War is like a black fabric."</i>...</p>
+<p><i>"War is a curtain of black fabric across the
+pathway."</i></p>
+<p><i>"War is a curtain of dense black fabric across all the hopes
+and kindliness of mankind. Yet always it has let <a name=
+"Page_429"></a>through some gleams of light, and now&mdash;I am not
+dreaming&mdash;it grows threadbare, and here and there and at a
+thousand points the light is breaking through. We owe it to all
+these dear youths&mdash;"</i></p>
+</div>
+<p>His pen stopped again.</p>
+<p>"I must work on a rough draft," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 5</h4>
+<br>
+<p>Three hours later Mr. Britling was working by daylight, though
+his study lamp was still burning, and his letter to old Heinrich
+was still no better than a collection of material for a letter. But
+the material was falling roughly into shape, and Mr. Britling's
+intentions were finding themselves. It was clear to him now that he
+was no longer writing as his limited personal self to those two
+personal selves grieving, in the old, large, high-walled,
+steep-roofed household amidst pine woods, of which Heinrich had
+once shown him a picture. He knew them too little for any such
+personal address. He was writing, he perceived, not as Mr. Britling
+but as an Englishman&mdash;that was all he could be to
+them&mdash;and he was writing to them as Germans; he could
+apprehend them as nothing more. He was just England bereaved to
+Germany bereaved....</p>
+<p>He was no longer writing to the particular parents of one
+particular boy, but to all that mass of suffering, regret,
+bitterness and fatigue that lay behind the veil of the "front."
+Slowly, steadily, the manhood of Germany was being wiped out. As he
+sat there in the stillness he could think that at least two million
+men of the Central Powers were dead, and an equal number maimed and
+disabled. Compared with that our British losses, immense and
+universal as they were by the standard of any previous experience,
+were still slight; our larger armies had still to suffer, and we
+had lost irrevocably not very much more than a quarter of a
+million. But the tragedy gathered<a name="Page_430"></a> against
+us. We knew enough already to know what must be the reality of the
+German homes to which those dead men would nevermore return....</p>
+<p>If England had still the longer account to pay, the French had
+paid already nearly to the limits of endurance. They must have lost
+well over a million of their mankind, and still they bled and bled.
+Russia too in the East had paid far more than man for man in this
+vast swapping off of lives. In a little while no Censorship would
+hold the voice of the peoples. There would be no more talk of
+honour and annexations, hegemonies and trade routes, but only
+Europe lamenting for her dead....</p>
+<p>The Germany to which he wrote would be a nation of widows and
+children, rather pinched boys and girls, crippled men, old men,
+deprived men, men who had lost brothers and cousins and friends and
+ambitions. No triumph now on land or sea could save Germany from
+becoming that. France too would be that, Russia, and lastly
+Britain, each in their degree. Before the war there had been no
+Germany to which an Englishman could appeal; Germany had been a
+threat, a menace, a terrible trampling of armed men. It was as
+little possible then to think of talking to Germany as it would
+have been to have stopped the Kaiser in mid career in his hooting
+car down the Unter den Linden and demand a quiet talk with him. But
+the Germany that had watched those rushes with a slightly doubting
+pride had her eyes now full of tears and blood. She had believed,
+she had obeyed, and no real victory had come. Still she fought on,
+bleeding, agonising, wasting her substance and the substance of the
+whole world, to no conceivable end but exhaustion, so capable she
+was, so devoted, so proud and utterly foolish. And the mind of
+Germany, whatever it was before the war, would now be something
+residual, something left over and sitting beside a reading-lamp as
+he was sitting beside a reading-lamp, thinking, sorrowing, counting
+the cost, looking into the dark future....</p>
+<a name="Page_431"></a>
+<p>And to that he wrote, to that dimly apprehended figure outside a
+circle of the light like his own circle of light&mdash;which was
+the father of Heinrich, which was great Germany, Germany which
+lived before and which will yet outlive the flapping of the
+eagles....</p>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>Our boys</i>, he wrote, <i>have died, fighting one against
+the other. They have been fighting upon an issue so obscure that
+your German press is still busy discussing what it was. For us it
+was that Belgium was invaded and France in danger of destruction.
+Nothing else could have brought the English into the field against
+you. But why you invaded Belgium and France and whether that might
+have been averted we do not know to this day. And still this war
+goes on and still more boys die, and these men who do not fight,
+these men in the newspaper offices and in the ministries plan
+campaigns and strokes and counter-strokes that belong to no
+conceivable plan at all. Except that now for them there is
+something more terrible than war. And that is the day of reckoning
+with their own people.</i></p>
+<p><i>What have we been fighting for? What are we fighting for? Do
+you know? Does any one know? Why am I spending what is left of my
+substance and you what is left of yours to keep on this war against
+each other? What have we to gain from hurting one another still
+further? Why should we be puppets any longer in the hands of
+crowned fools and witless diplomatists? Even if we were dumb and
+acquiescent before, does not the blood of our sons now cry out to
+us that this foolery should cease? We have let these people send
+our sons to death.</i></p>
+<p><i>It is you and I who must stop these wars, these massacres of
+boys.</i></p>
+<p><i>Massacres of boys! That indeed is the essence of modern war.
+The killing off of the young. It is the destruction of the human
+inheritance, it is the spending <a name="Page_432"></a>of all the
+life and material of the future upon present-day hate and greed.
+Fools and knaves, politicians, tricksters, and those who trade on
+the suspicions and thoughtless, generous angers of men, make wars;
+the indolence and modesty of the mass of men permit them. Are you
+and I to suffer such things until the whole fabric of our
+civilisation, that has been so slowly and so laboriously built up,
+is altogether destroyed?</i></p>
+<p><i>When I sat down to write to you I had meant only to write to
+you of your son and mine. But I feel that what can be said in
+particular of our loss, need not be said; it can be understood
+without saying. What needs to be said and written about is this,
+that war must be put an end to and that nobody else but you and me
+and all of us can do it. We have to do that for the love of our
+sons and our race and all that is human. War is no longer human;
+the chemist and the metallurgist have changed all that. My boy was
+shot through the eye; his brain was blown to pieces by some man who
+never knew what he had done. Think what that means!... It is plain
+to me, surely it is plain to you and all the world, that war is now
+a mere putting of the torch to explosives that flare out to
+universal ruin. There is nothing for one sane man to write to
+another about in these days but the salvation of mankind from
+war.</i></p>
+<p><i>Now I want you to be patient with me and hear me out. There
+was a time in the earlier part of this war when it was hard to be
+patient because there hung over us the dread of losses and
+disaster. Now we need dread no longer. The dreaded thing has
+happened. Sitting together as we do in spirit beside the mangled
+bodies of our dead, surely we can be as patient as the
+hills.</i></p>
+<p><i>I want to tell you quite plainly and simply that I think that
+Germany which is chief and central in this war is most to blame for
+this war. Writing to you as an Englishman to a German and with war
+still being waged, there must be no mistake between us upon this
+point. I <a name="Page_433"></a>am persuaded that in the decade
+that ended with your overthrow of France in 1871, Germany turned
+her face towards evil, and that her refusal to treat France
+generously and to make friends with any other great power in the
+world, is the essential cause of this war. Germany
+triumphed&mdash;and she trampled on the loser. She inflicted
+intolerable indignities. She set herself to prepare for further
+aggressions; long before this killing began she was making war upon
+land and sea, launching warships, building strategic railways,
+setting up a vast establishment of war material, threatening,
+straining all the world to keep pace with her threats.... At last
+there was no choice before any European nation but submission to
+the German will, or war. And it was no will to which righteous men
+could possibly submit. It came as an illiberal and ungracious will.
+It was the will of Zabern. It is not as if you had set yourselves
+to be an imperial people and embrace and unify the world. You did
+not want to unify the world. You wanted to set the foot of an
+intensely national Germany, a sentimental and illiberal Germany, a
+Germany that treasured the portraits of your ridiculous Kaiser and
+his litter of sons, a Germany wearing uniform, reading black
+letter, and despising every kultur but her own, upon the neck of a
+divided and humiliated mankind. It was an intolerable prospect. I
+had rather the whole world died.</i></p>
+<p><i>Forgive me for writing "you." You are as little responsible
+for that Germany as I am for&mdash;Sir Edward Grey. But this
+happened over you; you did not do your utmost to prevent
+it&mdash;even as England has happened, and I have let it happen
+over me....</i></p>
+</div>
+<p>"It is so dry; so general," whispered Mr. Britling. "And
+yet&mdash;it is this that has killed our sons."</p>
+<p>He sat still for a time, and then went on reading a fresh sheet
+of his manuscript.</p>
+<a name="Page_434"></a>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>When I bring these charges against Germany I have little
+disposition to claim any righteousness for Britain. There has been
+small splendour in this war for either Germany or Britain or
+Russia; we three have chanced to be the biggest of the combatants,
+but the glory lies with invincible France. It is France and Belgium
+and Serbia who shine as the heroic lands. They have fought
+defensively and beyond all expectation, for dear land and freedom.
+This war for them has been a war of simple, definite issues, to
+which they have risen with an entire nobility. Englishman and
+German alike may well envy them that simplicity. I look to you, as
+an honest man schooled by the fierce lessons of this war, to meet
+me in my passionate desire to see France, Belgium and Serbia emerge
+restored from all this blood and struggle, enlarged to the limits
+of their nationality, vindicated and secure. Russia I will not
+write about here; let me go on at once to tell you about my own
+country; remarking only that between England and Russia there are
+endless parallelisms. We have similar complexities, kindred
+difficulties. We have for instance an imported dynasty, we have a
+soul-destroying State Church which cramps and poisons the education
+of our ruling class, we have a people out of touch with a secretive
+government, and the same traditional contempt for science. We have
+our Irelands and Polands. Even our kings bear a curious
+likeness....</i></p>
+</div>
+<p>At this point there was a break in the writing, and Mr. Britling
+made, as it were, a fresh beginning.</p>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>Politically the British Empire is a clumsy collection of
+strange accidents. It is a thing as little to be proud of as the
+outline of a flint or the shape of a potato. For the mass of
+English people India and Egypt and all that side of our system mean
+less than nothing; our trade is something they do not understand,
+our imperial wealth something they do not share. Britain has been a
+group <a name="Page_435"></a>of four democracies caught in the net
+of a vast yet casual imperialism; the common man here is in a state
+of political perplexity from the cradle to the grave. None the less
+there is a great people here even as there is a great people in
+Russia, a people with a soul and character of its own, a people of
+unconquerable kindliness and with a peculiar genius, which still
+struggle towards will and expression. We have been beginning that
+same great experiment that France and America and Switzerland and
+China are making, the experiment of democracy. It is the newest
+form of human association, and we are still but half awake to its
+needs and necessary conditions. For it is idle to pretend that the
+little city democracies of ancient times were comparable to the
+great essays in practical republicanism that mankind is making
+to-day. This age of the democratic republics that dawn is a new
+age. It has not yet lasted for a century, not for a paltry hundred
+years.... All new things are weak things; a rat can kill a
+man-child with ease; the greater the destiny, the weaker the
+immediate self-protection may be. And to me it seems that your
+complete and perfect imperialism, ruled by Germans for Germans, is
+in its scope and outlook a more antiquated and smaller and less
+noble thing than these sprawling emergent giant democracies of the
+West that struggle so confusedly against it....</i></p>
+<p><i>But that we do struggle confusedly, with pitiful leaders and
+infinite waste and endless delay; that it is to our indisciplines
+and to the dishonesties and tricks our incompleteness provokes,
+that the prolongation of this war is to be ascribed, I readily
+admit. At the outbreak of this war I had hoped to see militarism
+felled within a year....</i></p>
+</div>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 6</h4>
+<br>
+<p>From this point onward Mr. Britling's notes became more
+fragmentary. They had a consecutiveness, but they were
+discontinuous. His thought had leapt across gaps<a name=
+"Page_436"></a> that his pen had had no time to fill. And he had
+begun to realise that his letter to the old people in Pomerania was
+becoming impossible. It had broken away into dissertation.</p>
+<p>"Yet there must be dissertations," he said. "Unless such men as
+we are take these things in hand, always we shall be misgoverned,
+always the sons will die...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 7</h4>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>I do not think you Germans realise how steadily you were
+conquering the world before this war began. Had you given half the
+energy and intelligence you have spent upon this war to the
+peaceful conquest of men's minds and spirits, I believe that you
+would have taken the leadership of the world tranquilly&mdash;no
+man disputing. Your science was five years, your social and
+economic organisation was a quarter of a century in front of
+ours.... Never has it so lain in the power of a great people to
+lead and direct mankind towards the world republic and universal
+peace. It needed but a certain generosity of the
+imagination....</i></p>
+<p><i>But your Junkers, your Imperial court, your foolish vicious
+Princes; what were such dreams to them?... With an envious
+satisfaction they hurled all the accomplishment of Germany into the
+fires of war....</i></p>
+</div>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 8</h4>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>Your boy, as no doubt you know, dreamt constantly of such a
+world peace as this that I foreshadow; he was more generous than
+his country. He could envisage war and hostility only as
+misunderstanding. He thought that a world that could explain itself
+clearly would surely be at peace. He was scheming always therefore
+for the perfection and propagation of Esperanto or Ido, or some
+such universal link. My youngster too was full of a <a name=
+"Page_437"></a>kindred and yet larger dream, the dream of human
+science, which knows neither king nor country nor race</i>....</p>
+<p><i>These boys, these hopes, this war has killed</i>....</p>
+</div>
+<p>That fragment ended so. Mr. Britling ceased to read for a time.
+"But has it killed them?" he whispered....</p>
+<p>"If you had lived, my dear, you and your England would have
+talked with a younger Germany&mdash;better than I can ever
+do...."</p>
+<p>He turned the pages back, and read here and there with an
+accumulating discontent.</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 9</h4>
+<br>
+<p>"Dissertations," said Mr. Britling.</p>
+<p>Never had it been so plain to Mr. Britling that he was a weak,
+silly, ill-informed and hasty-minded writer, and never had he felt
+so invincible a conviction that the Spirit of God was in him, and
+that it fell to him to take some part in the establishment of a new
+order of living upon the earth; it might be the most trivial part
+by the scale of the task, but for him it was to be now his supreme
+concern. And it was an almost intolerable grief to him that his
+services should be, for all his desire, so poor in quality, so weak
+in conception. Always he seemed to be on the verge of some
+illuminating and beautiful statement of his cause; always he was
+finding his writing inadequate, a thin treachery to the impulse of
+his heart, always he was finding his effort weak and ineffective.
+In this instance, at the outset he seemed to see with a golden
+clearness the message of brotherhood, or forgiveness, of a common
+call. To whom could such a message be better addressed than to
+those sorrowing parents; from whom could it come with a better
+effect than from himself? And now he read what he had made of this
+message. It seemed to his jaded mind a pitifully jaded effort. It
+had no light, it had no<a name="Page_438"></a> depth. It was like
+the disquisition of a debating society.</p>
+<p>He was distressed by a fancy of an old German couple, spectacled
+and peering, puzzled by his letter. Perhaps they would be obscurely
+hurt by his perplexing generalisations. Why, they would ask, should
+this Englishman preach to them?</p>
+<p>He sat back in his chair wearily, with his chin sunk upon his
+chest. For a time he did not think, and then, he read again the
+sentence in front of his eyes.</p>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>"These boys, these hopes, this war has killed."</i></p>
+</div>
+<p>The words hung for a time in his mind.</p>
+<p>"No!" said Mr. Britling stoutly. "They live!"</p>
+<p>And suddenly it was borne in upon his mind that he was not
+alone. There were thousands and tens of thousands of men and women
+like himself, desiring with all their hearts to say, as he desired
+to say, the reconciling word. It was not only his hand that thrust
+against the obstacles.... Frenchmen and Russians sat in the same
+stillness, facing the same perplexities; there were Germans seeking
+a way through to him. Even as he sat and wrote. And for the first
+time clearly he felt a Presence of which he had thought very many
+times in the last few weeks, a Presence so close to him that it was
+behind his eyes and in his brain and hands. It was no trick of his
+vision; it was a feeling of immediate reality. And it was Hugh,
+Hugh that he had thought was dead, it was young Heinrich living
+also, it was himself, it was those others that sought, it was all
+these and it was more, it was the Master, the Captain of Mankind,
+it was God, there present with him, and he knew that it was God. It
+was as if he had been groping all this time in the darkness,
+thinking himself alone amidst rocks and pitfalls and pitiless
+things, and suddenly a hand, a firm strong hand, had touched his
+own. And a voice within him bade him be of good courage. There was
+no magic trickery in that<a name="Page_439"></a> moment; he was
+still weak and weary, a discouraged rhetorician, a good intention
+ill-equipped; but he was no longer lonely and wretched, no longer
+in the same world with despair. God was beside him and within him
+and about him.... It was the crucial moment of Mr. Britling's life.
+It was a thing as light as the passing of a cloud on an April
+morning; it was a thing as great as the first day of creation. For
+some moments he still sat back with his chin upon his chest and his
+hands dropping from the arms of his chair. Then he sat up and drew
+a deep breath....</p>
+<p>This had come almost as a matter of course.</p>
+<p>For weeks his mind had been playing about this idea. He had
+talked to Letty of this Finite God, who is the king of man's
+adventure in space and time. But hitherto God had been for him a
+thing of the intelligence, a theory, a report, something told about
+but not realised.... Mr. Britling's thinking about God hitherto had
+been like some one who has found an empty house, very beautiful and
+pleasant, full of the promise of a fine personality. And then as
+the discoverer makes his lonely, curious explorations, he hears
+downstairs, dear and friendly, the voice of the Master coming
+in....</p>
+<p>There was no need to despair because he himself was one of the
+feeble folk. God was with him indeed, and he was with God. The King
+was coming to his own. Amidst the darknesses and confusions, the
+nightmare cruelties and the hideous stupidities of the great war,
+God, the Captain of the World Republic, fought his way to empire.
+So long as one did one's best and utmost in a cause so mighty, did
+it matter though the thing one did was little and poor?</p>
+<p>"I have thought too much of myself," said Mr. Britling, "and of
+what I would do by myself. I have forgotten <i>that which was with
+me</i>...."</p>
+<a name="Page_440"></a><br>
+<h4>&sect; 10</h4>
+<br>
+<p>He turned over the rest of the night's writing presently, and
+read it now as though it was the work of another man.</p>
+<p>These later notes were fragmentary, and written in a sprawling
+hand.</p>
+<div class="blkquot">
+<p><i>"Let us make ourselves watchers and guardians of the order of
+the world....</i></p>
+<p><i>"If only for love of our dead....</i></p>
+<p><i>"Let us pledge ourselves to service. Let us set ourselves
+with all our minds and all our hearts to the perfecting and working
+out of the methods of democracy and the ending for ever of the
+kings and emperors and priestcrafts and the bands of adventurers,
+the traders and owners and forestallers who have betrayed mankind
+into this morass of hate and blood&mdash;in which our sons are
+lost&mdash;in which we flounder still...."</i></p>
+</div>
+<p>How feeble was this squeak of exhortation! It broke into a
+scolding note.</p>
+<p>"Who have betrayed," read Mr. Britling, and judged the
+phrase.</p>
+<p>"Who have fallen with us," he amended....</p>
+<p>"One gets so angry and bitter&mdash;because one feels alone, I
+suppose. Because one feels that for them one's reason is no reason.
+One is enraged by the sense of their silent and regardless
+contradiction, and one forgets the Power of which one is a
+part...."</p>
+<p>The sheet that bore the sentence he criticised was otherwise
+blank except that written across it obliquely in a very careful
+hand were the words "Hugh," and "Hugh Philip Britling."...</p>
+<p>On the next sheet he had written: "Let us set up the peace of
+the World Republic amidst these ruins. Let it be our religion, our
+calling."</p>
+<p>There he had stopped.</p>
+<a name="Page_441"></a>
+<p>The last sheet of Mr. Britling's manuscript may be more
+conveniently given in fac-simile than described.</p>
+<center><img src="images/note.png" width="390" height="400" alt=
+"[Handwritten: Hugh Hugh My dear Hugh Lawyers Princes Dealers in Contention Honesty 'Blood Blood ... [Transcriber's Note: illegible] an End to them">
+</center>
+<h4>&sect; 11</h4>
+<br>
+<p>He sighed.</p>
+<p>He looked at the scattered papers, and thought of the letter
+they were to have made.</p>
+<p>His fatigue spoke first.</p>
+<p>"Perhaps after all I'd better just send the fiddle...."</p>
+<p>He rested his cheeks between his hands, and remained so for a
+long time. His eyes stared unseeingly. His thoughts wandered and
+spread and faded. At length he<a name="Page_442"></a> recalled his
+mind to that last idea. "Just send the fiddle&mdash;without a
+word."</p>
+<p>"No. I must write to them plainly.</p>
+<p>"About God as I have found Him.</p>
+<p>"As He has found me...."</p>
+<p>He forgot the Pomeranians for a time. He murmured to himself. He
+turned over the conviction that had suddenly become clear and
+absolute in his mind.</p>
+<p>"Religion is the first thing and the last thing, and until a man
+has found God and been found by God, he begins at no beginning, he
+works to no end. He may have his friendships, his partial
+loyalties, his scraps of honour. But all these things fall into
+place and life falls into place only with God. Only with God. God,
+who fights through men against Blind Force and Night and
+Non-Existence; who is the end, who is the meaning. He is the only
+King.... Of course I must write about Him. I must tell all my world
+of Him. And before the coming of the true King, the inevitable
+King, the King who is present whenever just men foregather, this
+blood-stained rubbish of the ancient world, these puny kings and
+tawdry emperors, these wily politicians and artful lawyers, these
+men who claim and grab and trick and compel, these war makers and
+oppressors, will presently shrivel and pass&mdash;like paper thrust
+into a flame...."</p>
+<p>Then after a time he said:</p>
+<p>"Our sons who have shown us God...."</p>
+<br>
+<h4>&sect; 12</h4>
+<br>
+<p>He rubbed his open hands over his eyes and forehead.</p>
+<p>The night of effort had tired his brain, and he was no longer
+thinking actively. He had a little interval of blankness, sitting
+at his desk with his hands pressed over his eyes....</p>
+<p>He got up presently, and stood quite motionless at the window,
+looking out.</p>
+<a name="Page_443"></a>
+<p>His lamp was still burning, but for some time he had not been
+writing by the light of his lamp. Insensibly the day had come and
+abolished his need for that individual circle of yellow light.
+Colour had returned to the world, clean pearly colour, clear and
+definite like the glance of a child or the voice of a girl, and a
+golden wisp of cloud hung in the sky over the tower of the church.
+There was a mist upon the pond, a soft grey mist not a yard high. A
+covey of partridges ran and halted and ran again in the dewy grass
+outside his garden railings. The partridges were very numerous this
+year because there had been so little shooting. Beyond in the
+meadow a hare sat up as still as a stone. A horse neighed.... Wave
+after wave of warmth and light came sweeping before the sunrise
+across the world of Matching's Easy. It was as if there was nothing
+but morning and sunrise in the world.</p>
+<p>From away towards the church came the sound of some early worker
+whetting a scythe.</p>
+<hr style="width: 65%;">
+<p>THE END</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Mr. Britling Sees It Through, by H. G. Wells
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Britling Sees It Through, by H. G. Wells
+
+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: Mr. Britling Sees It Through
+
+Author: H. G. Wells
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2004 [EBook #14060]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Eric Eldred, Sandra Bannatyne and the PG Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH
+
+BY H.G. WELLS
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY H.G. WELLS
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+MATCHING'S EASY AT EASE
+
+ I MR. DIRECK VISITS MR. BRITLING
+ II MR. BRITLING CONTINUES HIS EXPOSITION
+III THE ENTERTAINMENT OF MR. DIRECK REACHES A CLIMAX
+ IV MR. BRITLING IN SOLILOQUY
+ V THE COMING OF THE DAY
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+MATCHING'S EASY AT WAR
+
+ I ONLOOKERS
+ II TAKING PART
+III MALIGNITY
+ IV IN THE WEB OF THE INEFFECTIVE
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+THE TESTAMENT OF MATCHING'S EASY
+
+ I MRS. TEDDY GOES FOR A WALK
+ II MR. BRITLING WRITES UNTIL SUNRISE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK I
+
+MATCHING'S EASY AT EASE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FIRST
+
+MR. DIRECK VISITS MR. BRITLING
+
+
+Section 1
+
+It was the sixth day of Mr. Direck's first visit to England, and he was
+at his acutest perception of differences. He found England in every way
+gratifying and satisfactory, and more of a contrast with things American
+than he had ever dared to hope.
+
+He had promised himself this visit for many years, but being of a sunny
+rather than energetic temperament--though he firmly believed himself
+to be a reservoir of clear-sighted American energy--he had allowed all
+sorts of things, and more particularly the uncertainties of Miss Mamie
+Nelson, to keep him back. But now there were no more uncertainties about
+Miss Mamie Nelson, and Mr. Direck had come over to England just to
+convince himself and everybody else that there were other interests
+in life for him than Mamie....
+
+And also, he wanted to see the old country from which his maternal
+grandmother had sprung. Wasn't there even now in his bedroom in New York
+a water-colour of Market Saffron church, where the dear old lady had
+been confirmed? And generally he wanted to see Europe. As an interesting
+side show to the excursion he hoped, in his capacity of the rather
+underworked and rather over-salaried secretary of the Massachusetts
+Society for the Study of Contemporary Thought, to discuss certain
+agreeable possibilities with Mr. Britling, who lived at Matching's Easy.
+
+Mr. Direck was a type of man not uncommon in America. He was very much
+after the fashion of that clean and pleasant-looking person one sees in
+the advertisements in American magazines, that agreeable person who
+smiles and says, "Good, it's the Fizgig Brand," or "Yes, it's a Wilkins,
+and that's the Best," or "My shirt-front never rucks; it's a Chesson."
+But now he was saying, still with the same firm smile, "Good. It's
+English." He was pleased by every unlikeness to things American, by
+every item he could hail as characteristic; in the train to London he
+had laughed aloud with pleasure at the chequer-board of little fields
+upon the hills of Cheshire, he had chuckled to find himself in a
+compartment without a corridor; he had tipped the polite yet kindly
+guard magnificently, after doubting for a moment whether he ought to tip
+him at all, and he had gone about his hotel in London saying "Lordy!
+Lordy! My _word!_" in a kind of ecstasy, verifying the delightful
+absence of telephone, of steam-heat, of any dependent bathroom. At
+breakfast the waiter (out of Dickens it seemed) had refused to know what
+"cereals" were, and had given him his egg in a china egg-cup such as you
+see in the pictures in _Punch_. The Thames, when he sallied out to see
+it, had been too good to be true, the smallest thing in rivers he had
+ever seen, and he had had to restrain himself from affecting a marked
+accent and accosting some passer-by with the question, "Say! But is this
+little wet ditch here the Historical River Thames?"
+
+In America, it must be explained, Mr. Direck spoke a very good and
+careful English indeed, but he now found the utmost difficulty in
+controlling his impulse to use a high-pitched nasal drone and indulge in
+dry "Americanisms" and poker metaphors upon all occasions. When people
+asked him questions he wanted to say "Yep" or "Sure," words he would no
+more have used in America than he could have used a bowie knife. But he
+had a sense of role. He wanted to be visibly and audibly America
+eye-witnessing. He wanted to be just exactly what he supposed an
+Englishman would expect him to be. At any rate, his clothes had been
+made by a strongly American New York tailor, and upon the strength of
+them a taxi-man had assumed politely but firmly that the shillings on
+his taximeter were dollars, an incident that helped greatly to sustain
+the effect of Mr. Direck, in Mr. Direck's mind, as something standing
+out with an almost representative clearness against the English
+scene.... So much so that the taxi-man got the dollars....
+
+Because all the time he had been coming over he had dreaded that it
+wasn't true, that England was a legend, that London would turn out to be
+just another thundering great New York, and the English exactly like New
+Englanders....
+
+
+Section 2
+
+And now here he was on the branch line of the little old Great Eastern
+Railway, on his way to Matching's Easy in Essex, and he was suddenly in
+the heart of Washington Irving's England.
+
+Washington Irving's England! Indeed it was. He couldn't sit still and
+just peep at it, he had to stand up in the little compartment and stick
+his large, firm-featured, kindly countenance out of the window as if he
+greeted it. The country under the June sunshine was neat and bright as
+an old-world garden, with little fields of corn surrounded by dog-rose
+hedges, and woods and small rushy pastures of an infinite tidiness. He
+had seen a real deer park, it had rather tumbledown iron gates between
+its shield-surmounted pillars, and in the distance, beyond all question,
+was Bracebridge Hall nestling among great trees. He had seen thatched
+and timbered cottages, and half-a-dozen inns with creaking signs. He had
+seen a fat vicar driving himself along a grassy lane in a governess cart
+drawn by a fat grey pony. It wasn't like any reality he had ever known.
+It was like travelling in literature.
+
+Mr. Britling's address was the Dower House, and it was, Mr. Britling's
+note had explained, on the farther edge of the park at Claverings.
+Claverings! The very name for some stately home of England....
+
+And yet this was only forty-two miles from London. Surely it brought
+things within the suburban range. If Matching's Easy were in America,
+commuters would live there. But in supposing that, Mr. Direck displayed
+his ignorance of a fact of the greatest importance to all who would
+understand England. There is a gap in the suburbs of London. The suburbs
+of London stretch west and south and even west by north, but to the
+north-eastward there are no suburbs; instead there is Essex. Essex is
+not a suburban county; it is a characteristic and individualised county
+which wins the heart. Between dear Essex and the centre of things lie
+two great barriers, the East End of London and Epping Forest. Before a
+train could get to any villadom with a cargo of season-ticket holders it
+would have to circle about this rescued woodland and travel for twenty
+unprofitable miles, and so once you are away from the main Great Eastern
+lines Essex still lives in the peace of the eighteenth century, and
+London, the modern Babylon, is, like the stars, just a light in the
+nocturnal sky. In Matching's Easy, as Mr. Britling presently explained
+to Mr. Direck, there are half-a-dozen old people who have never set eyes
+on London in their lives--and do not want to.
+
+"Aye-ya!"
+
+"Fussin' about thea."
+
+"Mr. Robinson, 'e went to Lon', 'e did. That's 'ow 'e 'urt 'is fut."
+
+Mr. Direck had learnt at the main-line junction that he had to tell the
+guard to stop the train for Matching's Easy; it only stopped "by
+request"; the thing was getting better and better; and when Mr. Direck
+seized his grip and got out of the train there was just one little old
+Essex station-master and porter and signalman and everything, holding a
+red flag in his hand and talking to Mr. Britling about the cultivation
+of the sweet peas which glorified the station. And there was the Mr.
+Britling who was the only item of business and the greatest expectation
+in Mr. Direck's European journey, and he was quite unlike the portraits
+Mr. Direck had seen and quite unmistakably Mr. Britling all the same,
+since there was nobody else upon the platform, and he was advancing with
+a gesture of welcome.
+
+"Did you ever see such peas, Mr. Dick?" said Mr. Britling by way of
+introduction.
+
+"My _word_," said Mr. Direck in a good old Farmer Hayseed kind of voice.
+
+"Aye-ya!" said the station-master in singularly strident tones. "It be a
+rare year for sweet peas," and then he slammed the door of the carriage
+in a leisurely manner and did dismissive things with his flag, while the
+two gentlemen took stock, as people say, of one another.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+Except in the doubtful instance of Miss Mamie Nelson, Mr. Direck's habit
+was good fortune. Pleasant things came to him. Such was his position as
+the salaried secretary of this society of thoughtful Massachusetts
+business men to which allusion has been made. Its purpose was to bring
+itself expeditiously into touch with the best thought of the age.
+
+Too busily occupied with practical realities to follow the thought of
+the age through all its divagations and into all its recesses, these
+Massachusetts business men had had to consider methods of access more
+quintessential and nuclear. And they had decided not to hunt out the
+best thought in its merely germinating stages, but to wait until it had
+emerged and flowered to some trustworthy recognition, and then, rather
+than toil through recondite and possibly already reconsidered books and
+writings generally, to offer an impressive fee to the emerged new
+thinker, and to invite him to come to them and to lecture to them and to
+have a conference with them, and to tell them simply, competently and
+completely at first hand just all that he was about. To come, in fact,
+and be himself--in a highly concentrated form. In this way a number of
+interesting Europeans had been given very pleasant excursions to
+America, and the society had been able to form very definite opinions
+upon their teaching. And Mr. Britling was one of the representative
+thinkers upon which this society had decided to inform itself. It was to
+broach this invitation and to offer him the impressive honorarium by
+which the society honoured not only its guests but itself, that Mr.
+Direck had now come to Matching's Easy. He had already sent Mr. Britling
+a letter of introduction, not indeed intimating his precise purpose, but
+mentioning merely a desire to know him, and the letter had been so
+happily phrased and its writer had left such a memory of pleasant
+hospitality on Mr. Britling's mind during Mr. Britling's former visit to
+New York, that it had immediately produced for Mr. Direck an invitation
+not merely to come and see him but to come and stay over the week-end.
+
+And here they were shaking hands.
+
+Mr. Britling did not look at all as Mr. Direck had expected him to look.
+He had expected an Englishman in a country costume of golfing tweeds,
+like the Englishman in country costume one sees in American illustrated
+stories. Drooping out of the country costume of golfing tweeds he had
+expected to see the mildly unhappy face, pensive even to its drooping
+moustache, with which Mr. Britling's publisher had for some faulty and
+unfortunate reason familiarised the American public. Instead of this,
+Mr. Britling was in a miscellaneous costume, and mildness was the last
+quality one could attribute to him. His moustache, his hair, his
+eyebrows bristled; his flaming freckled face seemed about to bristle
+too. His little hazel eyes came out with a "ping" and looked at Mr.
+Direck. Mr. Britling was one of a large but still remarkable class of
+people who seem at the mere approach of photography to change their
+hair, their clothes, their moral natures. No photographer had ever
+caught a hint of his essential Britlingness and bristlingness. Only the
+camera could ever induce Mr. Britling to brush his hair, and for the
+camera alone did he reserve that expression of submissive martyrdom Mr.
+Direck knew. And Mr. Direck was altogether unprepared for a certain
+casualness of costume that sometimes overtook Mr. Britling. He was
+wearing now a very old blue flannel blazer, no hat, and a pair of
+knickerbockers, not tweed breeches but tweed knickerbockers of a
+remarkable bagginess, and made of one of those virtuous socialistic
+homespun tweeds that drag out into woolly knots and strings wherever
+there is attrition. His stockings were worsted and wrinkled, and on his
+feet were those extraordinary slippers of bright-coloured bast-like
+interwoven material one buys in the north of France. These were purple
+with a touch of green. He had, in fact, thought of the necessity of
+meeting Mr. Direck at the station at the very last moment, and had come
+away from his study in the clothes that had happened to him when he got
+up. His face wore the amiable expression of a wire-haired terrier
+disposed to be friendly, and it struck Mr. Direck that for a man of his
+real intellectual distinction Mr. Britling was unusually short.
+
+For there can be no denying that Mr. Britling was, in a sense,
+distinguished. The hero and subject of this novel was at its very
+beginning a distinguished man. He was in the _Who's Who_ of two
+continents. In the last few years he had grown with some rapidity into a
+writer recognised and welcomed by the more cultivated sections of the
+American public, and even known to a select circle of British readers.
+To his American discoverers he had first appeared as an essayist, a
+serious essayist who wrote about aesthetics and Oriental thought and
+national character and poets and painting. He had come through America
+some years ago as one of those Kahn scholars, those promising writers
+and intelligent men endowed by Auguste Kahn of Paris, who go about the
+world nowadays in comfort and consideration as the travelling guests of
+that original philanthropist--to acquire the international spirit.
+Previously he had been a critic of art and literature and a writer of
+thoughtful third leaders in the London _Times_. He had begun with a
+Pembroke fellowship and a prize poem. He had returned from his world
+tour to his reflective yet original corner of _The Times_ and to the
+production of books about national relationships and social psychology,
+that had brought him rapidly into prominence.
+
+His was a naturally irritable mind, which gave him point and passion;
+and moreover he had a certain obstinate originality and a generous
+disposition. So that he was always lively, sometimes spacious, and never
+vile. He loved to write and talk. He talked about everything, he had
+ideas about everything; he could no more help having ideas about
+everything than a dog can resist smelling at your heels. He sniffed at
+the heels of reality. Lots of people found him interesting and
+stimulating, a few found him seriously exasperating. He had ideas in the
+utmost profusion about races and empires and social order and political
+institutions and gardens and automobiles and the future of India and
+China and aesthetics and America and the education of mankind in
+general.... And all that sort of thing....
+
+Mr. Direck had read a very great deal of all this expressed
+opiniativeness of Mr. Britling: he found it entertaining and stimulating
+stuff, and it was with genuine enthusiasm that he had come over to
+encounter the man himself. On his way across the Atlantic and during
+the intervening days, he had rehearsed this meeting in varying keys, but
+always on the supposition that Mr. Britling was a large, quiet,
+thoughtful sort of man, a man who would, as it were, sit in attentive
+rows like a public meeting and listen. So Mr. Direck had prepared quite
+a number of pleasant and attractive openings, and now he felt was the
+moment for some one of these various simple, memorable utterances. But
+in none of these forecasts had he reckoned with either the spontaneous
+activities of Mr. Britling or with the station-master of Matching's
+Easy. Oblivious of any conversational necessities between Mr. Direck and
+Mr. Britling, this official now took charge of Mr. Direck's grip-sack,
+and, falling into line with the two gentlemen as they walked towards the
+exit gate, resumed what was evidently an interrupted discourse upon
+sweet peas, originally addressed to Mr. Britling.
+
+He was a small, elderly man with a determined-looking face and a sea
+voice, and it was clear he overestimated the distance of his hearers.
+
+"Mr. Darling what's head gardener up at Claverings, _'e_ can't get sweet
+peas like that, try _'ow_ 'e will. Tried everything 'e 'as. Sand
+ballast, 'e's tried. Seeds same as me. 'E came along 'ere only the other
+day, 'e did, and 'e says to me, 'e says, 'darned 'f I can see why a
+station-master should beat a professional gardener at 'is own game,' 'e
+says, 'but you do. And in your orf time, too, so's to speak,' 'e says.
+'I've tried sile,' 'e says--"
+
+"Your first visit to England?" asked Mr. Britling of his guest.
+
+"Absolutely," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"I says to 'im, 'there's one thing you 'aven't tried,' I says," the
+station-master continued, raising his voice by a Herculean feat still
+higher.
+
+"I've got a little car outside here," said Mr. Britling. "I'm a couple
+of miles from the station."
+
+"I says to 'im, I says, ''ave you tried the vibritation of the trains?'
+I says. 'That's what you 'aven't tried, Mr. Darling. That's what you
+_can't_ try,' I says. 'But you rest assured that that's the secret of my
+sweet peas,' I says, 'nothing less and nothing more than the vibritation
+of the trains.'"
+
+Mr. Direck's mind was a little confused by the double nature of the
+conversation and by the fact that Mr. Britling spoke of a car when
+he meant an automobile. He handed his ticket mechanically to the
+station-master, who continued to repeat and endorse his anecdote at the
+top of his voice as Mr. Britling disposed himself and his guest in the
+automobile.
+
+"You know you 'aven't 'urt that mud-guard, sir, not the slightest bit
+that matters," shouted the station-master. "I've been a looking at
+it--er. It's my fence that's suffered most. And that's only strained
+the post a lil' bit. Shall I put your bag in behind, sir?"
+
+Mr. Direck assented, and then, after a momentary hesitation, rewarded
+the station-master's services.
+
+"Ready?" asked Mr. Britling.
+
+"That's all right sir," the station-master reverberated.
+
+With a rather wide curve Mr. Britling steered his way out of the station
+into the highroad.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+And now it seemed was the time for Mr. Direck to make his meditated
+speeches. But an unexpected complication was to defeat this intention.
+Mr. Direck perceived almost at once that Mr. Britling was probably
+driving an automobile for the first or second or at the extremest the
+third time in his life.
+
+The thing became evident when he struggled to get into the high gear--an
+attempt that stopped the engine, and it was even more startlingly so
+when Mr. Britling narrowly missed a collision with a baker's cart at a
+corner. "I pressed the accelerator," he explained afterwards, "instead
+of the brake. One does at first. I missed him by less than a foot."
+The estimate was a generous one. And after that Mr. Direck became
+too anxious not to distract his host's thoughts to persist with his
+conversational openings. An attentive silence came upon both gentlemen
+that was broken presently by a sudden outcry from Mr. Britling and a
+great noise of tormented gears. "Damn!" cried Mr. Britling, and "How
+the _devil_?"
+
+Mr. Direck perceived that his host was trying to turn the car into a
+very beautiful gateway, with gate-houses on either side. Then it was
+manifest that Mr. Britling had abandoned this idea, and then they came
+to a stop a dozen yards or so along the main road. "Missed it," said Mr.
+Britling, and took his hands off the steering wheel and blew stormily,
+and then whistled some bars of a fretful air, and became still.
+
+"Do we go through these ancient gates?" asked Mr. Direck.
+
+Mr. Britling looked over his right shoulder and considered problems of
+curvature and distance. "I think," he said, "I will go round outside the
+park. It will take us a little longer, but it will be simpler than
+backing and manoeuvring here now.... These electric starters are
+remarkably convenient things. Otherwise now I should have to get down
+and wind up the engine."
+
+After that came a corner, the rounding of which seemed to present few
+difficulties until suddenly Mr. Britling cried out, "Eh! _eh_! EH! Oh,
+_damn_!"
+
+Then the two gentlemen were sitting side by side in a rather sloping car
+that had ascended the bank and buried its nose in a hedge of dog-rose
+and honeysuckle, from which two missel thrushes, a blackbird and a
+number of sparrows had made a hurried escape....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+"Perhaps," said Mr. Britling without assurance, and after a little
+peaceful pause, "I can reverse out of this."
+
+He seemed to feel some explanation was due to Mr. Direck. "You see,
+at first--it's perfectly simple--one steers _round_ a corner and then
+one doesn't put the wheels straight again, and so one keeps on going
+round--more than one meant to. It's the bicycle habit; the bicycle
+rights itself. One expects a car to do the same thing. It was my fault.
+The book explains all this question clearly, but just at the moment
+I forgot."
+
+He reflected and experimented in a way that made the engine scold
+and fuss....
+
+"You see, she won't budge for the reverse.... She's--embedded.... Do you
+mind getting out and turning the wheel back? Then if I reverse, perhaps
+we'll get a move on...."
+
+Mr. Direck descended, and there were considerable efforts.
+
+"If you'd just grip the spokes. Yes, so.... One, Two, Three!... No!
+Well, let's just sit here until somebody comes along to help us. Oh!
+Somebody will come all right. Won't you get up again?"
+
+And after a reflective moment Mr. Direck resumed his seat beside
+Mr. Britling....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+The two gentlemen smiled at each other to dispel any suspicion of
+discontent.
+
+"My driving leaves something to be desired," said Mr. Britling with
+an air of frank impartiality. "But I have only just got this car for
+myself--after some years of hired cars--the sort of lazy arrangement
+where people supply car, driver, petrol, tyres, insurance and everything
+at so much a month. It bored me abominably. I can't imagine now how
+I stood it for so long. They sent me down a succession of compact,
+scornful boys who used to go fast when I wanted to go slow, and slow
+when I wanted to go fast, and who used to take every corner on the
+wrong side at top speed, and charge dogs and hens for the sport of it,
+and all sorts of things like that. They would not even let me choose my
+roads. I should have got myself a car long ago, and driven it, if it
+wasn't for that infernal business with a handle one had to do when the
+engine stopped. But here, you see, is a reasonably cheap car with an
+electric starter--American, I need scarcely say. And here I am--going
+at my own pace."
+
+Mr. Direck glanced for a moment at the pretty disorder of the hedge in
+which they were embedded, and smiled and admitted that it was certainly
+much more agreeable.
+
+Before he had finished saying as much Mr. Britling was talking again.
+
+He had a quick and rather jerky way of speaking; he seemed to fire out a
+thought directly it came into his mind, and he seemed to have a loaded
+magazine of thoughts in his head. He spoke almost exactly twice as fast
+as Mr. Direck, clipping his words much more, using much compacter
+sentences, and generally cutting his corners, and this put Mr. Direck
+off his game.
+
+That rapid attack while the transatlantic interlocutor is deploying is
+indeed a not infrequent defect of conversations between Englishmen and
+Americans. It is a source of many misunderstandings. The two conceptions
+of conversation differ fundamentally. The English are much less disposed
+to listen than the American; they have not quite the same sense of
+conversational give and take, and at first they are apt to reduce their
+visitors to the role of auditors wondering when their turn will begin.
+Their turn never does begin. Mr. Direck sat deeply in his slanting seat
+with a half face to his celebrated host and said "Yep" and "Sure" and
+"That _is_ so," in the dry grave tones that he believed an Englishman
+would naturally expect him to use, realising this only very gradually.
+
+Mr. Britling, from his praise of the enterprise that had at last brought
+a car he could drive within his reach, went on to that favourite topic
+of all intelligent Englishmen, the adverse criticism of things British.
+He pointed out that the central position of the brake and gear levers in
+his automobile made it extremely easy for the American manufacturer to
+turn it out either as a left-handed or a right-handed car, and so adapt
+it either to the Continental or to the British rule of the road. No
+English cars were so adaptable. We British suffered much from our
+insular rule of the road, just as we suffered much from our insular
+weights and measures. But we took a perverse pride in such
+disadvantages. The irruption of American cars into England was a recent
+phenomenon, it was another triumph for the tremendous organising ability
+of the American mind. They were doing with the automobile what they had
+done with clocks and watches and rifles, they had standardised and
+machined wholesale, while the British were still making the things one
+by one. It was an extraordinary thing that England, which was the
+originator of the industrial system and the original developer of the
+division of labour, should have so fallen away from systematic
+manufacturing. He believed this was largely due to the influence of
+Oxford and the Established Church....
+
+At this point Mr. Direck was moved by an anecdote. "It will help to
+illustrate what you are saying, Mr. Britling, about systematic
+organisation if I tell you a little incident that happened to a friend
+of mine in Toledo, where they are setting up a big plant with a view to
+capturing the entire American and European market in the class of the
+thousand-dollar car--"
+
+"There's no end of such little incidents," said Mr. Britling, cutting in
+without apparent effort. "You see, we get it on both sides. Our
+manufacturer class was, of course, originally an insurgent class. It was
+a class of distended craftsmen. It had the craftsman's natural
+enterprise and natural radicalism. As soon as it prospered and sent its
+boys to Oxford it was lost. Our manufacturing class was assimilated in
+no time to the conservative classes, whose education has always had a
+mandarin quality--very, very little of it, and very cold and choice. In
+America you have so far had no real conservative class at all. Fortunate
+continent! You cast out your Tories, and you were left with nothing but
+Whigs and Radicals. But our peculiar bad luck has been to get a sort of
+revolutionary who is a Tory mandarin too. Ruskin and Morris, for
+example, were as reactionary and anti-scientific as the dukes and the
+bishops. Machine haters. Science haters. Rule of Thumbites to the bone.
+So are our current Socialists. They've filled this country with the idea
+that the ideal automobile ought to be made entirely by the hand labour
+of traditional craftsmen, quite individually, out of beaten copper,
+wrought iron and seasoned oak. All this electric-starter business and
+this electric lighting outfit I have here, is perfectly hateful to the
+English mind.... It isn't that we are simply backward in these things,
+we are antagonistic. The British mind has never really tolerated
+electricity; at least, not that sort of electricity that runs through
+wires. Too slippery and glib for it. Associates it with Italians and
+fluency generally, with Volta, Galvani, Marconi and so on. The proper
+British electricity is that high-grade useless long-sparking stuff you
+get by turning round a glass machine; stuff we used to call frictional
+electricity. Keep it in Leyden jars.... At Claverings here they still
+refuse to have electric bells. There was a row when the Solomonsons, who
+were tenants here for a time, tried to put them in...."
+
+Mr. Direck had followed this cascade of remarks with a patient smile and
+a slowly nodding head. "What you say," he said, "forms a very marked
+contrast indeed with the sort of thing that goes on in America. This
+friend of mine I was speaking of, the one who is connected with an
+automobile factory in Toledo--"
+
+"Of course," Mr. Britling burst out again, "even conservatism isn't an
+ultimate thing. After all, we and your enterprising friend at Toledo,
+are very much the same blood. The conservatism, I mean, isn't racial.
+And our earlier energy shows it isn't in the air or in the soil. England
+has become unenterprising and sluggish because England has been so
+prosperous and comfortable...."
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Direck. "My friend of whom I was telling you, was a
+man named Robinson, which indicates pretty clearly that he was of
+genuine English stock, and, if I may say so, quite of your build and
+complexion; racially, I should say, he was, well--very much what you
+are...."
+
+
+Section 7
+
+This rally of Mr. Direck's mind was suddenly interrupted.
+
+Mr. Britling stood up, and putting both hands to the sides of his mouth,
+shouted "Yi-ah! Aye-ya! Thea!" at unseen hearers.
+
+After shouting again, several times, it became manifest that he had
+attracted the attention of two willing but deliberate labouring men.
+They emerged slowly, first as attentive heads, from the landscape. With
+their assistance the car was restored to the road again. Mr. Direck
+assisted manfully, and noted the respect that was given to Mr. Britling
+and the shillings that fell to the men, with an intelligent detachment.
+They touched their hats, they called Mr. Britling "Sir." They examined
+the car distantly but kindly. "Ain't 'urt 'e, not a bit 'e ain't, not
+really," said one encouragingly. And indeed except for a slight
+crumpling of the mud-guard and the detachment of the wire of one of the
+headlights the automobile was uninjured. Mr. Britling resumed his seat;
+Mr. Direck gravely and in silence got up beside him. They started with
+the usual convulsion, as though something had pricked the vehicle
+unexpectedly and shamefully behind. And from this point Mr. Britling,
+driving with meticulous care, got home without further mishap, excepting
+only that he scraped off some of the metal edge of his footboard
+against the gate-post of his very agreeable garden.
+
+His family welcomed his safe return, visitor and all, with undisguised
+relief and admiration. A small boy appeared at the corner of the house,
+and then disappeared hastily again. "Daddy's got back all right at
+last," they heard him shouting to unseen hearers.
+
+
+Section 8
+
+Mr. Direck, though he was a little incommoded by the suppression of his
+story about Robinson--for when he had begun a thing he liked to finish
+it--found Mr. Britling's household at once thoroughly British, quite
+un-American and a little difficult to follow. It had a quality that at
+first he could not define at all. Compared with anything he had ever
+seen in his life before it struck him as being--he found the word at
+last--sketchy. For instance, he was introduced to nobody except his
+hostess, and she was indicated to him by a mere wave of Mr. Britling's
+hand. "That's Edith," he said, and returned at once to his car to put it
+away. Mrs. Britling was a tall, freckled woman with pretty bright brown
+hair and preoccupied brown eyes. She welcomed him with a handshake, and
+then a wonderful English parlourmaid--she at least was according to
+expectations--took his grip-sack and guided him to his room. "Lunch,
+sir," she said, "is outside," and closed the door and left him to that
+and a towel-covered can of hot water.
+
+It was a square-looking old red-brick house he had come to, very
+handsome in a simple Georgian fashion, with a broad lawn before it and
+great blue cedar trees, and a drive that came frankly up to the front
+door and then went off with Mr. Britling and the car round to unknown
+regions at the back. The centre of the house was a big airy hall,
+oak-panelled, warmed in winter only by one large fireplace and abounding
+in doors which he knew opened into the square separate rooms that
+England favours. Bookshelves and stuffed birds comforted the landing
+outside his bedroom. He descended to find the hall occupied by a small
+bright bristling boy in white flannel shirt and knickerbockers and bare
+legs and feet. He stood before the vacant open fireplace in an attitude
+that Mr. Direck knew instantly was also Mr. Britling's. "Lunch is in the
+garden," the Britling scion proclaimed, "and I've got to fetch you. And,
+I say! is it true? Are you American?"
+
+"Why surely," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"Well, I know some American," said the boy. "I learnt it."
+
+"Tell me some," said Mr. Direck, smiling still more amiably.
+
+"Oh! Well--God darn you! Ouch, Gee-whizz! Soak him, Maud! It's up to
+you, Duke...."
+
+"Now where did you learn all that?" asked Mr. Direck recovering.
+
+"Out of the Sunday Supplement," said the youthful Britling.
+
+"Why! Then you know all about Buster Brown," said Mr. Direck. "He's
+Fine--eh?"
+
+The Britling child hated Buster Brown. He regarded Buster Brown as a
+totally unnecessary infant. He detested the way he wore his hair and the
+peculiar cut of his knickerbockers and--him. He thought Buster Brown the
+one drop of paraffin in the otherwise delicious feast of the Sunday
+Supplement. But he was a diplomatic child.
+
+"I think I like Happy Hooligan better," he said. "And dat ole Maud."
+
+He reflected with joyful eyes, Buster clean forgotten. "Every week," he
+said, "she kicks some one."
+
+It came to Mr. Direck as a very pleasant discovery that a British infant
+could find a common ground with the small people at home in these
+characteristically American jests. He had never dreamt that the fine
+wine of Maud and Buster could travel.
+
+"Maud's a treat," said the youthful Britling, relapsing into his native
+tongue.
+
+Mr. Britling appeared coming to meet them. He was now in a grey flannel
+suit--he must have jumped into it--and altogether very much tidier....
+
+
+Section 9
+
+The long narrow table under the big sycamores between the house and the
+adapted barn that Mr. Direck learnt was used for "dancing and all that
+sort of thing," was covered with a blue linen diaper cloth, and that too
+surprised him. This was his first meal in a private household in
+England, and for obscure reasons he had expected something very stiff
+and formal with "spotless napery." He had also expected a very stiff and
+capable service by implacable parlourmaids, and the whole thing indeed
+highly genteel. But two cheerful women servants appeared from what was
+presumably the kitchen direction, wheeling a curious wicker erection,
+which his small guide informed him was called Aunt Clatter--manifestly
+deservedly--and which bore on its shelves the substance of the meal. And
+while the maids at this migratory sideboard carved and opened bottles
+and so forth, the small boy and a slightly larger brother, assisted a
+little by two young men of no very defined position and relationship,
+served the company. Mrs. Britling sat at the head of the table, and
+conversed with Mr. Direck by means of hostess questions and imperfectly
+accepted answers while she kept a watchful eye on the proceedings.
+
+The composition of the company was a matter for some perplexity to Mr.
+Direck. Mr. and Mrs. Britling were at either end of the table, that was
+plain enough. It was also fairly plain that the two barefooted boys were
+little Britlings. But beyond this was a cloud of uncertainty. There was
+a youth of perhaps seventeen, much darker than Britling but with nose
+and freckles rather like his, who might be an early son or a stepson; he
+was shock-headed and with that look about his arms and legs that
+suggests overnight growth; and there was an unmistakable young German,
+very pink, with close-cropped fair hair, glasses and a panama hat, who
+was probably the tutor of the younger boys. (Mr. Direck also was wearing
+his hat, his mind had been filled with an exaggerated idea of the
+treacheries of the English climate before he left New York. Every one
+else was hatless.) Finally, before one reached the limits of the
+explicable there was a pleasant young man with a lot of dark hair and
+very fine dark blue eyes, whom everybody called "Teddy." For him, Mr.
+Direck hazarded "secretary."
+
+But in addition to these normal and understandable presences, there was
+an entirely mysterious pretty young woman in blue linen who sat and
+smiled next to Mr. Britling, and there was a rather kindred-looking girl
+with darker hair on the right of Mr. Direck who impressed him at the
+very outset as being still prettier, and--he didn't quite place her at
+first--somehow familiar to him; there was a large irrelevant middle-aged
+lady in black with a gold chain and a large nose, between Teddy and the
+tutor; there was a tall middle-aged man with an intelligent face, who
+might be a casual guest; there was an Indian young gentleman faultlessly
+dressed up to his brown soft linen collar and cuffs, and thereafter an
+uncontrolled outbreak of fine bronze modelling and abundant fuzzy hair;
+and there was a very erect and attentive baby of a year or less, sitting
+up in a perambulator and gesticulating cheerfully to everybody. This
+baby it was that most troubled the orderly mind of Mr. Direck. The
+research for its paternity made his conversation with Mrs. Britling
+almost as disconnected and absent-minded as her conversation with him.
+It almost certainly wasn't Mrs. Britling's. The girl next to him or the
+girl next to Mr. Britling or the lady in black might any of them be
+married, but if so where was the spouse? It seemed improbable that they
+would wheel out a foundling to lunch....
+
+Realising at last that the problem of relationship must be left to solve
+itself if he did not want to dissipate and consume his mind entirely,
+Mr. Direck turned to his hostess, who was enjoying a brief lull in her
+administrative duties, and told her what a memorable thing the meeting
+of Mr. Britling in his own home would be in his life, and how very
+highly America was coming to esteem Mr. Britling and his essays. He
+found that with a slight change of person, one of his premeditated
+openings was entirely serviceable here. And he went on to observe that
+it was novel and entertaining to find Mr. Britling driving his own
+automobile and to note that it was an automobile of American
+manufacture. In America they had standardised and systematised the
+making of such things as automobiles to an extent that would, he
+thought, be almost startling to Europeans. It was certainly startling to
+the European manufacturers. In illustration of that he might tell a
+little story of a friend of his called Robinson--a man who curiously
+enough in general build and appearance was very reminiscent indeed of
+Mr. Britling. He had been telling Mr. Britling as much on his way here
+from the station. His friend was concerned with several others in one of
+the biggest attacks that had ever been made upon what one might describe
+in general terms as the thousand-dollar light automobile market. What
+they said practically was this: This market is a jig-saw puzzle waiting
+to be put together and made one. We are going to do it. But that was
+easier to figure out than to do. At the very outset of this attack he
+and his associates found themselves up against an unexpected and very
+difficult proposition....
+
+At first Mrs. Britling had listened to Mr. Direck with an almost
+undivided attention, but as he had developed his opening the feast upon
+the blue linen table had passed on to a fresh phase that demanded more
+and more of her directive intelligence. The two little boys appeared
+suddenly at her elbows. "Shall we take the plates and get the
+strawberries, Mummy?" they asked simultaneously. Then one of the neat
+maids in the background had to be called up and instructed in
+undertones, and Mr. Direck saw that for the present Robinson's
+illuminating experience was not for her ears. A little baffled, but
+quite understanding how things were, he turned to his neighbour on his
+left....
+
+The girl really had an extraordinarily pretty smile, and there was
+something in her soft bright brown eye--like the movement of some quick
+little bird. And--she was like somebody he knew! Indeed she was. She was
+quite ready to be spoken to.
+
+"I was telling Mrs. Britling," said Mr. Direck, "what a very great
+privilege I esteem it to meet Mr. Britling in this highly familiar way."
+
+"You've not met him before?"
+
+"I missed him by twenty-four hours when he came through Boston on the
+last occasion. Just twenty-four hours. It was a matter of very great
+regret to me."
+
+"I wish I'd been paid to travel round the world."
+
+"You must write things like Mr. Britling and then Mr. Kahn will send
+you."
+
+"Don't you think if I promised well?"
+
+"You'd have to write some promissory notes, I think--just to convince
+him it was all right."
+
+The young lady reflected on Mr. Britling's good fortune.
+
+"He saw India. He saw Japan. He had weeks in Egypt. And he went right
+across America."
+
+Mr. Direck had already begun on the liner to adapt himself to the
+hopping inconsecutiveness of English conversation. He made now what he
+felt was quite a good hop, and he dropped his voice to a confidential
+undertone. (It was probably Adam in his first conversation with Eve, who
+discovered the pleasantness of dropping into a confidential undertone
+beside a pretty ear with a pretty wave of hair above it.)
+
+"It was in India, I presume," murmured Mr. Direck, "that Mr. Britling
+made the acquaintance of the coloured gentleman?"
+
+"Coloured gentleman!" She gave a swift glance down the table as though
+she expected to see something purple with yellow spots. "Oh, that is one
+of Mr. Lawrence Carmine's young men!" she explained even more
+confidentially and with an air of discussing the silver bowl of roses
+before him. "He's a great authority on Indian literature, he belongs to
+a society for making things pleasant for Indian students in London, and
+he has them down."
+
+"And Mr. Lawrence Carmine?" he pursued.
+
+Even more intimately and confidentially she indicated Mr. Carmine, as it
+seemed by a motion of her eyelash.
+
+Mr. Direck prepared to be even more _sotto-voce_ and to plumb a much
+profounder mystery. His eye rested on the perambulator; he leant a
+little nearer to the ear.... But the strawberries interrupted him.
+
+"Strawberries!" said the young lady, and directed his regard to his left
+shoulder by a little movement of her head.
+
+He found one of the boys with a high-piled plate ready to serve him.
+
+And then Mrs. Britling resumed her conversation with him. She was so
+ignorant, she said, of things American, that she did not even know if
+they had strawberries there. At any rate, here they were at the crest of
+the season, and in a very good year. And in the rose season too. It was
+one of the dearest vanities of English people to think their apples and
+their roses and their strawberries the best in the world.
+
+"And their complexions," said Mr. Direck, over the pyramid of fruit,
+quite manifestly intending a compliment. So that was all right.... But
+the girl on the left of him was speaking across the table to the German
+tutor, and did not hear what he had said. So that even if it wasn't
+very neat it didn't matter....
+
+Then he remembered that she was like that old daguerreotype of a cousin
+of his grandmother's that he had fallen in love with when he was a boy.
+It was her smile. Of course! Of course!... And he'd sort of adored that
+portrait.... He felt a curious disposition to tell her as much....
+
+"What makes this visit even more interesting if possible to me," he said
+to Mrs. Britling, "than it would otherwise be, is that this Essex
+country is the country in which my maternal grandmother was raised, and
+also long way back my mother's father's people. My mother's father's
+people were very early New England people indeed.... Well, no. If I said
+_Mayflower_ it wouldn't be true. But it would approximate. They were
+Essex Hinkinsons. That's what they were. I must be a good third of me at
+least Essex. My grandmother was an Essex Corner, I must confess I've had
+some thought--"
+
+"Corner?" said the young lady at his elbow sharply.
+
+"I was telling Mrs. Britling I had some thought--"
+
+"But about those Essex relatives of yours?"
+
+"Well, of finding if they were still about in these parts.... Say! I
+haven't dropped a brick, have I?"
+
+He looked from one face to another.
+
+"_She's_ a Corner," said Mrs. Britling.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Direck, and hesitated for a moment. It was so
+delightful that one couldn't go on being just discreet. The atmosphere
+was free and friendly. His intonation disarmed offence. And he gave the
+young lady the full benefit of a quite expressive eye. "I'm very pleased
+to meet you, Cousin Corner. How are the old folks at home?"
+
+
+Section 10
+
+The bright interest of this consulship helped Mr. Direck more than
+anything to get the better of his Robinson-anecdote crave, and when
+presently he found his dialogue with Mr. Britling resumed, he turned at
+once to this remarkable discovery of his long lost and indeed hitherto
+unsuspected relative. "It's an American sort of thing to do, I suppose,"
+he said apologetically, "but I almost thought of going on, on Monday, to
+Market Saffron, which was the locality of the Hinkinsons, and just
+looking about at the tombstones in the churchyard for a day or so."
+
+"Very probably," said Mr. Britling, "you'd find something about them in
+the parish registers. Lots of our registers go back three hundred years
+or more. I'll drive you over in my lil' old car."
+
+"Oh! I wouldn't put you to that trouble," said Mr. Direck hastily.
+
+"It's no trouble. I like the driving. What I have had of it. And while
+we're at it, we'll come back by Harborough High Oak and look up the
+Corner pedigree. They're all over that district still. And the road's
+not really difficult; it's only a bit up and down and roundabout."
+
+"I couldn't think, Mr. Britling, of putting you to that much trouble."
+
+"It's no trouble. I want a day off, and I'm dying to take Gladys--"
+
+"Gladys?" said Mr. Direck with sudden hope.
+
+"That's my name for the lil' car. I'm dying to take her for something
+like a decent run. I've only had her out four times altogether, and I've
+not got her up yet to forty miles. Which I'm told she ought to do
+easily. We'll consider that settled."
+
+For the moment Mr. Direck couldn't think of any further excuse. But it
+was very clear in his mind that something must happen; he wished he knew
+of somebody who could send a recall telegram from London, to prevent him
+committing himself to the casual destinies of Mr. Britling's car again.
+And then another interest became uppermost in his mind.
+
+"You'd hardly believe me," he said, "if I told you that that Miss Corner
+of yours has a quite extraordinary resemblance to a miniature I've got
+away there in America of a cousin of my maternal grandmother's. She
+seems a very pleasant young lady."
+
+But Mr. Britling supplied no further information about Miss Corner.
+
+"It must be very interesting," he said, "to come over here and pick up
+these American families of yours on the monuments and tombstones. You
+know, of course, that district south of Evesham where every other church
+monument bears the stars and stripes, the arms of departed Washingtons.
+I doubt though if you'll still find the name about there. Nor will you
+find many Hinkinsons in Market Saffron. But lots of this country here
+has five or six hundred-year-old families still flourishing. That's why
+Essex is so much more genuinely Old England than Surrey, say, or Kent.
+Round here you'll find Corners and Fairlies, and then you get Capels,
+and then away down towards Dunmow and Braintree Maynards and Byngs. And
+there are oaks and hornbeams in the park about Claverings that have
+echoed to the howling of wolves and the clank of men in armour. All the
+old farms here are moated--because of the wolves. Claverings itself is
+Tudor, and rather fine too. And the cottages still wear thatch...."
+
+He reflected. "Now if you went south of London instead of northward it's
+all different. You're in a different period, a different society. You're
+in London suburbs right down to the sea. You'll find no genuine estates
+left, not of our deep-rooted familiar sort. You'll find millionaires and
+that sort of people, sitting in the old places. Surrey is full of rich
+stockbrokers, company-promoters, bookies, judges, newspaper proprietors.
+Sort of people who fence the paths across their parks. They do something
+to the old places--I don't know what they do--but instantly the
+countryside becomes a villadom. And little sub-estates and red-brick
+villas and art cottages spring up. And a kind of new, hard neatness. And
+pneumatic tyre and automobile spirit advertisements, great glaring
+boards by the roadside. And all the poor people are inspected and rushed
+about until they forget who their grandfathers were. They become villa
+parasites and odd-job men, and grow basely rich and buy gramophones.
+This Essex and yonder Surrey are as different as Russia and Germany. But
+for one American who comes to look at Essex, twenty go to Godalming and
+Guildford and Dorking and Lewes and Canterbury. Those Surrey people are
+not properly English at all. They are strenuous. You have to get on or
+get out. They drill their gardeners, lecture very fast on agricultural
+efficiency, and have miniature rifle ranges in every village. It's a
+county of new notice-boards and barbed-wire fences; there's always a
+policeman round the corner. They dress for dinner. They dress for
+everything. If a man gets up in the night to look for a burglar he puts
+on the correct costume--or doesn't go. They've got a special scientific
+system for urging on their tramps. And they lock up their churches on a
+week-day. Half their soil is hard chalk or a rationalistic sand, only
+suitable for bunkers and villa foundations. And they play golf in a
+large, expensive, thorough way because it's the thing to do.... Now here
+in Essex we're as lax as the eighteenth century. We hunt in any old
+clothes. Our soil is a rich succulent clay; it becomes semi-fluid in
+winter--when we go about in waders shooting duck. All our fingerposts
+have been twisted round by facetious men years ago. And we pool our
+breeds of hens and pigs. Our roses and oaks are wonderful; that alone
+shows that this is the real England. If I wanted to play golf--which I
+don't, being a decent Essex man--I should have to motor ten miles into
+Hertfordshire. And for rheumatics and longevity Surrey can't touch us. I
+want you to be clear on these points, because they really will affect
+your impressions of this place.... This country is a part of the real
+England--England outside London and outside manufactures. It's one with
+Wessex and Mercia or old Yorkshire--or for the matter of that with Meath
+or Lothian. And it's the essential England still...."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+It detracted a little from Mr. Direck's appreciation of this flow of
+information that it was taking them away from the rest of the company.
+He wanted to see more of his new-found cousin, and what the baby and the
+Bengali gentleman--whom manifestly one mustn't call "coloured"--and the
+large-nosed lady and all the other inexplicables would get up to.
+Instead of which Mr. Britling was leading him off alone with an air of
+showing him round the premises, and talking too rapidly and variously
+for a question to be got in edgeways, much less any broaching of the
+matter that Mr. Direck had come over to settle.
+
+There was quite a lot of rose garden, it made the air delicious, and it
+was full of great tumbling bushes of roses and of neglected standards,
+and it had a long pergola of creepers and trailers and a great arbour,
+and underneath over the beds everywhere, contrary to all the rules, the
+blossom of a multitude of pansies and stock and little trailing plants
+swarmed and crowded and scrimmaged and drilled and fought great massed
+attacks. And then Mr. Britling talked their way round a red-walled
+vegetable garden with an abundance of fruit trees, and through a door
+into a terraced square that had once been a farmyard, outside the
+converted barn. The barn doors had been replaced by a door-pierced
+window of glass, and in the middle of the square space a deep tank had
+been made, full of rainwater, in which Mr. Britling remarked casually
+that "everybody" bathed when the weather was hot. Thyme and rosemary and
+suchlike sweet-scented things grew on the terrace about the tank, and
+ten trimmed little trees of _Arbor vitae_ stood sentinel. Mr. Direck was
+tantalisingly aware that beyond some lilac bushes were his new-found
+cousin and the kindred young woman in blue playing tennis with the
+Indian and another young man, while whenever it was necessary the
+large-nosed lady crossed the stage and brooded soothingly over the
+perambulator. And Mr. Britling, choosing a seat from which Mr. Direck
+just couldn't look comfortably through the green branches at the flying
+glimpses of pink and blue and white and brown, continued to talk about
+England and America in relation to each other and everything else under
+the sun.
+
+Presently through a distant gate the two small boys were momentarily
+visible wheeling small but serviceable bicycles, followed after a little
+interval by the German tutor. Then an enormous grey cat came slowly
+across the garden court, and sat down to listen respectfully to Mr.
+Britling. The afternoon sky was an intense blue, with little puff-balls
+of cloud lined out across it.
+
+Occasionally, from chance remarks of Mr. Britling's, Mr. Direck was led
+to infer that his first impressions as an American visitor were being
+related to his host, but as a matter of fact he was permitted to relate
+nothing; Mr. Britling did all the talking. He sat beside his guest and
+spirted and played ideas and reflections like a happy fountain in the
+sunshine.
+
+Mr. Direck sat comfortably, and smoked with quiet appreciation the one
+after-lunch cigar he allowed himself. At any rate, if he himself felt
+rather word-bound, the fountain was nimble and entertaining. He listened
+in a general sort of way to the talk, it was quite impossible to follow
+it thoughtfully throughout all its chinks and turnings, while his eyes
+wandered about the garden and went ever and again to the flitting
+tennis-players beyond the green. It was all very gay and comfortable and
+complete; it was various and delightful without being in the least
+_opulent_; that was one of the little secrets America had to learn. It
+didn't look as though it had been made or bought or cost anything, it
+looked as though it had happened rather luckily....
+
+Mr. Britling's talk became like a wide stream flowing through Mr.
+Direck's mind, bearing along momentary impressions and observations,
+drifting memories of all the crowded English sights and sounds of the
+last five days, filmy imaginations about ancestral names and pretty
+cousins, scraps of those prepared conversational openings on Mr.
+Britling's standing in America, the explanation about the lecture club,
+the still incompletely forgotten purport of the Robinson anecdote....
+
+"Nobody planned the British estate system, nobody planned the British
+aristocratic system, nobody planned the confounded constitution, it came
+about, it was like layer after layer wrapping round an agate, but you
+see it came about so happily in a way, it so suited the climate and the
+temperament of our people and our island, it was on the whole so cosy,
+that our people settled down into it, you can't help settling down into
+it, they had already settled down by the days of Queen Anne, and Heaven
+knows if we shall ever really get away again. We're like that little
+shell the _Lingula_, that is found in the oldest rocks and lives to-day:
+it fitted its easy conditions, and it has never modified since. Why
+should it? It excretes all its disturbing forces. Our younger sons go
+away and found colonial empires. Our surplus cottage children emigrate
+to Australia and Canada or migrate into the towns. It doesn't alter
+_this_...."
+
+
+Section 12
+
+Mr. Direck's eye had come to rest upon the barn, and its expression
+changed slowly from lazy appreciation to a brightening intelligence.
+Suddenly he resolved to say something. He resolved to say it so firmly
+that he determined to say it even if Mr. Britling went on talking all
+the time.
+
+"I suppose, Mr. Britling," he said, "this barn here dates from the days
+of Queen Anne."
+
+"The walls of the yard here are probably earlier: probably monastic.
+That grey patch in the corner, for example. The barn itself is
+Georgian."
+
+"And here it is still. And this farmyard, here it is still."
+
+Mr. Britling was for flying off again, but Mr. Direck would not listen;
+he held on like a man who keeps his grip on a lasso.
+
+"There's one thing I would like to remark about your barn, Mr. Britling,
+and I might, while I am at it, say the same thing about your farmyard."
+
+Mr. Britling was held. "What's that?" he asked.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Direck, "the point that strikes me most about all this
+is that that barn isn't a barn any longer, and that this farmyard isn't
+a farmyard. There isn't any wheat or chaff or anything of that sort in
+the barn, and there never will be again: there's just a pianola and a
+dancing floor, and if a cow came into this farmyard everybody in the
+place would be shooing it out again. They'd regard it as a most
+unnatural object."
+
+He had a pleasant sense of talking at last. He kept right on. He was
+moved to a sweeping generalisation.
+
+"You were so good as to ask me, Mr. Britling, a little while ago, what
+my first impression of England was. Well, Mr. Britling, my first
+impression of England that seems to me to matter in the least is this:
+that it looks and feels more like the traditional Old England than any
+one could possibly have believed, and that in reality it is less like
+the traditional Old England than any one would ever possibly have
+imagined."
+
+He was carried on even further. He made a tremendous literary epigram.
+"I thought," he said, "when I looked out of the train this morning that
+I had come to the England of Washington Irving. I find it is not even
+the England of Mrs. Humphry Ward."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE SECOND
+
+MR. BRITLING CONTINUES HIS EXPOSITION
+
+
+Section 1
+
+Mr. Direck found little reason to revise his dictum in the subsequent
+experiences of the afternoon. Indeed the afternoon and the next day were
+steadily consistent in confirming what a very good dictum it had been.
+The scenery was the traditional scenery of England, and all the people
+seemed quicker, more irresponsible, more chaotic, than any one could
+have anticipated, and entirely inexplicable by any recognised code of
+English relationships....
+
+"You think that John Bull is dead and a strange generation is wearing
+his clothes," said Mr. Britling. "I think you'll find very soon it's the
+old John Bull. Perhaps not Mrs. Humphry Ward's John Bull, or Mrs. Henry
+Wood's John Bull but true essentially to Shakespeare, Fielding, Dickens,
+Meredith...."
+
+"I suppose," he added, "there are changes. There's a new generation
+grown up...."
+
+He looked at his barn and the swimming pool. "It's a good point of yours
+about the barn," he said. "What you say reminds me of that very jolly
+thing of Kipling's about the old mill-wheel that began by grinding corn
+and ended by driving dynamos....
+
+"Only I admit that barn doesn't exactly drive a dynamo....
+
+"To be frank, it's just a pleasure barn....
+
+"The country can afford it...."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+He left it at that for the time, but throughout the afternoon Mr. Direck
+had the gratification of seeing his thought floating round and round in
+the back-waters of Mr. Britling's mental current. If it didn't itself
+get into the stream again its reflection at any rate appeared and
+reappeared. He was taken about with great assiduity throughout the
+afternoon, and he got no more than occasional glimpses of the rest of
+the Dower House circle until six o'clock in the evening.
+
+Meanwhile the fountains of Mr. Britling's active and encyclopaedic mind
+played steadily.
+
+He was inordinately proud of England, and he abused her incessantly. He
+wanted to state England to Mr. Direck as the amiable summation of a
+grotesque assembly of faults. That was the view into which the comforts
+and prosperities of his middle age had brought him from a radicalism
+that had in its earlier stages been angry and bitter. And for Mr.
+Britling England was "here." Essex was the county he knew. He took Mr.
+Direck out from his walled garden by a little door into a trim paddock
+with two white goals. "We play hockey here on Sundays," he said in a way
+that gave Mr. Direck no hint of the practically compulsory participation
+of every visitor to Matching's Easy in this violent and dangerous
+exercise, and thence they passed by a rich deep lane and into a high
+road that ran along the edge of the deer park of Claverings. "We will
+call in on Claverings later," said Mr. Britling. "Lady Homartyn has some
+people there for the week-end, and you ought to see the sort of thing it
+is and the sort of people they are. She wanted us to lunch there
+to-morrow, but I didn't accept that because of our afternoon hockey."
+
+Mr. Direck received this reason uncritically.
+
+The village reminded Mr. Direck of Abbey's pictures. There was an inn
+with a sign standing out in the road, a painted sign of the Clavering
+Arms; it had a water trough (such as Mr. Weller senior ducked the
+dissenter in) and a green painted table outside its inviting door. There
+were also a general shop and a number of very pleasant cottages, each
+marked with the Mainstay crest. All this was grouped about a green with
+real geese drilling thereon. Mr. Britling conducted his visitor (through
+a lych gate) into the church-yard, and there they found mossy,
+tumble-down tombstones, one with a skull and cross-bones upon it, that
+went back to the later seventeenth century. In the aisle of the church
+were three huge hatchments, and there was a side chapel devoted to the
+Mainstay family and the Barons Homartyn, with a series of monuments that
+began with painted Tudor effigies and came down to a vast stained glass
+window of the vilest commercial Victorian. There were also mediaeval
+brasses of parish priests, and a marble crusader and his lady of some
+extinguished family which had ruled Matching's Easy before the Mainstays
+came. And as the two gentlemen emerged from the church they ran against
+the perfect vicar, Mr. Dimple, ample and genial, with an embracing laugh
+and an enveloping voice. "Come to see the old country," he said to Mr.
+Direck. "So Good of you Americans to do that! So Good of you...."
+
+There was some amiable sparring between the worthy man and Mr. Britling
+about bringing Mr. Direck to church on Sunday morning. "He's terribly
+Lax," said Mr. Dimple to Mr. Direck, smiling radiantly. "Terribly Lax.
+But then nowadays Everybody _is_ so Lax. And he's very Good to my Coal
+Club; I don't know what we should do without him. So I just admonish
+him. And if he doesn't go to church, well, anyhow he doesn't go anywhere
+else. He may be a poor churchman, but anyhow he's not a dissenter...."
+
+"In England, you see," Mr. Britling remarked, after they had parted from
+the reverend gentleman, "we have domesticated everything. We have even
+domesticated God."
+
+For awhile Mr. Britling showed Mr. Direck English lanes, and then came
+back along narrow white paths across small fields of rising wheat, to
+the village and a little gate that led into the park.
+
+"Well," said Mr. Direck, "what you say about domestication does seem to
+me to be very true indeed. Why! even those clouds up there look as
+though they had a shepherd and were grazing."
+
+"Ready for shearing almost," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Indeed," said Mr. Direck, raising his voice a little, "I've seen
+scarcely anything in England that wasn't domesticated, unless it was
+some of your back streets in London."
+
+Mr. Britling seemed to reflect for a moment. "They're an excrescence,"
+he said....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+The park had a trim wildness like nature in an old Italian picture;
+dappled fallow deer grouped close at hand and looked at the two men
+fearlessly; the path dropped through oak trees and some stunted bracken
+to a little loitering stream, that paused ever and again to play at
+ponds and waterfalls and bear a fleet of water-lily leaves; and then
+their way curved round in an indolent sweep towards the cedars and
+shrubberies of the great house. The house looked low and extensive to an
+American eye, and its red-brick chimneys rose like infantry in open
+order along its extended line. There was a glimpse of flower-bright
+garden and terraces to the right as they came round the corner to the
+front of the house through a path cut in the laurel bushes.
+
+Mr. Britling had a moment of exposition as they approached the entrance.
+
+"I expect we shall find Philbert from the Home Office--or is it the
+Local Government Board?--and Sir Thomas Loot, the Treasury man. There
+may be some other people of that sort, the people we call the Governing
+Class. Wives also. And I rather fancy the Countess of Frensham is
+coming, she's strong on the Irish Question, and Lady Venetia
+Trumpington, who they say is a beauty--I've never seen her. It's Lady
+Homartyn's way to expect me to come in--not that I'm an important item
+at these week-end social feasts--but she likes to see me on the
+table--to be nibbled at if any one wants to do so--like the olives and
+the salted almonds. And she always asks me to lunch on Sunday and I
+always refuse--because of the hockey. So you see I put in an appearance
+on the Saturday afternoon...."
+
+They had reached the big doorway.
+
+It opened into a large cool hall adorned with the heads of hippopotami
+and rhinoceroses and a stuffed lion, and furnished chiefly with a vast
+table on which hats and sticks and newspapers were littered. A
+manservant with a subdued, semi-confidential manner, conveyed to Mr.
+Britling that her ladyship was on the terrace, and took the hats and
+sticks that were handed to him and led the way through the house. They
+emerged upon a broad terrace looking out under great cedar trees upon
+flower beds and stone urns and tennis lawns and yew hedges that dipped
+to give a view of distant hills. On the terrace were grouped perhaps a
+dozen people for the most part holding teacups, they sat in deck chairs
+and folding seats about a little table that bore the tea-things. Lady
+Homartyn came forward to welcome the newcomers.
+
+Mr. Direck was introduced as a travelling American gratified to see a
+typical English country house, and Lady Homartyn in an habituated way
+ran over the points of her Tudor specimen. Mr. Direck was not accustomed
+to titled people, and was suddenly in doubt whether you called a
+baroness "My Lady" or "Your Ladyship," so he wisely avoided any form of
+address until he had a lead from Mr. Britling. Mr. Britling presently
+called her "Lady Homartyn." She took Mr. Direck and sat him down beside
+a lady whose name he didn't catch, but who had had a lot to do with the
+British Embassy at Washington, and then she handed Mr. Britling over to
+the Rt. Honble. George Philbert, who was anxious to discuss certain
+points in the latest book of essays. The conversation of the lady from
+Washington was intelligent but not exacting, and Mr. Direck was able to
+give a certain amount of attention to the general effect of the scene.
+
+He was a little disappointed to find that the servants didn't wear
+livery. In American magazine pictures and in American cinematograph
+films of English stories and in the houses of very rich Americans living
+in England, they do so. And the Mansion House is misleading; he had met
+a compatriot who had recently dined at the Mansion House, and who had
+described "flunkeys" in hair-powder and cloth of gold--like Thackeray's
+Jeames Yellowplush. But here the only servants were two slim, discreet
+and attentive young gentlemen in black coats with a gentle piety in
+their manner instead of pride. And he was a little disappointed too by a
+certain lack of splendour in the company. The ladies affected him as
+being ill-dressed; there was none of the hard snap, the "_There!_ and
+what do you say to it?" about them of the well-dressed American woman,
+and the men too were not so much tailored as unobtrusively and yet
+grammatically clothed.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+He was still only in the fragmentary stage of conversation when
+everything was thrown into commotion by the important arrival of Lady
+Frensham, and there was a general reshuffling of places. Lady Frensham
+had arrived from London by automobile; she appeared in veils and
+swathings and a tremendous dust cloak, with a sort of nephew in her
+train who had driven the car. She was manifestly a constitutionally
+triumphant woman. A certain afternoon lassitude vanished in the swirl
+of her arrival. Mr. Philbert removed wrappings and handed them to the
+manservant.
+
+"I lunched with Sir Edward Carson to-day, my dear," she told Lady
+Homartyn, and rolled a belligerent eye at Philbert.
+
+"And is he as obdurate as ever?" asked Sir Thomas.
+
+"Obdurate! It's Redmond who's obdurate," cried Lady Frensham. "What do
+you say, Mr. Britling?"
+
+"A plague on both your parties," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"You can't keep out of things like that," said Lady Frensham with the
+utmost gusto, "when the country's on the very verge of civil war.... You
+people who try to pretend there isn't a grave crisis when there is one,
+will be more accountable than any one--when the civil war does come. It
+won't spare you. Mark my words!"
+
+The party became a circle.
+
+Mr. Direck found himself the interested auditor of a real English
+country-house week-end political conversation. This at any rate was like
+the England of which Mrs. Humphry Ward's novels had informed him, but
+yet not exactly like it. Perhaps that was due to the fact that for the
+most part these novels dealt with the England of the 'nineties, and
+things had lost a little in dignity since those days. But at any rate
+here were political figures and titled people, and they were talking
+about the "country."...
+
+Was it possible that people of this sort did "run" the country, after
+all?... When he had read Mrs. Humphry Ward in America he had always
+accepted this theory of the story quite easily, but now that he saw and
+heard them--!
+
+But all governments and rulers and ruling classes when you look at them
+closely are incredible....
+
+"I don't believe the country is on the verge of civil war," said Mr.
+Britling.
+
+"Facts!" cried Lady Frensham, and seemed to wipe away delusions with a
+rapid gesture of her hands.
+
+"You're interested in Ireland, Mr. Dirks?" asked Lady Homartyn.
+
+"We see it first when we come over," said Mr. Direck rather neatly, and
+after that he was free to attend to the general discussion.
+
+Lady Frensham, it was manifest, was one of that energetic body of
+aristocratic ladies who were taking up an irreconcilable attitude
+against Home Rule "in any shape or form" at that time. They were rapidly
+turning British politics into a system of bitter personal feuds in which
+all sense of imperial welfare was lost. A wild ambition to emulate the
+extremest suffragettes seems to have seized upon them. They insulted,
+they denounced, they refused every invitation lest they should meet that
+"traitor" the Prime Minister, they imitated the party hatreds of a
+fiercer age, and even now the moderate and politic Philbert found
+himself treated as an invisible object. They were supported by the
+extremer section of the Tory press, and the most extraordinary writers
+were set up to froth like lunatics against the government as "traitors,"
+as men who "insulted the King"; the _Morning Post_ and the
+lighter-witted side of the Unionist press generally poured out a torrent
+of partisan nonsense it is now almost incredible to recall. Lady
+Frensham, bridling over Lady Homartyn's party, and for a time leaving
+Mr. Britling, hurried on to tell of the newest developments of the great
+feud. She had a wonderful description of Lady Londonderry sitting
+opposite "that old rascal, the Prime Minister," at a performance of
+Mozart's _Zauberfloete_.
+
+"If looks could kill!" cried Lady Frensham with tremendous gusto.
+
+"Sir Edward is quite firm that Ulster means to fight. They have
+machine-guns--ammunition. And I am sure the army is with us...."
+
+"Where did they get those machine-guns and ammunition?" asked Mr.
+Britling suddenly.
+
+"Ah! that's a secret," cried Lady Frensham.
+
+"Um," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"You see," said Lady Frensham; "it _will_ be civil war! And yet you
+writing people who have influence do nothing to prevent it!"
+
+"What are we to do, Lady Frensham?"
+
+"Tell people how serious it is."
+
+"You mean, tell the Irish Nationalists to lie down and be walked over.
+They won't be...."
+
+"We'll see about that," cried Lady Frensham, "we'll see about that!"
+
+She was a large and dignified person with a kind of figure-head nobility
+of carriage, but Mr. Direck was suddenly reminded of a girl cousin of
+his who had been expelled from college for some particularly elaborate
+and aimless rioting....
+
+"May I say something to you, Lady Frensham," said Mr. Britling, "that
+you have just said to me? Do you realise that this Carsonite campaign is
+dragging these islands within a measurable distance of civil war?"
+
+"It's the fault of your Lloyd George and his government. It's the fault
+of your Socialists and sentimentalists. You've made the mischief and you
+have to deal with it."
+
+"Yes. But do you really figure to yourself what a civil war may mean for
+the empire? Surely there are other things in the world besides this
+quarrel between the 'loyalists' of Ulster and the Liberal government;
+there are other interests in this big empire than party advantages? Yon
+think you are going to frighten this Home Rule government into some
+ridiculous sort of collapse that will bring in the Tories at the next
+election. Well, suppose you don't manage that. Suppose instead that you
+really do contrive to bring about a civil war. Very few people here or
+in Ireland want it--I was over there not a month ago--but when men have
+loaded guns in their hands they sometimes go off. And then people see
+red. Few people realise what an incurable sore opens when fighting
+begins. Suppose part of the army revolts and we get some extraordinary
+and demoralising fighting over there. India watches these things. Bengal
+may imitate Ireland. At that distance rebellion and treason are
+rebellion and treason whether they are coloured orange or green. And
+then suppose the Germans see fit to attack us!"
+
+Lady Frensham had a woman's elusiveness. "Your Redmondites would welcome
+them with open arms."
+
+"It isn't the Redmondites who invite them now, anyhow," said Mr.
+Britling, springing his mine. "The other day one of your 'loyalists,'
+Andrews, was talking in the _Morning Post_ of preferring conquest by
+Germany to Home Rule; Craig has been at the same game; Major Crawford,
+the man who ran the German Mausers last April, boasted that he would
+transfer his allegiance to the German Emperor rather than see Redmond in
+power."
+
+"Rhetoric!" said Lady Frensham. "Rhetoric!"
+
+"But one of your Ulster papers has openly boasted that arrangements have
+been made for a 'powerful Continental monarch' to help an Ulster
+rebellion."
+
+"Which paper?" snatched Lady Frensham.
+
+Mr. Britling hesitated.
+
+Mr. Philbert supplied the name. "I saw it. It was the _Irish
+Churchman_."
+
+"You two have got your case up very well," said Lady Frensham. "I didn't
+know Mr. Britling was a party man."
+
+"The Nationalists have been circulating copies," said Philbert.
+"Naturally."
+
+"They make it look worse than mere newspaper talk and speeches," Mr.
+Britling pressed. "Carson, it seems, was lunching with the German
+Emperor last autumn. A fine fuss you'd make if Redmond did that. All
+this gun-running, too, is German gun-running."
+
+"What does it matter if it is?" said Lady Frensham, allowing a
+belligerent eye to rest for the first time on Philbert. "You drove us to
+it. One thing we are resolved upon at any cost. Johnny Redmond may rule
+England if he likes; he shan't rule Ireland...."
+
+Mr. Britling shrugged his shoulders, and his face betrayed despair.
+
+"My one consolation," he said, "in this storm is a talk I had last month
+with a young Irishwoman in Meath. She was a young person of twelve, and
+she took a fancy to me--I think because I went with her in an alleged
+dangerous canoe she was forbidden to navigate alone. All day the eternal
+Irish Question had banged about over her observant head. When we were
+out on the water she suddenly decided to set me right upon a disregarded
+essential. 'You English,' she said, 'are just a bit disposed to take all
+this trouble seriously. Don't you fret yourself about it... Half the
+time we're just laffing at you. You'd best leave us all alone....'"
+
+And then he went off at a tangent from his own anecdote.
+
+"But look at this miserable spectacle!" he cried. "Here is a chance of
+getting something like a reconciliation of the old feud of English and
+Irish, and something like a settlement of these ancient distresses, and
+there seems no power, no conscience, no sanity in any of us, sufficient
+to save it from this cantankerous bitterness, this sheer wicked mischief
+of mutual exasperation.... Just when Ireland is getting a gleam of
+prosperity.... A murrain on both your parties!"
+
+"I see, Mr. Britling, you'd hand us all over to Jim Larkin!"
+
+"I'd hand you all over to Sir Horace Plunkett--"
+
+"That doctrinaire dairyman!" cried Lady Frensham, with an air of quite
+conclusive repartee. "You're hopeless, Mr. Britling. You're hopeless."
+
+And Lady Homartyn, seeing that the phase of mere personal verdicts drew
+near, created a diversion by giving Lady Frensham a second cup of tea,
+and fluttering like a cooling fan about the heated brows of the
+disputants. She suggested tennis....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Mr. Britling was still flushed and ruffled as he and his guest returned
+towards the Dower House. He criticised England himself unmercifully, but
+he hated to think that in any respect she fell short of perfection; even
+her defects he liked to imagine were just a subtler kind of power and
+wisdom. And Lady Frensham had stuck her voice and her gestures through
+all these amiable illusions. He was like a lover who calls his lady a
+foolish rogue, and is startled to find that facts and strangers do
+literally agree with him.
+
+But it was so difficult to resolve Lady Frensham and the Irish squabble
+generally into anything better than idiotic mischief, that for a time he
+was unusually silent--wrestling with the problem, and Mr. Direck got the
+conversational initiative.
+
+"To an American mind it's a little--startling," said Mr. Direck, "to
+hear ladies expressing such vigorous political opinions."
+
+"I don't mind that," said Mr. Britling. "Women over here go into
+politics and into public-houses--I don't see why they shouldn't. If such
+things are good enough for men they are good enough for women; we
+haven't your sort of chivalry. But it's the peculiar malignant silliness
+of this sort of Toryism that's so discreditable. It's discreditable.
+There's no good in denying it. Those people you have heard and seen are
+a not unfair sample of our governing class--of a certain section of our
+governing class--as it is to-day. Not at all unfair. And you see how
+amazingly they haven't got hold of anything. There was a time when they
+could be politic.... Hidden away they have politic instincts even
+now.... But it makes me sick to think of this Irish business. Because,
+you know, it's true--we _are_ drifting towards civil war there."
+
+"You are of that opinion?" said Mr. Direck.
+
+"Well, isn't it so? Here's all this Ulster gun-running--you heard how
+she talked of it? Isn't it enough to drive the south into open
+revolt?..."
+
+"Is there very much, do you think, in the suggestion that some of this
+Ulster trouble is a German intrigue? You and Mr. Philbert were saying
+things--"
+
+"I don't know," said Mr. Britling shortly.
+
+"I don't know," he repeated. "But it isn't because I don't think our
+Unionists and their opponents aren't foolish enough for anything of the
+sort. It's only because I don't believe that the Germans are so stupid
+as to do such things.... Why should they?...
+
+"It makes me--expressionless with anger," said Mr. Britling after a
+pause, reverting to his main annoyance. "They won't consider any
+compromise. It's sheer love of quarrelling.... Those people there think
+that nothing can possibly happen. They are like children in a nursery
+playing at rebellion. Unscathed and heedless. Until there is death at
+their feet they will never realise they are playing with loaded
+guns...."
+
+For a time he said no more; and listened perfunctorily while Mr. Direck
+tried to indicate the feeling in New England towards the Irish Question
+and the many difficult propositions an American politician has to face
+in that respect. And when Mr. Britling took up the thread of speech
+again it had little or no relation to Mr. Direck's observations.
+
+"The psychology of all this recent insubordination and violence
+is--curious. Exasperating too.... I don't quite grasp it.... It's the
+same thing whether you look at the suffrage business or the labour
+people or at this Irish muddle. People may be too safe. You see we live
+at the end of a series of secure generations in which none of the great
+things of life have changed materially. We've grown up with no sense of
+danger--that is to say, with no sense of responsibility. None of us,
+none of us--for though I talk my actions belie me--really believe that
+life can change very fundamentally any more forever. All this",--Mr.
+Britling waved his arm comprehensively--"looks as though it was bound to
+go on steadily forever. It seems incredible that the system could be
+smashed. It seems incredible that anything we can do will ever smash the
+system. Lady Homartyn, for example, is incapable of believing that she
+won't always be able to have week-end parties at Claverings, and that
+the letters and the tea won't come to her bedside in the morning. Or if
+her imagination goes to the point of supposing that some day _she_ won't
+be there to receive the tea, it means merely that she supposes somebody
+else will be. Her pleasant butler may fear to lose his 'situation,' but
+nothing on earth could make him imagine a time when there will not be a
+'situation' for him to lose. Old Asquith thinks that we always have got
+along, and that we always shall get along by being quietly artful and
+saying, 'Wait and see.' And it's just because we are all convinced that
+we are so safe against a general breakdown that we are able to be so
+recklessly violent in our special cases. Why shouldn't women have the
+vote? they argue. What does it matter? And bang goes a bomb in
+Westminster Abbey. Why shouldn't Ulster create an impossible position?
+And off trots some demented Carsonite to Germany to play at treason on
+some half word of the German Emperor's and buy half a million rifles....
+
+"Exactly like children being very, very naughty....
+
+"And," said Mr. Britling with a gesture to round off his discourse, "we
+do go on. We shall go on--until there is a spark right into the
+magazine. We have lost any belief we ever had that fundamental things
+happen. We are everlasting children in an everlasting nursery...."
+
+And immediately he broke out again.
+
+"The truth of the matter is that hardly any one has ever yet mastered
+the fact that the world is round. The world is round--like an orange.
+The thing is told us--like any old scandal--at school. For all
+practical purposes we forget it. Practically we all live in a world as
+flat as a pancake. Where time never ends and nothing changes. Who really
+believes in any world outside the circle of the horizon? Here we are and
+visibly nothing is changing. And so we go on to--nothing will ever
+change. It just goes on--in space, in time. If we could realise that
+round world beyond, then indeed we should go circumspectly.... If the
+world were like a whispering gallery, what whispers might we not hear
+now--from India, from Africa, from Germany, warnings from the past,
+intimations of the future....
+
+"We shouldn't heed them...."
+
+
+Section 6
+
+And indeed at the very moment when Mr. Britling was saying these words,
+in Sarajevo in Bosnia, where the hour was somewhat later, men whispered
+together, and one held nervously to a black parcel that had been given
+him and nodded as they repeated his instructions, a black parcel with
+certain unstable chemicals and a curious arrangement of detonators
+therein, a black parcel destined ultimately to shatter nearly every
+landmark of Mr. Britling's and Lady Frensham's cosmogony....
+
+
+Section 7
+
+When Mr. Direck and Mr. Britling returned to the Dower House the guest
+was handed over to Mrs. Britling and Mr. Britling vanished, to reappear
+at supper time, for the Britlings had a supper in the evening instead of
+dinner. When Mr. Britling did reappear every trace of his vexation with
+the levities of British politics and the British ruling class had
+vanished altogether, and he was no longer thinking of all that might be
+happening in Germany or India....
+
+While he was out of the way Mr. Direck extended his acquaintance with
+the Britling household. He was taken round the garden and shown the
+roses by Mrs. Britling, and beyond the rose garden in a little arbour
+they came upon Miss Corner reading a book. She looked very grave and
+pretty reading a book. Mr. Direck came to a pause in front of her, and
+Mrs. Britling stopped beside him. The young lady looked up and smiled.
+
+"The last new novel?" asked Mr. Direck pleasantly.
+
+"Campanella's 'City of the Sun.'"
+
+"My word! but isn't that stiff reading?"
+
+"You haven't read it," said Miss Corner.
+
+"It's a dry old book anyhow."
+
+"It's no good pretending you have," she said, and there Mr. Direck felt
+the conversation had to end.
+
+"That's a very pleasant young lady to have about," he said to Mrs.
+Britling as they went on towards the barn court.
+
+"She's all at loose ends," said Mrs. Britling. "And she reads like
+a--Whatever does read? One drinks like a fish. One eats like a wolf."
+
+They found the German tutor in a little court playing Badminton with the
+two younger boys. He was a plump young man with glasses and compact
+gestures; the game progressed chiefly by misses and the score was
+counted in German. He won thoughtfully and chiefly through the ardour of
+the younger brother, whose enthusiastic returns invariably went out.
+Instantly the boys attacked Mrs. Britling with a concerted enthusiasm.
+"Mummy! Is it to be dressing-up supper?"
+
+Mrs. Britling considered, and it was manifest that Mr. Direck was
+material to her answer.
+
+"We wrap ourselves up in curtains and bright things instead of
+dressing," she explained. "We have a sort of wardrobe of fancy dresses.
+Do you mind?"
+
+Mr. Direck was delighted.
+
+And this being settled, the two small boys went off with their mother
+upon some special decorative project they had conceived and Mr. Direck
+was left for a time to Herr Heinrich.
+
+Herr Heinrich suggested a stroll in the rose garden, and as Mr. Direck
+had not hitherto been shown the rose garden by Herr Heinrich, he agreed.
+Sooner or later everybody, it was evident, had got to show him that rose
+garden.
+
+"And how do you like living in an English household?" said Mr. Direck,
+getting to business at once. "It's interesting to an American to see
+this English establishment, and it must be still more interesting to a
+German."
+
+"I find it very different from Pomerania," said Herr Heinrich. "In some
+respects it is more agreeable, in others less so. It is a pleasant life
+but it is not a serious life.
+
+"At any time," continued Herr Heinrich, "some one may say, 'Let us do
+this thing,' or 'Let us do that thing,' and then everything is
+disarranged.
+
+"People walk into the house without ceremony. There is much kindness but
+no politeness. Mr. Britling will go away for three or four days, and
+when he returns and I come forward to greet him and bow, he will walk
+right past me, or he will say just like this, 'How do, Heinrich?'"
+
+"Are you interested in Mr. Britling's writings?" Mr. Direck asked.
+
+"There again I am puzzled. His work is known even in Germany. His
+articles are reprinted in German and Austrian reviews. You would expect
+him to have a certain authority of manner. You would expect there to be
+discussion at the table upon questions of philosophy and aesthetics....
+It is not so. When I ask him questions it is often that they are not
+seriously answered. Sometimes it is as if he did not like the questions
+I askt of him. Yesterday I askt of him did he agree or did he not agree
+with Mr. Bernard Shaw. He just said--I wrote it down in my memoranda--he
+said: 'Oh! Mixt Pickles.' What can one understand of that?--Mixt
+Pickles!"...
+
+The young man's sedulous blue eyes looked out of his pink face through
+his glasses at Mr. Direck, anxious for any light he could offer upon the
+atmospheric vagueness of this England.
+
+He was, he explained, a student of philology preparing for his
+doctorate. He had not yet done his year of military service. He was
+studying the dialects of East Anglia--
+
+"You go about among the people?" Mr. Direck inquired.
+
+"No, I do not do that. But I ask Mr. Carmine and Mrs. Britling and the
+boys many questions. And sometimes I talk to the gardener."
+
+He explained how he would prepare his thesis and how it would be
+accepted, and the nature of his army service and the various stages by
+which he would subsequently ascend in the orderly professorial life to
+which he was destined. He confessed a certain lack of interest in
+philology, but, he said, "it is what I have to do." And so he was going
+to do it all his life through. For his own part he was interested in
+ideas of universal citizenship, in Esperanto and Ido and universal
+languages and such-like attacks upon the barriers between man and man.
+But the authorities at home did not favour cosmopolitan ideas, and so he
+was relinquishing them. "Here, it is as if there were no authorities,"
+he said with a touch of envy.
+
+Mr. Direck induced him to expand that idea.
+
+Herr Heinrich made Mr. Britling his instance. If Mr. Britling were a
+German he would certainly have some sort of title, a definite position,
+responsibility. Here he was not even called Herr Doktor. He said what he
+liked. Nobody rewarded him; nobody reprimanded him. When Herr Heinrich
+asked him of his position, whether he was above or below Mr. Bernard
+Shaw or Mr. Arnold White or Mr. Garvin or any other publicist, he made
+jokes. Nobody here seemed to have a title and nobody seemed to have a
+definite place. There was Mr. Lawrence Carmine; he was a student of
+Oriental questions; he had to do with some public institution in London
+that welcomed Indian students; he was a Geheimrath--
+
+"Eh?" said Mr. Direck.
+
+"It is--what do they call it? the Essex County Council." But nobody took
+any notice of that. And when Mr. Philbert, who was a minister in the
+government, came to lunch he was just like any one else. It was only
+after he had gone that Herr Heinrich had learnt by chance that he was a
+minister and "Right Honourable...."
+
+"In Germany everything is definite. Every man knows his place, has his
+papers, is instructed what to do...."
+
+"Yet," said Mr. Direck, with his eyes on the glowing roses, the neat
+arbour, the long line of the red wall of the vegetable garden and a
+distant gleam of cornfield, "it all looks orderly enough."
+
+"It is as if it had been put in order ages ago," said Herr Heinrich.
+
+"And was just going on by habit," said Mr. Direck, taking up the idea.
+
+Their comparisons were interrupted by the appearance of "Teddy," the
+secretary, and the Indian young gentleman, damp and genial, as they
+explained, "from the boats." It seemed that "down below" somewhere was a
+pond with a punt and an island and a toy dinghy. And while they
+discussed swimming and boating, Mr. Carmine appeared from the direction
+of the park conversing gravely with the elder son. They had been for a
+walk and a talk together. There were proposals for a Badminton foursome.
+Mr. Direck emerged from the general interchange with Mr. Lawrence
+Carmine, and then strolled through the rose garden to see the sunset
+from the end. Mr. Direck took the opportunity to verify his impression
+that the elder son was the present Mrs. Britling's stepson, and he also
+contrived by a sudden admiration for a distant row of evening primroses
+to deflect their path past the arbour in which the evening light must
+now be getting a little too soft for Miss Corner's book.
+
+Miss Corner was drawn into the sunset party. She talked to Mr. Carmine
+and displayed, Mr. Direck thought, great originality of mind. She said
+"The City of the Sun" was like the cities the boys sometimes made on the
+playroom floor. She said it was the dearest little city, and gave some
+amusing particulars. She described the painted walls that made the tour
+of the Civitas Solis a liberal education. She asked Mr. Carmine, who was
+an authority on Oriental literature, why there were no Indian nor
+Chinese Utopias.
+
+Now it had never occurred to Mr. Direck to ask why there were no Indian
+nor Chinese Utopias, and even Mr. Carmine seemed surprised to discover
+this deficiency.
+
+"The primitive patriarchal village _is_ Utopia to India and China," said
+Mr. Carmine, when they had a little digested the inquiry. "Or at any
+rate it is their social ideal. They want no Utopias."
+
+"Utopias came with cities," he said, considering the question. "And the
+first cities, as distinguished from courts and autocratic capitals, came
+with ships. India and China belong to an earlier age. Ships, trade,
+disorder, strange relationships, unofficial literature, criticism--and
+then this idea of some novel remaking of society...."
+
+
+Section 8
+
+Then Mr. Direck fell into the hands of Hugh, the eldest son, and
+anticipating the inevitable, said that he liked to walk in the rose
+garden. So they walked in the rose garden.
+
+"Do you read Utopias?" said Mr. Direck, cutting any preface, in the
+English manner.
+
+"Oh, _rather_!" said Hugh, and became at once friendly and confidential.
+
+"We all do," he explained. "In England everybody talks of change and
+nothing ever changes."
+
+"I found Miss Corner reading--what was it? the Sun People?--some old
+classical Italian work."
+
+"Campanella," said Hugh, without betraying the slightest interest in
+Miss Corner. "Nothing changes in England, because the people who want to
+change things change their minds before they change anything else. I've
+been in London talking for the last half-year. Studying art they call
+it. Before that I was a science student, and I want to be one again.
+Don't you think, Sir, there's something about science--it's steadier
+than anything else in the world?"
+
+Mr. Direck thought that the moral truths of human nature were steadier
+than science, and they had one of those little discussions of real life
+that begin about a difference inadequately apprehended, and do not so
+much end as are abandoned. Hugh struck him as being more speculative and
+detached than any American college youth of his age that he knew--but
+that might not be a national difference but only the Britling strain. He
+seemed to have read more and more independently, and to be doing less.
+And he was rather more restrained and self-possessed.
+
+Before Mr. Direck could begin a proper inquiry into the young man's work
+and outlook, he had got the conversation upon America. He wanted
+tremendously to see America. "The dad says in one of his books that over
+here we are being and that over there you are beginning. It must be
+tremendously stimulating to think that your country is still being
+made...."
+
+Mr. Direck thought that an interesting point of view. "Unless something
+tumbles down here, we never think of altering it," the young man
+remarked. "And even then we just shore it up."
+
+His remarks had the effect of floating off from some busy mill of
+thought within him. Hitherto Mr. Direck had been inclined to think this
+silent observant youth, with his hands in his pockets and his shoulders
+a little humped, as probably shy and adolescently ineffective. But the
+head was manifestly quite busy....
+
+"Miss Corner," he began, taking the first thing that came into his head,
+and then he remembered that he had already made the remark he was going
+to make not five minutes ago.
+
+"What form of art," he asked, "are you contemplating in your studies at
+the present time in London?"....
+
+Before this question could be dealt with at all adequately, the two
+small boys became active in the garden beating in everybody to
+"dress-up" before supper. The secretary, Teddy, came in a fatherly way
+to look after Mr. Direck and see to his draperies.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+Mr. Direck gave his very best attention to this business of draping
+himself, for he had not the slightest intention of appearing ridiculous
+in the eyes of Miss Corner. Teddy came with an armful of stuff that he
+thought "might do."
+
+"What'll I come as?" asked Mr. Direck.
+
+"We don't wear costumes," said Teddy. "We just put on all the brightest
+things we fancy. If it's any costume at all, it's Futurist."
+
+"And surely why shouldn't one?" asked Mr. Direck, greatly struck by this
+idea. "Why should we always be tied by the fashions and periods of the
+past?"
+
+He rejected a rather Mephistopheles-like costume of crimson and a scheme
+for a brigand-like ensemble based upon what was evidently an old bolero
+of Mrs. Britling's, and after some reflection he accepted some black
+silk tights. His legs were not legs to be ashamed of. Over this he tried
+various brilliant wrappings from the Dower House _armoire_, and chose at
+last, after some hesitation in the direction of a piece of gold and
+purple brocade, a big square of green silk curtain stuff adorned with
+golden pheasants and other large and dignified ornaments; this he wore
+toga fashion over his light silken under-vest--Teddy had insisted on the
+abandonment of his shirt "if you want to dance at all"--and fastened
+with a large green glass-jewelled brooch. From this his head and neck
+projected, he felt, with a tolerable dignity. Teddy suggested a fillet
+of green ribbon, and this Mr. Direck tried, but after prolonged
+reflection before the glass rejected. He was still weighing the effect
+of this fillet upon the mind of Miss Corner when Teddy left him to make
+his own modest preparations. Teddy's departure gave him a chance for
+profile studies by means of an arrangement of the long mirror and the
+table looking-glass that he had been too shy to attempt in the presence
+of the secretary. The general effect was quite satisfactory.
+
+"Wa-a-a-l," he said with a quaver of laughter, "now who'd have thought
+it?" and smiled a consciously American smile at himself before going
+down.
+
+The company was assembling in the panelled hall, and made a brilliant
+show in the light of the acetylene candles against the dark background.
+Mr. Britling in a black velvet cloak and black silk tights was a deeper
+shade among the shadows; the high lights were Miss Corner and her
+sister, in glittering garments of peacock green and silver that gave a
+snake-like quality to their lithe bodies. They were talking to the
+German tutor, who had become a sort of cotton Cossack, a spectacled
+Cossack in buff and bright green. Mrs. Britling was dignified and
+beautiful in a purple djibbah, and her stepson had become a handsome
+still figure of black and crimson. Teddy had contrived something
+elaborate and effective in the Egyptian style, with a fish-basket and a
+cuirass of that thin matting one finds behind washstands; the small boys
+were brigands, with immensely baggy breeches and cummerbunds in which
+they had stuck a selection of paper-knives and toy pistols and similar
+weapons. Mr. Carmine and his young man had come provided with real
+Indian costumes; the feeling of the company was that Mr. Carmine was a
+mullah. The aunt-like lady with the noble nose stood out amidst these
+levities in a black silk costume with a gold chain. She refused, it
+seemed, to make herself absurd, though she encouraged the others to
+extravagance by nods and enigmatical smiles. Nevertheless she had put
+pink ribbons in her cap. A family of father, golden-haired mother, and
+two young daughters, sympathetically attired, had just arrived, and were
+discarding their outer wrappings with the assistance of host and
+hostess.
+
+It was all just exactly what Mr. Direck had never expected in England,
+and equally unexpected was the supper on a long candle-lit table without
+a cloth. No servants were present, but on a sideboard stood a cold
+salmon and cold joints and kalter aufschnitt and kartoffel salat, and a
+variety of other comestibles, and many bottles of beer and wine and
+whisky. One helped oneself and anybody else one could, and Mr. Direck
+did his best to be very attentive to Mrs. Britling and Miss Corner, and
+was greatly assisted by the latter.
+
+Everybody seemed unusually gay and bright-eyed. Mr. Direck found
+something exhilarating and oddly exciting in all this unusual bright
+costume and in this easy mutual service; it made everybody seem franker
+and simpler. Even Mr. Britling had revealed a sturdy handsomeness that
+had not been apparent to Mr. Direck before, and young Britling left no
+doubts now about his good looks. Mr. Direck forgot his mission and his
+position, and indeed things generally, in an irrational satisfaction
+that his golden pheasants harmonised with the glitter of the warm and
+smiling girl beside him. And he sat down beside her--"You sit anywhere,"
+said Mrs. Britling--with far less compunction than in his ordinary
+costume he would have felt for so direct a confession of preference. And
+there was something in her eyes, it was quite indefinable and yet very
+satisfying, that told him that now he escaped from the stern square
+imperatives of his patriotic tailor in New York she had made a
+discovery of him.
+
+Everybody chattered gaily, though Mr. Direck would have found it
+difficult to recall afterwards what it was they chattered about, except
+that somehow he acquired the valuable knowledge that Miss Corner was
+called Cecily, and her sister Letty, and then--so far old Essex custom
+held--the masculine section was left for a few minutes for some
+imaginary drinking, and a lighting of cigars and cigarettes, after which
+everybody went through interwoven moonlight and afterglow to the barn.
+Mr. Britling sat down to a pianola in the corner and began the familiar
+cadences of "Whistling Rufus."
+
+"You dance?" said Miss Cecily Corner.
+
+"I've never been much of a dancing man," said Mr. Direck. "What sort of
+dance is this?"
+
+"Just anything. A two-step."
+
+Mr. Direck hesitated and regretted a well-spent youth, and then Hugh
+came prancing forward with outstretched hands and swept her away.
+
+Just for an instant Mr. Direck felt that this young man was a trifle
+superfluous....
+
+But it was very amusing dancing.
+
+It wasn't any sort of taught formal dancing. It was a spontaneous retort
+to the leaping American music that Mr. Britling footed out. You kept
+time, and for the rest you did as your nature prompted. If you had a
+partner you joined hands, you fluttered to and from one another, you
+paced down the long floor together, you involved yourselves in romantic
+pursuits and repulsions with other couples. There was no objection to
+your dancing alone. Teddy, for example, danced alone in order to develop
+certain Egyptian gestures that were germinating in his brain. There was
+no objection to your joining hands in a cheerful serpent....
+
+Mr. Direck hung on to Cissie and her partner. They danced very well
+together; they seemed to like and understand each other. It was natural
+of course for two young people like that, thrown very much together, to
+develop an affection for one another.... Still, she was older by three
+or four years.
+
+It seemed unreasonable that the boy anyhow shouldn't be in love with
+her....
+
+It seemed unreasonable that any one shouldn't be in love with her....
+
+Then Mr. Direck remarked that Cissie was watching Teddy's manoeuvres
+over her partner's shoulder with real affection and admiration....
+
+But then most refreshingly she picked up Mr. Direck's gaze and gave him
+the slightest of smiles. She hadn't forgotten him.
+
+The music stopped with an effect of shock, and all the bobbing, whirling
+figures became walking glories.
+
+"Now that's not difficult, is it?" said Miss Corner, glowing happily.
+
+"Not when you do it," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"I can't imagine an American not dancing a two-step. You must do the
+next with me. Listen! It's 'Away Down Indiana' ... ah! I knew you
+could."
+
+Mr. Direck, too, understood now that he could, and they went off holding
+hands rather after the fashion of two skaters.
+
+"My word!" said Mr. Direck. "To think I'd be dancing."
+
+But he said no more because he needed his breath.
+
+He liked it, and he had another attempt with one of the visitor
+daughters, who danced rather more formally, and then Teddy took the
+pianola and Mr. Direck was astonished by the spectacle of an eminent
+British thinker in a whirl of black velvet and extremely active black
+legs engaged in a kind of Apache dance in pursuit of the visitor wife.
+In which Mr. Lawrence Carmine suddenly mingled.
+
+"In Germany," said Herr Heinrich, "we do not dance like this. It could
+not be considered seemly. But it is very pleasant."
+
+And then there was a waltz, and Herr Heinrich bowed to and took the
+visitor wife round three times, and returned her very punctually and
+exactly to the point whence he had taken her, and the Indian young
+gentleman (who must not be called "coloured") waltzed very well with
+Cecily. Mr. Direck tried to take a tolerant European view of this brown
+and white combination. But he secured her as soon as possible from this
+Asiatic entanglement, and danced with her again, and then he danced with
+her again.
+
+"Come and look at the moonlight," cried Mrs. Britling.
+
+And presently Mr. Direck found himself strolling through the rose garden
+with Cecily. She had the sweetest moonlight face, her white shining robe
+made her a thing of moonlight altogether. If Mr. Direck had not been in
+love with her before he was now altogether in love. Mamie Nelson, whose
+freakish unkindness had been rankling like a poisoned thorn in his heart
+all the way from Massachusetts, suddenly became Ancient History.
+
+A tremendous desire for eloquence arose in Mr. Direck's soul, a desire
+so tremendous that no conceivable phrase he could imagine satisfied it.
+So he remained tongue-tied. And Cecily was tongue-tied, too. The scent
+of the roses just tinted the clear sweetness of the air they breathed.
+
+Mr. Direck's mood was an immense solemnity, like a dark ocean beneath
+the vast dome of the sky, and something quivered in every fibre of his
+being, like moonlit ripples on the sea. He felt at the same time a
+portentous stillness and an immense enterprise....
+
+Then suddenly the pianola, pounding a cake walk, burst out into ribald
+invitation....
+
+"Come back to dance!" cried Cecily, like one from whom a spell has just
+been broken. And Mr. Direck, snatching at a vanishing scrap of
+everything he had not said, remarked, "I shall never forget this
+evening."
+
+She did not seem to hear that.
+
+They danced together again. And then Mr. Direck danced with the visitor
+lady, whose name he had never heard. And then he danced with Mrs.
+Britling, and then he danced with Letty. And then it seemed time for him
+to look for Miss Cecily again.
+
+And so the cheerful evening passed until they were within a quarter of
+an hour of Sunday morning. Mrs. Britling went to exert a restraining
+influence upon the pianola.
+
+"Oh! one dance more!" cried Cissie Corner.
+
+"Oh! one dance more!" cried Letty.
+
+"One dance more," Mr. Direck supported, and then things really _had_ to
+end.
+
+There was a rapid putting out of candles and a stowing away of things by
+Teddy and the sons, two chauffeurs appeared from the region of the
+kitchen and brought Mr. Lawrence Carmine's car and the visitor family's
+car to the front door, and everybody drifted gaily through the moonlight
+and the big trees to the front of the house. And Mr. Direck saw the
+perambulator waiting--the mysterious perambulator--a little in the dark
+beyond the front door.
+
+The visitor family and Mr. Carmine and his young Indian departed. "Come
+to hockey!" shouted Mr. Britling to each departing car-load, and Mr.
+Carmine receding answered: "I'll bring three!"
+
+Then Mr. Direck, in accordance with a habit that had been growing on him
+throughout the evening, looked around for Miss Cissie Corner and failed
+to find her. And then behold she was descending the staircase with the
+mysterious baby in her arms. She held up a warning finger, and then
+glanced at her sleeping burthen. She looked like a silvery Madonna. And
+Mr. Direck remembered that he was still in doubt about that baby....
+
+Teddy, who was back in his flannels, seized upon the perambulator. There
+was much careful baby stowing on the part of Cecily; she displayed an
+infinitely maternal solicitude. Letty was away changing; she reappeared
+jauntily taking leave, disregarding the baby absolutely, and Teddy
+departed bigamously, wheeling the perambulator between the two sisters
+into the hazes of the moonlight. There was much crying of good nights.
+Mr. Direck's curiosities narrowed down to a point of great intensity....
+
+Of course, Mr. Britling's circle must be a very "Advanced" circle....
+
+
+Section 10
+
+Mr. Direck found he had taken leave of the rest of the company, and
+drifted into a little parlour with Mr. Britling and certain glasses and
+siphons and a whisky decanter on a tray....
+
+"It is a very curious thing," said Mr. Direck, "that in England I find
+myself more disposed to take stimulants and that I no longer have the
+need for iced water that one feels at home. I ascribe it to a greater
+humidity in the air. One is less dried and one is less braced. One is no
+longer pursued by a thirst, but one needs something to buck one up a
+little. Thank you. That is enough."
+
+Mr. Direck took his glass of whisky and soda from Mr. Britling's hand.
+
+Mr. Britling seated himself in an armchair by the fireplace and threw
+one leg carelessly over the arm. In his black velvet cloak and cap, and
+his black silk tights, he was very like a minor character, a court
+chamberlain for example, in some cloak and rapier drama. "I find this
+week-end dancing and kicking about wonderfully wholesome," he said.
+"That and our Sunday hockey. One starts the new week clear and bright
+about the mind. Friday is always my worst working day."
+
+Mr. Direck leant against the table, wrapped in his golden pheasants, and
+appreciated the point.
+
+"Your young people dance very cheerfully," he said.
+
+"We all dance very cheerfully," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Then this Miss Corner," said Mr. Direck, "she is the sister, I presume,
+is she? of that pleasant young lady who is married--she is married,
+isn't she?--to the young man you call Teddy."
+
+"I should have explained these young people. They're the sort of young
+people we are producing over here now in quite enormous quantity. They
+are the sort of equivalent of the Russian Intelligentsia, an
+irresponsible middle class with ideas. Teddy, you know, is my secretary.
+He's the son, I believe, of a Kilburn solicitor. He was recommended to
+me by Datcher of _The Times_. He came down here and lived in lodgings
+for a time. Then suddenly appeared the young lady."
+
+"Miss Corner's sister?"
+
+"Exactly. The village was a little startled. The cottager who had let
+the rooms came to me privately. Teddy is rather touchy on the point of
+his personal independence, he considers any demand for explanations as
+an insult, and probably all he had said to the old lady was, 'This is
+Letty--come to share my rooms.' I put the matter to him very gently.
+'Oh, yes,' he said, rather in the manner of some one who has overlooked
+a trifle. 'I got married to her in the Christmas holidays. May I bring
+her along to see Mrs. Britling?' We induced him to go into a little
+cottage I rent. The wife was the daughter of a Colchester journalist and
+printer. I don't know if you talked to her."
+
+"I've talked to the sister rather."
+
+"Well, they're both idea'd. They're highly educated in the sense that
+they do really think for themselves. Almost fiercely. So does Teddy. If
+he thinks he hasn't thought anything he thinks for himself, he goes off
+and thinks it different. The sister is a teacher who wants to take the
+B.A. degree in London University. Meanwhile she pays the penalty of her
+sex."
+
+"Meaning--?" asked Mr. Direck, startled.
+
+"Oh! that she puts in a great deal too much of her time upon housework
+and minding her sister's baby."
+
+"She's a very interesting and charming young lady indeed," said Mr.
+Direck. "With a sort of Western college freedom of mind--and something
+about her that isn't American at all."
+
+Mr. Britling was following the train of his own thoughts.
+
+"My household has some amusing contrasts," he said. "I don't know if you
+have talked to that German.
+
+"He's always asking questions. And you tell him any old thing and he
+goes and writes it down in his room upstairs, and afterwards asks you
+another like it in order to perplex himself by the variety of your
+answers. He regards the whole world with a methodical distrust. He wants
+to document it and pin it down. He suspects it only too justly of
+disorderly impulses, and a capacity for self-contradiction. He is the
+most extraordinary contrast to Teddy, whose confidence in the universe
+amounts almost to effrontery. Teddy carries our national laxness to a
+foolhardy extent. He is capable of leaving his watch in the middle of
+Claverings Park and expecting to find it a month later--being carefully
+taken care of by a squirrel, I suppose--when he happens to want it. He's
+rather like a squirrel himself--without the habit of hoarding. He is
+incapable of asking a question about anything; he would be quite sure it
+was all right anyhow. He would feel that asking questions betrayed a
+want of confidence--was a sort of incivility. But my German, if you
+notice,--his normal expression is one of grave solicitude. He is like a
+conscientious ticket-collector among his impressions. And did you notice
+how beautifully my pianola rolls are all numbered and catalogued? He did
+that. He set to work and did it as soon as he got here, just as a good
+cat when you bring it into the house sets to work and catches mice.
+Previously the pianola music was chaos. You took what God sent you.
+
+"And he _looks_ like a German," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"He certainly does that," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"He has the fair type of complexion, the rather full habit of body, the
+temperamental disposition, but in addition that close-cropped head, it
+is almost as if it were shaved, the plumpness, the glasses--those are
+things that are made. And the way he carries himself. And the way he
+thinks. His meticulousness. When he arrived he was delightful, he was
+wearing a student's corps cap and a rucksack, he carried a violin; he
+seemed to have come out of a book. No one would ever dare to invent so
+German a German for a book. Now, a young Frenchman or a young Italian or
+a young Russian coming here might look like a foreigner, but he wouldn't
+have the distinctive national stamp a German has. He wouldn't be plainly
+French or Italian or Russian. Other peoples are not made; they are
+neither made nor created but proceeding--out of a thousand indefinable
+causes. The Germans are a triumph of directive will. I had to remark the
+other day that when my boys talked German they shouted. 'But when one
+talks German one _must_ shout,' said Herr Heinrich. 'It is taught so in
+the schools.' And it is. They teach them to shout and to throw out their
+chests. Just as they teach them to read notice-boards and not think
+about politics. Their very ribs are not their own. My Herr Heinrich is
+comparatively a liberal thinker. He asked me the other day, 'But why
+should I give myself up to philology? But then,' he reflected, 'it is
+what I have to do.'"
+
+Mr. Britling seemed to have finished, and then just as Mr. Direck was
+planning a way of getting the talk back by way of Teddy to Miss Corner,
+he snuggled more deeply into his chair, reflected and broke out again.
+
+"This contrast between Heinrich's carefulness and Teddy's
+easy-goingness, come to look at it, is I suppose one of the most
+fundamental in the world. It reaches to everything. It mixes up with
+education, statecraft, morals. Will you make or will you take? Those are
+the two extreme courses in all such things. I suppose the answer of
+wisdom to that is, like all wise answers, a compromise. I suppose one
+must accept and then make all one can of it.... Have you talked at all
+to my eldest son?"
+
+"He's a very interesting young man indeed," said Mr. Direck. "I should
+venture to say there's a very great deal in him. I was most impressed by
+the few words I had with him."
+
+"There, for example, is one of my perplexities," said Mr. Britling.
+
+Mr. Direck waited for some further light on this sudden transition.
+
+"Ah! your troubles in life haven't begun yet. Wait till you're a father.
+That cuts to the bone. You have the most delicate thing in the world in
+hand, a young kindred mind. You feel responsible for it, you know you
+are responsible for it; and you lose touch with it. You can't get at it.
+Nowadays we've lost the old tradition of fatherhood by divine right--and
+we haven't got a new one. I've tried not to be a cramping ruler, a
+director, a domestic tyrant to that lad--and in effect it's meant his
+going his own way.... I don't dominate. I hoped to advise. But you see
+he loves my respect and good opinion. Too much. When things go well I
+know of them. When the world goes dark for him, then he keeps his
+trouble from me. Just when I would so eagerly go into it with him....
+There's something the matter now, something--it may be grave. I feel he
+wants to tell me. And there it is!--it seems I am the last person to
+whom he can humiliate himself by a confession of blundering, or
+weakness.... Something I should just laugh at and say, 'That's in the
+blood of all of us, dear Spit of myself. Let's see what's to be
+done.'..."
+
+He paused and then went on, finding in the unfamiliarity and
+transitoriness of his visitor a freedom he might have failed to find in
+a close friend.
+
+"I am frightened at times at all I don't know about in that boy's mind.
+I know nothing of his religiosities. He's my son and he must have
+religiosities. I know nothing of his ideas or of his knowledge about sex
+and all that side of life. I do not know of the things he finds
+beautiful. I can guess at times; that's all; when he betrays himself....
+You see, you don't know really what love is until you have children. One
+doesn't love women. Indeed you don't! One gives and gets; it's a trade.
+One may have tremendous excitements and expectations and overwhelming
+desires. That's all very well in its way. But the love of children is an
+exquisite tenderness: it rends the heart. It's a thing of God. And I lie
+awake at nights and stretch out my hands in the darkness to this
+lad--who will never know--until his sons come in their time...."
+
+He made one of his quick turns again.
+
+"And that's where our English way makes for distresses. Mr. Prussian
+respects and fears his father; respects authorities, attends, obeys
+and--_his father has a hold upon him_. But I said to myself at the
+outset, 'No, whatever happens, I will not usurp the place of God. I will
+not be the Priest-Patriarch of my children. They shall grow and I will
+grow beside them, helping but not cramping or overshadowing.' They grow
+more. But they blunder more. Life ceases to be a discipline and becomes
+an experiment...."
+
+"That's very true," said Mr. Direck, to whom it seemed the time was ripe
+to say something. "This is the problem of America perhaps even more than
+of England. Though I have not had the parental experience you have
+undergone.... I can see very clearly that a son is a very serious
+proposition."
+
+"The old system of life was organisation. That is where Germany is still
+the most ancient of European states. It's a reversion to a tribal cult.
+It's atavistic.... To organise or discipline, or mould characters or
+press authority, is to assume that you have reached finality in your
+general philosophy. It implies an assured end. Heinrich has his assured
+end, his philological professorship or thereabouts as a part of the
+Germanic machine. And that too has its assured end in German national
+assertion. Here, we have none of those convictions. We know we haven't
+finality, and so we are open and apologetic and receptive, rather than
+wilful.... You see all organisation, with its implication of finality,
+is death. We feel that. The Germans don't. What you organise you kill.
+Organised morals or organised religion or organised thought are dead
+morals and dead religion and dead thought. Yet some organisation you
+must have. Organisation is like killing cattle. If you do not kill some
+the herd is just waste. But you musn't kill all or you kill the herd.
+The unkilled cattle are the herd, the continuation; the unorganised side
+of life is the real life. The reality of life is adventure, not
+performance. What isn't adventure isn't life. What can be ruled about
+can be machined. But priests and schoolmasters and bureaucrats get hold
+of life and try to make it _all_ rules, _all_ etiquette and regulation
+and correctitude.... And parents and the love of parents make for the
+same thing. It is all very well to experiment for oneself, but when one
+sees these dear things of one's own, so young and inexperienced and so
+capable of every sort of gallant foolishness, walking along the narrow
+plank, going down into dark jungles, ah! then it makes one want to wrap
+them in laws and foresight and fence them about with 'Verboten' boards
+in all the conceivable aspects...."
+
+"In America of course we do set a certain store upon youthful
+self-reliance," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"As we do here. It's in your blood and our blood. It's the instinct of
+the English and the Irish anyhow to suspect government and take the
+risks of the chancy way.... And manifestly the Russians, if you read
+their novelists, have the same twist in them.... When we get this young
+Prussian here, he's a marvel to us. He really believes in Law. He
+_likes_ to obey. That seems a sort of joke to us. It's curious how
+foreign these Germans are--to all the rest of the world. Because of
+their docility. Scratch the Russian and you get the Tartar. Educate the
+Russian or the American or the Englishman or the Irishman or Frenchman
+or any real northern European except the German, and you get the
+Anarchist, that is to say the man who dreams of order without
+organisation--of something beyond organisation....
+
+"It's one o'clock," said Mr. Britling abruptly, perceiving a shade of
+fatigue upon the face of his hearer and realising that his thoughts had
+taken him too far, "and Sunday. Let's go to bed."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+For a time Mr. Direck could not sleep. His mind had been too excited by
+this incessant day with all its novelties and all its provocations to
+comparison. The whole complicated spectacle grouped itself, with a
+naturalness and a complete want of logic that all who have been young
+will understand, about Cecily Corner.
+
+She had to be in the picture, and so she came in as though she were the
+central figure, as though she were the quintessential England. There she
+was, the type, the blood, the likeness, of no end of Massachusetts
+families, the very same stuff indeed, and yet she was different....
+
+For a time his thoughts hovered ineffectively about certain details of
+her ear and cheek, and one may doubt if his interest in these things was
+entirely international....
+
+Then he found himself under way with an exposition of certain points to
+Mr. Britling. In the security of his bed he could imagine that he was
+talking very slowly and carefully while Mr. Britling listened; already
+he was more than half way to dreamland or he could not have supposed
+anything so incredible.
+
+"There's a curious sort of difference," he was saying. "It is difficult
+to define, but on the whole I might express it by saying that such a
+gathering as this if it was in America would be drawn with harder lines,
+would show its bones more and have everything more emphatic. And just to
+take one illustrative point: in America in such a gathering as this
+there would be bound to be several jokes going on as it were, running
+jokes and running criticisms, from day to day and from week to week....
+There would be jokes about your writing and your influence and jokes
+about Miss Corner's advanced reading.... You see, in America we pay much
+more attention to personal character. Here people, I notice, are not
+talked to about their personal characters at all, and many of them do
+not seem to be aware and do not seem to mind what personal characters
+they have....
+
+"And another thing I find noteworthy is the way in which what I might
+call mature people seem to go on having a good time instead of standing
+by and applauding the young people having a good time.... And the young
+people do not seem to have set out to have a good time at all.... Now in
+America, a charming girl like Miss Corner would be distinctly more aware
+of herself and her vitality than she is here, distinctly more. Her
+peculiarly charming sidelong look, if I might make so free with
+her--would have been called attention to. It's a perfectly beautiful
+look, the sort of look some great artist would have loved to make
+immortal. It's a look I shall find it hard to forget.... But she doesn't
+seem to be aware in the least of it. In America she would be aware of
+it. She would be distinctly aware of it. She would have been _made_
+aware of it. She would have been advised of it. It would be looked for
+and she would know it was looked for. She would _give_ it as a singer
+gives her most popular song. Mamie Nelson, for example, used to give a
+peculiar little throw back of the chin and a laugh.... It was talked
+about. People came to see it....
+
+"Of course Mamie Nelson was a very brilliant girl indeed. I suppose in
+England you would say we spoilt her. I suppose we did spoil her...."
+
+It came into Mr. Direck's head that for a whole day he had scarcely
+given a thought to Mamie Nelson. And now he was thinking of her--calmly.
+Why shouldn't one think of Mamie Nelson calmly?
+
+She was a proud imperious thing. There was something Southern in her.
+Very dark blue eyes she had, much darker than Miss Corner's....
+
+But how tortuous she had been behind that outward pride of hers! For
+four years she had let him think he was the only man who really mattered
+in the world, and all the time quite clearly and definitely she had
+deceived him. She had made a fool of him and she had made a fool of the
+others perhaps--just to have her retinue and play the queen in her
+world. And at last humiliation, bitter humiliation, and Mamie with her
+chin in the air and her bright triumphant smile looking down on him.
+
+Hadn't he, she asked, had the privilege of loving her?
+
+She took herself at the value they had set upon her.
+
+Well--somehow--that wasn't right....
+
+All the way across the Atlantic Mr. Direck had been trying to forget her
+downward glance with the chin up, during that last encounter--and other
+aspects of the same humiliation. The years he had spent upon her! The
+time! Always relying upon her assurance of a special preference for him.
+He tried to think he was suffering from the pangs of unrequited love,
+and to conceal from himself just how bitterly his pride and vanity had
+been rent by her ultimate rejection. There had been a time when she had
+given him reason to laugh in his sleeve at Booth Wilmington.
+
+Perhaps Booth Wilmington had also had reason for laughing in his
+sleeve....
+
+Had she even loved Booth Wilmington? Or had she just snatched at him?...
+
+Wasn't he, Direck, as good a man as Booth Wilmington anyhow?...
+
+For some moments the old sting of jealousy rankled again. He recalled
+the flaring rivalry that had ended in his defeat, the competition of
+gifts and treats.... A thing so open that all Carrierville knew of it,
+discussed it, took sides.... And over it all Mamie with her flashing
+smile had sailed like a processional goddess....
+
+Why, they had made jokes about him in the newspapers!
+
+One couldn't imagine such a contest in Matching's Easy. Yet surely even
+in Matching's Easy there are lovers.
+
+Is it something in the air, something in the climate that makes things
+harder and clearer in America?...
+
+Cissie--why shouldn't one call her Cissie in one's private thoughts
+anyhow?--would never be as hard and clear as Mamie. She had English
+eyes--merciful eyes....
+
+That was the word--_merciful_!
+
+The English light, the English air, are merciful....
+
+Merciful....
+
+They tolerate old things and slow things and imperfect apprehensions.
+They aren't always getting at you....
+
+They don't laugh at you.... At least--they laugh differently....
+
+Was England the tolerant country? With its kind eyes and its wary
+sidelong look. Toleration. In which everything mellowed and nothing was
+destroyed. A soft country. A country with a passion for imperfection. A
+padded country....
+
+England--all stuffed with soft feathers ... under one's ear. A
+pillow--with soft, kind Corners ... Beautiful rounded Corners.... Dear,
+dear Corners. Cissie Corners. Corners. Could there be a better family?
+
+Massachusetts--but in heaven....
+
+Harps playing two-steps, and kind angels wrapped in moonlight.
+
+ Very softly I and you,
+ One turn, two turn, three turn, too.
+ Off we go!....
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE THIRD
+
+THE ENTERTAINMENT OF MR. DIRECK REACHES A CLIMAX
+
+
+Section 1
+
+Breakfast was in the open air, and a sunny, easy-going feast. Then the
+small boys laid hands on Mr. Direck and showed him the pond and the
+boats, while Mr. Britling strolled about the lawn with Hugh, talking
+rather intently. And when Mr. Direck returned from the boats in a state
+of greatly enhanced popularity he found Mr. Britling conversing over his
+garden railings to what was altogether a new type of Britisher in Mr.
+Direck's experience. It was a tall, lean, sun-bitten youngish man of
+forty perhaps, in brown tweeds, looking more like the Englishman of the
+American illustrations than anything Mr. Direck had met hitherto. Indeed
+he came very near to a complete realisation of that ideal except that
+there was a sort of intensity about him, and that his clipped moustache
+had the restrained stiffness of a wiry-haired terrier. This gentleman
+Mr. Direck learnt was Colonel Rendezvous. He spoke in clear short
+sentences, they had an effect of being punched out, and he was refusing
+to come into the garden and talk.
+
+"Have to do my fourteen miles before lunch," he said. "You haven't seen
+Manning about, have you?"
+
+"He isn't here," said Mr. Britling, and it seemed to Mr. Direck that
+there was the faintest ambiguity in this reply.
+
+"Have to go alone, then," said Colonel Rendezvous. "They told me that he
+had started to come here."
+
+"I shall motor over to Bramley High Oak for your Boy Scout festival,"
+said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Going to have three thousand of 'em," said the Colonel. "Good show."
+
+His steely eyes seemed to search the cover of Mr. Britling's garden for
+the missing Manning, and then he decided to give him up. "I must be
+going," he said. "So long. Come up!"
+
+A well-disciplined dog came to heel, and the lean figure had given Mr.
+Direck a semi-military salutation and gone upon its way. It marched with
+a long elastic stride; it never looked back.
+
+"Manning," said Mr. Britling, "is probably hiding up in my rose garden."
+
+"Curiously enough, I guessed from your manner that that might be the
+case," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"Yes. Manning is a London journalist. He has a little cottage about a
+mile over there"--Mr. Britling pointed vaguely--"and he comes down for
+the week-ends. And Rendezvous has found out he isn't fit. And everybody
+ought to be fit. That is the beginning and end of life for Rendezvous.
+Fitness. An almost mineral quality, an insatiable activity of body,
+great mental simplicity. So he takes possession of poor old Manning and
+trots him for that fourteen miles--at four miles an hour. Manning goes
+through all the agonies of death and damnation, he half dissolves, he
+pants and drags for the first eight or ten miles, and then I must admit
+he rather justifies Rendezvous' theory. He is to be found in the
+afternoon in a hammock suffering from blistered feet, but otherwise
+unusually well. But if he can escape it, he does. He hides."
+
+"But if he doesn't want to go with Rendezvous, why does he?" said Mr.
+Direck.
+
+"Well, Rendezvous is accustomed to the command of men. And Manning's
+only way of refusing things is on printed forms. Which he doesn't bring
+down to Matching's Easy. Ah! behold!"
+
+Far away across the lawn between two blue cedars there appeared a
+leisurely form in grey flannels and a loose tie, advancing with manifest
+circumspection.
+
+"He's gone," cried Britling.
+
+The leisurely form, obviously amiable, obviously a little out of
+condition, became more confident, drew nearer.
+
+"I'm sorry to have missed him," he said cheerfully. "I thought he might
+come this way. It's going to be a very warm day indeed. Let us sit about
+somewhere and talk.
+
+"Of course," he said, turning to Direck, "Rendezvous is the life and
+soul of the country."
+
+They strolled towards a place of seats and hammocks between the big
+trees and the rose garden, and the talk turned for a time upon
+Rendezvous. "They have the tidiest garden in Essex," said Manning. "It's
+not Mrs. Rendezvous' fault that it is so. Mrs. Rendezvous, as a matter
+of fact, has a taste for the picturesque. She just puts the things about
+in groups in the beds. She wants them, she says, to grow anyhow. She
+desires a romantic disorder. But she never gets it. When he walks down
+the path all the plants dress instinctively.... And there's a tree near
+their gate; it used to be a willow. You can ask any old man in the
+village. But ever since Rendezvous took the place it's been trying to
+present arms. With the most extraordinary results. I was passing the
+other day with old Windershin. 'You see that there old poplar,' he said.
+'It's a willow,' said I. 'No,' he said, 'it did used to be a willow
+before Colonel Rendezvous he came. But now it's a poplar.'... And, by
+Jove, it is a poplar!"...
+
+The conversation thus opened by Manning centred for a time upon Colonel
+Rendezvous. He was presented as a monster of energy and self-discipline;
+as the determined foe of every form of looseness, slackness, and
+easy-goingness.
+
+"He's done wonderful work for the local Boy Scout movement," said
+Manning.
+
+"It's Kitchenerism," said Britling.
+
+"It's the army side of the efficiency stunt," said Manning.
+
+There followed a digression upon the Boy Scout movement, and Mr. Direck
+made comparisons with the propaganda of Seton Thompson in America.
+"Colonel Teddyism," said Manning. "It's a sort of reaction against
+everything being too easy and too safe."
+
+"It's got its anti-decadent side," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"If there is such a thing as decadence," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"If there wasn't such a thing as decadence," said Manning, "we
+journalists would have had to invent it."...
+
+"There is something tragical in all this--what shall I call
+it?--Kitchenerism," Mr. Britling reflected "Here you have it rushing
+about and keeping itself--screwed up, and trying desperately to keep the
+country screwed up. And all because there may be a war some day somehow
+with Germany. Provided Germany _is_ insane. It's that war, like some
+sort of bee in Rendezvous' brains, that is driving him along the road
+now to Market Saffron--he always keeps to the roads because they are
+severer--through all the dust and sunshine. When he might be here
+gossiping....
+
+"And you know, I don't see that war coming," said Mr. Britling. "I
+believe Rendezvous sweats in vain. I can't believe in that war. It has
+held off for forty years. It may hold off forever."
+
+He nodded his head towards the German tutor, who had come into view
+across the lawn, talking profoundly with Mr. Britling's eldest son.
+
+"Look at that pleasant person. There he is--_Echt Deutsch_--if anything
+ever was. Look at my son there! Do you see the two of them engaged in
+mortal combat? The thing's too ridiculous. The world grows sane. They
+may fight in the Balkans still; in many ways the Balkan States are in
+the very rear of civilisation; but to imagine decent countries like this
+or Germany going back to bloodshed! No.... When I see Rendezvous
+keeping it up and keeping it up, I begin to see just how poor Germany
+must be keeping it up. I begin to realise how sick Germany must be
+getting of the high road and the dust and heat and the everlasting drill
+and restraint.... My heart goes out to the South Germans. Old Manning
+here always reminds me of Austria. Think of Germany coming like
+Rendezvous on a Sunday morning, and looking stiffly over Austria's
+fence. 'Come for a good hard walk, man. Keep Fit....'"
+
+"But suppose this Balkan trouble becomes acute," said Manning.
+
+"It hasn't; it won't. Even if it did we should keep out of it."
+
+"But suppose Russia grappled Austria and Germany flung herself suddenly
+upon France--perhaps taking Belgium on the way."
+
+"Oh!--we should fight. Of course we should fight. Could any one but a
+congenital idiot suppose we shouldn't fight? They know we should fight.
+They aren't altogether idiots in Germany. But the thing's absurd. Why
+_should_ Germany attack France? It's as if Manning here took a hatchet
+suddenly and assailed Edith.... It's just the dream of their military
+journalists. It's such schoolboy nonsense. Isn't that a beautiful pillar
+rose? Edith only put it in last year.... I hate all this talk of wars
+and rumours of wars.... It's worried all my life. And it gets worse and
+it gets emptier every year...."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+Now just at that moment there was a loud report....
+
+But neither Mr. Britling nor Mr. Manning nor Mr. Direck was interrupted
+or incommoded in the slightest degree by that report. Because it was too
+far off over the curve of this round world to be either heard or seen at
+Matching's Easy. Nevertheless it was a very loud report. It occurred at
+an open space by a river that ran through a cramped Oriental city, a
+city spiked with white minarets and girt about by bare hills under a
+blazing afternoon sky. It came from a black parcel that the Archduke
+Francis Ferdinand of Austria, with great presence of mind, had just
+flung out from the open hood of his automobile, where, tossed from the
+side of the quay, it had descended a few seconds before. It exploded as
+it touched the cobbled road just under the front of the second vehicle
+in the procession, and it blew to pieces the front of the automobile and
+injured the aide-de-camp who was in it and several of the spectators.
+Its thrower was immediately gripped by the bystanders. The procession
+stopped. There was a tremendous commotion amongst that brightly-costumed
+crowd, a hot excitement in vivid contrast to the Sabbath calm of
+Matching's Easy....
+
+Mr. Britling, to whom the explosion was altogether inaudible, continued
+his dissertation upon the common-sense of the world and the practical
+security of our Western peace.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+Lunch was an open-air feast again. Three visitors had dropped in; they
+had motored down from London piled up on a motor-cycle and a side-car; a
+brother and two sisters they seemed to be, and they had apparently
+reduced hilariousness to a principle. The rumours of coming hockey that
+had been floating on the outskirts of Mr. Direck's consciousness ever
+since his arrival, thickened and multiplied.... It crept into his mind
+that he was expected to play....
+
+He decided he would not play. He took various people into his
+confidence. He told Mr. Britling, and Mr. Britling said, "We'll make you
+full back, where you'll get a hit now and then and not have very much to
+do. All you have to remember is to hit with the flat side of your stick
+and not raise it above your shoulders." He told Teddy, and Teddy said,
+"I strongly advise you to dress as thinly as you can consistently with
+decency, and put your collar and tie in your pocket before the game
+begins. Hockey is properly a winter game." He told the maiden aunt-like
+lady with the prominent nose, and she said almost enviously, "Every one
+here is asked to play except me. I assuage the perambulator. I suppose
+one mustn't be envious. I don't see why I shouldn't play. I'm not so old
+as all that." He told Hugh, and Hugh warned him to be careful not to get
+hold of one of the sprung sticks. He considered whether it wouldn't be
+wiser to go to his own room and lock himself in, or stroll off for a
+walk through Claverings Park. But then he would miss Miss Corner, who
+was certain, it seemed, to come up for hockey. On the other hand, if he
+did not miss her he might make himself ridiculous in her eyes, and
+efface the effect of the green silk stuff with the golden pheasants.
+
+He determined to stay behind until she arrived, and explain to her that
+he was not going to play. He didn't somehow want her to think he wasn't
+perfectly fit to play.
+
+Mr. Carmine arrived in an automobile with two Indians and a gentleman
+who had been a prospector in Alaska, the family who had danced overnight
+at the Dower House reappeared, and then Mrs. Teddy, very detached with a
+special hockey stick, and Miss Corner wheeling the perambulator. Then
+came further arrivals. At the earliest opportunity Mr. Direck secured
+the attention of Miss Corner, and lost his interest in any one else.
+
+"I can't play this hockey," said Mr. Direck. "I feel strange about it.
+It isn't an American game. Now if it were baseball--!"
+
+He left her to suppose him uncommonly hot stuff at baseball.
+
+"If you're on my side," said Cecily, "mind you pass to me."
+
+It became evident to Mr. Direck that he was going to play this hockey
+after all.
+
+"Well," he said, "if I've got to play hockey, I guess I've got to play
+hockey. But can't I just get a bit of practice somewhere before the game
+begins?"
+
+So Miss Corner went off to get two sticks and a ball and came back to
+instruct Mr. Direck. She said he had a good eye. The two small boys
+scenting play in the air got sticks and joined them. The overnight
+visitor's wife appeared from the house in abbreviated skirts, and
+wearing formidable shin-guards. With her abundant fair hair, which was
+already breaking loose, so to speak, to join the fray, she looked like a
+short stout dismounted Valkyr. Her gaze was clear and firm.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+Hockey as it was played at the Dower House at Matching's Easy before the
+war, was a game combining danger, physical exercise and kindliness in a
+very high degree. Except for the infant in the perambulator and the
+outwardly calm but inwardly resentful aunt, who wheeled the child up and
+down in a position of maximum danger just behind the unnetted goal,
+every one was involved. Quite able-bodied people acquainted with the
+game played forward, the less well-informed played a defensive game
+behind the forward line, elderly, infirm, and bulky persons were used
+chiefly as obstacles in goal. Several players wore padded leg-guards,
+and all players were assumed to have them and expected to behave
+accordingly.
+
+Proceedings began with an invidious ceremony called picking up. This was
+heralded by Mr. Britling, clad in the diaphanous flannels and bearing a
+hockey stick, advancing with loud shouts to the centre of the hockey
+field. "Pick up! Pick up!" echoed the young Britlings.
+
+Mr. Direck became aware of a tall, drooping man with long hair and long
+digressive legs in still longer white flannel trousers, and a face that
+was somehow familiar. He was talking with affectionate intimacy to
+Manning, and suddenly Mr. Direck remembered that it was in Manning's
+weekly paper, _The Sectarian_, in which a bitter caricaturist enlivened
+a biting text, that he had become familiar with the features of
+Manning's companion. It was Raeburn, Raeburn the insidious, Raeburn the
+completest product of the party system.... Well, that was the English
+way. "Come for the pick up!" cried the youngest Britling, seizing upon
+Mr. Direck's elbow. It appeared that Mr. Britling and the overnight
+dinner guest--Mr. Direck never learnt his name--were picking up.
+
+Names were shouted. "I'll take Cecily!" Mr. Direck heard Mr. Britling
+say quite early. The opposing sides as they were picked fell into two
+groups. There seemed to be difficulties about some of the names. Mr.
+Britling, pointing to the more powerful looking of the Indian gentlemen,
+said, "_You_, Sir."
+
+"I'm going to speculate on Mr. Dinks," said Mr. Britling's opponent.
+
+Mr. Direck gathered that Mr. Dinks was to be his hockey name.
+
+"You're on _our_ side," said Mrs. Teddy. "I think you'll have to play
+forward, outer right, and keep a sharp eye on Cissie."
+
+"I'll do what I can," said Mr. Direck.
+
+His captain presently confirmed this appointment.
+
+His stick was really a sort of club and the ball was a firm hard cricket
+ball.... He resolved to be very gentle with Cecily, and see that she
+didn't get hurt.
+
+The sides took their places for the game, and a kind of order became
+apparent to Mr. Direck. In the centre stood Mr. Britling and the
+opposing captain, and the ball lay between them. They were preparing to
+"bully off" and start the game. In a line with each of them were four
+other forwards. They all looked spirited and intent young people, and
+Mr. Direck wished he had had more exercise to justify his own alert
+appearance. Behind each centre forward hovered one of the Britling boys.
+Then on each side came a vaguer row of three backs, persons of gentler
+disposition or maturer years. They included Mr. Raeburn, who was
+considered to have great natural abilities for hockey but little
+experience. Mr. Raeburn was behind Mr. Direck. Mrs. Britling was the
+centre back. Then in a corner of Mr. Direck's side was a small girl of
+six or seven, and in the half-circle about the goal a lady in a motoring
+dust coat and a very short little man whom Mr. Direck had not previously
+remarked. Mr. Lawrence Carmine, stripped to the braces, which were
+richly ornamented with Oriental embroidery, kept goal for our team.
+
+The centre forwards went through a rapid little ceremony. They smote
+their sticks on the ground, and then hit the sticks together. "One,"
+said Mr. Britling. The operation was repeated. "Two," ... "Three."
+
+Smack, Mr. Britling had got it and the ball had gone to the shorter and
+sturdier of the younger Britlings, who had been standing behind Mr.
+Direck's captain. Crack, and it was away to Teddy; smack, and it was
+coming right at Direck.
+
+"Lordy!" he said, and prepared to smite it.
+
+Then something swift and blue had flashed before him, intercepted the
+ball and shot it past him. This was Cecily Corner, and she and Teddy
+were running abreast like the wind towards Mr. Raeburn.
+
+"Hey!" cried Mr. Raeburn, "stop!" and advanced, as it seemed to Mr.
+Direck, with unseemly and threatening gestures towards Cissie.
+
+But before Mr. Direck could adjust his mind to this new phase of
+affairs, Cecily had passed the right honourable gentleman with the same
+mysterious ease with which she had flashed by Mr. Direck, and was
+bearing down upon the miscellaneous Landwehr which formed the "backs" of
+Mr. Direck's side.
+
+"_You_ rabbit!" cried Mr. Raeburn, and became extraordinarily active in
+pursuit, administering great lengths of arm and leg with a centralised
+efficiency he had not hitherto displayed.
+
+Running hard to the help of Mr. Raeburn was the youngest Britling boy, a
+beautiful contrast. It was like a puff ball supporting and assisting a
+conger eel. In front of Mr. Direck the little stout man was being alert.
+Teddy was supporting the attack near the middle of the field, crying
+"Centre!" while Mr. Britling, very round and resolute, was bouncing
+straight towards the threatened goal. But Mrs. Teddy, running as swiftly
+as her sister, was between Teddy and the ball. Whack! the little short
+man's stick had clashed with Cecily's. Confused things happened with
+sticks and feet, and the little short man appeared to be trying to cut
+down Cecily as one cuts down a tree, she tried to pass the ball to her
+centre forward--too late, and then Mrs. Teddy had intercepted it, and
+was flickering back towards Mr. Britling's goal in a rush in which Mr.
+Direck perceived it was his duty to join.
+
+Yes, he had to follow up Mrs. Teddy and pick up the ball if he had a
+chance and send it in to her or the captain or across to the left
+forwards, as circumstances might decide. It was perfectly clear.
+
+Then came his moment. The little formidably padded lady who had dined at
+the Dower House overnight, made a gallant attack upon Mrs. Teddy. Out of
+the confusion of this clash the ball spun into Mr. Direck's radius.
+Where should he smite and how? A moment of reflection was natural.
+
+But now the easy-fitting discipline of the Dower House style of hockey
+became apparent. Mr. Direck had last observed the tall young Indian
+gentleman, full of vitality and anxious for destruction, far away in the
+distance on the opposing right wing. But now, regardless of the more
+formal methods of the game, this young man had resolved, without further
+delay and at any cost, to hit the ball hard, and he was travelling like
+some Asiatic typhoon with an extreme velocity across the remonstrances
+of Mr. Britling and the general order of his side. Mr. Direck became
+aware of him just before his impact. There was a sort of collision from
+which Mr. Direck emerged with a feeling that one side of his face was
+permanently flattened, but still gallantly resolved to hit the
+comparatively lethargic ball. He and the staggered but resolute Indian
+clashed sticks again. And Mr. Direck had the best of it. Years of
+experience couldn't have produced a better pass to the captain....
+
+"Good pass!"
+
+Apparently from one of the London visitors.
+
+But this was _some_ game!
+
+The ball executed some rapid movements to and fro across the field. Our
+side was pressing hard. There was a violent convergence of miscellaneous
+backs and suchlike irregulars upon the threatened goal. Mr. Britling's
+dozen was rapidly losing its disciplined order. One of the sidecar
+ladies and the gallant Indian had shifted their activities to the
+defensive back, and with them was a spectacled gentleman waving his
+stick, high above all recognised rules. Mr. Direck's captain and both
+Britling boys hurried to join the fray. Mr. Britling, who seemed to Mr.
+Direck to be for a captain rather too demagogic, also ran back to rally
+his forces by loud cries. "Pass outwardly!" was the burthen of his
+contribution.
+
+The struggle about the Britling goal ceased to be a game and became
+something between a fight and a social gathering. Mr. Britling's
+goal-keeper could be heard shouting, "I can't see the ball! _Lift your
+feet!_" The crowded conflict lurched towards the goal posts. "My shin!"
+cried Mr. Manning. "No, you _don't!_"
+
+Whack, but again whack!
+
+Whack! "Ah! _would_ you?" Whack.
+
+"Goal!" cried the side-car gentleman.
+
+"Goal!" cried the Britling boys....
+
+Mr. Manning, as goal-keeper, went to recover the ball, but one of the
+Britling boys politely anticipated him.
+
+The crowd became inactive, and then began to drift back to loosely
+conceived positions.
+
+"It's no good swarming into goal like that," Mr. Britling, with a faint
+asperity in his voice, explained to his followers. "We've got to keep
+open and not _crowd_ each other."
+
+Then he went confidentially to the energetic young Indian to make some
+restrictive explanation of his activities.
+
+Mr. Direck strolled back towards Cecily. He was very warm and a little
+blown, but not, he felt, disgraced. He was winning.
+
+"You'll have to take your coat off," she said.
+
+It was a good idea.
+
+It had occurred to several people and the boundary line was already
+dotted with hastily discarded jackets and wraps and so forth. But the
+lady in the motoring dust coat was buttoning it to the chin.
+
+"One goal love," said the minor Britling boy.
+
+"We haven't begun yet, Sunny," said Cecily.
+
+"Sonny! That's American," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"No. We call him Sunny Jim," said Cecily. "They're bullying off again."
+
+"Sunny Jim's American too," said Mr. Direck, returning to his place....
+
+The struggle was resumed. And soon it became clear that the first goal
+was no earnest of the quality of the struggle. Teddy and Cecily formed a
+terribly efficient combination. Against their brilliant rushes,
+supported in a vehement but effective manner by the Indian to their
+right and guided by loud shoutings from Mr. Britling (centre), Mr.
+Direck and the side-car lady and Mr. Raeburn struggled in vain. One
+swift advance was only checked by the dust cloak, its folds held the
+ball until help arrived; another was countered by a tremendous swipe of
+Mr. Raeburn's that sent the ball within an inch of the youngest
+Britling's head and right across the field; the third resulted in a
+swift pass from Cecily to the elder Britling son away on her right, and
+he shot the goal neatly and swiftly through the lattice of Mr. Lawrence
+Carmine's defensive movements. And after that very rapidly came another
+goal for Mr. Britling's side and then another.
+
+Then Mr. Britling cried out that it was "Half Time," and explained to
+Mr. Direck that whenever one side got to three goals they considered it
+was half time and had five minutes' rest and changed sides. Everybody
+was very hot and happy, except the lady in the dust cloak who was
+perfectly cool. In everybody's eyes shone the light of battle, and not a
+shadow disturbed the brightness of the afternoon for Mr. Direck except a
+certain unspoken anxiety about Mr. Raeburn's trousers.
+
+You see Mr. Direck had never seen Mr. Raeburn before, and knew nothing
+about his trousers.
+
+They appeared to be coming down.
+
+To begin with they had been rather loose over the feet and turned up,
+and as the game progressed, fold after fold of concertina-ed flannel
+gathered about his ankles. Every now and then Mr. Raeburn would seize
+the opportunity of some respite from the game to turn up a fresh six
+inches or so of this accumulation. Naturally Mr. Direck expected this
+policy to end unhappily. He did not know that the flannel trousers of
+Mr. Raeburn were like a river, that they could come down forever and
+still remain inexhaustible....
+
+He had visions of this scene of happy innocence being suddenly blasted
+by a monstrous disaster....
+
+Apart from this worry Mr. Direck was as happy as any one there!
+
+Perhaps these apprehensions affected his game. At any rate he did
+nothing that pleased him in the second half, Cecily danced all over him
+and round and about him, and in the course of ten minutes her side had
+won the two remaining goals with a score of Five-One; and five goals is
+"game" by the standards of Matching's Easy.
+
+And then with the very slightest of delays these insatiable people
+picked up again. Mr. Direck slipped away and returned in a white silk
+shirt, tennis trousers and a belt. This time he and Cecily were on the
+same side, the Cecily-Teddy combination was broken, and he it seemed was
+to take the place of the redoubtable Teddy on the left wing with her.
+
+This time the sides were better chosen and played a long, obstinate,
+even game. One-One. One-Two. One-Three. (Half Time.) Two-Three. Three
+all. Four-Three. Four all....
+
+By this time Mr. Direck was beginning to master the simple strategy of
+the sport. He was also beginning to master the fact that Cecily was the
+quickest, nimblest, most indefatigable player on the field. He scouted
+for her and passed to her. He developed tacit understandings with her.
+Ideas of protecting her had gone to the four winds of Heaven. Against
+them Teddy and a sidecar girl with Raeburn in support made a memorable
+struggle. Teddy was as quick as a cat. "Four-Three" looked like winning,
+but then Teddy and the tall Indian and Mrs. Teddy pulled square. They
+almost repeated this feat and won, but Mr. Manning saved the situation
+with an immense oblique hit that sent the ball to Mr. Direck. He ran
+with the ball up to Raeburn and then dodged and passed to Cecily. There
+was a lively struggle to the left; the ball was hit out by Mr. Raeburn
+and thrown in by a young Britling; lost by the forwards and rescued by
+the padded lady. Forward again! This time will do it!
+
+Cecily away to the left had worked round Mr. Raeburn once more. Teddy,
+realising that things were serious, was tearing back to attack her.
+
+Mr. Direck supported with silent intentness. "Centre!" cried Mr.
+Britling. "Cen-tre!"
+
+"Mr. Direck!" came her voice, full of confidence. (Of such moments is
+the heroic life.) The ball shot behind the hurtling Teddy. Mr. Direck
+stopped it with his foot, a trick he had just learnt from the eldest
+Britling son. He was neither slow nor hasty. He was in the half-circle,
+and the way to the goal was barred only by the dust-cloak lady and Mr.
+Lawrence Carmine. He made as if to shoot to Mr. Carmine's left and then
+smacked the ball, with the swiftness of a serpent's stroke, to his
+right.
+
+He'd done it! Mr. Carmine's stick and feet were a yard away.
+
+Then hard on this wild triumph came a flash of horror. One can't see
+everything. His eye following the ball's trajectory....
+
+Directly in its line of flight was the perambulator.
+
+The ball missed the legs of the lady with the noble nose by a kind of
+miracle, hit and glanced off the wheel of the perambulator, and went
+spinning into a border of antirrhinums.
+
+"Good!" cried Cecily. "Splendid shot!"
+
+He'd shot a goal. He'd done it well. The perambulator it seemed didn't
+matter. Though apparently the impact had awakened the baby. In the
+margin of his consciousness was the figure of Mr. Britling remarking:
+"Aunty. You really mustn't wheel the perambulator--_just_ there."
+
+"I thought," said the aunt, indicating the goal posts by a facial
+movement, "that those two sticks would be a sort of protection.... Aah!
+_Did_ they then?"
+
+Never mind that.
+
+"That's _game!_" said one of the junior Britlings to Mr. Direck with a
+note of high appreciation, and the whole party, relaxing and crumpling
+like a lowered flag, moved towards the house and tea.
+
+
+Section 5
+
+"We'll play some more after tea," said Cecily. "It will be cooler then."
+
+"My word, I'm beginning to like it," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"You're going to play very well," she said.
+
+And such is the magic of a game that Mr. Direck was humbly proud and
+grateful for her praise, and trotted along by the side of this creature
+who had revealed herself so swift and resolute and decisive, full to
+overflowing of the mere pleasure of just trotting along by her side. And
+after tea, which was a large confused affair, enlivened by wonderful and
+entirely untruthful reminiscences of the afternoon by Mr. Raeburn, they
+played again, with fewer inefficients and greater skill and swiftness,
+and Mr. Direck did such quick and intelligent things that everybody
+declared that he was a hockey player straight from heaven. The dusk,
+which at last made the position of the ball too speculative for play,
+came all too soon for him. He had played in six games, and he knew he
+would be as stiff as a Dutch doll in the morning. But he was very, very
+happy.
+
+The rest of the Sunday evening was essentially a sequel to the hockey.
+
+Mr. Direck changed again, and after using some embrocation that Mrs.
+Britling recommended very strongly, came down in a black jacket and a
+cheerfully ample black tie. He had a sense of physical well-being such
+as he had not experienced since he came aboard the liner at New York.
+The curious thing was that it was not quite the same sense of physical
+well-being that one had in America. That is bright and clear and a
+little dry, this was--humid. His mind quivered contentedly, like sunset
+midges over a lake--it had no hard bright flashes--and his body wanted
+to sit about. His sense of intimacy with Cecily increased each time he
+looked at her. When she met his eyes she smiled. He'd caught her style
+now, he felt; he attempted no more compliments and was frankly her
+pupil at hockey and Badminton. After supper Mr. Britling renewed his
+suggestion of an automobile excursion on the Monday.
+
+"There's nothing to take you back to London," said Mr. Britling, "and we
+could just hunt about the district with the little old car and see
+everything you want to see...."
+
+Mr. Direck did not hesitate three seconds. He thought of Gladys; he
+thought of Miss Cecily Corner.
+
+"Well, indeed," he said, "if it isn't burthening you, if I'm not being
+any sort of inconvenience here for another night, I'd be really very
+glad indeed of the opportunity of going around and seeing all these
+ancient places...."
+
+
+Section 6
+
+The newspapers came next morning at nine, and were full of the Sarajevo
+Murders. Mr. Direck got the _Daily Chronicle_ and found quite animated
+headlines for a British paper.
+
+"Who's this Archduke," he asked, "anyhow? And where is this Bosnia? I
+thought it was a part of Turkey."
+
+"It's in Austria," said Teddy.
+
+"It's in the middle ages," said Mr. Britling. "What an odd, pertinaceous
+business it seems to have been. First one bomb, then another; then
+finally the man with the pistol. While we were strolling about the rose
+garden. It's like something out of 'The Prisoner of Zenda.'"
+
+"Please," said Herr Heinrich.
+
+Mr. Britling assumed an attentive expression.
+
+"Will not this generally affect European politics?"
+
+"I don't know. Perhaps it will."
+
+"It says in the paper that Serbia has sent those bombs to Sarajevo."
+
+"It's like another world," said Mr. Britling, over his paper.
+"Assassination as a political method. Can you imagine anything of the
+sort happening nowadays west of the Adriatic? Imagine some one
+assassinating the American Vice-President, and the bombs being at once
+ascribed to the arsenal at Toronto!... We take our politics more sadly
+in the West.... Won't you have another egg, Direck?"
+
+"Please! Might this not lead to a war?"
+
+"I don't think so. Austria may threaten Serbia, but she doesn't want to
+provoke a conflict with Russia. It would be going too near the powder
+magazine. But it's all an extraordinary business."
+
+"But if she did?" Herr Heinrich persisted.
+
+"She won't.... Some years ago I used to believe in the inevitable
+European war," Mr. Britling explained to Mr. Direck, "but it's been
+threatened so long that at last I've lost all belief in it. The Powers
+wrangle and threaten. They're far too cautious and civilised to let the
+guns go off. If there was going to be a war it would have happened two
+years ago when the Balkan League fell upon Turkey. Or when Bulgaria
+attacked Serbia...."
+
+Herr Heinrich reflected, and received these conclusions with an
+expression of respectful edification.
+
+"I am naturally anxious," he said, "because I am taking tickets for my
+holidays at an Esperanto Conference at Boulogne."
+
+
+Section 7
+
+"There is only one way to master such a thing as driving an automobile,"
+said Mr. Britling outside his front door, as he took his place in the
+driver's seat, "and that is to resolve that from the first you will take
+no risks. Be slow if you like. Stop and think when you are in doubt. But
+do nothing rashly, permit no mistakes."
+
+It seemed to Mr. Direck as he took his seat beside his host that this
+was admirable doctrine.
+
+They started out of the gates with an extreme deliberation. Indeed twice
+they stopped dead in the act of turning into the road, and the engine
+had to be restarted.
+
+"You will laugh at me," said Mr. Britling; "but I'm resolved to have no
+blunders this time."
+
+"I don't laugh at you. It's excellent," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"It's the right way," said Mr. Britling. "Care--oh damn! I've stopped
+the engine again. Ugh!--ah!--_so!_--Care, I was saying--and calm."
+
+"Don't think I want to hurry you," said Mr. Direck. "I don't...."
+
+They passed through the tillage at a slow, agreeable pace, tooting
+loudly at every corner, and whenever a pedestrian was approached. Mr.
+Direck was reminded that he had still to broach the lecture project to
+Mr. Britling. So much had happened--
+
+The car halted abruptly and the engine stopped.
+
+"I thought that confounded hen was thinking of crossing the road," said
+Mr. Britling. "Instead of which she's gone through the hedge. She
+certainly looked this way.... Perhaps I'm a little fussy this
+morning.... I'll warm up to the work presently."
+
+"I'm convinced you can't be too careful," said Mr. Direck. "And this
+sort of thing enables one to see the country better...."
+
+Beyond the village Mr. Britling seemed to gather confidence. The pace
+quickened. But whenever other traffic or any indication of a side way
+appeared discretion returned. Mr. Britling stalked his sign posts,
+crawling towards them on the belly of the lowest gear; he drove all the
+morning like a man who is flushing ambuscades. And yet accident overtook
+him. For God demands more from us than mere righteousness.
+
+He cut through the hills to Market Saffron along a lane-road with which
+he was unfamiliar. It began to go up hill. He explained to Mr. Direck
+how admirably his engine would climb hills on the top gear.
+
+They took a curve and the hill grew steeper, and Mr. Direck opened the
+throttle.
+
+They rounded another corner, and still more steeply the hill rose before
+them.
+
+The engine began to make a chinking sound, and the car lost pace. And
+then Mr. Britling saw a pleading little white board with the inscription
+"Concealed Turning." For the moment he thought a turning might be
+concealed anywhere. He threw out his clutch and clapped on his brake.
+Then he repented of what he had done. But the engine, after three
+Herculean throbs, ceased to work. Mr. Britling with a convulsive clutch
+at his steering wheel set the electric hooter snarling, while one foot
+released the clutch again and the other, on the accelerator, sought in
+vain for help. Mr. Direck felt they were going back, back, in spite of
+all this vocalisation. He clutched at the emergency brake. But he was
+too late to avoid misfortune. With a feeling like sitting gently in
+butter, the car sank down sideways and stopped with two wheels in the
+ditch.
+
+Mr. Britling said they were in the ditch--said it with quite unnecessary
+violence....
+
+This time two cart horses and a retinue of five men were necessary to
+restore Gladys to her self-respect....
+
+After that they drove on to Market Saffron, and got there in time for
+lunch, and after lunch Mr. Direck explored the church and the churchyard
+and the parish register....
+
+After lunch Mr. Britling became more cheerful about his driving. The
+road from Market Saffron to Blandish, whence one turns off to Matching's
+Easy, is the London and Norwich high road; it is an old Roman Stane
+Street and very straightforward and honest in its stretches. You can see
+the cross roads half a mile away, and the low hedges give you no chance
+of a surprise. Everybody is cheered by such a road, and everybody drives
+more confidently and quickly, and Mr. Britling particularly was
+heartened by it and gradually let out Gladys from the almost excessive
+restriction that had hitherto marked the day. "On a road like this
+nothing can happen," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Unless you broke an axle or burst a tyre," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"My man at Matching's Easy is most careful in his inspection," said Mr.
+Britling, putting the accelerator well down and watching the speed
+indicator creep from forty to forty-five. "He went over the car not a
+week ago. And it's not one month old--in use that is."
+
+Yet something did happen.
+
+It was as they swept by the picturesque walls under the big old trees
+that encircle Brandismead Park. It was nothing but a slight
+miscalculation of distances. Ahead of them and well to the left, rode a
+postman on a bicycle; towards them, with that curious effect of
+implacable fury peculiar to motor cycles, came a motor cyclist. First
+Mr. Britling thought that he would not pass between these two, then he
+decided that he would hurry up and do so, then he reverted to his former
+decision, and then it seemed to him that he was going so fast that he
+must inevitably run down the postman. His instinct not to do that pulled
+the car sharply across the path of the motor cyclist. "Oh, my God!"
+cried Mr. Britling. "My God!" twisted his wheel over and distributed his
+feet among his levers dementedly.
+
+He had an imperfectly formed idea of getting across right in front of
+the motor cyclist, and then they were going down the brief grassy slope
+between the road and the wall, straight at the wall, and still at a good
+speed. The motor cyclist smacked against something and vanished from the
+problem. The wall seemed to rush up at them and then--collapse. There
+was a tremendous concussion. Mr. Direck gripped at his friend the
+emergency brake, but had only time to touch it before his head hit
+against the frame of the glass wind-screen, and a curtain fell upon
+everything....
+
+He opened his eyes upon a broken wall, a crumpled motor car, and an
+undamaged motor cyclist in the aviator's cap and thin oilskin overalls
+dear to motor cyclists. Mr. Direck stared and then, still stunned and
+puzzled, tried to raise himself. He became aware of acute pain.
+
+"Don't move for a bit," said the motor cyclist. "Your arm and side are
+rather hurt, I think...."
+
+
+Section 8
+
+In the course of the next twelve hours Mr. Direck was to make a
+discovery that was less common in the days before the war than it has
+been since. He discovered that even pain and injury may be vividly
+interesting and gratifying.
+
+If any one had told him he was going to be stunned for five or six
+minutes, cut about the brow and face and have a bone in his wrist put
+out, and that as a consequence he would find himself pleased and
+exhilarated, he would have treated the prophecy with ridicule; but here
+he was lying stiffly on his back with his wrist bandaged to his side and
+smiling into the darkness even more brightly than he had smiled at the
+Essex landscape two days before. The fact is pain hurts or irritates,
+but in itself it does not make a healthily constituted man miserable.
+The expectation of pain, the certainty of injury may make one hopeless
+enough, the reality rouses our resistance. Nobody wants a broken bone or
+a delicate wrist, but very few people are very much depressed by getting
+one. People can be much more depressed by smoking a hundred cigarettes
+in three days or losing one per cent. of their capital.
+
+And everybody had been most delightful to Mr. Direck.
+
+He had had the monopoly of damage. Mr. Britling, holding on to the
+steering wheel, had not even been thrown out. "Unless I'm internally
+injured," he said, "I'm not hurt at all. My liver perhaps--bruised a
+little...."
+
+Gladys had been abandoned in the ditch, and they had been very kindly
+brought home by a passing automobile. Cecily had been at the Dower
+House at the moment of the rueful arrival. She had seen how an American
+can carry injuries. She had made sympathy and helpfulness more
+delightful by expressed admiration.
+
+"She's a natural born nurse," said Mr. Direck, and then rather in the
+tone of one who addressed a public meeting: "But this sort of thing
+brings out all the good there is in a woman."
+
+He had been quite explicit to them and more particularly to her, when
+they told him he must stay at the Dower House until his arm was cured.
+He had looked the application straight into her pretty eyes.
+
+"If I'm to stay right here just as a consequence of that little shake
+up, may be for a couple of weeks, may be three, and if you're coming to
+do a bit of a talk to me ever and again, then I tell you I don't call
+this a misfortune. It isn't a misfortune. It's right down sheer good
+luck...."
+
+And now he lay as straight as a mummy, with his soul filled with
+radiance of complete mental peace. After months of distress and
+confusion, he'd got straight again. He was in the middle of a real good
+story, bright and clean. He knew just exactly what he wanted.
+
+"After all," he said, "it's true. There's ideals. _She's_ an ideal. Why,
+I loved her before ever I set eyes on Mamie. I loved her before I was
+put into pants. That old portrait, there it was pointing my destiny....
+It's affinity.... It's natural selection....
+
+"Well, I don't know what she thinks of me yet, but I do know very well
+what she's _got_ to think of me. She's got to think all the world of
+me--if I break every limb of my body making her do it.
+
+"I'd a sort of feeling it was right to go in that old automobile.
+
+"Say what you like, there's a Guidance...."
+
+He smiled confidentially at the darkness as if they shared a secret.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FOURTH
+
+MR. BRITLING IN SOLILOQUY
+
+
+Section 1
+
+Very different from the painful contentment of the bruised and broken
+Mr. Direck was the state of mind of his unwounded host. He too was
+sleepless, but sleepless without exaltation. The day had been too much
+for him altogether; his head, to borrow an admirable American
+expression, was "busy."
+
+How busy it was, a whole chapter will be needed to describe....
+
+The impression Mr. Britling had made upon Mr. Direck was one of
+indefatigable happiness. But there were times when Mr. Britling was
+called upon to pay for his general cheerful activity in lump sums of
+bitter sorrow. There were nights--and especially after seasons of
+exceptional excitement and nervous activity--when the reckoning would be
+presented and Mr. Britling would welter prostrate and groaning under a
+stormy sky of unhappiness--active insatiable unhappiness--a beating with
+rods.
+
+The sorrows of the sanguine temperament are brief but furious; the world
+knows little of them. The world has no need to reckon with them. They
+cause no suicides and few crimes. They hurry past, smiting at their
+victim as they go. None the less they are misery. Mr. Britling in these
+moods did not perhaps experience the grey and hopeless desolations of
+the melancholic nor the red damnation of the choleric, but he saw a
+world that bristled with misfortune and error, with poisonous thorns and
+traps and swampy places and incurable blunderings. An almost
+insupportable remorse for being Mr. Britling would pursue
+him--justifying itself upon a hundred counts....
+
+And for being such a Britling!...
+
+Why--he revived again that bitter question of a thousand and one unhappy
+nights--why was he such a fool? Such a hasty fool? Why couldn't he look
+before he leapt? Why did he take risks? Why was he always so ready to
+act upon the supposition that all was bound to go well? (He might as
+well have asked why he had quick brown eyes.)
+
+Why, for instance, hadn't he adhered to the resolution of the early
+morning? He had begun with an extremity of caution....
+
+It was a characteristic of these moods of Mr. Britling that they
+produced a physical restlessness. He kept on turning over and then
+turning over again, and sitting up and lying back, like a martyr on a
+gridiron....
+
+This was just the latest instance of a life-long trouble. Will there
+ever be a sort of man whose thoughts are quick and his acts slow? Then
+indeed we shall have a formidable being. Mr. Britling's thoughts were
+quick and sanguine and his actions even more eager than his thoughts.
+Already while he was a young man Mr. Britling had found his acts elbow
+their way through the hurry of his ideas and precipitate humiliations.
+Long before his reasons were marshalled, his resolutions were formed. He
+had attempted a thousand remonstrances with himself; he had sought to
+remedy the defects in his own character by written inscriptions in his
+bedroom and memoranda inside his watch case. "Keep steady!" was one of
+them. "Keep the End in View." And, "Go steadfastly, coherently,
+continuously; only so can you go where you will." In distrusting all
+impulse, scrutinising all imagination, he was persuaded lay his one
+prospect of escape from the surprise of countless miseries. Otherwise he
+danced among glass bombs and barbed wire.
+
+There had been a time when he could exhort himself to such fundamental
+charge and go through phases of the severest discipline. Always at last
+to be taken by surprise from some unexpected quarter. At last he had
+ceased to hope for any triumph so radical. He had been content to
+believe that in recent years age and a gathering habit of wisdom had
+somewhat slowed his leaping purpose. That if he hadn't overcome he had
+at least to a certain extent minimised it. But this last folly was
+surely the worst. To charge through this patient world with--how much
+did the car weigh? A ton certainly and perhaps more--reckless of every
+risk. Not only to himself but others. At this thought, he clutched the
+steering wheel again. Once more he saw the bent back of the endangered
+cyclist, once more he felt rather than saw the seething approach of the
+motor bicycle, and then through a long instant he drove helplessly at
+the wall....
+
+Hell perhaps is only one such incident, indefinitely prolonged....
+
+Anything might have been there in front of him. And indeed now, out of
+the dreamland to which he could not escape something had come, something
+that screamed sharply....
+
+"Good God!" he cried, "if I had hit a child! I might have hit a child!"
+The hypothesis flashed into being with the thought, tried to escape and
+was caught. It was characteristic of Mr. Britling's nocturnal
+imagination that he should individualise this child quite sharply as
+rather plain and slender, with reddish hair, staring eyes, and its ribs
+crushed in a vivid and dreadful manner, pinned against the wall, mixed
+up with some bricks, only to be extracted, oh! _horribly_.
+
+But this was not fair! He had hurt no child! He had merely pitched out
+Mr. Direck and broken his arm....
+
+It wasn't his merit that the child hadn't been there!
+
+The child might have been there!
+
+Mere luck.
+
+He lay staring in despair--as an involuntary God might stare at many a
+thing in this amazing universe--staring at the little victim his
+imagination had called into being only to destroy....
+
+
+Section 2
+
+If he had not crushed a child other people had. Such things happened.
+Vicariously at any rate he had crushed many children....
+
+Why are children ever crushed?
+
+And suddenly all the pain and destruction and remorse of all the
+accidents in the world descended upon Mr. Britling.
+
+No longer did he ask why am I such a fool, but why are we all such
+fools? He became Man on the automobile of civilisation, crushing his
+thousands daily in his headlong and yet aimless career....
+
+That was a trick of Mr. Britling's mind. It had this tendency to spread
+outward from himself to generalised issues. Many minds are like that
+nowadays. He was not so completely individualised as people are supposed
+to be individualised--in our law, in our stories, in our moral
+judgments. He had a vicarious factor. He could slip from concentrated
+reproaches to the liveliest remorse for himself as The Automobilist in
+General, or for himself as England, or for himself as Man. From remorse
+for smashing his guest and his automobile he could pass by what was for
+him the most imperceptible of transitions to remorse for every accident
+that has ever happened through the error of an automobilist since
+automobiles began. All that long succession of blunderers became Mr.
+Britling. Or rather Mr. Britling became all that vast succession of
+blunderers.
+
+These fluctuating lapses from individuation made Mr. Britling a
+perplexity to many who judged only by the old personal standards. At
+times he seemed a monster of cantankerous self-righteousness, whom
+nobody could please or satisfy, but indeed when he was most pitiless
+about the faults of his race or nation he was really reproaching
+himself, and when he seemed more egotistical and introspective and
+self-centred he was really ransacking himself for a clue to that same
+confusion of purposes that waste the hope and strength of humanity. And
+now through the busy distresses of the night it would have perplexed a
+watching angel to have drawn the line and shown when Mr. Britling, was
+grieving for his own loss and humiliation and when he was grieving for
+these common human weaknesses of which he had so large a share.
+
+And this double refraction of his mind by which a concentrated and
+individualised Britling did but present a larger impersonal Britling
+beneath, carried with it a duplication of his conscience and sense of
+responsibility. To his personal conscience he was answerable for his
+private honour and his debts and the Dower House he had made and so on,
+but to his impersonal conscience he was answerable for the whole world.
+The world from the latter point of view was his egg. He had a
+subconscious delusion that he had laid it. He had a subconscious
+suspicion that he had let it cool and that it was addled. He had an
+urgency to incubate it. The variety and interest of his talk was largely
+due to that persuasion, it was a perpetual attempt to spread his mental
+feathers over the task before him....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+After this much of explanation it is possible to go on to the task which
+originally brought Mr. Direck to Matching's Easy, the task that
+Massachusetts society had sent him upon, the task of organising the
+mental unveiling of Mr. Britling. Mr. Direck saw Mr. Britling only in
+the daylight, and with an increasing distraction of the attention
+towards Miss Cecily Corner. We may see him rather _more_ clearly in the
+darkness, without any distraction except his own.
+
+Now the smashing of Gladys was not only the source of a series of
+reproaches and remorses directly arising out of the smash; it had also a
+wide system of collateral consequences, which were also banging and
+blundering their way through the Britling mind. It was extraordinarily
+inconvenient in quite another direction that the automobile should be
+destroyed. It upset certain plans of Mr. Britling's in a direction
+growing right out from all the Dower House world in which Mr. Direck
+supposed him to be completely set and rooted. There were certain matters
+from which Mr. Britling had been averting his mind most strenuously
+throughout the week-end. Now, there was no averting his mind any more.
+
+Mr. Britling was entangled in a love affair. It was, to be exact, and
+disregarding minor affinities, his eighth love affair. And the new
+automobile, so soon as he could drive it efficiently, was to have played
+quite a solvent and conclusive part in certain entangled complications
+of this relationship.
+
+A man of lively imagination and quick impulses naturally has love
+affairs as he drives himself through life, just as he naturally has
+accidents if he drives an automobile.
+
+And the peculiar relations that existed between Mr. Britling and Mrs.
+Britling tended inevitably to make these love affairs troublesome,
+undignified and futile. Especially when they were viewed from the point
+of view of insomnia.
+
+Mr. Britling's first marriage had been a passionately happy one. His
+second was by comparison a marriage in neutral tint. There is much to be
+said for that extreme Catholic theory which would make marriage not
+merely lifelong but eternal. Certainly Mr. Britling would have been a
+finer if not a happier creature if his sentimental existence could have
+died with his first wife or continued only in his love for their son. He
+had married in the glow of youth, he had had two years of clean and
+simple loving, helping, quarrelling and the happy ending of quarrels.
+Something went out of him into all that, which could not be renewed
+again. In his first extremity of grief he knew that perfectly well--and
+then afterwards he forgot it. While there is life there is imagination,
+which makes and forgets and goes on.
+
+He met Edith under circumstances that did not in any way recall his lost
+Mary. He met her, as people say, "socially"; Mary, on the other hand,
+had been a girl at Newnham while he was a fellow of Pembroke, and there
+had been something of accident and something of furtiveness in their
+lucky discovery of each other. There had been a flush in it; there was
+dash in it. But Edith he saw and chose and had to woo. There was no
+rushing together; there was solicitation and assent. Edith was a
+Bachelor of Science of London University and several things like that,
+and she looked upon the universe under her broad forehead and
+broad-waving brown hair with quiet watchful eyes that had nothing
+whatever to hide, a thing so incredible to Mr. Britling that he had
+loved and married her very largely for the serenity of her mystery. And
+for a time after their marriage he sailed over those brown depths
+plumbing furiously.
+
+Of course he did not make his former passion for Mary at all clear to
+her. Indeed, while he was winning Edith it was by no means clear to
+himself. He was making a new emotional drama, and consciously and
+subconsciously he dismissed a hundred reminiscences that sought to
+invade the new experience, and which would have been out of key with it.
+And without any deliberate intention to that effect he created an
+atmosphere between himself and Edith in which any discussion of Mary was
+reduced to a minimum, and in which Hugh was accepted rather than
+explained. He contrived to believe that she understood all sorts of
+unsayable things; he invented miracles of quite uncongenial mute
+mutuality....
+
+It was over the chess-board that they first began to discover their
+extensive difficulties of sympathy. Mr. Britling's play was
+characterised by a superficial brilliance, much generosity and extreme
+unsoundness; he always moved directly his opponent had done so--and then
+reflected on the situation. His reflection was commonly much wiser than
+his moves. Mrs. Britling was, as it were, a natural antagonist to her
+husband; she was as calm as he was irritable. She was never in a hurry
+to move, and never disposed to make a concession. Quietly, steadfastly,
+by caution and deliberation, without splendour, without error, she had
+beaten him at chess until it led to such dreadful fits of anger that he
+had to renounce the game altogether. After every such occasion he would
+be at great pains to explain that he had merely been angry with himself.
+Nevertheless he felt, and would not let himself think (while she
+concluded from incidental heated phrases), that that was not the
+complete truth about the outbreak.
+
+Slowly they got through the concealments of that specious explanation.
+Temperamentally they were incompatible.
+
+They were profoundly incompatible. In all things she was defensive. She
+never came out; never once had she surprised him halfway upon the road
+to her. He had to go all the way to her and knock and ring, and then she
+answered faithfully. She never surprised him even by unkindness. If he
+had a cut finger she would bind it up very skilfully and healingly, but
+unless he told her she never discovered he had a cut finger. He was
+amazed she did not know of it before it happened. He piped and she did
+not dance. That became the formula of his grievance. For several unhappy
+years she thwarted him and disappointed him, while he filled her with
+dumb inexplicable distresses. He had been at first so gay an activity,
+and then he was shattered; fragments of him were still as gay and
+attractive as ever, but between were outbreaks of anger, of hostility,
+of something very like malignity. Only very slowly did they realise the
+truth of their relationship and admit to themselves that the fine bud
+of love between them had failed to flower, and only after long years
+were they able to delimit boundaries where they had imagined union, and
+to become--allies. If it had been reasonably possible for them to part
+without mutual injury and recrimination they would have done so, but two
+children presently held them, and gradually they had to work out the
+broad mutual toleration of their later relations. If there was no love
+and delight between them there was a real habitual affection and much
+mutual help. She was proud of his steady progress to distinction, proud
+of each intimation of respect he won; she admired and respected his
+work; she recognised that he had some magic, of liveliness and
+unexpectedness that was precious and enviable. So far as she could help
+him she did. And even when he knew that there was nothing behind it,
+that it was indeed little more than an imaginative inertness, he could
+still admire and respect her steady dignity and her consistent
+honourableness. Her practical capacity was for him a matter for
+continual self-congratulation. He marked the bright order of her
+household, her flowering borders, the prosperous high-born roses of her
+garden with a wondering appreciation. He had never been able to keep
+anything in order. He relied more and more upon her. He showed his
+respect for her by a scrupulous attention to her dignity, and his
+confidence by a franker and franker emotional neglect. Because she
+expressed so little he succeeded in supposing she felt little, and since
+nothing had come out of the brown depths of her eyes he saw fit at last
+to suppose no plumb-line would ever find anything there. He pursued his
+interests; he reached out to this and that; he travelled; she made it a
+matter of conscience to let him go unhampered; she felt, she
+thought--unrecorded; he did, and he expressed and re-expressed and
+over-expressed, and started this and that with quick irrepressible
+activity, and so there had accumulated about them the various items of
+the life to whose more ostensible accidents Mr. Direck was now for an
+indefinite period joined.
+
+It was in the nature of Mr. Britling to incur things; it was in the
+nature of Mrs. Britling to establish them. Mr. Britling had taken the
+Dower House on impulse, and she had made it a delightful home. He had
+discovered the disorderly delights of mixed Sunday hockey one week-end
+at Pontings that had promised to be dull, and she had made it an
+institution.... He had come to her with his orphan boy and a memory of a
+passionate first loss that sometimes, and more particularly at first, he
+seemed to have forgotten altogether, and at other times was only too
+evidently lamenting with every fibre of his being. She had taken the
+utmost care of the relics of her duskily pretty predecessor that she
+found in unexpected abundance in Mr. Britling's possession, and she had
+done her duty by her sometimes rather incomprehensible stepson. She
+never allowed herself to examine the state of her heart towards this
+youngster; it is possible that she did not perceive the necessity for
+any such examination....
+
+So she went through life, outwardly serene and dignified, one of a great
+company of rather fastidious, rather unenterprising women who have
+turned for their happiness to secondary things, to those fair inanimate
+things of household and garden which do not turn again and rend one, to
+aestheticisms and delicacies, to order and seemliness. Moreover she
+found great satisfaction in the health and welfare, the growth and
+animation of her own two little boys. And no one knew, and perhaps even
+she had contrived to forget, the phases of astonishment and
+disillusionment, of doubt and bitterness and secret tears, that spread
+out through the years in which she had slowly realised that this
+strange, fitful, animated man who had come to her, vowing himself hers,
+asking for her so urgently and persuasively, was ceasing, had ceased, to
+love her, that his heart had escaped her, that she had missed it; she
+never dreamt that she had hurt it, and that after its first urgent,
+tumultuous, incomprehensible search for her it had hidden itself
+bitterly away....
+
+
+Section 4
+
+The mysterious processes of nature that had produced Mr. Britling had
+implanted in him an obstinate persuasion that somewhere in the world,
+from some human being, it was still possible to find the utmost
+satisfaction for every need and craving. He could imagine as existing,
+as waiting for him, he knew not where, a completeness of understanding,
+a perfection of response, that would reach all the gamut of his feelings
+and sensations from the most poetical to the most entirely physical, a
+beauty of relationship so transfiguring that not only would she--it went
+without saying that this completion was a woman--be perfectly beautiful
+in its light but, what was manifestly more incredible, that he too would
+be perfectly beautiful and quite at his ease.... In her presence there
+could be no self-reproaches, no lapses, no limitations, nothing but
+happiness and the happiest activities.... To such a persuasion half the
+imaginative people in the world succumb as readily and naturally as
+ducklings take to water. They do not doubt its truth any more than a
+thirsty camel doubts that presently it will come to a spring.
+
+This persuasion is as foolish as though a camel hoped that some day it
+would drink from such a spring that it would never thirst again. For the
+most part Mr. Britling ignored its presence in his mind, and resisted
+the impulses it started. But at odd times, and more particularly in the
+afternoon and while travelling and in between books, Mr. Britling so far
+succumbed to this strange expectation of a wonder round the corner that
+he slipped the anchors of his humour and self-contempt and joined the
+great cruising brotherhood of the Pilgrims of Love....
+
+In fact--though he himself had never made a reckoning of it--he had
+been upon eight separate cruises. He was now upon the eighth....
+
+Between these various excursions--they took him round and about the
+world, so to speak, they cast him away on tropical beaches, they left
+him dismasted on desolate seas, they involved the most startling
+interventions and the most inconvenient consequences--there were
+interludes of penetrating philosophy. For some years the suspicion had
+been growing up in Mr. Britling's mind that in planting this persuasion
+in his being, the mysterious processes of Nature had been, perhaps for
+some purely biological purpose, pulling, as people say, his leg, that
+there were not these perfect responses, that loving a woman is a thing
+one does thoroughly once for all--or so--and afterwards recalls
+regrettably in a series of vain repetitions, and that the career of the
+Pilgrim of Love, so soon as you strip off its credulous glamour, is
+either the most pitiful or the most vulgar and vile of perversions from
+the proper conduct of life. But this suspicion had not as yet grown to
+prohibitive dimensions with him, it was not sufficient to resist the
+seasons of high tide, the sudden promise of the salt-edged breeze, the
+invitation of the hovering sea-bird; and he was now concealing beneath
+the lively surface of activities with which Mr. Direck was now familiar,
+a very extensive system of distresses arising out of the latest, the
+eighth of these digressional adventures....
+
+Mr. Britling had got into it very much as he had got into the ditch on
+the morning before his smash. He hadn't thought the affair out and he
+hadn't looked carefully enough. And it kept on developing in just the
+ways he would rather that it didn't.
+
+The seventh affair had been very disconcerting. He had made a fool of
+himself with quite a young girl; he blushed to think how young; it
+hadn't gone very far, but it had made his nocturnal reflections so
+disagreeable that he had--by no means for the first time--definitely
+and forever given up these foolish dreams of love. And when Mrs.
+Harrowdean swam into his circle, she seemed just exactly what was wanted
+to keep his imagination out of mischief. She came bearing flattery to
+the pitch of adoration. She was the brightest and cleverest of young
+widows. She wrote quite admirably criticism in the _Scrutator_ and the
+_Sectarian_, and occasionally poetry in the _Right Review_--when she
+felt disposed to do so. She had an intermittent vein of high spirits
+that was almost better than humour and made her quickly popular with
+most of the people she met, and she was only twenty miles away in her
+pretty house and her absurd little jolly park.
+
+There was something, she said, in his thought and work that was like
+walking in mountains. She came to him because she wanted to clamber
+about the peaks and glens of his mind.
+
+It was natural to reply that he wasn't by any means the serene mountain
+elevation she thought him, except perhaps for a kind of loneliness....
+
+She was a great reader of eighteenth century memoirs, and some she
+conveyed to him. Her mental quality was all in the vein of the
+friendships of Rousseau and Voltaire, and pleasantly and trippingly she
+led him along the primrose path of an intellectual liaison. She came
+first to Matching's Easy, where she was sweet and bright and vividly
+interested and a great contrast to Mrs. Britling, and then he and she
+met in London, and went off together with a fine sense of adventure for
+a day at Richmond, and then he took some work with him to her house and
+stayed there....
+
+Then she went away into Scotland for a time and he wanted her again
+tremendously and clamoured for her eloquently, and then it was apparent
+and admitted between them that they were admirably in love, oh!
+immensely in love.
+
+The transitions from emotional mountaineering to ardent intimacies were
+so rapid and impulsive that each phase obliterated its predecessor, and
+it was only with a vague perplexity that Mr. Britling found himself
+transferred from the role of a mountainous objective for pretty little
+pilgrims to that of a sedulous lover in pursuit of the happiness of one
+of the most uncertain, intricate, and entrancing of feminine
+personalities. This was not at all his idea of the proper relations
+between men and women, but Mrs. Harrowdean had a way of challenging his
+gallantry. She made him run about for her; she did not demand but she
+commanded presents and treats and surprises; she even developed a
+certain jealousy in him. His work began to suffer from interruptions.
+Yet they had glowing and entertaining moments together that could temper
+his rebellious thoughts with the threat of irreparable loss. "One must
+love, and all things in life are imperfect," was how Mr. Britling
+expressed his reasons for submission. And she had a hold upon him too in
+a certain facile pitifulness. She was little; she could be stung
+sometimes by the slightest touch and then her blue eyes would be bright
+with tears.
+
+Those possible tears could weigh at times even more than those possible
+lost embraces.
+
+And there was Oliver.
+
+Oliver was a person Mr. Britling had never seen. He grew into the scheme
+of things by insensible gradations. He was a government official in
+London; he was, she said, extraordinarily dull, he was lacking
+altogether in Mr. Britling's charm and interest, but he was faithful and
+tender and true. And considerably younger than Mr. Britling. He asked
+nothing but to love. He offered honourable marriage. And when one's
+heart was swelling unendurably one could weep in safety on his patient
+shoulder. This patient shoulder of Oliver's ultimately became Mr.
+Britling's most exasperating rival.
+
+She liked to vex him with Oliver. She liked to vex him generally. Indeed
+in this by no means abnormal love affair, there was a very strong
+antagonism. She seemed to resent the attraction Mr. Britling had for
+her and the emotions and pleasure she had with him. She seemed under the
+sway of an instinctive desire to make him play heavily for her, in time,
+in emotion, in self-respect. It was intolerable to her that he could
+take her easily and happily. That would be taking her cheaply. She
+valued his gifts by the bother they cost him, and was determined that
+the path of true love should not, if she could help it, run smooth. Mr.
+Britling on the other hand was of the school of polite and happy lovers.
+He thought it outrageous to dispute and contradict, and he thought that
+making love was a cheerful, comfortable thing to be done in a state of
+high good humour and intense mutual appreciation. This levity offended
+the lady's pride. She drew unfavourable contrasts with Oliver. If Oliver
+lacked charm he certainly did not lack emotion. He desired sacrifice, it
+seemed, almost more than satisfactions. Oliver was a person of the most
+exemplary miserableness; he would weep copiously and frequently. She
+could always make him weep when she wanted to do so. By holding out
+hopes and then dashing them if by no other expedient. Why did Mr.
+Britling never weep? She wept.
+
+Some base streak of competitiveness in Mr. Britling's nature made it
+seem impossible that he should relinquish the lady to Oliver. Besides,
+then, what would he do with his dull days, his afternoons, his need for
+a properly demonstrated affection?
+
+So Mr. Britling trod the path of his eighth digression, rather
+overworked in the matter of flowers and the selection of small
+jewellery, stalked by the invisible and indefatigable Oliver, haunted
+into an unwilling industry of attentions--attentions on the model of the
+professional lover of the French novels--by the memory and expectation
+of tearful scenes. "Then you don't love me! And it's all spoilt. I've
+risked talk and my reputation.... I was a fool ever to dream of making
+love beautifully...."
+
+Exactly like running your car into a soft wet ditch when you cannot get
+out and you cannot get on. And your work and your interests waiting and
+waiting for you!...
+
+The car itself was an outcome of the affair. It was Mrs. Harrowdean's
+idea, she thought chiefly of pleasant expeditions to friendly inns in
+remote parts of the country, inns with a flavour of tacit complicity,
+but it fell in very pleasantly with Mr. Britling's private resentment at
+the extraordinary inconvenience of the railway communications between
+Matching's Easy and her station at Pyecrafts, which involved a journey
+to Liverpool Street and a long wait at a junction. And now the car was
+smashed up--just when he had acquired skill enough to take it over to
+Pyecrafts without shame, and on Tuesday or Wednesday at latest he would
+have to depart in the old way by the London train....
+
+Only the most superficial mind would assert nowadays that man is a
+reasonable creature. Man is an unreasonable creature, and it was
+entirely unreasonable and human for Mr. Britling during his nocturnal
+self-reproaches to mix up his secret resentment at his infatuation for
+Mrs. Harrowdean with his ill-advised attack upon the wall of Brandismead
+Park. He ought never to have bought that car; he ought never to have
+been so ready to meet Mrs. Harrowdean more than halfway.
+
+What exacerbated his feeling about Mrs. Harrowdean was a new line she
+had recently taken with regard to Mrs. Britling. From her first rash
+assumption that Mr. Britling was indifferent to his wife, she had come
+to realise that on the contrary he was in some ways extremely tender
+about his wife. This struck her as an outrageous disloyalty. Instead of
+appreciating a paradox she resented an infidelity. She smouldered with
+perplexed resentment for some days, and then astonished her lover by a
+series of dissertations of a hostile and devastating nature upon the
+lady of the Dower House.
+
+He tried to imagine he hadn't heard all that he had heard, but Mrs.
+Harrowdean had a nimble pen and nimbler afterthoughts, and once her mind
+had got to work upon the topic she developed her offensive in
+half-a-dozen brilliant letters.... On the other hand she professed a
+steadily increasing passion for Mr. Britling. And to profess
+passion for Mr. Britling was to put him under a sense of profound
+obligation--because indeed he was a modest man. He found himself in an
+emotional quandary.
+
+You see, if Mrs. Harrowdean had left Mrs. Britling alone everything
+would have been quite tolerable. He considered Mrs. Harrowdean a
+charming human being, and altogether better than he deserved. Ever so
+much better. She was all initiative and response and that sort of thing.
+And she was so discreet. She had her own reputation to think about, and
+one or two of her predecessors--God rest the ashes of those fires!--had
+not been so discreet. Yet one could not have this sort of thing going on
+behind Edith's back. All sorts of things one might have going on behind
+Edith's back, but not this writing and saying of perfectly beastly
+things about Edith. Nothing could alter the fact that Edith was his
+honour....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Throughout the week-end Mr. Britling had kept this trouble well battened
+down. He had written to Mrs. Harrowdean a brief ambiguous note saying,
+"I am thinking over all that you have said," and after that he had
+scarcely thought about her at all. Or at least he had always contrived
+to be much more vividly thinking about something else. But now in these
+night silences the suppressed trouble burst hatches and rose about him.
+
+What a mess he had made of the whole scheme of his emotional life! There
+had been a time when he had started out as gaily with his passions and
+his honour as he had started out with Gladys to go to Market Saffron.
+He had as little taste for complications as he had for ditches. And now
+his passions and his honour were in a worse case even than poor muddy
+smashed up Gladys as the cart-horses towed her off, for she at any rate
+might be repaired. But he--he was a terribly patched fabric of
+explanations now. Not indeed that he had ever stooped to explanations.
+But there he was! Far away, like a star seen down the length of a
+tunnel, was that first sad story of a love as clean as starlight. It had
+been all over by eight-and-twenty and he could find it in his heart to
+grieve that he had ever given a thought to love again. He should have
+lived a decent widower.... Then Edith had come into his life, Edith that
+honest and unconscious defaulter. And there again he should have stuck
+to his disappointment. He had stuck to it--nine days out of every ten.
+It's the tenth day, it's the odd seductive moment, it's the instant of
+confident pride--and there is your sanguine temperament in the ditch.
+
+He began to recapitulate items in the catalogue of his escapades, and
+the details of his automobile misadventures mixed themselves up with the
+story of his heart steering. For example there was that tremendous
+Siddons affair. He had been taking the corner of a girlish friendship
+and he had taken it altogether too far. What a frightful mess that had
+been! When once one is off the road anything may happen, from a crumpled
+mud-guard to the car on the top of you. And there was his forty miles an
+hour spurt with the great and gifted Delphine Marquise--for whom he was
+to have written a play and been a perfect Annunzio. Until Willersley
+appeared--very like the motor-cyclist--buzzing in the opposite
+direction. And then had ensued angers, humiliations....
+
+Had every man this sort of crowded catalogue? Was every
+forty-five-year-old memory a dark tunnel receding from the star of
+youth? It is surely a pity that life cannot end at thirty. It comes to
+one clean and in perfect order....
+
+Is experience worth having?
+
+What a clean, straight thing the spirit of youth is. It is like a bright
+new spear. It is like a finely tempered sword. The figure of his boy
+took possession of his mind, his boy who looked out on the world with
+his mother's dark eyes, the slender son of that whole-hearted first
+love. He was a being at once fine and simple, an intimate mystery. Must
+he in his turn get dented and wrinkled and tarnished?
+
+The boy was in trouble. What was the trouble?
+
+Was it some form of the same trouble that had so tangled and tainted and
+scarred the private pride of his father? And how was it possible for Mr.
+Britling, disfigured by heedless misadventures, embarrassed by
+complications and concealments, to help this honest youngster out of his
+perplexities? He imagined possible forms of these perplexities.
+Graceless forms. Ugly forms. Such forms as only the nocturnal
+imagination would have dared present....
+
+Oh, why had he been such a Britling? Why was he still such a Britling?
+
+Mr. Britling sat up in his bed and beat at the bedclothes with his
+fists. He uttered uncompleted vows, "From this hour forth ... from this
+hour forth...."
+
+He must do something, he felt. At any rate he had his experiences. He
+could warn. He could explain away. Perhaps he might help to extricate,
+if things had got to that pitch.
+
+Should he write to his son? For a time he revolved a long, tactful
+letter in his mind. But that was impossible. Suppose the trouble was
+something quite different? It would have to be a letter in the most
+general terms....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+It was in the doubly refracting nature of Mr. Britling's mind that while
+he was deploring his inefficiency in regard to his son, he was also
+deploring the ineffectiveness of all his generation of parents. Quite
+insensibly his mind passed over to the generalised point of view.
+
+In his talks with Mr. Direck, Mr. Britling could present England as a
+great and amiable spectacle of carelessness and relaxation, but was it
+indeed an amiable spectacle? The point that Mr. Direck had made about
+the barn rankled in his thoughts. His barn was a barn no longer, his
+farmyard held no cattle; he was just living laxly in the buildings that
+ancient needs had made, he was living on the accumulated prosperity of
+former times, the spendthrift heir of toiling generations. Not only was
+he a pampered, undisciplined sort of human being; he was living in a
+pampered, undisciplined sort of community. The two things went
+together.... This confounded Irish business, one could laugh at it in
+the daylight, but was it indeed a thing to laugh at? We were drifting
+lazily towards a real disaster. We had a government that seemed guided
+by the principles of Mr. Micawber, and adopted for its watchword "Wait
+and see." For months now this trouble had grown more threatening.
+Suppose presently that civil war broke out in Ireland! Suppose presently
+that these irritated, mishandled suffragettes did some desperate
+irreconcilable thing, assassinated for example! The bomb in Westminster
+Abbey the other day might have killed a dozen people.... Suppose the
+smouldering criticism of British rule in India and Egypt were fanned by
+administrative indiscretions into a flame....
+
+And then suppose Germany had made trouble....
+
+Usually Mr. Britling kept his mind off Germany. In the daytime he
+pretended Germany meant nothing to England. He hated alarmists. He hated
+disagreeable possibilities. He declared the idea of a whole vast nation
+waiting to strike at us incredible. Why should they? You cannot have
+seventy million lunatics.... But in the darkness of the night one cannot
+dismiss things in this way. Suppose, after all, their army was more
+than a parade, their navy more than a protest?
+
+We might be caught--It was only in the vast melancholia of such
+occasions that Mr. Britling would admit such possibilities, but we might
+be caught by some sudden declaration of war.... And how should we face
+it?
+
+He recalled the afternoon's talk at Claverings and such samples of our
+governmental machinery as he chanced to number among his personal
+acquaintance. Suppose suddenly the enemy struck! With Raeburn and his
+friends to defend us! Or if the shock tumbled them out of power, then
+with these vituperative Tories, these spiteful advocates of weak
+tyrannies and privileged pretences in the place of them. There was no
+leadership in England. In the lucid darkness he knew that with a
+terrible certitude. He had a horrible vision of things disastrously
+muffled; of Lady Frensham and her _Morning Post_ friends first
+garrulously and maliciously "patriotic," screaming her way with
+incalculable mischiefs through the storm, and finally discovering that
+the Germans were the real aristocrats and organising our national
+capitulation on that understanding. He knew from talk he had heard that
+the navy was weak in mines and torpedoes, unprovided with the great
+monitors needed for a war with Germany; torn by doctrinaire feuds;
+nevertheless the sea power was our only defence. In the whole country we
+might muster a military miscellany of perhaps three hundred thousand
+men. And he had no faith in their equipment, in their direction. General
+French, the one man who had his entire confidence, had been forced to
+resign through some lawyer's misunderstanding about the Irish
+difficulty. He did not believe any plans existed for such a war as
+Germany might force upon us, any calculation, any foresight of the thing
+at all.
+
+Why had we no foresight? Why had we this wilful blindness to
+disagreeable possibilities? Why did we lie so open to the unexpected
+crisis? Just what he said of himself he said also of his country. It was
+curious to remember that. To realise how closely Dower House could play
+the microcosm to the whole Empire....
+
+It became relevant to the trend of his thoughts that his son had through
+his mother a strong strain of the dark Irish in his composition.
+
+How we had wasted Ireland! The rich values that lay in Ireland, the
+gallantry and gifts, the possible friendliness, all these things were
+being left to the Ulster politicians and the Tory women to poison and
+spoil, just as we left India to the traditions of the chattering army
+women and the repressive instincts of our mandarins. We were too lazy,
+we were too negligent. We passed our indolent days leaving everything to
+somebody else. Was this the incurable British, just as it was the
+incurable Britling, quality?
+
+Was the whole prosperity of the British, the far-flung empire, the
+securities, the busy order, just their good luck? It was a question he
+had asked a hundred times of his national as of his personal self. No
+doubt luck had favoured him. He was prosperous, and he was still only at
+the livelier end of middle age. But was there not also a personal
+factor, a meritorious factor? Luck had favoured the British with a
+well-placed island, a hardening climate, accessible minerals, but then
+too was there not also a national virtue? Once he had believed in that,
+in a certain gallantry, a noble levity, an underlying sound sense. The
+last ten years of politics had made him doubt that profoundly. He clung
+to it still, but without confidence. In the night that dear persuasion
+left him altogether.... As for himself he had a certain brightness and
+liveliness of mind, but the year of his fellowship had been a soft year,
+he had got on to _The Times_ through something very like a
+misapprehension, and it was the chances of a dinner and a duchess that
+had given him the opportunity of the Kahn show. He'd dropped into good
+things that suited him. That at any rate was the essence of it. And
+these lucky chances had been no incentive to further effort. Because
+things had gone easily and rapidly with him he had developed indolence
+into a philosophy. Here he was just over forty, and explaining to the
+world, explaining all through the week-end to this American--until even
+God could endure it no longer and the smash stopped him--how excellent
+was the backwardness of Essex and English go-as-you-please, and how
+through good temper it made in some mysterious way for all that was
+desirable. A fat English doctrine. _Punch_ has preached it for forty
+years.
+
+But this wasn't what he had always been. He thought of the strenuous
+intentions of his youth, before he had got into this turmoil of amorous
+experiences, while he was still out there with the clean star of youth.
+As Hugh was....
+
+In those days he had had no amiable doctrine of compromise. He had
+truckled to no "domesticated God," but talked of the "pitiless truth";
+he had tolerated no easy-going pseudo-aristocratic social system, but
+dreamt of such a democracy "mewing its mighty youth" as the world had
+never seen. He had thought that his brains were to do their share in
+building up this great national _imago_, winged, divine, out of the
+clumsy, crawling, snobbish, comfort-loving caterpillar of Victorian
+England. With such dreams his life had started, and the light of them,
+perhaps, had helped him to his rapid success. And then his wife had
+died, and he had married again and become somehow more interested in his
+income, and then the rather expensive first of the eight experiences had
+drained off so much of his imaginative energy, and the second had
+drained off so much, and there had been quarrels and feuds, and the way
+had been lost, and the days had passed. He hadn't failed. Indeed he
+counted as a success among his generation. He alone, in the night
+watches, could gauge the quality of that success. He was widely known,
+reputably known; he prospered. Much had come, oh! by a mysterious luck,
+but everything was doomed by his invincible defects. Beneath that
+hollow, enviable show there ached waste. Waste, waste, waste--his heart,
+his imagination, his wife, his son, his country--his automobile....
+
+Then there flashed into his mind a last straw of disagreeable
+realisation.
+
+He hadn't as yet insured his automobile! He had meant to do so. The
+papers were on his writing-desk.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+On these black nights, when the personal Mr. Britling would lie awake
+thinking how unsatisfactorily Mr. Britling was going on, and when the
+impersonal Mr. Britling would be thinking how unsatisfactorily his
+universe was going on, the whole mental process had a likeness to some
+complex piece of orchestral music wherein the organ deplored the
+melancholy destinies of the race while the piccolo lamented the secret
+trouble of Mrs. Harrowdean; the big drum thundered at the Irish
+politicians, and all the violins bewailed the intellectual laxity of the
+university system. Meanwhile the trumpets prophesied wars and disasters,
+the cymbals ever and again inserted a clashing jar about the fatal delay
+in the automobile insurance, while the triangle broke into a plangent
+solo on the topic of a certain rotten gate-post he always forgot in the
+daytime, and how in consequence the cows from the glebe farm got into
+the garden and ate Mrs. Britling's carnations.
+
+Time after time he had promised to see to that gate-post....
+
+The organ _motif_ battled its way to complete predominance. The lesser
+themes were drowned or absorbed. Mr. Britling returned from the role of
+an incompetent automobilist to the role of a soul naked in space and
+time wrestling with giant questions. These cosmic solicitudes, it may
+be, are the last penalty of irreligion. Was Huxley right, and was all
+humanity, even as Mr. Britling, a careless, fitful thing, playing a
+tragically hopeless game, thinking too slightly, moving too quickly,
+against a relentless antagonist?
+
+Or is the whole thing just witless, accidentally cruel perhaps, but not
+malignant? Or is it wise, and merely refusing to pamper us? Is there
+somewhere in the immensities some responsive kindliness, some faint hope
+of toleration and assistance, something sensibly on our side against
+death and mechanical cruelty? If so, it certainly refuses to pamper
+us.... But if the whole thing is cruel, perhaps also it is witless and
+will-less? One cannot imagine the ruler of everything a devil--that
+would be silly. So if at the worst it is inanimate then anyhow we have
+our poor wills and our poor wits to pit against it. And manifestly then,
+the good of life, the significance of any life that is not mere
+receptivity, lies in the disciplined and clarified will and the
+sharpened and tempered mind. And what for the last twenty years--for all
+his lectures and writings--had he been doing to marshal the will and
+harden the mind which were his weapons against the Dark? He was ready
+enough to blame others--dons, politicians, public apathy, but what was
+he himself doing?
+
+What was he doing now?
+
+Lying in bed!
+
+His son was drifting to ruin, his country was going to the devil, the
+house was a hospital of people wounded by his carelessness, the country
+roads choked with his smashed (and uninsured) automobiles, the cows were
+probably lined up along the borders and munching Edith's carnations at
+this very moment, his pocketbook and bureau were stuffed with venomous
+insults about her--and he was just lying in bed!
+
+Suddenly Mr. Britling threw back his bedclothes and felt for the matches
+on his bedside table.
+
+Indeed this was by no means the first time that his brain had become a
+whirring torment in his skull. Previous experiences had led to the most
+careful provision for exactly such states. Over the end of the bed hung
+a light, warm pyjama suit of llama-wool, and at the feet of it were two
+tall boots of the same material that buckled to the middle of his calf.
+So protected, Mr. Britling proceeded to make himself tea. A Primus stove
+stood ready inside the fender of his fireplace, and on it was a brightly
+polished brass kettle filled with water; a little table carried a
+tea-caddy, a tea-pot, a lemon and a glass. Mr. Britling lit the stove
+and then strolled to his desk. He was going to write certain "Plain
+Words about Ireland." He lit his study lamp and meditated beside it
+until a sound of water boiling called him to his tea-making.
+
+He returned to his desk stirring the lemon in his glass of tea. He would
+write the plain common sense of this Irish situation. He would put
+things so plainly that this squabbling folly would _have_ to cease. It
+should be done austerely, with a sort of ironical directness. There
+should be no abuse, no bitterness, only a deep passion of sanity.
+
+What is the good of grieving over a smashed automobile?
+
+He sipped his tea and made a few notes on his writing pad. His face in
+the light of his shaded reading lamp had lost its distraught expression,
+his hand fingered his familiar fountain pen....
+
+
+Section 8
+
+The next morning Mr. Britling came into Mr. Direck's room. He was pink
+from his morning bath, he was wearing a cheerful green-and-blue silk
+dressing gown, he had shaved already, he showed no trace of his
+nocturnal vigil. In the bathroom he had whistled like a bird. "Had a
+good night?" he said. "That's famous. So did I. And the wrist and arm
+didn't even ache enough to keep you awake?"
+
+"I thought I heard you talking and walking about," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"I got up for a little bit and worked. I often do that. I hope I didn't
+disturb you. Just for an hour or so. It's so delightfully quiet in the
+night...."
+
+He went to the window and blinked at the garden outside. His two younger
+sons appeared on their bicycles returning from some early expedition. He
+waved a hand of greeting. It was one of those summer mornings when
+attenuated mist seems to fill the very air with sunshine dust.
+
+"This is the sunniest morning bedroom in the house," he said. "It's
+south-east."
+
+The sunlight slashed into the masses of the blue cedar outside with a
+score of golden spears.
+
+"The Dayspring from on High," he said.... "I thought of rather a useful
+pamphlet in the night.
+
+"I've been thinking about your luggage at that hotel," he went on,
+turning to his guest again. "You'll have to write and get it packed up
+and sent down here--
+
+"No," he said, "we won't let you go until you can hit out with that arm
+and fell a man. Listen!"
+
+Mr. Direck could not distinguish any definite sound.
+
+"The smell of frying rashers, I mean," said Mr. Britling. "It's the
+clarion of the morn in every proper English home....
+
+"You'd like a rasher, coffee?
+
+"It's good to work in the night, and it's good to wake in the morning,"
+said Mr. Britling, rubbing his hands together. "I suppose I wrote nearly
+two thousand words. So quiet one is, so concentrated. And as soon as I
+have had my breakfast I shall go on with it again."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FIFTH
+
+THE COMING OF THE DAY
+
+
+Section 1
+
+It was quite characteristic of the state of mind of England in the
+summer of 1914 that Mr. Britling should be mightily concerned about the
+conflict in Ireland, and almost deliberately negligent of the
+possibility of a war with Germany.
+
+The armament of Germany, the hostility of Germany, the consistent
+assertion of Germany, the world-wide clash of British and German
+interests, had been facts in the consciousness of Englishmen for more
+than a quarter of a century. A whole generation had been born and
+brought up in the threat of this German war. A threat that goes on for
+too long ceases to have the effect of a threat, and this overhanging
+possibility had become a fixed and scarcely disturbing feature of the
+British situation. It kept the navy sedulous and Colonel Rendezvous
+uneasy; it stimulated a small and not very influential section of the
+press to a series of reminders that bored Mr. Britling acutely, it was
+the excuse for an agitation that made national service ridiculous, and
+quite subconsciously it affected his attitude to a hundred things. For
+example, it was a factor in his very keen indignation at the Tory levity
+in Ireland, in his disgust with many things that irritated or estranged
+Indian feeling. It bored him; there it was, a danger, and there was no
+denying it, and yet he believed firmly that it was a mine that would
+never be fired, an avalanche that would never fall. It was a nuisance, a
+stupidity, that kept Europe drilling and wasted enormous sums on
+unavoidable preparations; it hung up everything like a noisy argument in
+a drawing-room, but that human weakness and folly would ever let the
+mine actually explode he did not believe. He had been in France in 1911,
+he had seen how close things had come then to a conflict, and the fact
+that they had not come to a conflict had enormously strengthened his
+natural disposition to believe that at bottom Germany was sane and her
+militarism a bluff.
+
+But the Irish difficulty was a different thing. There, he felt, was need
+for the liveliest exertions. A few obstinate people in influential
+positions were manifestly pushing things to an outrageous point....
+
+He wrote through the morning--and as the morning progressed the judicial
+calm of his opening intentions warmed to a certain regrettable vigour of
+phrasing about our politicians, about our political ladies, and our
+hand-to-mouth press....
+
+He came down to lunch in a frayed, exhausted condition, and was much
+afflicted by a series of questions from Herr Heinrich. For it was an
+incurable characteristic of Herr Heinrich that he asked questions; the
+greater part of his conversation took the form of question and answer,
+and his thirst for information was as marked as his belief that German
+should not simply be spoken but spoken "out loud." He invariably
+prefaced his inquiries with the word "Please," and he insisted upon
+ascribing an omniscience to his employer that it was extremely irksome
+to justify after a strenuous morning of enthusiastic literary effort. He
+now took the opportunity of a lull in the solicitudes and
+congratulations that had followed Mr. Direck's appearance--and Mr.
+Direck was so little shattered by his misadventure that with the
+assistance of the kindly Teddy he had got up and dressed and come down
+to lunch--to put the matter that had been occupying his mind all the
+morning, even to the detriment of the lessons of the Masters Britling.
+
+"Please!" he said, going a deeper shade of pink and partly turning to
+Mr. Britling.
+
+A look of resignation came into Mr. Britling's eyes. "Yes?" he said.
+
+"I do not think it will be wise to take my ticket for the Esperanto
+Conference at Boulogne. Because I think it is probable to be war between
+Austria and Servia, and that Russia may make war on Austria."
+
+"That may happen. But I think it improbable."
+
+"If Russia makes war on Austria, Germany will make war on Russia, will
+she not?"
+
+"Not if she is wise," said Mr. Britling, "because that would bring in
+France."
+
+"That is why I ask. If Germany goes to war with France I should have to
+go to Germany to do my service. It will be a great inconvenience to me."
+
+"I don't imagine Germany will do anything so frantic as to attack
+Russia. That would not only bring in France but ourselves."
+
+"England?"
+
+"Of course. We can't afford to see France go under. The thing is as
+plain as daylight. So plain that it cannot possibly happen....
+Cannot.... Unless Germany wants a universal war."
+
+"Thank you," said Herr Heinrich, looking obedient rather than reassured.
+
+"I suppose now," said Mr. Direck after a pause, "that there isn't any
+strong party in Germany that wants a war. That young Crown Prince, for
+example."
+
+"They keep him in order," said Mr. Britling a little irritably. "They
+keep him in order....
+
+"I used to be an alarmist about Germany," said Mr. Britling, "but I have
+come to feel more and more confidence in the sound common sense of the
+mass of the German population, and in the Emperor too if it comes to
+that. He is--if Herr Heinrich will permit me to agree with his own
+German comic papers--sometimes a little theatrical, sometimes a little
+egotistical, but in his operatic, boldly coloured way he means peace. I
+am convinced he means peace...."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+After lunch Mr. Britling had a brilliant idea for the ease and comfort
+of Mr. Direck.
+
+It seemed as though Mr. Direck would be unable to write any letters
+until his wrist had mended. Teddy tried him with a typewriter, but Mr.
+Direck was very awkward with his left hand, and then Mr. Britling
+suddenly remembered a little peculiarity he had which it was possible
+that Mr. Direck might share unconsciously, and that was his gift of
+looking-glass writing with his left hand. Mr. Britling had found out
+quite by chance in his schoolboy days that while his right hand had been
+laboriously learning to write, his left hand, all unsuspected, had been
+picking up the same lesson, and that by taking a pencil in his left hand
+and writing from right to left, without watching what he was writing,
+and then examining the scrawl in a mirror, he could reproduce his own
+handwriting in exact reverse. About three people out of five have this
+often quite unsuspected ability. He demonstrated his gift, and then Miss
+Cecily Corner, who had dropped in in a casual sort of way to ask about
+Mr. Direck, tried it, and then Mr. Direck tried it. And they could all
+do it. And then Teddy brought a sheet of copying carbon, and so Mr.
+Direck, by using the carbon reversed under his paper, was restored to
+the world of correspondence again.
+
+They sat round a little table under the cedar trees amusing themselves
+with these experiments, and after that Cecily and Mr. Britling and the
+two small boys entertained themselves by drawing pigs with their eyes
+shut, and then Mr. Britling and Teddy played hard at Badminton until it
+was time for tea. And Cecily sat by Mr. Direck and took an interest in
+his accident, and he told her about summer holidays in the Adirondacks
+and how he loved to travel. She said she would love to travel. He said
+that so soon as he was better he would go on to Paris and then into
+Germany. He was extraordinarily curious about this Germany and its
+tremendous militarism. He'd far rather see it than Italy, which was, he
+thought, just all art and ancient history. His turn was for modern
+problems. Though of course he didn't intend to leave out Italy while he
+was at it. And then their talk was scattered, and there was great
+excitement because Herr Heinrich had lost his squirrel.
+
+He appeared coming out of the house into the sunshine, and so distraught
+that he had forgotten the protection of his hat. He was very pink and
+deeply moved.
+
+"But what shall I do without him?" he cried. "He has gone!"
+
+The squirrel, Mr. Direck gathered, had been bought by Mrs. Britling for
+the boys some month or so ago; it had been christened "Bill" and adored
+and then neglected, until Herr Heinrich took it over. It had filled a
+place in his ample heart that the none too demonstrative affection of
+the Britling household had left empty. He abandoned his pursuit of
+philology almost entirely for the cherishing and adoration of this busy,
+nimble little creature. He carried it off to his own room, where it ran
+loose and took the greatest liberties with him and his apartment. It was
+an extraordinarily bold and savage little beast even for a squirrel, but
+Herr Heinrich had set his heart and his very large and patient will upon
+the establishment of sentimental relations. He believed that ultimately
+Bill would let himself be stroked, that he would make Bill love him and
+understand him, and that his would be the only hand that Bill would ever
+suffer to touch him. In the meanwhile even the untamed Bill was
+wonderful to watch. One could watch him forever. His front paws were
+like hands, like a musician's hands, very long and narrow. "He would be
+a musician if he could only make his fingers go apart, because when I
+play my violin he listens. He is attentive."
+
+The entire household became interested in Herr Heinrich's attacks upon
+Bill's affection. They watched his fingers with particular interest
+because it was upon those that Bill vented his failures to respond to
+the stroking advances.
+
+"To-day I have stroked him once and he has bitten me three times," Herr
+Heinrich reported. "Soon I will stroke him three times and he shall not
+bite me at all.... Also yesterday he climbed up me and sat on my
+shoulder, and suddenly bit my ear. It was not hard he bit, but sudden.
+
+"He does not mean to bite," said Herr Heinrich. "Because when he has bit
+me he is sorry. He is ashamed.
+
+"You can see he is ashamed."
+
+Assisted by the two small boys, Herr Heinrich presently got a huge bough
+of oak and brought it into his room, converting the entire apartment
+into the likeness of an aviary. "For this," said Herr Heinrich, looking
+grave and diplomatic through his glasses, "Billy will be very grateful.
+And it will give him confidence with me. It will make him feel we are in
+the forest together."
+
+Mrs. Britling came to console her husband in the matter.
+
+"It is not right that the bedroom should be filled with trees. All sorts
+of dust and litter came in with it."
+
+"If it amuses him," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"But it makes work for the servants."
+
+"Do they complain?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Things will adjust themselves. And it is amusing that he should do such
+a thing...."
+
+And now Billy had disappeared, and Herr Heinrich was on the verge of
+tears. It was so ungrateful of Billy. Without a word.
+
+"They leave my window open," he complained to Mr. Direck. "Often I have
+askit them not to. And of course he did not understand. He has out
+climbit by the ivy. Anything may have happened to him. Anything. He is
+not used to going out alone. He is too young.
+
+"Perhaps if I call--"
+
+And suddenly he had gone off round the house crying: "Beelee! Beelee!
+Here is an almond for you! An almond, Beelee!"
+
+"Makes me want to get up and help," said Mr. Direck. "It's a tragedy."
+
+Everybody else was helping. Even the gardener and his boy knocked off
+work and explored the upper recesses of various possible trees.
+
+"He is too young," said Herr Heinrich, drifting back.... And then
+presently: "If he heard my voice I am sure he would show himself. But he
+does not show himself."
+
+It was clear he feared the worst....
+
+At supper Billy was the sole topic of conversation, and condolence was
+in the air. The impression that on the whole he had displayed rather a
+brutal character was combated by Herr Heinrich, who held that a certain
+brusqueness was Billy's only fault, and told anecdotes, almost sacred
+anecdotes, of the little creature's tenderer, nobler side. "When I feed
+him always he says, 'Thank you,'" said Herr Heinrich. "He never fails."
+He betrayed darker thoughts. "When I went round by the barn there was a
+cat that sat and looked at me out of a laurel bush," he said. "I do not
+like cats."
+
+Mr. Lawrence Carmine, who had dropped in, was suddenly reminded of that
+lugubrious old ballad, "The Mistletoe Bough," and recited large worn
+fragments of it impressively. It tells of how a beautiful girl hid away
+in a chest during a Christmas game of hide-and-seek, and how she was
+found, a dried vestige, years afterwards. It took a very powerful hold
+upon Herr Heinrich's imagination. "Let us now," he said, "make an
+examination of every box and cupboard and drawer. Marking each as we
+go...."
+
+When Mr. Britling went to bed that night, after a long gossip with
+Carmine about the Bramo Samaj and modern developments of Indian thought
+generally, the squirrel was still undiscovered.
+
+The worthy modern thinker undressed slowly, blew out his candle and got
+into bed. Still meditating deeply upon the God of the Tagores, he thrust
+his right hand under his pillow according to his usual practice, and
+encountered something soft and warm and active. He shot out of bed
+convulsively, lit his candle, and lifted his pillow discreetly.
+
+He discovered the missing Billy looking crumpled and annoyed.
+
+For some moments there was a lively struggle before Billy was gripped.
+He chattered furiously and bit Mr. Britling twice. Then Mr. Britling was
+out in the passage with the wriggling lump of warm fur in his hand, and
+paddling along in the darkness to the door of Herr Heinrich. He opened
+it softly.
+
+A startled white figure sat up in bed sharply.
+
+"Billy," said Mr. Britling by way of explanation, dropped his capture on
+the carpet, and shut the door on the touching reunion.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+A day was to come when Mr. Britling was to go over the history of that
+sunny July with incredulous minuteness, trying to trace the real
+succession of events that led from the startling crime at Sarajevo to
+Europe's last swift rush into war. In a sense it was untraceable; in a
+sense it was so obvious that he was amazed the whole world had not
+watched the coming of disaster. The plain fact of the case was that
+there was no direct connection; the Sarajevo murders were dropped for
+two whole weeks out of the general consciousness, they went out of the
+papers, they ceased to be discussed; then they were picked up again and
+used as an excuse for war. Germany, armed so as to be a threat to all
+the world, weary at last of her mighty vigil, watching the course of
+events, decided that her moment had come, and snatched the dead archduke
+out of his grave again to serve her tremendous ambition.
+
+It may well have seemed to the belligerent German patriot that all her
+possible foes were confused, divided within themselves, at an extremity
+of distraction and impotence. The British Isles seemed slipping steadily
+into civil war. Threat was met by counter-threat, violent fool competed
+with violent fool for the admiration of the world, the National
+Volunteers armed against the Ulster men; everything moved on with a kind
+of mechanical precision from parade and meeting towards the fatal
+gun-running of Howth and the first bloodshed in Dublin streets. That
+wretched affray, far more than any other single thing, must have
+stiffened Germany in the course she had chosen. There can be no doubt of
+it; the mischief makers of Ireland set the final confirmation upon the
+European war. In England itself there was a summer fever of strikes;
+Liverpool was choked by a dockers' strike, the East Anglian agricultural
+labourers were in revolt, and the building trade throughout the country
+was on the verge of a lockout. Russia seemed to be in the crisis of a
+social revolution. From Baku to St. Petersburg there were
+insurrectionary movements in the towns, and on the 23rd--the very day of
+the Austrian ultimatum--Cossacks were storming barbed wire entanglements
+in the streets of the capital. The London Stock Exchange was in a state
+of panic disorganisation because of a vast mysterious selling of
+securities from abroad. And France, France it seemed was lost to all
+other consideration in the enthralling confrontations and denunciations
+of the Caillaux murder trial, the trial of the wife of her ex-prime
+Minister for the murder of a blackmailing journalist. It was a case full
+of the vulgarest sexual violence. Before so piquant a spectacle France
+it seemed could have no time nor attention for the revelation of M.
+Humbert, the Reporter of the Army Committee, proclaiming that the
+artillery was short of ammunition, that her infantry had boots "thirty
+years old" and not enough of those....
+
+Such were the appearances of things. Can it be wondered if it seemed to
+the German mind that the moment for the triumphant assertion of the
+German predominance in the world had come? A day or so before the Dublin
+shooting, the murder of Sarajevo had been dragged again into the
+foreground of the world's affairs by an ultimatum from Austria to Serbia
+of the extremest violence. From the hour when the ultimatum was
+discharged the way to Armageddon lay wide and unavoidable before the
+feet of Europe. After the Dublin conflict there was no turning back. For
+a week Europe was occupied by proceedings that were little more than the
+recital of a formula. Austria could not withdraw her unqualified threats
+without admitting error and defeat, Russia could not desert Serbia
+without disgrace, Germany stood behind Austria, France was bound to
+Russia by a long confederacy of mutual support, and it was impossible
+for England to witness the destruction of France or the further
+strengthening of a loud and threatening rival. It may be that Germany
+counted on Russia giving way to her, it may be she counted on the
+indecisions and feeble perplexities of England, both these possibilities
+were in the reckoning, but chiefly she counted on war. She counted on
+war, and since no nation in all the world had ever been so fully
+prepared in every way for war as she was, she also counted on victory.
+
+One writes "Germany." That is how one writes of nations, as though they
+had single brains and single purposes. But indeed while Mr. Britling lay
+awake and thought of his son and Lady Frensham and his smashed
+automobile and Mrs. Harrowdean's trick of abusive letter-writing and of
+God and evil and a thousand perplexities, a multitude of other brains
+must also have been busy, lying also in beds or sitting in studies or
+watching in guard-rooms or chatting belatedly in cafes or smoking-rooms
+or pacing the bridges of battleships or walking along in city or
+country, upon this huge possibility the crime of Sarajevo had just
+opened, and of the state of the world in relation to such possibilities.
+Few women, one guesses, heeded what was happening, and of the men, the
+men whose decision to launch that implacable threat turned the destinies
+of the world to war, there is no reason to believe that a single one of
+them had anything approaching the imaginative power needed to understand
+fully what it was they were doing. We have looked for an hour or so into
+the seething pot of Mr. Britling's brain and marked its multiple
+strands, its inconsistencies, its irrational transitions. It was but a
+specimen. Nearly every brain of the select few that counted in this
+cardinal determination of the world's destinies, had its streak of
+personal motive, its absurd and petty impulses and deflections. One man
+decided to say _this_ because if he said _that_ he would contradict
+something he had said and printed four or five days ago; another took a
+certain line because so he saw his best opportunity of putting a rival
+into a perplexity. It would be strange if one could reach out now and
+recover the states of mind of two such beings as the German Kaiser and
+his eldest son as Europe stumbled towards her fate through the long days
+and warm, close nights of that July. Here was the occasion for which so
+much of their lives had been but the large pretentious preparation,
+coming right into their hands to use or forgo, here was the opportunity
+that would put them into the very forefront of history forever; this
+journalist emperor with the paralysed arm, this common-fibred, sly,
+lascivious son. It is impossible that they did not dream of glory over
+all the world, of triumphant processions, of a world-throne that would
+outshine Caesar's, of a godlike elevation, of acting Divus Caesar while
+yet alive. And being what they were they must have imagined spectators,
+and the young man, who was after all a young man of particularly poor
+quality, imagined no doubt certain women onlookers, certain humiliated
+and astonished friends, and thought of the clothes he would wear and
+the gestures he would make. The nickname his English cousins had given
+this heir to all the glories was the "White Rabbit." He was the backbone
+of the war party at court. And presently he stole bric-a-brac. That will
+help posterity to the proper values of things in 1914. And the Teutonic
+generals and admirals and strategists with their patient and perfect
+plans, who were so confident of victory, each within a busy skull must
+have enacted anticipatory dreams of his personal success and marshalled
+his willing and unwilling admirers. Readers of histories and memoirs as
+most of this class of men are, they must have composed little eulogistic
+descriptions of the part themselves were to play in the opening drama,
+imagined pleasing vindications and interesting documents. Some of them
+perhaps saw difficulties, but few foresaw failure. For all this set of
+brains the thing came as a choice to take or reject; they could make war
+or prevent it. And they chose war.
+
+It is doubtful if any one outside the directing intelligence of Germany
+and Austria saw anything so plain. The initiative was with Germany. The
+Russian brains and the French brains and the British brains, the few
+that were really coming round to look at this problem squarely, had a
+far less simple set of problems and profounder uncertainties. To Mr.
+Britling's mind the Round Table Conference at Buckingham Palace was
+typical of the disunion and indecision that lasted up to the very
+outbreak of hostilities. The solemn violence of Sir Edward Carson was
+intensely antipathetic to Mr. Britling, and in his retrospective
+inquiries he pictured to himself that dark figure with its dropping
+under-lip, seated, heavy and obstinate, at that discussion, still
+implacable though the King had but just departed after a little speech
+that was packed with veiled intimations of imminent danger...
+
+Mr. Britling had no mercy in his mind for the treason of obstinate
+egotism and for persistence in a mistaken course. His own temperamental
+weaknesses lay in such different directions. He was always ready to
+leave one trail for another; he was always open to conviction, trusting
+to the essentials of his character for an ultimate consistency. He hated
+Carson in those days as a Scotch terrier might hate a bloodhound, as
+something at once more effective and impressive, and exasperatingly,
+infinitely less intelligent.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+Thus--a vivid fact as yet only in a few hundred skulls or so--the vast
+catastrophe of the Great War gathered behind the idle, dispersed and
+confused spectacle of an indifferent world, very much as the storms and
+rains of late September gathered behind the glow and lassitudes of
+August, and with scarcely more of set human intention. For the greater
+part of mankind the European international situation was at most
+something in the papers, no more important than the political
+disturbances in South Africa, where the Herzogites were curiously
+uneasy, or the possible trouble between Turkey and Greece. The things
+that really interested people in England during the last months of peace
+were boxing and the summer sales. A brilliant young Frenchman,
+Carpentier, who had knocked out Bombardier Wells, came over again to
+defeat Gunboat Smith, and did so to the infinite delight of France and
+the whole Latin world, amidst the generous applause of Anglo-Saxondom.
+And there was also a British triumph over the Americans at polo, and a
+lively and cultured newspaper discussion about a proper motto for the
+arms of the London County Council. The trial of Madame Caillaux filled
+the papers with animated reports and vivid pictures; Gregori Rasputin
+was stabbed and became the subject of much lively gossip about the
+Russian Court; and Ulivi, the Italian impostor who claimed he could
+explode mines by means of an "ultra-red" ray, was exposed and fled with
+a lady, very amusingly. For a few days all the work at Woolwich Arsenal
+was held up because a certain Mr. Entwhistle, having refused to erect a
+machine on a concrete bed laid down by non-unionists, was rather
+uncivilly dismissed, and the Irish trouble pounded along its tiresome
+mischievous way. People gave a divided attention to these various
+topics, and went about their individual businesses.
+
+And at Dower House they went about their businesses. Mr. Direck's arm
+healed rapidly; Cecily Corner and he talked of their objects in life and
+Utopias and the books of Mr. Britling, and he got down from a London
+bookseller Baedeker's guides for Holland and Belgium, South Germany and
+Italy; Herr Heinrich after some doubt sent in his application form and
+his preliminary deposit for the Esperanto Conference at Boulogne, and
+Billy consented to be stroked three times but continued to bite with
+great vigour and promptitude. And the trouble about Hugh, Mr. Britling's
+eldest son, resolved itself into nothing of any vital importance, and
+settled itself very easily.
+
+
+Section 5
+
+After Hugh had cleared things up and gone back to London Mr. Britling
+was inclined to think that such a thing as apprehension was a sin
+against the general fairness and integrity of life.
+
+Of all things in the world Hugh was the one that could most easily rouse
+Mr. Britling's unhappy aptitude for distressing imaginations. Hugh was
+nearer by far to his heart and nerves than any other creature. In the
+last few years Mr. Britling, by the light of a variety of emotional
+excursions in other directions, had been discovering this. Whatever Mr.
+Britling discovered he talked about; he had evolved from his realisation
+of this tenderness, which was without an effort so much tenderer than
+all the subtle and tremendous feelings he had attempted in
+his--excursions, the theory that he had expounded to Mr. Direck that it
+is only through our children that we are able to achieve disinterested
+love, real love. But that left unexplained that far more intimate
+emotional hold of Hugh than of his very jolly little step-brothers. That
+was a fact into which Mr. Britling rather sedulously wouldn't look....
+
+Mr. Britling was probably much franker and more open-eyed with himself
+and the universe than a great number of intelligent people, and yet
+there were quite a number of aspects of his relations with his wife,
+with people about him, with his country and God and the nature of
+things, upon which he turned his back with an attentive persistence. But
+a back too resolutely turned may be as indicative as a pointing finger,
+and in this retrogressive way, and tacitly even so far as his formal
+thoughts, his unspoken comments, went, Mr. Britling knew that he loved
+his son because he had lavished the most hope and the most imagination
+upon him, because he was the one living continuation of that dear life
+with Mary, so lovingly stormy at the time, so fine now in memory, that
+had really possessed the whole heart of Mr. Britling. The boy had been
+the joy and marvel of the young parents; it was incredible to them that
+there had ever been a creature so delicate and sweet, and they brought
+considerable imagination and humour to the detailed study of his minute
+personality and to the forecasting of his future. Mr. Britling's mind
+blossomed with wonderful schemes for his education. All that mental
+growth no doubt contributed greatly to Mr. Britling's peculiar
+affection, and with it there interwove still tenderer and subtler
+elements, for the boy had a score of Mary's traits. But there were other
+things still more conspicuously ignored. One silent factor in the slow
+widening of the breach between Edith and Mr. Britling was her cool
+estimate of her stepson. She was steadfastly kind to this shock-headed,
+untidy little dreamer, he was extremely well cared for in her hands, she
+liked him and she was amused by him--it is difficult to imagine what
+more Mr. Britling could have expected--but it was as plain as daylight
+that she felt that this was not the child she would have cared to have
+borne. It was quite preposterous and perfectly natural that this should
+seem to Mr. Britling to be unfair to Hugh.
+
+Edith's home was more prosperous than Mary's; she brought her own money
+to it; the bringing up of her children was a far more efficient business
+than Mary's instinctive proceedings. Hugh had very nearly died in his
+first year of life; some summer infection had snatched at him; that had
+tied him to his father's heart by a knot of fear; but no infection had
+ever come near Edith's own nursery. And it was Hugh that Mr. Britling
+had seen, small and green-faced and pitiful under an anaesthetic for
+some necessary small operation to his adenoids. His younger children had
+never stabbed to Mr. Britling's heart with any such pitifulness; they
+were not so thin-skinned as their elder brother, not so assailable by
+the little animosities of dust and germ. And out of such things as this
+evolved a shapeless cloud of championship for Hugh. Jealousies and
+suspicions are latent in every human relationship. We go about the
+affairs of life pretending magnificently that they are not so,
+pretending to the generosities we desire. And in all step-relationships
+jealousy and suspicion are not merely latent, they stir.
+
+It was Mr. Britling's case for Hugh that he was something exceptional,
+something exceptionally good, and that the peculiar need there was to
+take care of him was due to a delicacy of nerve and fibre that was
+ultimately a virtue. The boy was quick, quick to hear, quick to move,
+very accurate in his swift way, he talked unusually soon, he began to
+sketch at an early age with an incurable roughness and a remarkable
+expressiveness. That he was sometimes ungainly, often untidy, that he
+would become so mentally preoccupied as to be uncivil to people about
+him, that he caught any malaise that was going, was all a part of that.
+The sense of Mrs. Britling's unexpressed criticisms, the implied
+contrasts with the very jolly, very uninspired younger family, kept up
+a nervous desire in Mr. Britling for evidences and manifestations of
+Hugh's quality. Not always with happy results; it caused much mutual
+irritation, but not enough to prevent the growth of a real response on
+Hugh's part to his father's solicitude. The youngster knew and felt that
+his father was his father just as certainly as he felt that Mrs.
+Britling was not his mother. To his father he brought his successes and
+to his father he appealed.
+
+But he brought his successes more readily than he brought his troubles.
+So far as he himself was concerned he was disposed to take a humorous
+view of the things that went wrong and didn't come off with him, but as
+a "Tremendous Set-Down for the Proud Parent" they resisted humorous
+treatment....
+
+Now the trouble that he had been hesitating to bring before his father
+was concerned with that very grave interest of the young, his Object in
+Life. It had nothing to do with those erotic disturbances that had
+distressed his father's imagination. Whatever was going on below the
+surface of Hugh's smiling or thoughtful presence in that respect had
+still to come to the surface and find expression. But he was bothered
+very much by divergent strands in his own intellectual composition. Two
+sets of interests pulled at him, one--it will seem a dry interest to
+many readers, but for Hugh it glittered and fascinated--was
+crystallography and molecular physics; the other was caricature. Both
+aptitudes sprang no doubt from the same exceptional sensitiveness to
+form. As a schoolboy he exercised both very happily, but now he was
+getting to the age of specialisation, and he was fluctuating very much
+between science and art. After a spell of scientific study he would come
+upon a fatigue period and find nothing in life but absurdities and a
+lark that one could represent very amusingly; after a bout of funny
+drawings his mind went back to his light and crystals and films like a
+Magdalen repenting in a church. After his public school he had refused
+Cambridge and gone to University College, London, to work under the
+great and inspiring Professor Cardinal; simultaneously Cardinal had been
+arranging to go to Cambridge, and Hugh had scarcely embarked upon his
+London work when Cardinal was succeeded by the dull, conscientious and
+depressing Pelkingham, at whose touch crystals became as puddings,
+bubble films like cotton sheets, transparency vanished from the world,
+and X rays dwarfed and died. And Hugh degenerated immediately into a
+scoffing trifler who wished to give up science for art.
+
+He gave up science for art after grave consultation with his father, and
+the real trouble that had been fretting him, it seemed, was that now he
+repented and wanted to follow Cardinal to Cambridge, and--a year
+lost--go on with science again. He felt it was a discreditable
+fluctuation; he knew it would be a considerable expense; and so he took
+two weeks before he could screw himself up to broaching the matter.
+
+"So _that_ is all," said Mr. Britling, immensely relieved.
+
+"My dear Parent, you didn't think I had backed a bill or forged a
+cheque?"
+
+"I thought you might have married a chorus girl or something of that
+sort," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Or bought a large cream-coloured motor-car for her on the instalment
+system, which she'd smashed up. No, that sort of thing comes later....
+I'll just put myself down on the waiting list of one of those bits of
+delight in the Cambridge tobacco shops--and go on with my studies for a
+year or two...."
+
+
+Section 6
+
+Though Mr. Britling's anxiety about his son was dispelled, his mind
+remained curiously apprehensive throughout July. He had a feeling that
+things were not going well with the world, a feeling he tried in vain to
+dispel by various distractions. Perhaps some subtler subconscious
+analysis of the situation was working out probabilities that his
+conscious self would not face. And when presently he bicycled off to
+Mrs. Harrowdean for flattery, amusement, and comfort generally, he found
+her by no means the exalting confirmation of everything he wished to
+believe about himself and the universe, that had been her delightful
+role in the early stages of their romantic friendship. She maintained
+her hostility to Edith; she seemed bent on making things impossible. And
+yet there were one or two phases of the old sustaining intimacies.
+
+They walked across her absurd little park to the summer-house with the
+view on the afternoon of his arrival, and they discussed the Irish
+pamphlet which was now nearly finished.
+
+"Of course," she said, "it will be a wonderful pamphlet."
+
+There was a reservation in her voice that made him wait.
+
+"But I suppose all sorts of people could write an Irish pamphlet. Nobody
+but you could write 'The Silent Places.' Oh, _why_ don't you finish that
+great beautiful thing, and leave all this world of reality and
+newspapers, all these Crude, Vulgar, Quarrelsome, Jarring things to
+other people? You have the magic gift, you might be a poet, you can take
+us out of all these horrid things that are, away to Beautyland, and you
+are just content to be a critic and a disputer. It's your surroundings.
+It's your sordid realities. It's that Practicality at your elbow. You
+ought never to see a newspaper. You ought never to have an American come
+within ten miles of you. You ought to live on bowls of milk drunk in
+valleys of asphodel."
+
+Mr. Britling, who liked this sort of thing in a way, and yet at the same
+time felt ridiculously distended and altogether preposterous while it
+was going on, answered feebly and self-consciously.
+
+"There was your letter in the _Nation_ the other day," she said. "Why
+_do_ you get drawn into arguments? I wanted to rush into the _Nation_
+and pick you up and wipe the anger off you, and carry you out of it
+all--into some quiet beautiful place."
+
+"But one _has_ to answer these people," said Mr. Britling, rolling along
+by the side of her like a full moon beside Venus, and quite artlessly
+falling in with the tone of her.
+
+She repeated lines from "The Silent Places" from memory. She threw quite
+wonderful emotion into her voice. She made the words glow. And he had
+only shown her the thing once....
+
+Was he indeed burying a marvellous gift under the dust of current
+affairs? When at last in the warm evening light they strolled back from
+the summer-house to dinner he had definitely promised her that he would
+take up and finish "The Silent Places."... And think over the Irish
+pamphlet again before he published it....
+
+Pyecrafts was like a crystal casket of finer soil withdrawn from the
+tarred highways of the earth....
+
+And yet the very next day this angel enemy of controversies broke out in
+the most abominable way about Edith, and he had to tell her more plainly
+than he had done hitherto, that he could not tolerate that sort of
+thing. He wouldn't have Edith guyed. He wouldn't have Edith made to seem
+base. And at that there was much trouble between them, and tears and
+talk of Oliver....
+
+Mr. Britling found himself unable to get on either with "The Silent
+Places" or the pamphlet, and he was very unhappy....
+
+Afterwards she repented very touchingly, and said that if only he would
+love her she would swallow a thousand Ediths. He waived a certain
+disrespect in the idea of her swallowing Edith, and they had a beautiful
+reconciliation and talked of exalted things, and in the evening he
+worked quite well upon "The Silent Places" and thought of half-a-dozen
+quite wonderful lines, and in the course of the next day he returned to
+Dower House and Mr. Direck and considerable piles of correspondence and
+the completion of the Irish pamphlet.
+
+But he was restless. He was more restless in his house than he had ever
+been. He could not understand it. Everything about him was just as it
+had always been, and yet it was unsatisfactory, and it seemed more
+unstable than anything had ever seemed before. He was bored by the
+solemn development of the Irish dispute; he was irritated by the
+smouldering threat of the Balkans; he was irritated by the suffragettes
+and by a string of irrational little strikes; by the general absence of
+any main plot as it were to hold all these wranglings and trivialities
+together.... At the Dower House the most unpleasant thoughts would come
+to him. He even had doubts whether in "The Silent Places," he had been
+plagiarising, more or less unconsciously, from Henry James's "Great Good
+Place."...
+
+On the twenty-first of July Gladys came back repaired and looking none
+the worse for her misadventure. Next day he drove her very carefully
+over to Pyecrafts, hoping to drug his uneasiness with the pretence of a
+grand passion and the praises of "The Silent Places," that beautiful
+work of art that was so free from any taint of application, and alas! he
+found Mrs. Harrowdean in an evil mood. He had been away from her for ten
+days--ten whole days. No doubt Edith had manoeuvred to keep him. She
+hadn't! _Hadn't_ she? How was he, poor simple soul! to tell that she
+hadn't? That was the prelude to a stormy afternoon.
+
+The burthen of Mrs. Harrowdean was that she was wasting her life, that
+she was wasting the poor, good, patient Oliver's life, that for the sake
+of friendship she was braving the worst imputations and that he treated
+her cavalierly, came when he wished to do so, stayed away heartlessly,
+never thought she needed _little_ treats, _little_ attentions, _little_
+presents. Did he think she could settle down to her poor work, such as
+it was, in neglect and loneliness? He forgot women were dear little
+tender things, and had to be made happy and _kept_ happy. Oliver might
+not be clever and attractive but he did at least in his clumsy way
+understand and try and do his duty....
+
+Towards the end of the second hour of such complaints the spirit of Mr.
+Britling rose in revolt. He lifted up his voice against her, he charged
+his voice with indignant sorrow and declared that he had come over to
+Pyecrafts with no thought in his mind but sweet and loving thoughts,
+that he had but waited for Gladys to be ready before he came, that he
+had brought over the manuscript of "The Silent Places" with him to
+polish and finish up, that "for days and days" he had been longing to do
+this in the atmosphere of the dear old summer-house with its distant
+view of the dear old sea, and that now all that was impossible, that
+Mrs. Harrowdean had made it impossible and that indeed she was rapidly
+making everything impossible....
+
+And having delivered himself of this judgment Mr. Britling, a little
+surprised at the rapid vigour of his anger, once he had let it loose,
+came suddenly to an end of his words, made a renunciatory gesture with
+his arms, and as if struck with the idea, rushed out of her room and out
+of the house to where Gladys stood waiting. He got into her and started
+her up, and after some trouble with the gear due to the violence of his
+emotion, he turned her round and departed with her--crushing the corner
+of a small bed of snapdragon as he turned--and dove her with a sulky
+sedulousness back to the Dower House and newspapers and correspondence
+and irritations, and that gnawing and irrational sense of a hollow and
+aimless quality in the world that he had hoped Mrs. Harrowdean would
+assuage. And the further he went from Mrs. Harrowdean the harsher and
+unjuster it seemed to him that he had been to her.
+
+But he went on because he did not see how he could very well go back.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Mr. Direck's broken wrist healed sooner than he desired. From the first
+he had protested that it was the sort of thing that one can carry about
+in a sling, that he was quite capable of travelling about and taking
+care of himself in hotels, that he was only staying on at Matching's
+Easy because he just loved to stay on and wallow in Mrs. Britling's
+kindness and Mr. Britling's company. While as a matter of fact he
+wallowed as much as he could in the freshness and friendliness of Miss
+Cecily Corner, and for more than a third of this period Mr. Britling was
+away from home altogether.
+
+Mr. Direck, it should be clear by this time, was a man of more than
+European simplicity and directness, and his intentions towards the young
+lady were as simple and direct and altogether honest as such intentions
+can be. It is the American conception of gallantry more than any other
+people's, to let the lady call the tune in these affairs; the man's
+place is to be protective, propitiatory, accommodating and clever, and
+the lady's to be difficult but delightful until he catches her and
+houses her splendidly and gives her a surprising lot of pocket-money,
+and goes about his business; and upon these assumptions Mr. Direck went
+to work. But quite early it was manifest to him that Cecily did not
+recognise his assumptions. She was embarrassed when he got down one or
+two little presents of chocolates and flowers for her from London--the
+Britling boys were much more appreciative--she wouldn't let him contrive
+costly little expeditions for her, and she protested against compliments
+and declared she would stay away when he paid them. And she was not
+contented by his general sentiments about life, but asked the most
+direct questions about his occupation and his activities. His chief
+occupation was being the well provided heir of a capable lawyer, and
+his activities in the light of her inquiries struck him as being light
+and a trifle amateurish, qualities he had never felt as any drawback
+about them before. So that he had to rely rather upon aspirations and
+the possibility, under proper inspiration, of a more actively
+serviceable life in future.
+
+"There's a feeling in the States," he said, "that we've had rather a
+tendency to overdo work, and that there is scope for a leisure class to
+develop the refinement and the wider meanings of life."
+
+"But a leisure class doesn't mean a class that does nothing," said
+Cecily. "It only means a class that isn't busy in business."
+
+"You're too hard on me," said Mr. Direck with that quiet smile of his.
+
+And then by way of putting her on the defensive he asked her what she
+thought a man in his position ought to do.
+
+"_Something_," she said, and in the expansion of this vague demand they
+touched on a number of things. She said that she was a Socialist, and
+there was still in Mr. Direck's composition a streak of the
+old-fashioned American prejudice against the word. He associated
+Socialists with Anarchists and deported aliens. It was manifest too that
+she was deeply read in the essays and dissertations of Mr. Britling. She
+thought everybody, man or woman, ought to be chiefly engaged in doing
+something definite for the world at large. ("There's my secretaryship of
+the Massachusetts Modern Thought Society, anyhow," said Mr. Direck.) And
+she herself wanted to be doing something--it was just because she did
+not know what it was she ought to be doing that she was reading so
+extensively and voraciously. She wanted to lose herself in something.
+Deep in the being of Mr. Direck was the conviction that what she ought
+to be doing was making love in a rapturously egotistical manner, and
+enjoying every scrap of her own delightful self and her own delightful
+vitality--while she had it, but for the purposes of their conversation
+he did not care to put it any more definitely than to say that he
+thought we owed it to ourselves to develop our personalities. Upon which
+she joined issue with great vigour.
+
+"That is just what Mr. Britling says about you in his 'American
+Impressions,'" she said. "He says that America overdoes the development
+of personalities altogether, that whatever else is wrong about America
+that is where America is most clearly wrong. I read that this morning,
+and directly I read it I thought, 'Yes, that's exactly it! Mr. Direck is
+overdoing the development of personalities.'"
+
+"Me!"
+
+"Yes. I like talking to you and I don't like talking to you. And I see
+now it is because you keep on talking of my Personality and your
+Personality. That makes me uncomfortable. It's like having some one
+following me about with a limelight. And in a sort of way I do like it.
+I like it and I'm flattered by it, and then I go off and dislike it,
+dislike the effect of it. I find myself trying to be what you have told
+me I am--sort of acting myself. I want to glance at looking-glasses to
+see if I am keeping it up. It's just exactly what Mr. Britling says in
+his book about American women. They act themselves, he says; they get a
+kind of story and explanation about themselves and they are always
+trying to make it perfectly plain and clear to every one. Well, when you
+do that you can't think nicely of other things."
+
+"We like a clear light on people," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"We don't. I suppose we're shadier," said Cecily.
+
+"You're certainly much more in half-tones," said Mr. Direck. "And I
+confess it's the half-tones get hold of me. But still you haven't told
+me, Miss Cissie, what you think I ought to do with myself. Here I am,
+you see, very much at your disposal. What sort of business do you think
+it's my duty to go in for?"
+
+"That's for some one with more experience than I have, to tell you. You
+should ask Mr. Britling."
+
+"I'd rather have it from you."
+
+"I don't even know for myself," she said.
+
+"So why shouldn't we start to find out together?" he asked.
+
+It was her tantalising habit to ignore all such tentatives.
+
+"One can't help the feeling that one is in the world for something more
+than oneself," she said....
+
+
+Section 8
+
+Soon Mr. Direck could measure the time that was left to him at the Dower
+House no longer by days but by hours. His luggage was mostly packed, his
+tickets to Rotterdam, Cologne, Munich, Dresden, Vienna, were all in
+order. And things were still very indefinite between him and Cecily. But
+God has not made Americans clean-shaven and firm-featured for nothing,
+and he determined that matters must be brought to some sort of
+definition before he embarked upon travels that were rapidly losing
+their attractiveness in this concentration of his attention....
+
+A considerable nervousness betrayed itself in his voice and manner when
+at last he carried out his determination.
+
+"There's just a lil' thing," he said to her, taking advantage of a
+moment when they were together after lunch, "that I'd value now more
+than anything else in the world."
+
+She answered by a lifted eyebrow and a glance that had not so much
+inquiry in it as she intended.
+
+"If we could just take a lil' walk together for a bit. Round by
+Claverings Park and all that. See the deer again and the old trees. Sort
+of scenery I'd like to remember when I'm away from it."
+
+He was a little short of breath, and there was a quite disproportionate
+gravity about her moment for consideration.
+
+"Yes," she said with a cheerful acquiescence that came a couple of bars
+too late. "Let's. It will be jolly."
+
+"These fine English afternoons are wonderful afternoons," he remarked
+after a moment or so of silence. "Not quite the splendid blaze we get in
+our summer, but--sort of glowing."
+
+"It's been very fine all the time you've been here," she said....
+
+After which exchanges they went along the lane, into the road by the
+park fencing, and so to the little gate that lets one into the park,
+without another word.
+
+The idea took hold of Mr. Direck's mind that until they got through the
+park gate it would be quite out of order to say anything. The lane and
+the road and the stile and the gate were all so much preliminary stuff
+to be got through before one could get to business. But after the little
+white gate the way was clear, the park opened out and one could get
+ahead without bothering about the steering. And Mr. Direck had, he felt,
+been diplomatically involved in lanes and by-ways long enough.
+
+"Well," he said as he rejoined her after very carefully closing the
+gate. "What I really wanted was an opportunity of just mentioning
+something that happens to be of interest to you--if it does happen to
+interest you.... I suppose I'd better put the thing as simply as
+possible.... Practically.... I'm just right over the head and all in
+love with you.... I thought I'd like to tell you...."
+
+Immense silences.
+
+"Of course I won't pretend there haven't been others," Mr. Direck
+suddenly resumed. "There have. One particularly. But I can assure you
+I've never felt the depth and height or anything like the sort of Quiet
+Clear Conviction.... And now I'm just telling you these things, Miss
+Corner, I don't know whether it will interest you if I tell you that
+you're really and truly the very first love I ever had as well as my
+last. I've had sent over--I got it only yesterday--this lil' photograph
+of a miniature portrait of one of my ancestor's relations--a Corner just
+as you are. It's here...."
+
+He had considerable difficulties with his pockets and papers. Cecily,
+mute and flushed and inconvenienced by a preposterous and unaccountable
+impulse to weep, took the picture he handed her.
+
+"When I was a lil' fellow of fifteen," said Mr. Direck in the tone of
+one producing a melancholy but conclusive piece of evidence, "I
+_worshipped_ that miniature. It seemed to me--the loveliest person....
+And--it's just you...."
+
+He too was preposterously moved.
+
+It seemed a long time before Cecily had anything to say, and then what
+she had to say she said in a softened, indistinct voice. "You're very
+kind," she said, and kept hold of the little photograph.
+
+They had halted for the photograph. Now they walked on again.
+
+"I thought I'd like to tell you," said Mr. Direck and became
+tremendously silent.
+
+Cecily found him incredibly difficult to answer. She tried to make
+herself light and offhand, and to be very frank with him.
+
+"Of course," she said, "I knew--I felt somehow--you meant to say
+something of this sort to me--when you asked me to come with you--"
+
+"Well?" he said.
+
+"And I've been trying to make my poor brain think of something to say to
+you."
+
+She paused and contemplated her difficulties....
+
+"Couldn't you perhaps say something of the same kind--such as I've been
+trying to say?" said Mr. Direck presently, with a note of earnest
+helpfulness. "I'd be very glad if you could."
+
+"Not exactly," said Cecily, more careful than ever.
+
+"Meaning?"
+
+"I think you know that you are the best of friends. I think you are,
+oh--a Perfect Dear."
+
+"Well--that's all right--so far."
+
+"That _is_ as far."
+
+"You don't know whether you love me? That's what you mean to say."
+
+"No.... I feel somehow it isn't that.... Yet...."
+
+"There's nobody else by any chance?"
+
+"No." Cecily weighed things. "You needn't trouble about that."
+
+"Only ... only you don't know."
+
+Cecily made a movement of assent.
+
+"It's no good pretending I haven't thought about you," she said.
+
+"Well, anyhow I've done my best to give you the idea," said Mr. Direck.
+"I seem now to have been doing that pretty nearly all the time."
+
+"Only what should we do?"
+
+Mr. Direck felt this question was singularly artless. "Why!--we'd
+marry," he said. "And all that sort of thing."
+
+"Letty has married--and all that sort of thing," said Cecily, fixing her
+eye on him very firmly because she was colouring brightly. "And it
+doesn't leave Letty very much--forrader."
+
+"Well now, they have a good time, don't they? I'd have thought they have
+a lovely time!"
+
+"They've had a lovely time. And Teddy is the dearest husband. And they
+have a sweet little house and a most amusing baby. And they play hockey
+every Sunday. And Teddy does his work. And every week is like every
+other week. It is just heavenly. Just always the same heavenly. Every
+Sunday there is a fresh week of heavenly beginning. And this, you see,
+isn't heaven; it is earth. And they don't know it but they are getting
+bored. I have been watching them, and they are getting dreadfully bored.
+It's heart-breaking to watch, because they are almost my dearest people.
+Teddy used to be making perpetual jokes about the house and the baby and
+his work and Letty, and now--he's made all the possible jokes. It's only
+now and then he gets a fresh one. It's like spring flowers and
+then--summer. And Letty sits about and doesn't sing. They want something
+new to happen.... And there's Mr. and Mrs. Britling. They love each
+other. Much more than Mrs. Britling dreams, or Mr. Britling for the
+matter of that. Once upon a time things were heavenly for them too, I
+suppose. Until suddenly it began to happen to them that nothing new ever
+happened...."
+
+"Well," said Mr. Direck, "people can travel."
+
+"But that isn't _real_ happening," said Cecily.
+
+"It keeps one interested."
+
+"But real happening is doing something."
+
+"You come back to that," said Mr. Direck. "I never met any one before
+who'd quite got that spirit as you have it. I wouldn't alter it. It's
+part of you. It's part of this place. It's what Mr. Britling always
+seems to be saying and never quite knowing he's said it. It's just as
+though all the things that are going on weren't the things that ought to
+be going on--but something else quite different. Somehow one falls into
+it. It's as if your daily life didn't matter, as if politics didn't
+matter, as if the King and the social round and business and all those
+things weren't anything really, and as though you felt there was
+something else--out of sight--round the corner--that you ought to be
+getting at. Well, I admit, that's got hold of me too. And it's all mixed
+up with my idea of you. I don't see that there's really a contradiction
+in it at all. I'm in love with you, all my heart's in love with you,
+what's the good of being shy about it? I'd just die for your littlest
+wish right here now, it's just as though I'd got love in my veins
+instead of blood, but that's not taking me away from that other thing.
+It's bringing me round to that other thing. I feel as if without you I
+wasn't up to anything at all, but _with_ you--We'd not go settling down
+in a cottage or just touring about with a Baedeker Guide or anything of
+that kind. Not for long anyhow. We'd naturally settle down side by side
+and _do_ ..."
+
+"But what should we do?" asked Cecily.
+
+There came a hiatus in their talk.
+
+Mr. Direck took a deep breath.
+
+"You see that old felled tree there. I was sitting on it the day before
+yesterday and thinking of you. Will you come there and sit with me on
+it? When you sit on it you get a view, oh! a perfectly lovely English
+view, just a bit of the house and those clumps of trees and the valley
+away there with the lily pond. I'd love to have you in my memory of
+it...."
+
+They sat down, and Mr. Direck opened his case. He was shy and clumsy
+about opening it, because he had been thinking dreadfully hard about it,
+and he hated to seem heavy or profound or anything but artless and
+spontaneous to Cecily. And he felt even when he did open his case that
+the effect of it was platitudinous and disappointing. Yet when he had
+thought it out it had seemed very profound and altogether living.
+
+"You see one doesn't want to use terms that have been used in a thousand
+different senses in any way that isn't a perfectly unambiguous sense,
+and at the same time one doesn't want to seem to be canting about things
+or pitching anything a note or two higher than it ought legitimately to
+go, but it seems to me that this sort of something that Mr. Britling is
+always asking for in his essays and writings and things, and what you
+are looking for just as much and which seems so important to you that
+even love itself is a secondary kind of thing until you can square the
+two together, is nothing more nor less than Religion--I don't mean this
+Religion or that Religion but just Religion itself, a Big, Solemn,
+Comprehensive Idea that holds you and me and all the world together in
+one great, grand universal scheme. And though it isn't quite the sort of
+idea of love-making that's been popular--well, in places like
+Carrierville--for some time, it's the right idea; it's got to be
+followed out if we don't want love-making to be a sort of idle,
+troublesome game of treats and flatteries that is sure as anything to
+lead right away to disappointments and foolishness and unfaithfulness
+and--just Hell. What you are driving at, according to my interpretation,
+is that marriage has got to be a religious marriage or else you are
+splitting up life, that religion and love are most of life and all the
+power there is in it, and that they can't afford to be harnessed in two
+different directions.... I never had these ideas until I came here and
+met you, but they come up now in my mind as though they had always been
+there.... And that's why you don't want to marry in a hurry. And that's
+why I'm glad almost that you don't want to marry in a hurry."
+
+He considered. "That's why I'll have to go on to Germany and just let
+both of us turn things over in our minds."
+
+"Yes," said Cecily, weighing his speech. "_I_ think that is it. I think
+that I do want a religious marriage, and that what is wrong with Teddy
+and Letty is that they aren't religious. They pretend they are religious
+somewhere out of sight and round the corner.... Only--"
+
+He considered her gravely.
+
+"What _is_ Religion?" she asked.
+
+Here again there was a considerable pause.
+
+"Very nearly two-thirds of the papers read before our Massachusetts
+society since my connection with it, have dealt with that very
+question," Mr. Direck began. "And one of our most influential members
+was able to secure the services of a very able and highly trained young
+woman from Michigan University, to make a digest of all these
+representative utterances. We are having it printed in a thoroughly
+artistic mariner, as the club book for our autumn season. The drift of
+her results is that religion isn't the same thing as religions. That
+most religions are old and that religion is always new.... Well, putting
+it simply, religion is the perpetual rediscovery of that Great Thing Out
+There.... What the Great Thing is goes by all sorts of names, but if you
+know it's there and if you remember it's there, you've got religion....
+That's about how she figured it out.... I shall send you the book as
+soon as a copy comes over to me.... I can't profess to put it as clearly
+as she puts it. She's got a real analytical mind. But it's one of the
+most suggestive lil' books I've ever seen. It just takes hold of you and
+_makes_ you think."
+
+He paused and regarded the ground before him--thoughtfully.
+
+"Life," said Cecily, "has either got to be religious or else it goes to
+pieces.... Perhaps anyhow it goes to pieces...."
+
+Mr. Direck endorsed these observations by a slow nodding of the head.
+
+He allowed a certain interval to elapse. Then a vaguely apprehended
+purpose that had been for a time forgotten in these higher interests
+came back to him. He took it up with a breathless sense of temerity.
+
+"Well," he said, "then you don't hate me?"
+
+She smiled.
+
+"You don't dislike me or despise me?"
+
+She was still reassuring.
+
+"You don't think I'm just a slow American sort of portent?"
+
+"No."
+
+"You think, on the whole, I might even--someday--?"
+
+She tried to meet his eyes with a pleasant frankness, and perhaps she
+was franker than she meant to be.
+
+"Look here," said Mr. Direck, with a little quiver of emotion softening
+his mouth. "I'll ask you something. We've got to wait. Until you feel
+clearer. Still.... Could you bring yourself--? If just once--I could
+kiss you....
+
+"I'm going away to Germany," he went on to her silence. "But I shan't be
+giving so much attention to Germany as I supposed I should when I
+planned it out. But somehow--if I felt--that I'd kissed you...."
+
+With a delusive effect of calmness the young lady looked first over her
+left shoulder and then over her right and surveyed the park about them.
+Then she stood up. "We can go that way home," she said with a movement
+of her head, "through the little covert."
+
+Mr. Direck stood up too.
+
+"If I was a poet or a bird," said Mr. Direck, "I should sing. But being
+just a plain American citizen all I can do is just to talk about all I'd
+do if I wasn't...."
+
+And when they had reached the little covert, with its pathway of soft
+moss and its sheltering screen of interlacing branches, he broke the
+silence by saying, "Well, what's wrong with right here and now?" and
+Cecily stood up to him as straight as a spear, with gifts in her clear
+eyes. He took her soft cool face between his trembling hands, and kissed
+her sweet half-parted lips. When he kissed her she shivered, and he held
+her tighter and would have kissed her again. But she broke away from
+him, and he did not press her. And muter than ever, pondering deeply,
+and secretly trembling in the queerest way, these two outwardly sedate
+young people returned to the Dower House....
+
+And after tea the taxicab from the junction came for him and he
+vanished, and was last seen as a waving hat receding along the top of
+the dog-rose hedge that ran beyond the hockey field towards the village.
+
+"He will see Germany long before I shall," said Herr Heinrich with a
+gust of nostalgia. "I wish almost I had not agreed to go to Boulogne."
+
+And for some days Miss Cecily Corner was a very grave and dignified
+young woman indeed. Pondering....
+
+
+Section 9
+
+After the departure of Mr. Direck things international began to move
+forward with great rapidity. It was exactly as if his American
+deliberation had hitherto kept things waiting. Before his postcard from
+Rotterdam reached the Dower House Austria had sent an ultimatum to
+Serbia, and before Cecily had got the letter he wrote her from Cologne,
+a letter in that curiously unformed handwriting the stenographer and the
+typewriter are making an American characteristic, Russia was mobilising,
+and the vast prospect of a European war had opened like the rolling up
+of a curtain on which the interests of the former week had been but a
+trivial embroidery. So insistent was this reality that revealed itself
+that even the shooting of the Dublin people after the gun-running of
+Howth was dwarfed to unimportance. The mind of Mr. Britling came round
+from its restless wanderings to a more and more intent contemplation of
+the hurrying storm-clouds that swept out of nothingness to blacken all
+his sky. He watched it, he watched amazed and incredulous, he watched
+this contradiction of all his reiterated confessions of faith in German
+sanity and pacifism, he watched it with all that was impersonal in his
+being, and meanwhile his personal life ran in a continually deeper and
+narrower channel as his intelligence was withdrawn from it.
+
+Never had the double refraction of his mind been more clearly defined.
+On the one hand the Britling of the disinterested intelligence saw the
+habitual peace of the world vanish as the daylight vanishes when a
+shutter falls over the window of a cell; and on the other the Britling
+of the private life saw all the pleasant comfort of his relations with
+Mrs. Harrowdean disappearing in a perplexing irrational quarrel. He did
+not want to lose Mrs. Harrowdean; he contemplated their breach with a
+profound and profoundly selfish dismay. It seemed the wanton termination
+of an arrangement of which he was only beginning to perceive the extreme
+and irreplaceable satisfactoriness.
+
+It wasn't that he was in love with her. He knew almost as clearly as
+though he had told himself as much that he was not. But then, on the
+other hand, it was equally manifest in its subdued and ignored way that
+as a matter of fact she was hardly more in love with him. What
+constituted the satisfactoriness of the whole affair was its essential
+unlovingness and friendly want of emotion. It left their minds free to
+play with all the terms and methods of love without distress. She could
+summon tears and delights as one summons servants, and he could act his
+part as lover with no sense of lost control. They supplied in each
+other's lives a long-felt want--if only, that is, she could control her
+curious aptitude for jealousy and the sexual impulse to vex. There, he
+felt, she broke the convention of their relations and brought in serious
+realities, and this little rift it was that had widened to a now
+considerable breach. He knew that in every sane moment she dreaded and
+wished to heal that breach as much as he did. But the deep simplicities
+of the instincts they had tacitly agreed to bridge over washed the piers
+of their reconciliation away.
+
+And unless they could restore the bridge things would end, and Mr.
+Britling felt that the ending of things would involve for him the most
+extraordinary exasperation. She would go to Oliver for comfort; she
+would marry Oliver; and he knew her well enough to be sure that she
+would thrust her matrimonial happiness with Oliver unsparingly upon his
+attention; while he, on the other hand, being provided with no
+corresponding Olivette, would be left, a sort of emotional celibate,
+with his slack times and his afternoons and his general need for
+flattery and amusement dreadfully upon his own hands. He would be
+tormented by jealousy. In which case--and here he came to verities--his
+work would suffer. It wouldn't grip him while all these vague demands
+she satisfied fermented unassuaged.
+
+And, after the fashion of our still too adolescent world, Mr. Britling
+and Mrs. Harrowdean proceeded to negotiate these extremely unromantic
+matters in the phrases of that simple, honest and youthful
+passionateness which is still the only language available, and at times
+Mr. Britling came very near persuading himself that he had something of
+the passionate love for her that he had once had for his Mary, and that
+the possible loss of her had nothing to do with the convenience of
+Pyecrafts or any discretion in the world. Though indeed the only thing
+in the whole plexus of emotional possibility that still kept anything of
+its youthful freshness in his mind was the very strong objection indeed
+he felt to handing her over to anybody else in the world. And in
+addition he had just a touch of fatherly feeling that a younger man
+would not have had, and it made him feel very anxious to prevent her
+making a fool of herself by marrying a man out of spite. He felt that
+since an obstinate lover is apt to be an exacting husband, in the end
+the heavy predominance of Oliver might wring much sincerer tears from
+her than she had ever shed for himself. But that generosity was but the
+bright edge to a mainly possessive jealousy.
+
+It was Mr. Britling who reopened the correspondence by writing a little
+apology for the corner of the small snapdragon bed, and this evoked an
+admirably touching reply. He replied quite naturally with assurances and
+declarations. But before she got his second letter her mood had changed.
+She decided that if he had really and truly been lovingly sorry, instead
+of just writing a note to her he would have rushed over to her in a
+wild, dramatic state of mind, and begged forgiveness on his knees. She
+wrote therefore a second letter to this effect, crossing his second one,
+and, her literary gift getting the better of her, she expanded her
+thesis into a general denunciation of his habitual off-handedness with
+her, to an abandonment of all hope of ever being happy with him, to a
+decision to end the matter once for all, and after a decent interval of
+dignified regrets to summon Oliver to the reward of his patience and
+goodness. The European situation was now at a pitch to get upon Mr.
+Britling's nerves, and he replied with a letter intended to be
+conciliatory, but which degenerated into earnest reproaches for her
+"unreasonableness." Meanwhile she had received his second and tenderly
+eloquent letter; it moved her deeply, and having now cleared her mind of
+much that had kept it simmering uncomfortably, she replied with a
+sweetly loving epistle. From this point their correspondence had a kind
+of double quality, being intermittently angry and loving; her third
+letter was tender, and it was tenderly answered in his fourth; but in
+the interim she had received his third and answered it with considerable
+acerbity, to which his fifth was a retort, just missing her generous and
+conclusive fifth. She replied to his fifth on a Saturday evening--it was
+that eventful Saturday, Saturday the First of August, 1914--by a
+telegram. Oliver was abroad in Holland, engaged in a much-needed
+emotional rest, and she wired to Mr. Britling: "Have wired for Oliver,
+he will come to me, do not trouble to answer this."
+
+She was astonished to get no reply for two days. She got no reply for
+two days because remarkable things were happening to the telegraph wires
+of England just then, and her message, in the hands of a boy scout on a
+bicycle, reached Mr. Britling's house only on Monday afternoon. He was
+then at Claverings discussing the invasion of Belgium that made
+Britain's participation in the war inevitable, and he did not open the
+little red-brown envelope until about half-past six. He failed to mark
+the date and hours upon it, but he perceived that it was essentially a
+challenge. He was expected, he saw, to go over at once with his
+renovated Gladys and end this unfortunate clash forever in one striking
+and passionate scene. His mind was now so full of the war that he found
+this the most colourless and unattractive of obligations. But he felt
+bound by the mysterious code of honour of the illicit love affair to
+play his part. He postponed his departure until after supper--there was
+no reason why he should be afraid of motoring by moonlight if he went
+carefully--because Hugh came in with Cissie demanding a game of hockey.
+Hockey offered a nervous refreshment, a scampering forgetfulness of the
+tremendous disaster of this war he had always believed impossible, that
+nothing else could do, and he was very glad indeed of the irruption....
+
+
+Section 10
+
+For days the broader side of Mr. Britling's mind, as distinguished from
+its egotistical edge, had been reflecting more and more vividly and
+coherently the spectacle of civilisation casting aside the thousand
+dispersed activities of peace, clutching its weapons and setting its
+teeth, for a supreme struggle against militarist imperialism. From the
+point of view of Matching's Easy that colossal crystallising of
+accumulated antagonisms was for a time no more than a confusion of
+headlines and a rearrangement of columns in the white windows of the
+newspapers through which those who lived in the securities of England
+looked out upon the world. It was a display in the sphere of thought and
+print immeasurably remote from the real green turf on which one walked,
+from the voice and the church-bells of Mr. Dimple that sounded their
+ample caresses in one's ears, from the clashing of the stags who were
+beginning to knock the velvet from their horns in the park, or the
+clatter of the butcher's cart and the respectful greeting of the butcher
+boy down the lane. It was the spectacle of the world less real even to
+most imaginations than the world of novels or plays. People talked of
+these things always with an underlying feeling that they romanced and
+intellectualised.
+
+On Thursday, July 23rd, the Austro-Hungarian minister at Belgrade
+presented his impossible ultimatum to the Serbian government, and
+demanded a reply within forty-eight hours. With the wisdom of retrospect
+we know now clearly enough what that meant. The Sarajevo crime was to be
+resuscitated and made an excuse for war. But nine hundred and
+ninety-nine Europeans out of a thousand had still no suspicion of what
+was happening to them. The ultimatum figured prominently in the morning
+papers that came to Matching's Easy on Friday, but it by no means
+dominated the rest of the news; Sir Edward Carson's rejection of the
+government proposals for Ulster was given the pride of place, and almost
+equally conspicuous with the Serbian news were the Caillaux trial and
+the storming of the St. Petersburg barricades by Cossacks. Herr
+Heinrich's questions at lunch time received reassuring replies.
+
+On Saturday Sir Edward Carson was still in the central limelight, Russia
+had intervened and demanded more time for Serbia, and the _Daily
+Chronicle_ declared the day a critical one for Europe. Dublin with
+bayonet charges and bullets thrust Serbia into a corner on Monday. No
+shots had yet been fired in the East, and the mischief in Ireland that
+Germany had counted on was well ahead. Sir Edward Grey was said to be
+working hard for peace.
+
+"It's the cry of wolf," said Mr. Britling to Herr Heinrich.
+
+"But at last there did come a wolf," said Herr Heinrich. "I wish I had
+not sent my first moneys to that Conference upon Esperanto. I feel sure
+it will be put off."
+
+"See!" said Teddy very cheerfully to Herr Heinrich on Tuesday, and held
+up the paper, in which "The Bloodshed in Dublin" had squeezed the "War
+Cloud Lifting" into a quite subordinate position.
+
+"What did we tell you?" said Mrs. Britling. "Nobody wants a European
+war."
+
+But Wednesday's paper vindicated his fears. Germany had commanded Russia
+not to mobilise.
+
+"Of course Russia will mobilise," said Herr Heinrich.
+
+"Or else forever after hold her peace," said Teddy.
+
+"And then Germany will mobilise," said Herr Heinrich, "and all my
+holiday will vanish. I shall have to go and mobilise too. I shall have
+to fight. I have my papers."
+
+"I never thought of you as a soldier before," said Teddy.
+
+"I have deferred my service until I have done my thesis," said Herr
+Heinrich. "Now all that will be--Piff! And my thesis three-quarters
+finished."
+
+"That is serious," said Teddy.
+
+"_Verdammte Dummheit!_" said Herr Heinrich. "Why do they do such
+things?"
+
+On Thursday, the 30th of July, Caillaux, Carson, strikes, and all the
+common topics of life had been swept out of the front page of the paper
+altogether; the stock exchanges were in a state of wild perturbation,
+and food prices were leaping fantastically. Austria was bombarding
+Belgrade, contrary to the rules of war hitherto accepted; Russia was
+mobilising; Mr. Asquith was, he declared, not relaxing his efforts "to
+do everything possible to circumscribe the area of possible conflict,"
+and the Vienna Conference of Peace Societies was postponed. "I do not
+see why a conflict between Russia and Austria should involve Western
+Europe," said Mr. Britling. "Our concern is only for Belgium and
+France."
+
+But Herr Heinrich knew better. "No," he said. "It is the war. It has
+come. I have heard it talked about in Germany many times. But I have
+never believed that it was obliged to come. Ach! It considers no one. So
+long as Esperanto is disregarded, all these things must be."
+
+Friday brought photographs of the mobilisation in Vienna, and the news
+that Belgrade was burning. Young men in straw hats very like English or
+French or Belgian young men in straw hats were shown parading the
+streets of Vienna, carrying flags and banners portentously, blowing
+trumpets or waving hats and shouting. Saturday saw all Europe
+mobilising, and Herr Heinrich upon Teddy's bicycle in wild pursuit of
+evening papers at the junction. Mobilisation and the emotions of Herr
+Heinrich now became the central facts of the Dower House situation. The
+two younger Britlings mobilised with great vigour upon the playroom
+floor. The elder had one hundred and ninety toy soldiers with a
+considerable equipment of guns and wagons; the younger had a force of a
+hundred and twenty-three, not counting three railway porters (with
+trucks complete), a policeman, five civilians and two ladies. Also they
+made a number of British and German flags out of paper. But as neither
+would allow his troops to be any existing foreign army, they agreed to
+be Redland and Blueland, according to the colour of their prevailing
+uniforms. Meanwhile Herr Heinrich confessed almost promiscuously the
+complication of his distresses by a hitherto unexpected emotional
+interest in the daughter of the village publican. She was a placid
+receptive young woman named Maud Hickson, on whom the young man had, it
+seemed, imposed the more poetical name of Marguerite.
+
+"Often we have spoken together, oh yes, often," he assured Mrs.
+Britling. "And now it must all end. She loves flowers, she loves birds.
+She is most sweet and innocent. I have taught her many words in German
+and several times I have tried to draw her in pencil, and now I must go
+away and never see her any more."
+
+His implicit appeal to the whole literature of Teutonic romanticism
+disarmed Mrs. Britling's objection that he had no business whatever to
+know the young woman at all.
+
+"Also," cried Herr Heinrich, facing another aspect of his distresses,
+"how am I to pack my things? Since I have been here I have bought many
+things, many books, and two pairs of white flannel trousers and some
+shirts and a tin instrument that I cannot work, for developing privately
+Kodak films. All this must go into my little portmanteau. And it will
+not go into my little portmanteau!
+
+"And there is Billy! Who will now go on with the education of Billy?"
+
+The hands of fate paused not for Herr Heinrich's embarrassments and
+distresses. He fretted from his room downstairs and back to his room, he
+went out upon mysterious and futile errands towards the village inn, he
+prowled about the garden. His head and face grew pinker and pinker; his
+eyes were flushed and distressed. Everybody sought to say and do kind
+and reassuring things to him.
+
+"Ach!" he said to Teddy; "you are a civilian. You live in a free
+country. It is not your war. You can be amused at it...."
+
+But then Teddy was amused at everything.
+
+Something but very dimly apprehended at Matching's Easy, something
+methodical and compelling away in London, seemed to be fumbling and
+feeling after Herr Heinrich, and Herr Heinrich it appeared was
+responding. Sunday's post brought the decision.
+
+"I have to go," he said. "I must go right up to London to-day. To an
+address in Bloomsbury. Then they will tell me how to go to Germany. I
+must pack and I must get the taxi-cab from the junction and I must go.
+Why are there no trains on the branch line on Sundays for me to go by
+it?"
+
+At lunch he talked politics. "I am entirely opposed to the war," he
+said. "I am entirely opposed to any war."
+
+"Then why go?" asked Mr. Britling. "Stay here with us. We all like you.
+Stay here and do not answer your mobilisation summons."
+
+"But then I shall lose all my country. I shall lose my papers. I shall
+be outcast. I must go."
+
+"I suppose a man should go with his own country," Mr. Britling
+reflected.
+
+"If there was only one language in all the world, none of such things
+would happen," Herr Heinrich declared. "There would be no English, no
+Germans, no Russians."
+
+"Just Esperantists," said Teddy.
+
+"Or Idoists," said Herr Heinrich. "I am not convinced of which. In some
+ways Ido is much better."
+
+"Perhaps there would have to be a war between Ido and Esperanto to
+settle it," said Teddy.
+
+"Who shall we play skat with when you have gone?" asked Mrs. Britling.
+
+"All this morning," said Herr Heinrich, expanding in the warmth of
+sympathy, "I have been trying to pack and I have been unable to pack. My
+mind is too greatly disordered. I have been told not to bring much
+luggage. Mrs. Britling, please."
+
+Mrs. Britling became attentive.
+
+"If I could leave much of my luggage, my clothes, some of them, and
+particularly my violin, it would be much more to my convenience. I do
+not care to be mobilised with my violin. There may be much crowding.
+Then I would but just take my rucksack...."
+
+"If you will leave your things packed up."
+
+"And afterwards they could be sent."
+
+But he did not leave them packed up. The taxi-cab, to order which he had
+gone to the junction in the morning on Teddy's complaisant machine, came
+presently to carry him off, and the whole family and the first
+contingent of the usual hockey players gathered about it to see him off.
+The elder boy of the two juniors put a distended rucksack upon the seat.
+Herr Heinrich then shook hands with every one.
+
+"Write and tell us how you get on," cried Mrs. Britling.
+
+"But if England also makes war!"
+
+"Write to Reynolds--let me give you his address; he is my agent in New
+York," said Mr. Britling, and wrote it down.
+
+"We'll come to the village corner with you, Herr Heinrich," cried the
+boys.
+
+"No," said Herr Heinrich, sitting down into the automobile, "I will part
+with you altogether. It is too much...."
+
+"_Auf Wiedersehen!_" cried Mr. Britling. "Remember, whatever happens
+there will be peace at last!"
+
+"Then why not at the beginning?" Herr Heinrich demanded with a
+reasonable exasperation and repeated his maturer verdict on the whole
+European situation; "_Verdammte Bummelei!_"
+
+"Go," said Mr. Britling to the taxi driver.
+
+"_Auf Wiedersehen_, Herr Heinrich!"
+
+"_Auf Wiedersehen!_"
+
+"Good-bye, Herr Heinrich!"
+
+"Good luck, Herr Heinrich!"
+
+The taxi started with a whir, and Herr Heinrich passed out of the gates
+and along the same hungry road that had so recently consumed Mr. Direck.
+"Give him a last send-off," cried Teddy. "One, Two, Three! _Auf
+Wiedersehen!_"
+
+The voices, gruff and shrill, sounded raggedly together. The dog-rose
+hedge cut off the sight of the little face. Then the pink head bobbed up
+again. He was standing up and waving the panama hat. Careless of
+sunstroke....
+
+Then Herr Heinrich had gone altogether....
+
+"Well," said Mr. Britling, turning away.
+
+"I do hope they won't hurt him," said a visitor.
+
+"Oh, they won't put a youngster like that in the fighting line," said
+Mr. Britling. "He's had no training yet. And he has to wear glasses. How
+can he shoot? They'll make a clerk of him."
+
+"He hasn't packed at all," said Mrs. Britling to her husband. "Just come
+up for an instant and peep at his room. It's--touching."
+
+It was touching.
+
+It was more than touching; in its minute, absurd way it was symbolical
+and prophetic, it was the miniature of one small life uprooted.
+
+The door stood wide open, as he had left it open, careless of all the
+little jealousies and privacies of occupation and ownership. Even the
+windows were wide open as though he had needed air; he who had always so
+sedulously shut his windows since first he came to England. Across the
+empty fireplace stretched the great bough of oak he had brought in for
+Billy, but now its twigs and leaves had wilted, and many had broken off
+and fallen on the floor. Billy's cage stood empty upon a little table in
+the corner of the room. Instead of packing, the young man had evidently
+paced up and down in a state of emotional elaboration; the bed was
+disordered as though he had several times flung himself upon it, and his
+books had been thrown about the room despairfully. He had made some
+little commencements of packing in a borrowed cardboard box. The violin
+lay as if it lay in state upon the chest of drawers, the drawers were
+all partially open, and in the middle of the floor sprawled a pitiful
+shirt of blue, dropped there, the most flattened and broken-hearted of
+garments. The fireplace contained an unsuccessful pencil sketch of a
+girl's face, torn across....
+
+Husband and wife regarded the abandoned room in silence for a time, and
+when Mr. Britling spoke he lowered his voice.
+
+"I don't see Billy," he said.
+
+"Perhaps he has gone out of the window," said Mrs. Britling also in a
+hushed undertone....
+
+"Well," said Mr. Britling abruptly and loudly, turning away from this
+first intimation of coming desolations, "let us go down to our hockey!
+He had to go, you know. And Billy will probably come back again when he
+begins to feel hungry...."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+Monday was a public holiday, the First Monday in August, and the day
+consecrated by long-established custom to the Matching's Easy Flower
+Show in Claverings Park. The day was to live in Mr. Britling's memory
+with a harsh brightness like the brightness of that sunshine one sees at
+times at the edge of a thunderstorm. There were tents with the exhibits,
+and a tent for "Popular Refreshments," there was a gorgeous gold and
+yellow steam roundabout with motor-cars and horses, and another in green
+and silver with wonderfully undulating ostriches and lions, and each had
+an organ that went by steam; there were cocoanut shies and many
+ingenious prize-giving shooting and dart-throwing and ring-throwing
+stalls, each displaying a marvellous array of crockery, clocks, metal
+ornaments, and suchlike rewards. There was a race of gas balloons, each
+with a postcard attached to it begging the finder to say where it
+descended, and you could get a balloon for a shilling and have a chance
+of winning various impressive and embarrassing prizes if your balloon
+went far enough--fish carvers, a silver-handled walking-stick, a bog-oak
+gramophone-record cabinet, and things like that. And by a special gate
+one could go for sixpence into the Claverings gardens, and the sixpence
+would be doubled by Lady Homartyn and devoted next winter to the
+Matching's Easy coal club. And Mr. Britling went through all the shows
+with his boys, and finally left them with a shilling each and his
+blessing and paid his sixpence for the gardens and made his way as he
+had promised, to have tea with Lady Homartyn.
+
+The morning papers had arrived late, and he had been reading them and
+re-reading them and musing over them intermittently until his family had
+insisted upon his coming out to the festivities. They said that if for
+no other reason he must come to witness Aunt Wilshire's extraordinary
+skill at the cocoanut shy. She could beat everybody. Well, one must not
+miss a thing like that. The headlines proclaimed, "The Great Powers at
+War; France Invaded by Germany; Germany invaded by Russia; 100,000
+Germans march into Luxemburg; Can England Abstain? Fifty Million Loan to
+be Issued." And Germany had not only violated the Treaty of London but
+she had seized a British ship in the Kiel Canal.... The roundabouts were
+very busy and windily melodious, and the shooting gallery kept popping
+and jingling as people shot and broke bottles, and the voices of the
+young men and women inviting the crowd to try their luck at this and
+that rang loud and clear. Teddy and Letty and Cissie and Hugh were
+developing a quite disconcerting skill at the dart-throwing, and were
+bent upon compiling a complete tea-set for the Teddy cottage out of
+their winnings. There was a score of automobiles and a number of traps
+and gigs about the entrance to the portion of the park that had been
+railed off for the festival, the small Britling boys had met some
+nursery visitors from Claverings House and were busy displaying skill
+and calm upon the roundabout ostriches, and less than four hundred miles
+away with a front that reached from Nancy to Liege more than a million
+and a quarter of grey-clad men, the greatest and best-equipped host the
+world had ever seen, were pouring westward to take Paris, grip and
+paralyse France, seize the Channel ports, invade England, and make the
+German Empire the master-state of the earth. Their equipment was a
+marvel of foresight and scientific organisation, from the motor kitchens
+that rumbled in their wake to the telescopic sights of the
+sharp-shooters, the innumerable machine-guns of the infantry, the supply
+of entrenching material, the preparations already made in the invaded
+country....
+
+"Let's try at the other place for the sugar-basin!" said Teddy, hurrying
+past. "Don't get _two_ sugar-basins," said Cissie breathless in
+pursuit. "Hugh is trying for a sugar-basin at the other place."
+
+Then Mr. Britling heard a bellicose note.
+
+"Let's have a go at the bottles," said a cheerful young farmer. "Ought
+to keep up our shooting, these warlike times...."
+
+Mr. Britling ran against Hickson from the village inn and learnt that he
+was disturbed about his son being called up as a reservist. "Just when
+he was settling down here. It seems a pity they couldn't leave him for a
+bit."
+
+"'Tis a noosence," said Hickson, "but anyhow, they give first prize to
+his radishes. He'll be glad to hear they give first prize to his
+radishes. Do you think, Sir, there's very much probability of this war?
+It do seem to be beginning like."
+
+"It looks more like beginning than it has ever done," said Mr. Britling.
+"It's a foolish business."
+
+"I suppose if they start in on us we got to hit back at them," said Mr.
+Hickson. "Postman--he's got his papers too...."
+
+Mr. Britling made his way through the drifting throng towards the little
+wicket that led into the Gardens....
+
+He was swung round suddenly by a loud bang.
+
+It was the gun proclaiming the start of the balloon race.
+
+He stood for some moments watching the scene. The balloon start had
+gathered a little crowd of people, village girls in white gloves and
+cheerful hats, young men in bright ties and ready-made Sunday suits,
+fathers and mothers, boy scouts, children, clerks in straw hats,
+bicyclists and miscellaneous folk. Over their heads rose Mr. Cheshunt,
+the factotum of the estate. He was standing on a table and handing the
+little balloons up into the air one by one. They floated up from his
+hand like many-coloured grapes, some rising and falling, some soaring
+steadily upward, some spinning and eddying, drifting eastward before the
+gentle breeze, a string of bubbles against the sky and the big trees
+that bounded the park. Farther away to the right were the striped
+canvas tents of the flower-show, still farther off the roundabouts
+churned out their music, the shooting galleries popped, and the swing
+boats creaked through the air. Cut off from these things by a line of
+fencing lay the open park in which the deer grouped themselves under the
+great trees and regarded the festival mistrustfully. Teddy and Hugh
+appeared breaking away from the balloon race cluster, and hurrying back
+to their dart-throwing. A man outside a little tent that stood apart was
+putting up a brave-looking notice, "Unstinted Teas One Shilling." The
+Teddy perambulator was moored against the cocoanut shy, and Aunt
+Wilshire was still displaying her terrible prowess at the cocoanuts.
+Already she had won twenty-seven. Strange children had been impressed by
+her to carry them, and formed her retinue. A wonderful old lady was Aunt
+Wilshire....
+
+Then across all the sunshine of this artless festival there appeared, as
+if it were writing showing through a picture, "France Invaded by
+Germany; Germany Invaded by Russia."
+
+Mr. Britling turned again towards the wicket, with its collectors of
+tribute, that led into the Gardens.
+
+
+Section 12
+
+The Claverings gardens, and particularly the great rockery, the lily
+pond, and the herbaceous borders, were unusually populous with
+unaccustomed visitors and shy young couples. Mr. Britling had to go to
+the house for instructions, and guided by the under-butler found Lady
+Homartyn hiding away in the walled Dutch garden behind the dairy. She
+had been giving away the prizes of the flower-show, and she was resting
+in a deck chair while a spinster relation presided over the tea. Mrs.
+Britling had fled the outer festival earlier, and was sitting by the
+tea-things. Lady Meade and two or three visitors had motored out from
+Hartleytree to assist, and Manning had come in with his tremendous
+confirmation of all that the morning papers had foreshadowed.
+
+"Have you any news?" asked Mr. Britling.
+
+"It's _war!_" said Mrs. Britling.
+
+"They are in Luxemburg," said Manning. "That can only mean that they are
+coming through Belgium."
+
+"Then I was wrong," said Mr. Britling, "and the world is altogether mad.
+And so there is nothing else for us to do but win.... Why could they not
+leave Belgium alone?"
+
+"It's been in all their plans for the last twenty years," said Manning.
+
+"But it brings us in for certain."
+
+"I believe they have reckoned on that."
+
+"Well!" Mr. Britling took his tea and sat down, and for a time he said
+nothing.
+
+"It is three against three," said one of the visitors, trying to count
+the Powers engaged.
+
+"Italy," said Manning, "will almost certainly refuse to fight. In fact
+Italy is friendly to us. She is bound to be. This is, to begin with, an
+Austrian war. And Japan will fight for us...."
+
+"I think," said old Lady Meade, "that this is the suicide of Germany.
+They cannot possibly fight against Russia and France and ourselves. Why
+have they ever begun it?"
+
+"It may be a longer and more difficult war than people suppose," said
+Manning. "The Germans reckon they are going to win."
+
+"Against us all?"
+
+"Against us all. They are tremendously prepared."
+
+"It is impossible that Germany should win," said Mr. Britling, breaking
+his silence. "Against her Germany has something more than armies; all
+reason, all instinct--the three greatest peoples in the world."
+
+"At present very badly supplied with war material."
+
+"That may delay things; it may make the task harder; but it will not
+alter the end. Of course we are going to win. Nothing else is thinkable.
+I have never believed they meant it. But I see now they meant it. This
+insolent arming and marching, this forty years of national blustering;
+sooner or later it had to topple over into action...."
+
+He paused and found they were listening, and he was carried on by his
+own thoughts into further speech.
+
+"This isn't the sort of war," he said, "that is settled by counting guns
+and rifles. Something that has oppressed us all has become intolerable
+and has to be ended. And it will be ended. I don't know what soldiers
+and politicians think of our prospects, but I do know what ordinary
+reasonable men think of the business. I know that all we millions of
+reasonable civilised onlookers are prepared to spend our last shillings
+and give all our lives now, rather than see Germany unbeaten. I know
+that the same thing is felt in America, and that given half a chance,
+given just one extra shake of that foolish mailed fist in the face of
+America, and America also will be in this war by our side. Italy will
+come in. She is bound to come in. France will fight like one man. I'm
+quite prepared to believe that the Germans have countless rifles and
+guns; have got the most perfect maps, spies, plans you can imagine. I'm
+quite prepared to hear that they have got a thousand tremendous
+surprises in equipment up their sleeves. I'm quite prepared for sweeping
+victories for them and appalling disasters for us. Those are the first
+things. What I do know is that the Germans understand nothing of the
+spirit of man; that they do not dream for a moment of the devil of
+resentment this war will arouse. Didn't we all trust them not to let off
+their guns? Wasn't that the essence of our liberal and pacific faith?
+And here they are in the heart of Europe letting off their guns?"
+
+"And such a lot of guns," said Manning.
+
+"Then you think it will be a long war, Mr. Britling?" said Lady Meade.
+
+"Long or short, it will end in the downfall of Germany. But I do not
+believe it will be long. I do not agree with Manning. Even now I cannot
+believe that a whole great people can be possessed by war madness. I
+think the war is the work of the German armaments party and of the Court
+party. They have forced this war on Germany. Well--they must win and go
+on winning. So long as they win, Germany will hold together, so long as
+their armies are not clearly defeated nor their navy destroyed. But once
+check them and stay them and beat them, then I believe that suddenly the
+spirit of Germany will change even as it changed after Jena...."
+
+"Willie Nixon," said one of the visitors, "who came back from Hamburg
+yesterday, says they are convinced they will have taken Paris and St.
+Petersburg and one or two other little places and practically settled
+everything for us by about Christmas."
+
+"And London?"
+
+"I forgot if he said London. But I suppose a London more or less hardly
+matters. They don't think we shall dare come in, but if we do they will
+Zeppelin the fleet and walk through our army--if you can call it an
+army."
+
+Manning nodded confirmation.
+
+"They do not understand," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Sir George Padish told me the same sort of thing," said Lady Homartyn.
+"He was in Berlin in June."
+
+"Of course the efficiency of their preparations is almost incredible,"
+said another of Lady Meade's party.
+
+"They have thought out and got ready for everything--literally
+everything."
+
+
+Section 13
+
+Mr. Britling had been a little surprised by the speech he had made. He
+hadn't realised before he began to talk how angry and scornful he was at
+this final coming into action of the Teutonic militarism that had so
+long menaced his world. He had always said it would never really
+fight--and here it was fighting! He was furious with the indignation of
+an apologist betrayed. He had only realised the strength and passion of
+his own belligerent opinions as he had heard them, and as he walked back
+with his wife through the village to the Dower House, he was still in
+the swirl of this self-discovery; he was darkly silent, devising
+fiercely denunciatory phrases against Krupp and Kaiser. "Krupp and
+Kaiser," he grasped that obvious, convenient alliteration. "It is all
+that is bad in mediaevalism allied to all that is bad in modernity," he
+told himself.
+
+"The world," he said, startling Mrs. Britling with his sudden speech,
+"will be intolerable to live in, it will be unendurable for a decent
+human being, unless we win this war.
+
+"We must smash or be smashed...."
+
+His brain was so busy with such stuff that for a time he stared at Mrs.
+Harrowdean's belated telegram without grasping the meaning of a word of
+it. He realised slowly that it was incumbent upon him to go over to her,
+but he postponed his departure very readily in order to play hockey.
+Besides which it would be a full moon, and he felt that summer moonlight
+was far better than sunset and dinner time for the declarations he was
+expected to make. And then he went on phrase-making again about Germany
+until he had actually bullied off at hockey.
+
+Suddenly in the midst of the game he had an amazing thought. It came to
+him like a physical twinge.
+
+"What the devil are we doing at this hockey?" he asked abruptly of
+Teddy, who was coming up to bully after a goal. "We ought to be drilling
+or shooting against those infernal Germans."
+
+Teddy looked at him questioningly.
+
+"Oh, come on!" said Mr. Britling with a gust of impatience, and snapped
+the sticks together.
+
+
+Section 14
+
+Mr. Britling started for his moonlight ride about half-past nine that
+night. He announced that he could neither rest nor work, the war had
+thrown him into a fever; the driving of the automobile was just the
+distraction he needed; he might not, he added casually, return for a day
+or so. When he felt he could work again he would come back. He filled up
+his petrol tank by the light of an electric torch, and sat in his car in
+the garage and studied his map of the district. His thoughts wandered
+from the road to Pyecrafts to the coast, and to the possible route of a
+raider. Suppose the enemy anticipated a declaration of war! Here he
+might come, and here....
+
+He roused himself from these speculations to the business in hand.
+
+The evening seemed as light as day, a cool moonshine filled the world.
+The road was silver that flushed to pink at the approach of Mr.
+Britling's headlight, the dark turf at the wayside and the bushes on the
+bank became for a moment an acid green as the glare passed. The full
+moon was climbing up the sky, and so bright that scarcely a star was
+visible in the blue grey of the heavens. Houses gleamed white a mile
+away, and ever and again a moth would flutter and hang in the light of
+the lamps, and then vanish again in the night.
+
+Gladys was in excellent condition for a run, and so was Mr. Britling. He
+went neither fast nor slow, and with a quite unfamiliar confidence.
+Life, which had seemed all day a congested confusion darkened by
+threats, became cool, mysterious and aloof and with a quality of
+dignified reassurance.
+
+He steered along the narrow road by the black dog-rose hedge, and so
+into the high road towards the village. The village was alight at
+several windows but almost deserted. Out beyond, a coruscation of lights
+burnt like a group of topaz and rubies set in the silver shield of the
+night. The festivities of the Flower Show were still in full progress,
+and the reduction of the entrance fee after seven had drawn in every
+lingering outsider. The roundabouts churned out their relentless music,
+and the bottle-shooting galleries popped and crashed. The
+well-patronised ostriches and motorcars flickered round in a pulsing
+rhythm; black, black, black, before the naphtha flares.
+
+Mr. Britling pulled up at the side of the road, and sat for a little
+while watching the silhouettes move hither and thither from shadow to
+shadow across the bright spaces.
+
+"On the very brink of war--on the brink of Armageddon," he whispered at
+last. "Do they understand? Do any of us understand?"
+
+He slipped in his gear to starting, and was presently running quietly
+with his engine purring almost inaudibly along the level road to
+Hartleytree. The sounds behind him grew smaller and smaller, and died
+away leaving an immense unruffled quiet under the moon. There seemed no
+motion but his own, no sound but the neat, subdued, mechanical rhythm in
+front of his feet. Presently he ran out into the main road, and heedless
+of the lane that turned away towards Pyecrafts, drove on smoothly
+towards the east and the sea. Never before had he driven by night. He
+had expected a fumbling and tedious journey; he found he had come into
+an undreamt-of silvery splendour of motion. For it seemed as though even
+the automobile was running on moonlight that night.... Pyecrafts could
+wait. Indeed the later he got to Pyecrafts the more moving and romantic
+the little comedy of reconciliation would be. And he was in no hurry for
+that comedy. He felt he wanted to apprehend this vast summer calm about
+him, that alone of all the things of the day seemed to convey anything
+whatever of the majestic tragedy that was happening to mankind. As one
+slipped through this still vigil one could imagine for the first time
+the millions away there marching, the wide river valleys, villages,
+cities, mountain-ranges, ports and seas inaudibly busy.
+
+"Even now," he said, "the battleships may be fighting."
+
+He listened, but the sound was only the low intermittent drumming of his
+cylinders as he ran with his throttle nearly closed, down a stretch of
+gentle hill.
+
+He felt that he must see the sea. He would follow the road beyond the
+Rodwell villages, and then turn up to the crest of Eastonbury Hill. And
+thither he went and saw in the gap of the low hills beyond a V-shaped
+level of moonlit water that glittered and yet lay still. He stopped his
+car by the roadside, and sat for a long time looking at this and musing.
+And once it seemed to him three little shapes like short black needles
+passed in line ahead across the molten silver.
+
+But that may have been just the straining of the eyes....
+
+All sorts of talk had come to Mr. Britling's ears about the navies of
+England and France and Germany; there had been public disputes of
+experts, much whispering and discussion in private. We had the heavier
+vessels, the bigger guns, but it was not certain that we had the
+preeminence in science and invention. Were they relying as we were
+relying on Dreadnoughts, or had they their secrets and surprises for us?
+To-night, perhaps, the great ships were steaming to conflict....
+
+To-night all over the world ships must be in flight and ships pursuing;
+ten thousand towns must be ringing with the immediate excitement of
+war....
+
+Only a year ago Mr. Britling had been lunching on a battleship and
+looking over its intricate machinery. It had seemed to him then that
+there could be no better human stuff in the world than the quiet,
+sunburnt, disciplined men and officers he had met.... And our little
+army, too, must be gathering to-night, the little army that had been
+chastened and reborn in South Africa, that he was convinced was
+individually more gallant and self-reliant and capable than any other
+army in the world. He would have sneered or protested if he had heard
+another Englishman say that, but in his heart he held the dear
+belief....
+
+And what other aviators in the world could fly as the Frenchmen and
+Englishmen he had met once or twice at Eastchurch and Salisbury could
+fly? These are things of race and national quality. Let the German cling
+to his gasbags. "We shall beat them in the air," he whispered. "We shall
+beat them on the seas. Surely we shall beat them on the seas. If we have
+men enough and guns enough we shall beat them on land.... Yet--For years
+they have been preparing...."
+
+There was little room in the heart of Mr. Britling that night for any
+love but the love of England. He loved England now as a nation of men.
+There could be no easy victory. Good for us with our too easy natures
+that there could be no easy victory. But victory we must have now--or
+perish....
+
+He roused himself with a sigh, restarted his engine, and went on to find
+some turning place. He still had a colourless impression that the
+journey's end was Pyecrafts.
+
+"We must all do the thing we can," he thought, and for a time the course
+of his automobile along a winding down-hill road held his attention so
+that he could not get beyond it. He turned about and ran up over the
+hill again and down long slopes inland, running very softly and smoothly
+with his lights devouring the road ahead and sweeping the banks and
+hedges beside him, and as he came down a little hill through a village
+he heard a confused clatter and jingle of traffic ahead, and saw the
+danger triangle that warns of cross-roads. He slowed down and then
+pulled up abruptly.
+
+Riding across the gap between the cottages was a string of horsemen, and
+then a grey cart, and then a team drawing a heavy object--a gun, and
+then more horsemen, and then a second gun. It was all a dim brown
+procession in the moonlight. A mounted officer came up beside him and
+looked at him and then went back to the cross-roads, but as yet England
+was not troubling about spies. Four more guns passed, and then a string
+of carts and more mounted men, sitting stiffly. Nobody was singing or
+shouting; scarcely a word was audible, and through all the column there
+was an effect of quiet efficient haste. And so they passed, and rumbled
+and jingled and clattered out of the scene, leaving Mr. Britling in his
+car in the dreaming village. He restarted his engine once more, and went
+his way thoughtfully.
+
+He went so thoughtfully that presently he missed the road to
+Pyecrafts--if ever he had been on the road to Pyecrafts at
+all--altogether. He found himself upon a highway running across a
+flattish plain, and presently discovered by the sight of the Great Bear,
+faint but traceable in the blue overhead, that he was going due north.
+Well, presently he would turn south and west; that in good time; now he
+wanted to feel; he wanted to think. How could he best help England in
+the vast struggle for which the empty silence and beauty of this night
+seemed to be waiting? But indeed he was not thinking at all, but
+feeling, feeling wonder, as he had never felt it since his youth had
+passed from him. This war might end nearly everything in the world as he
+had known the world; that idea struggled slowly through the moonlight
+into consciousness, and won its way to dominance in his mind.
+
+The character of the road changed; the hedges fell away, the pine trees
+and pine woods took the place of the black squat shapes of the hawthorn
+and oak and apple. The houses grew rarer and the world emptier and
+emptier, until he could have believed that he was the only man awake and
+out-of-doors in all the slumbering land....
+
+For a time a little thing caught hold of his dreaming mind. Continually
+as he ran on, black, silent birds rose startled out of the dust of the
+road before him, and fluttered noiselessly beyond his double wedge of
+light. What sort of bird could they be? Were they night-jars? Were they
+different kinds of birds snatching at the quiet of the night for a dust
+bath in the sand? This little independent thread of inquiry ran through
+the texture of his mind and died away....
+
+And at one place there was a great bolting of rabbits across the road,
+almost under his wheels....
+
+The phrases he had used that afternoon at Claverings came back presently
+into his head. They were, he felt assured, the phrases that had to be
+said now. This war could be seen as the noblest of wars, as the crowning
+struggle of mankind against national dominance and national aggression;
+or else it was a mere struggle of nationalities and pure destruction and
+catastrophe. Its enormous significances, he felt, must not be lost in
+any petty bickering about the minor issues of the conflict. But were
+these enormous significances being stated clearly enough? Were they
+being understood by the mass of liberal and pacific thinkers? He drove
+more and more slowly as these questions crowded upon his attention until
+at last he came to a stop altogether.... "Certain things must be said
+clearly," he whispered. "Certain things--The meaning of England.... The
+deep and long-unspoken desire for kindliness and fairness.... Now is the
+time for speaking. It must be put as straight now as her gun-fire, as
+honestly as the steering of her ships."
+
+Phrases and paragraphs began to shape themselves in his mind as he sat
+with one arm on his steering-wheel.
+
+Suddenly he roused himself, turned over the map in the map-case beside
+him, and tried to find his position....
+
+So far as he could judge he had strayed right into Suffolk....
+
+About one o'clock in the morning he found himself in Newmarket.
+Newmarket too was a moonlit emptiness, but as he hesitated at the
+cross-roads he became aware of a policeman standing quite stiff and
+still at the corner by the church.
+
+"Matching's Easy?" he cried.
+
+"That road, Sir, until you come to Market Saffron, and then to the
+left...."
+
+Mr. Britling had a definite purpose now in his mind, and he drove
+faster, but still very carefully and surely. He was already within a
+mile or so of Market Saffron before he remembered that he had made a
+kind of appointment with himself at Pyecrafts. He stared at two
+conflicting purposes. He turned over certain possibilities.
+
+At the Market Saffron cross-roads he slowed down, and for a moment he
+hung undecided.
+
+"Oliver," he said, and as he spoke he threw over his steering-wheel
+towards the homeward way.... He finished his sentence when he had
+negotiated the corner safely. "Oliver must have her...."
+
+And then, perhaps fifty yards farther along, and this time almost
+indignantly: "She ought to have married him long ago...."
+
+He put his automobile in the garage, and then went round under the black
+shadow of his cedars to the front door. He had no key, and for a long
+time he failed to rouse his wife by flinging pebbles and gravel at her
+half-open window. But at last he heard her stirring and called out to
+her.
+
+He explained he had returned because he wanted to write. He wanted
+indeed to write quite urgently. He went straight up to his room, lit his
+reading-lamp, made himself some tea, and changed into his nocturnal
+suit. Daylight found him still writing very earnestly at his pamphlet.
+The title he had chosen was: "And Now War Ends."
+
+
+Section 15
+
+In this fashion it was that the great war began in Europe and came to
+one man in Matching's Easy, as it came to countless intelligent men in
+countless pleasant homes that had scarcely heeded its coming through all
+the years of its relentless preparation. The familiar scenery of life
+was drawn aside, and War stood unveiled. "I am the Fact," said War, "and
+I stand astride the path of life. I am the threat of death and
+extinction that has always walked beside life, since life began. There
+can be nothing else and nothing more in human life until you have
+reckoned with me."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK II
+
+MATCHING'S EASY AT WAR
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FIRST
+
+ONLOOKERS
+
+
+Section 1
+
+On that eventful night of the first shots and the first deaths Mr.
+Britling did not sleep until daylight had come. He sat writing at this
+pamphlet of his, which was to hail the last explosion and the ending of
+war. For a couple of hours he wrote with energy, and then his energy
+flagged. There came intervals when he sat still and did not write. He
+yawned and yawned again and rubbed his eyes. The day had come and the
+birds were noisy when he undressed slowly, dropping his clothes anyhow
+upon the floor, and got into bed....
+
+He woke to find his morning tea beside him and the housemaid going out
+of the room. He knew that something stupendous had happened to the
+world, but for a few moments he could not remember what it was. Then he
+remembered that France was invaded by Germany and Germany by Russia, and
+that almost certainly England was going to war. It seemed a harsh and
+terrible fact in the morning light, a demand for stresses, a certainty
+of destruction; it appeared now robbed of all the dark and dignified
+beauty of the night. He remembered just the same feeling of unpleasant,
+anxious expectation as he now felt when the Boer War had begun fifteen
+years ago, before the first news came. The first news of the Boer War
+had been the wrecking of a British armoured train near Kimberley. What
+similar story might not the overdue paper tell when presently it came?
+
+Suppose, for instance, that some important division of our Fleet had
+been surprised and overwhelmed....
+
+Suppose the Germans were already crumpling up the French armies between
+Verdun and Belfort, very swiftly and dreadfully....
+
+Suppose after all that the Cabinet was hesitating, and that there would
+be no war for some weeks, but only a wrangle about Belgian neutrality.
+While the Germans smashed France....
+
+Or, on the other hand, there might be some amazing, prompt success on
+our part. Our army and navy people were narrow, but in their narrow way
+he believed they were extraordinarily good....
+
+What would the Irish do?...
+
+His thoughts were no more than a thorny jungle of unanswerable questions
+through which he struggled in un-progressive circles.
+
+He got out of bed and dressed in a slow, distraught manner. When he
+reached his braces he discontinued dressing for a time; he opened the
+atlas at Northern France, and stood musing over the Belgian border. Then
+he turned to Whitaker's Almanack to browse upon the statistics of the
+great European armies. He was roused from this by the breakfast gong.
+
+At breakfast there was no talk of anything but war. Hugh was as excited
+as a cat in thundery weather, and the small boys wanted information
+about flags. The Russian and the Serbian flag were in dispute, and the
+flag page of Webster's Dictionary had to be consulted. Newspapers and
+letters were both abnormally late, and Mr. Britling, tiring of supplying
+trivial information to his offspring, smoked cigarettes in the garden.
+He had an idea of intercepting the postman. His eyes and ears informed
+him of the approach of Mrs. Faber's automobile. It was an old,
+resolute-looking machine painted red, and driven by a trusted gardener;
+there was no mistaking it.
+
+Mrs. Faber was in it, and she stopped it outside the gate and made
+signals. Mrs. Britling, attracted by the catastrophic sounds of Mrs.
+Faber's vehicle, came out by the front door, and she and her husband
+both converged upon the caller.
+
+
+Section 2
+
+"I won't come in," cried Mrs. Faber, "but I thought I'd tell you. I've
+been getting food."
+
+"Food?"
+
+"Provisions. There's going to be a run on provisions. Look at my flitch
+of bacon!"
+
+"But--"
+
+"Faber says we have to lay in what we can. This war--it's going to stop
+everything. We can't tell what will happen. I've got the children to
+consider, so here I am. I was at Hickson's before nine...."
+
+The little lady was very flushed and bright-eyed. Her fair hair was
+disordered, her hat a trifle askew. She had an air of enjoying unwonted
+excitements. "All the gold's being hoarded too," she said, with a crow
+of delight in her voice. "Faber says that probably our cheques won't be
+worth _that_ in a few days. He rushed off to London to get gold at his
+clubs--while he can. I had to insist on Hickson taking a cheque.
+'Never,' I said, 'will I deal with you again--never--unless you do....'
+Even then he looked at me almost as if he thought he wouldn't.
+
+"It's Famine!" she said, turning to Mr. Britling. "I've laid hands on
+all I can. I've got the children to consider."
+
+"But why is it famine?" asked Mr. Britling.
+
+"Oh! it _is_!" she said.
+
+"But why?"
+
+"Faber understands," she said. "Of course it's Famine...."
+
+"And would you believe me," she went on, going back to Mrs. Britling,
+"that man Hickson stood behind his counter--where I've dealt with him
+for _years_, and refused absolutely to let me have more than a dozen
+tins of sardines. _Refused!_ Point blank!
+
+"I was there before nine, and even then Hickson's shop was
+crowded--_crowded_, my dear!"
+
+"What have you got?" said Mr. Britling with an inquiring movement
+towards the automobile.
+
+She had got quite a lot. She had two sides of bacon, a case of sugar,
+bags of rice, eggs, a lot of flour.
+
+"What are all these little packets?" said Mr. Britling.
+
+Mrs. Faber looked slightly abashed.
+
+"Cerebos salt," she said. "One gets carried away a little. I just got
+hold of it and carried it out to the car. I thought we might have to
+salt things later."
+
+"And the jars are pickles?" said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Yes. But look at all my flour! That's what will go first...."
+
+The lady was a little flurried by Mr. Britling's too detailed
+examination of her haul. "What good is blacking?" he asked. She would
+not hear him. She felt he was trying to spoil her morning. She declared
+she must get on back to her home. "Don't say I didn't warn you," she
+said. "I've got no end of things to do. There's peas! I want to show
+cook how to bottle our peas. For this year--it's lucky, we've got no end
+of peas. I came by here just for the sake of telling you." And with that
+she presently departed--obviously ruffled by Mrs. Britling's lethargy
+and Mr. Britling's scepticism.
+
+Mr. Britling watched her go off with a slowly rising indignation.
+
+"And that," he said, "is how England is going to war! Scrambling for
+food--at the very beginning."
+
+"I suppose she is anxious for the children," said Mrs. Britling.
+
+"Blacking!"
+
+"After all," said Mr. Britling, "if other people are doing that sort of
+thing--"
+
+"That's the idea of all panics. We've got not to do it.... The country
+hasn't even declared war yet! Hallo, here we are! Better late than
+never."
+
+The head of the postman, bearing newspapers and letters, appeared
+gliding along the top of the hedge as he cycled down the road towards
+the Dower House corner.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+England was not yet at war, but all the stars were marching to that end.
+It was as if an event so vast must needs take its time to happen. No
+doubt was left upon Mr. Britling's mind, though a whole-page
+advertisement in the _Daily News_, in enormous type and of mysterious
+origin, implored Great Britain not to play into the hands of Russia,
+Russia the Terrible, that bugbear of the sentimental Radicals. The news
+was wide and sweeping, and rather inaccurate. The Germans were said to
+be in Belgium and Holland, and they had seized English ships in the Kiel
+Canal. A moratorium had been proclaimed, and the reports of a food panic
+showed Mrs. Faber to be merely one example of a large class of excitable
+people.
+
+Mr. Britling found the food panic disconcerting. It did not harmonise
+with his leading _motif_ of the free people of the world rising against
+the intolerable burthen of militarism. It spoilt his picture....
+
+Mrs. Britling shared the paper with Mr. Britling, they stood by the bed
+of begonias near the cedar tree and read, and the air was full of the
+cheerful activities of the lawn-mower that was being drawn by a
+carefully booted horse across the hockey field.
+
+Presently Hugh came flitting out of the house to hear what had happened.
+"One can't work somehow, with all these big things going on," he
+apologised. He secured the _Daily News_ while his father and mother read
+_The Times_. The voices of the younger boys came from the shade of the
+trees; they had brought all their toy soldiers out of doors, and were
+making entrenched camps in the garden.
+
+"The financial situation is an extraordinary one," said Mr. Britling,
+concentrating his attention.... "All sorts of staggering things may
+happen. In a social and economic system that has grown just anyhow....
+Never been planned.... In a world full of Mrs. Fabers...."
+
+"Moratorium?" said Hugh over his _Daily News_. "In relation to debts and
+so on? Modern side you sent me to, Daddy. I live at hand to mouth in
+etymology. Mors and crematorium--do we burn our bills instead of paying
+them?"
+
+"Moratorium," reflected Mr. Britling; "Moratorium. What nonsense you
+talk! It's something that delays, of course. Nothing to do with death.
+Just a temporary stoppage of payments.... Of course there's bound to be
+a tremendous change in values...."
+
+
+Section 4
+
+"There's bound to be a tremendous change in values."
+
+On that text Mr. Britling's mind enlarged very rapidly. It produced a
+wonderful crop of possibilities before he got back to his study. He sat
+down to his desk, but he did not immediately take up his work. He had
+discovered something so revolutionary in his personal affairs that even
+the war issue remained for a time in suspense.
+
+Tucked away in the back of Mr. Britling's consciousness was something
+that had not always been there, something warm and comforting that made
+life and his general thoughts about life much easier and pleasanter than
+they would otherwise have been, the sense of a neatly arranged
+investment list, a shrewdly and geographically distributed system of
+holdings in national loans, municipal investments, railway debentures,
+that had amounted altogether to rather over five-and-twenty thousand
+pounds; his and Mrs. Britling's, a joint accumulation. This was, so to
+speak, his economic viscera. It sustained him, and kept him going and
+comfortable. When all was well he did not feel its existence; he had
+merely a pleasant sense of general well-being. When here or there a
+security got a little disarranged he felt a vague discomfort. Now he
+became aware of grave disorders. It was as if he discovered he had been
+accidentally eating toadstools, and didn't quite know whether they
+weren't a highly poisonous sort. But an analogy may be carried too
+far....
+
+At any rate, when Mr. Britling got back to his writing-desk he was much
+too disturbed to resume "And Now War Ends."
+
+"There's bound to be a tremendous change in values!"
+
+He had never felt quite so sure as most people about the stability of
+the modern financial system. He did not, he felt, understand the working
+of this moratorium, or the peculiar advantage of prolonging the bank
+holidays. It meant, he supposed, a stoppage of payment all round, and a
+cutting off of the supply of ready money. And Hickson the grocer,
+according to Mrs. Faber, was already looking askance at cheques.
+
+Even if the bank did reopen Mr. Britling was aware that his current
+balance was low; at the utmost it amounted to twenty or thirty pounds.
+He had been expecting cheques from his English and American publishers,
+and the usual _Times_ cheque. Suppose these payments were intercepted!
+
+All these people might, so far as he could understand, stop payment
+under this moratorium! That hadn't at first occurred to him. But, of
+course, quite probably they might refuse to pay his account when it fell
+due.
+
+And suppose _The Times_ felt his peculiar vein of thoughtfulness
+unnecessary in these stirring days!
+
+And then if the bank really did lock up his deposit account, and his
+securities became unsaleable!
+
+Mr. Britling felt like an oyster that is invited to leave its shell....
+
+He sat back from his desk contemplating these things. His imagination
+made a weak attempt to picture a world in which credit has vanished and
+money is of doubtful value. He supposed a large number of people would
+just go on buying and selling at or near the old prices by force of
+habit.
+
+His mind and conscience made a valiant attempt to pick up "And Now War
+Ends" and go on with it, but before five minutes were out he was back at
+the thoughts of food panic and bankruptcy....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+The conflict of interests at Mr. Britling's desk became unendurable. He
+felt he must settle the personal question first. He wandered out upon
+the lawn and smoked cigarettes.
+
+His first conception of a great convergent movement of the nations to
+make a world peace and an end to militant Germany was being obscured by
+this second, entirely incompatible, vision of a world confused and
+disorganised. Mrs. Fabers in great multitudes hoarding provisions,
+riotous crowds attacking shops, moratorium, shut banks and waiting
+queues. Was it possible for the whole system to break down through a
+shock to its confidence? Without any sense of incongruity the dignified
+pacification of the planet had given place in his mind to these more
+intimate possibilities. He heard a rustle behind him, and turned to face
+his wife.
+
+"Do you think," she asked, "that there is any chance of a shortage of
+food?"
+
+"If all the Mrs. Fabers in the world run and grab--"
+
+"Then every one must grab. I haven't much in the way of stores in the
+house."
+
+"H'm," said Mr. Britling, and reflected.... "I don't think we must buy
+stores now."
+
+"But if we are short."
+
+"It's the chances of war," said Mr. Britling.
+
+He reflected. "Those who join a panic make a panic. After all, there is
+just as much food in the world as there was last month. And short of
+burning it the only way of getting rid of it is to eat it. And the
+harvests are good. Why begin a scramble at a groaning board?"
+
+"But people _are_ scrambling! It would be awkward--with the children and
+everything--if we ran short."
+
+"We shan't. And anyhow, you mustn't begin hoarding, even if it means
+hardship."
+
+"Yes. But you won't like it if suddenly there's no sugar for your tea."
+
+Mr. Britling ignored this personal application.
+
+"What is far more serious than a food shortage is the possibility of a
+money panic."
+
+He paced the lawn with her and talked. He said that even now very few
+people realised the flimsiness of the credit system by which the modern
+world was sustained. It was a huge growth of confidence, due very
+largely to the uninquiring indolence of--everybody. It was sound so long
+as mankind did, on the whole, believe in it; give only a sufficient loss
+of faith and it might suffer any sort of collapse. It might vanish
+altogether--as the credit system vanished at the breaking up of Italy by
+the Goths--and leave us nothing but tangible things, real property,
+possession nine points of the law, and that sort of thing. Did she
+remember that last novel of Gissing's?--"Veranilda," it was called. It
+was a picture of the world when there was no wealth at all except what
+one could carry hidden or guarded about with one. That sort of thing
+came to the Roman Empire slowly, in the course of lifetimes, but
+nowadays we lived in a rapider world--with flimsier institutions. Nobody
+knew the strength or the weakness of credit; nobody knew whether even
+the present shock might not send it smashing down.... And then all the
+little life we had lived so far would roll away....
+
+Mrs. Britling, he noted, glanced ever and again at her sunlit
+house--there were new sunblinds, and she had been happy in her choice of
+a colour--and listened with a sceptical expression to this
+disquisition.
+
+"A few days ago," said Mr. Britling, trying to make things concrete for
+her, "you and I together were worth five-and-twenty thousand pounds. Now
+we don't know what we are worth; whether we have lost a thousand or ten
+thousand...."
+
+He examined his sovereign purse and announced he had six pounds. "What
+have you?"
+
+She had about eighteen pounds in the house.
+
+"We may have to get along with that for an indefinite time."
+
+"But the bank will open again presently," she said. "And people about
+here trust us."
+
+"Suppose they don't?"
+
+She did not trouble about the hypothesis. "And our investments will
+recover. They always do recover."
+
+"Everything may recover," he admitted. "But also nothing may recover.
+All this life of ours which has seemed so settled and secure--isn't
+secure. I have felt that we were fixed here and rooted--for all our
+lives. Suppose presently things sweep us out of it? It's a possibility
+we may have to face. I feel this morning as if two enormous gates had
+opened in our lives, like the gates that give upon an arena, gates
+giving on a darkness--through which anything might come. Even death.
+Suppose suddenly we were to see one of those great Zeppelins in the air,
+or hear the thunder of guns away towards the coast. And if a messenger
+came upon a bicycle telling us to leave everything and go inland...."
+
+"I see no reason why one should go out to meet things like that."
+
+"But there is no reason why one should not envisage them...."
+
+"The curious thing," said Mr. Britling, pursuing his examination of the
+matter, "is that, looking at these things as one does now, as things
+quite possible, they are not nearly so terrifying and devastating to the
+mind as they would have seemed--last week. I believe I should load you
+all into Gladys and start off westward with a kind of exhilaration...."
+
+She looked at him as if she would speak, and said nothing. She suspected
+him of hating his home and affecting to care for it out of politeness to
+her....
+
+"Perhaps mankind tries too much to settle down. Perhaps these stirrings
+up have to occur to save us from our disposition to stuffy comfort.
+There's the magic call of the unknown experience, of dangers and
+hardships. One wants to go. But unless some push comes one does not go.
+There is a spell that keeps one to the lair and the old familiar ways.
+Now I am afraid--and at the same time I feel that the spell is broken.
+The magic prison is suddenly all doors. You may call this ruin,
+bankruptcy, invasion, flight; they are doors out of habit and
+routine.... I have been doing nothing for so long, except idle things
+and discursive things."
+
+"I thought that you managed to be happy here. You have done a lot of
+work."
+
+"Writing is recording, not living. But now I feel suddenly that we are
+living intensely. It is as if the whole quality of life was changing.
+There are such times. There are times when the spirit of life changes
+altogether. The old world knew that better than we do. It made a
+distinction between weekdays and Sabbaths, and between feasts and fasts
+and days of devotion. That is just what has happened now. Week-day rules
+must be put aside. Before--oh! three days ago, competition was fair, it
+was fair and tolerable to get the best food one could and hold on to
+one's own. But that isn't right now. War makes a Sabbath, and we shut
+the shops. The banks are shut, and the world still feels as though
+Sunday was keeping on...."
+
+He saw his own way clear.
+
+"The scale has altered. It does not matter now in the least if we are
+ruined. It does not matter in the least if we have to live upon potatoes
+and run into debt for our rent. These now are the most incidental of
+things. A week ago they would have been of the first importance. Here we
+are face to face with the greatest catastrophe and the greatest
+opportunity in history. We have to plunge through catastrophe to
+opportunity. There is nothing to be done now in the whole world except
+to get the best out of this tremendous fusing up of all the settled
+things of life." He had got what he wanted. He left her standing upon
+the lawn and hurried back to his desk....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+When Mr. Britling, after a strenuous morning among high ideals,
+descended for lunch, he found Mr. Lawrence Carmine had come over to join
+him at that meal. Mr. Carmine was standing in the hall with his legs
+very wide apart reading _The Times_ for the fourth time. "I can do no
+work," he said, turning round. "I can't fix my mind. I suppose we are
+going to war. I'd got so used to the war with Germany that I never
+imagined it would happen. Gods! what a bore it will be.... And Maxse and
+all those scaremongers cock-a-hoop and 'I told you so.' Damn these
+Germans!"
+
+He looked despondent and worried. He followed Mr. Britling towards the
+dining-room with his hands deep in his pockets.
+
+"It's going to be a tremendous thing," he said, after he had greeted
+Mrs. Britling and Hugh and Aunt Wilshire and Teddy, and seated himself
+at Mr. Britling's hospitable board. "It's going to upset everything. We
+don't begin to imagine all the mischief it is going to do."
+
+Mr. Britling was full of the heady draught of liberal optimism he had
+been brewing upstairs. "I am not sorry I have lived to see this war," he
+said. "It may be a tremendous catastrophe in one sense, but in another
+it is a huge step forward in human life. It is the end of forty years of
+evil suspense. It is crisis and solution."
+
+"I wish I could see it like that," said Mr. Carmine.
+
+"It is like a thaw--everything has been in a frozen confusion since that
+Jew-German Treaty of Berlin. And since 1871."
+
+"Why not since Schleswig-Holstein?" said Mr. Carmine.
+
+"Why not? Or since the Treaty of Vienna?"
+
+"Or since--One might go back."
+
+"To the Roman Empire," said Hugh.
+
+"To the first conquest of all," said Teddy....
+
+"I couldn't work this morning," said Hugh. "I have been reading in the
+Encyclopaedia about races and religions in the Balkans.... It's very
+mixed."
+
+"So long as it could only be dealt with piecemeal," said Mr. Britling.
+"And that is just where the tremendous opportunity of this war comes in.
+Now everything becomes fluid. We can redraw the map of the world. A week
+ago we were all quarrelling bitterly about things too little for human
+impatience. Now suddenly we face an epoch. This is an epoch. The world
+is plastic for men to do what they will with it. This is the end and the
+beginning of an age. This is something far greater than the French
+Revolution or the Reformation.... And we live in it...."
+
+He paused impressively.
+
+"I wonder what will happen to Albania?" said Hugh, but his comment was
+disregarded.
+
+"War makes men bitter and narrow," said Mr. Carmine.
+
+"War narrowly conceived," said Mr. Britling. "But this is an indignant
+and generous war."
+
+They speculated about the possible intervention of the United States.
+Mr. Britling thought that the attack on Belgium demanded the
+intervention of every civilised power, that all the best instincts of
+America would be for intervention. "The more," he said, "the quicker."
+
+"It would be strange if the last power left out to mediate were to be
+China," said Mr. Carmine. "The one people in the world who really
+believe in peace.... I wish I had your confidence, Britling."
+
+For a time they contemplated a sort of Grand Inquest on Germany and
+militarism, presided over by the Wisdom of the East. Militarism was, as
+it were, to be buried as a suicide at four cross-roads, with a stake
+through its body to prevent any untimely resuscitation.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Mr. Britling was in a phase of imaginative release. Such a release was
+one of the first effects of the war upon many educated minds. Things
+that had seemed solid forever were visibly in flux; things that had
+seemed stone were alive. Every boundary, every government, was seen for
+the provisional thing it was. He talked of his World Congress meeting
+year by year, until it ceased to be a speculation and became a mere
+intelligent anticipation; he talked of the "manifest necessity" of a
+Supreme Court for the world. He beheld that vision at the Hague, but Mr.
+Carmine preferred Delhi or Samarkand or Alexandria or Nankin. "Let us
+get away from the delusion of Europe anyhow," said Mr. Carmine....
+
+As Mr. Britling had sat at his desk that morning and surveyed the
+stupendous vistas of possibility that war was opening, the catastrophe
+had taken on a more and more beneficial quality. "I suppose that it is
+only through such crises as these that the world can reconstruct
+itself," I said. And, on the whole that afternoon he was disposed to
+hope that the great military machine would not smash itself too easily.
+"We want the nations to feel the need of one another," he said. "Too
+brief a campaign might lead to a squabble for plunder. The Englishman
+has to learn his dependence on the Irishman, the Russian has to be
+taught the value of education and the friendship of the Pole.... Europe
+will now have to look to Asia, and recognise that Indians and Chinamem
+are also 'white.'... But these lessons require time and stresses if
+they are to be learnt properly...."
+
+They discussed the possible duration of the war.
+
+Mr. Carmine thought it would be a long struggle; Mr. Britling thought
+that the Russians would be in Berlin by the next May. He was afraid they
+might get there before the end of the year. He thought that the Germans
+would beat out their strength upon the French and Belgian lines, and
+never be free to turn upon the Russian at all. He was sure they had
+underrated the strength and energy of the French and of ourselves. "The
+Russians meanwhile," he said, "will come on, slowly, steadily,
+inevitably...."
+
+
+Section 8
+
+That day of vast anticipations drew out into the afternoon. It was a
+day--obsessed. It was the precursor of a relentless series of doomed and
+fettered days. There was a sense of enormous occurrences going on just
+out of sound and sight--behind the mask of Essex peacefulness. From this
+there was no escape. It made all other interests fitful. Games of
+Badminton were begun and abruptly truncated by the arrival of the
+evening papers; conversations started upon any topic whatever returned
+to the war by the third and fourth remark....
+
+After lunch Mr. Britling and Mr. Carmine went on talking. Nothing else
+was possible. They repeated things they had already said. They went into
+things more thoroughly. They sat still for a time, and then suddenly
+broke out with some new consideration....
+
+It had been their custom to play skat with Herr Heinrich, who had shown
+them the game very explicitly and thoroughly. But there was no longer
+any Herr Heinrich--and somehow German games were already out of fashion.
+The two philosophers admitted that they had already considered skat to
+be complicated without subtlety, and that its chief delight for them had
+been the pink earnestness of Herr Heinrich, his inability to grasp
+their complete but tacit comprehension of its innocent strategy, and his
+invariable ill-success to bring off the coups that flashed before his
+imagination.
+
+He would survey the destructive counter-stroke with unconcealed
+surprise. He would verify his first impression by craning towards it and
+adjusting his glasses on his nose. He had a characteristic way of doing
+this with one stiff finger on either side of his sturdy nose.
+
+"It is very fortunate for you that you have played that card," he would
+say, growing pinker and pinker with hasty cerebration. "Or else--yes"--a
+glance at his own cards--"it would have been altogether bad for you. I
+had taken only a very small risk.... Now I must--"
+
+He would reconsider his hand.
+
+"_Zo!_" he would say, dashing down a card....
+
+Well, he had gone and skat had gone. A countless multitude of such links
+were snapping that day between hundreds of thousands of English and
+German homes.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+The imminence of war produced a peculiar exaltation in Aunt Wilshire.
+She developed a point of view that was entirely her own.
+
+It was Mr. Britling's habit, a habit he had set himself to acquire after
+much irritating experience, to disregard Aunt Wilshire. She was not,
+strictly speaking, his aunt; she was one of those distant cousins we
+find already woven into our lives when we attain to years of
+responsibility. She had been a presence in his father's household when
+Mr. Britling was a boy. Then she had been called "Jane," or "Cousin
+Jane," or "Your cousin Wilshire." It had been a kindly freak of Mr.
+Britling's to promote her to Aunty rank.
+
+She eked out a small inheritance by staying with relatives. Mr.
+Britling's earlier memories presented her as a slender young woman of
+thirty, with a nose upon which small boys were forbidden to comment. Yet
+she commented upon it herself, and called his attention to its marked
+resemblance to that of the great Duke of Wellington. "He was, I am
+told," said Cousin Wilshire to the attentive youth, "a great friend of
+your great-grandmother's. At any rate, they were contemporaries. Since
+then this nose has been in the family. He would have been the last to
+draw a veil over it, but other times, other manners. 'Publish,' he said,
+'and be damned.'"
+
+She had a knack of exasperating Mr. Britling's father, a knack which to
+a less marked degree she also possessed in relation to the son. But Mr.
+Britling senior never acquired the art of disregarding her. Her
+method--if one may call the natural expression of a personality a
+method--was an invincibly superior knowledge, a firm and ill-concealed
+belief that all statements made in her hearing were wrong and most of
+them absurd, and a manner calm, assured, restrained. She may have been
+born with it; it is on record that at the age of ten she was pronounced
+a singularly trying child. She may have been born with the air of
+thinking the doctor a muff and knowing how to manage all this business
+better. Mr. Britling had known her only in her ripeness. As a boy, he
+had enjoyed her confidences--about other people and the general neglect
+of her advice. He grew up rather to like her--most people rather liked
+her--and to attach a certain importance to her unattainable approval.
+She was sometimes kind, she was frequently absurd....
+
+With very little children she was quite wise and Jolly....
+
+So she circulated about a number of houses which at any rate always
+welcomed her coming. In the opening days of each visit she performed
+marvels of tact, and set a watch upon her lips. Then the demons of
+controversy and dignity would get the better of her. She would begin to
+correct, quietly but firmly, she would begin to disapprove of the tone
+and quality of her treatment. It was quite common for her visit to
+terminate in speechless rage both on the side of host and of visitor.
+The remarkable thing was that this speechless rage never endured. Though
+she could exasperate she could never offend. Always after an interval
+during which she was never mentioned, people began to wonder how Cousin
+Jane was getting on.... A tentative correspondence would begin, leading
+slowly up to a fresh invitation.
+
+She spent more time in Mr. Britling's house than in any other. There was
+a legend that she had "drawn out" his mind, and that she had "stood up"
+for him against his father. She had certainly contradicted quite a
+number of those unfavourable comments that fathers are wont to make
+about their sons. Though certainly she contradicted everything. And Mr.
+Britling hated to think of her knocking about alone in boarding-houses
+and hydropathic establishments with only the most casual chances for
+contradiction.
+
+Moreover, he liked to see her casting her eye over the morning paper.
+She did it with a manner as though she thought the terrestrial globe a
+great fool, and quite beyond the reach of advice. And as though she
+understood and was rather amused at the way in which the newspaper
+people tried to keep back the real facts of the case from her.
+
+And now she was scornfully entertained at the behaviour of everybody in
+the war crisis.
+
+She confided various secrets of state to the elder of the younger
+Britlings--preferably when his father was within earshot.
+
+"None of these things they are saying about the war," she said, "really
+matter in the slightest degree. It is all about a spoilt carpet and
+nothing else in the world--a madman and a spoilt carpet. If people had
+paid the slightest attention to common sense none of this war would have
+happened. The thing was perfectly well known. He was a delicate child,
+difficult to rear and given to screaming fits. Consequently he was never
+crossed, allowed to do everything. Nobody but his grandmother had the
+slightest influence with him. And she prevented him spoiling this carpet
+as completely as he wished to do. The story is perfectly well known. It
+was at Windsor--at the age of eight. After that he had but one thought:
+war with England....
+
+"Everybody seemed surprised," she said suddenly at tea to Mr. Carmine.
+"I at least am not surprised. I am only surprised it did not come
+sooner. If any one had asked me I could have told them, three years,
+five years ago."
+
+The day was one of flying rumours, Germany was said to have declared war
+on Italy, and to have invaded Holland as well as Belgium.
+
+"They'll declare war against the moon next!" said Aunt Wilshire.
+
+"And send a lot of Zeppelins," said the smallest boy. "Herr Heinrich
+told us they can fly thousands of miles."
+
+"He will go on declaring war until there is nothing left to declare war
+against. That is exactly what he has always done. Once started he cannot
+desist. Often he has had to be removed from the dinner-table for fear of
+injury. _Now_, it is ultimatums."
+
+She was much pleased by a headline in the _Daily Express_ that streamed
+right across the page: "The Mad Dog of Europe." Nothing else, she said,
+had come so near her feelings about the war.
+
+"Mark my words," said Aunt Wilshire in her most impressive tones. "He is
+insane. It will be proved to be so. He will end his days in an
+asylum--as a lunatic. I have felt it myself for years and said so in
+private.... Knowing what I did.... To such friends as I could trust not
+to misunderstand me.... Now at least I can speak out.
+
+"With his moustaches turned up!" exclaimed Aunt Wilshire after an
+interval of accumulation.... "They say he has completely lost the use of
+the joint in his left arm, he carries it stiff like a Punch and
+Judy--and he wants to conquer Europe.... While his grandmother lived
+there was some one to keep him in order. He stood in Awe of her. He
+hated her, but he did not dare defy her. Even his uncle had some
+influence. Now, nothing restrains him.
+
+"A double-headed mad dog," said Aunt Wilshire. "Him and his eagles!... A
+man like that ought never to have been allowed to make a war.... Not
+even a little war.... If he had been put under restraint when I said so,
+none of these things would have happened. But, of course I am nobody....
+It was not considered worth attending to."
+
+
+Section 10
+
+One remarkable aspect of the English attitude towards the war was the
+disposition to treat it as a monstrous joke. It is a disposition
+traceable in a vast proportion of the British literature of the time. In
+spite of violence, cruelty, injustice, and the vast destruction and
+still vaster dangers of the struggles, that disposition held. The
+English mind refused flatly to see anything magnificent or terrible in
+the German attack, or to regard the German Emperor or the Crown Prince
+as anything more than figures of fun. From first to last their
+conception of the enemy was an overstrenuous, foolish man, red with
+effort, with protruding eyes and a forced frightfulness of demeanour.
+That he might be tremendously lethal did not in the least obscure the
+fact that he was essentially ridiculous. And if as the war went on the
+joke grew grimmer, still it remained a joke. The German might make a
+desert of the world; that could not alter the British conviction that he
+was making a fool of himself.
+
+And this disposition kept coming to the surface throughout the
+afternoon, now in a casual allusion, now in some deliberate jest. The
+small boys had discovered the goose step, and it filled their little
+souls with amazement and delight. That human beings should consent to
+those ridiculous paces seemed to them almost incredibly funny. They
+tried it themselves, and then set out upon a goose-step propaganda.
+Letty and Cissie had come up to the Dower House for tea and news, and
+they were enrolled with Teddy and Hugh. The six of them, chuckling and
+swaying, marched, in vast scissor strides across the lawn. "Left," cried
+Hugh. "Left."
+
+"Toes _out_ more," said Mr. Lawrence Carmine.
+
+"Keep stiffer," said the youngest Britling.
+
+"Watch the Zeppelins and look proud," said Hugh. "With the chest out.
+_Zo!_"
+
+Mrs. Britling was so much amused that she went in for her camera, and
+took a snapshot of the detachment. It was a very successful snapshot,
+and a year later Mr. Britling was to find a print of it among his
+papers, and recall the sunshine and the merriment....
+
+
+Section 11
+
+That night brought the British declaration of war against Germany. To
+nearly every Englishman that came as a matter of course, and it is one
+of the most wonderful facts in history that the Germans were surprised
+by it. When Mr. Britling, as a sample Englishman, had said that there
+would never be war between Germany and England, he had always meant that
+it was inconceivable to him that Germany should ever attack Belgium or
+France. If Germany had been content to fight a merely defensive war upon
+her western frontier and let Belgium alone, there would scarcely have
+been such a thing as a war party in Great Britain. But the attack upon
+Belgium, the westward thrust, made the whole nation flame unanimously
+into war. It settled a question that was in open debate up to the very
+outbreak of the conflict. Up to the last the English had cherished the
+idea that in Germany, just as in England, the mass of people were
+kindly, pacific, and detached. That had been the English mistake.
+Germany was really and truly what Germany had been professing to be for
+forty years, a War State. With a sigh--and a long-forgotten
+thrill--England roused herself to fight. Even now she still roused
+herself sluggishly. It was going to be an immense thing, but just how
+immense it was going to be no one in England had yet imagined.
+
+Countless men that day whom Fate had marked for death and wounds stared
+open-mouthed at the news, and smiled with the excitement of the
+headlines, not dreaming that any of these things would come within three
+hundred miles of them. What was war to Matching's Easy--to all the
+Matching's Easies great and small that make up England? The last home
+that was ever burnt by an enemy within a hundred miles of Matching's
+Easy was burnt by the Danes rather more than a thousand years ago....
+And the last trace of those particular Danes in England were certain
+horny scraps of indurated skin under the heads of the nails in the door
+of St. Clement Danes in London....
+
+Now again, England was to fight in a war which was to light fires in
+England and bring death to English people on English soil. There were
+inconceivable ideas in August, 1914. Such things must happen before they
+can be comprehended as possible.
+
+
+Section 12
+
+This story is essentially the history of the opening and of the
+realisation of the Great War as it happened to one small group of people
+in Essex, and more particularly as it happened to one human brain. It
+came at first to all these people in a spectacular manner, as a thing
+happening dramatically and internationally, as a show, as something in
+the newspapers, something in the character of an historical epoch rather
+than a personal experience; only by slow degrees did it and its
+consequences invade the common texture of English life. If this story
+could be represented by sketches or pictures the central figure would be
+Mr. Britling, now sitting at his desk by day or by night and writing
+first at his tract "And Now War Ends" and then at other things, now
+walking about his garden or in Claverings park or going to and fro in
+London, in his club reading the ticker or in his hall reading the
+newspaper, with ideas and impressions continually clustering, expanding,
+developing more and more abundantly in his mind, arranging themselves,
+reacting upon one another, building themselves into generalisations and
+conclusions....
+
+All Mr. Britling's mental existence was soon threaded on the war. His
+more or less weekly _Times_ leader became dissertations upon the German
+point of view; his reviews of books and Literary Supplement articles
+were all oriented more and more exactly to that one supreme fact....
+
+It was rare that he really seemed to be seeing the war; few people saw
+it; for most of the world it came as an illimitable multitude of
+incoherent, loud, and confusing impressions. But all the time he was at
+least doing his utmost to see the war, to simplify it and extract the
+essence of it until it could be apprehended as something epic and
+explicable, as a stateable issue....
+
+Most typical picture of all would be Mr. Britling writing in a little
+circle of orange lamplight, with the blinds of his room open for the
+sake of the moonlight, but the window shut to keep out the moths that
+beat against it. Outside would be the moon and the high summer sky and
+the old church tower dim above the black trees half a mile away, with
+its clock--which Mr. Britling heard at night but never noted by
+day--beating its way round the slow semicircle of the nocturnal hours.
+He had always hated conflict and destruction, and felt that war between
+civilised states was the quintessential expression of human failure, it
+was a stupidity that stopped progress and all the free variation of
+humanity, a thousand times he had declared it impossible, but even now
+with his country fighting he was still far from realising that this was
+a thing that could possibly touch him more than intellectually. He did
+not really believe with his eyes and finger-tips and backbone that
+murder, destruction, and agony on a scale monstrous beyond precedent was
+going on in the same world as that which slumbered outside the black ivy
+and silver shining window-sill that framed his peaceful view.
+
+War had not been a reality of the daily life of England for more than a
+thousand years. The mental habit of the nation for fifty generations was
+against its emotional recognition. The English were the spoilt children
+of peace. They had never been wholly at war for three hundred years, and
+for over eight hundred years they had not fought for life against a
+foreign power. Spain and France had threatened in turn, but never even
+crossed the seas. It is true that England had had her civil dissensions
+and had made wars and conquests in every part of the globe and
+established an immense empire, but that last, as Mr. Britling had told
+Mr. Direck, was "an excursion." She had just sent out younger sons and
+surplus people, emigrants and expeditionary forces. Her own soil had
+never seen any successful foreign invasion; her homeland, the bulk of
+her households, her general life, had gone on untouched by these things.
+Nineteen people out of twenty, the middle class and most of the lower
+class, knew no more of the empire than they did of the Argentine
+Republic or the Italian Renaissance. It did not concern them. War that
+calls upon every man and threatens every life in the land, war of the
+whole national being, was a thing altogether outside English experience
+and the scope of the British imagination. It was still incredible, it
+was still outside the range of Mr. Britling's thoughts all through the
+tremendous onrush and check of the German attack in the west that opened
+the great war. Through those two months he was, as it were, a more and
+more excited spectator at a show, a show like a baseball match, a
+spectator with money on the event, rather than a really participating
+citizen of a nation thoroughly at war....
+
+
+Section 13
+
+After the jolt of the food panic and a brief, financial scare, the vast
+inertia of everyday life in England asserted itself. When the public
+went to the banks for the new paper money, the banks tendered
+gold--apologetically. The supply of the new notes was very insufficient,
+and there was plenty of gold. After the first impression that a
+universal catastrophe had happened there was an effect as if nothing had
+happened.
+
+Shops re-opened after the Bank Holiday, in a tentative spirit that
+speedily became assurance; people went about their business again, and
+the war, so far as the mass of British folk were concerned, was for some
+weeks a fever of the mind and intelligence rather than a physical and
+personal actuality. There was a keen demand for news, and for a time
+there was very little news. The press did its best to cope with this
+immense occasion. Led by the _Daily Express_, all the halfpenny
+newspapers adopted a new and more resonant sort of headline, the
+streamer, a band of emphatic type that ran clean across the page and
+announced victories or disconcerting happenings. They did this every
+day, whether there was a great battle or the loss of a trawler to
+announce, and the public mind speedily adapted itself to the new pitch.
+
+There was no invitation from the government and no organisation for any
+general participation in war. People talked unrestrictedly; every one
+seemed to be talking; they waved flags and displayed much vague
+willingness to do something. Any opportunity of service was taken very
+eagerly. Lord Kitchener was understood to have demanded five hundred
+thousand men; the War Office arrangements for recruiting, arrangements
+conceived on a scale altogether too small, were speedily overwhelmed by
+a rush of willing young men. The flow had to be checked by raising the
+physical standard far above the national average, and recruiting died
+down to manageable proportions. There was a quite genuine belief that
+the war might easily be too exclusively considered; that for the great
+mass of people it was a disturbing and distracting rather than a vital
+interest. The phase "Business as Usual" ran about the world, and the
+papers abounded in articles in which going on as though there was no war
+at all was demonstrated to be the truest form of patriotism. "Leave
+things to Kitchener" was another watchword with a strong appeal to the
+national quality. "Business as usual during Alterations to the Map of
+Europe" was the advertisement of one cheerful barber, widely quoted....
+
+Hugh was at home all through August. He had thrown up his rooms in
+London with his artistic ambitions, and his father was making all the
+necessary arrangements for him to follow Cardinal to Cambridge.
+Meanwhile Hugh was taking up his scientific work where he had laid it
+down. He gave a reluctant couple of hours in the afternoon to the
+mysteries of Little-go Greek, and for the rest of his time he was either
+working at mathematics and mathematical physics or experimenting in a
+little upstairs room that had been carved out of the general space of
+the barn. It was only at the very end of August that it dawned upon him
+or Mr. Britling that the war might have more than a spectacular and
+sympathetic appeal for him. Hitherto contemporary history had happened
+without his personal intervention. He did not see why it should not
+continue to happen with the same detachment. The last elections--and a
+general election is really the only point at which the life of the
+reasonable Englishman becomes in any way public--had happened four years
+ago, when he was thirteen.
+
+
+Section 14
+
+For a time it was believed in Matching's Easy that the German armies had
+been defeated and very largely destroyed at Liege. It was a mistake not
+confined to Matching's Easy.
+
+The first raiding attack was certainly repulsed with heavy losses, and
+so were the more systematic assaults on August the sixth and seventh.
+After that the news from Liege became uncertain, but it was believed in
+England that some or all of the forts were still holding out right up to
+the German entry into Brussels. Meanwhile the French were pushing into
+their lost provinces, occupying Altkirch, Mulhausen and Saarburg; the
+Russians were invading Bukovina and East Prussia; the _Goeben_, the
+_Breslau_ and the _Panther_ had been sunk by the newspapers in an
+imaginary battle in the Mediterranean, and Togoland was captured by the
+French and British. Neither the force nor the magnitude of the German
+attack through Belgium was appreciated by the general mind, and it was
+possible for Mr. Britling to reiterate his fear that the war would be
+over too soon, long before the full measure of its possible benefits
+could be secured. But these apprehensions were unfounded; the lessons
+the war had in store for Mr. Britling were far more drastic than
+anything he was yet able to imagine even in his most exalted moods.
+
+He resisted the intimations of the fall of Brussels and the appearance
+of the Germans at Dinant. The first real check to his excessive
+anticipations of victory for the Allies came with the sudden
+reappearance of Mr. Direck in a state of astonishment and dismay at
+Matching's Easy. He wired from the Strand office, "Coming to tell you
+about things," and arrived on the heels of his telegram.
+
+He professed to be calling upon Mr. and Mrs. Britling, and to a certain
+extent he was; but he had a quick eye for the door or windows; his
+glance roved irrelevantly as he talked. A faint expectation of Cissie
+came in with him and hovered about him, as the scent of violets follows
+the flower.
+
+He was, however, able to say quite a number of things before Mr.
+Britling's natural tendency to do the telling asserted itself.
+
+"My word," said Mr. Direck, "but this is _some_ war. It is going on
+regardless of every decent consideration. As an American citizen I
+naturally expected to be treated with some respect, war or no war. That
+expectation has not been realised.... Europe is dislocated.... You have
+no idea here yet how completely Europe is dislocated....
+
+"I came to Europe in a perfectly friendly spirit--and I must say I am
+surprised. Practically I have been thrown out, neck and crop. All my
+luggage is lost. Away at some one-horse junction near the Dutch frontier
+that I can't even learn the name of. There's joy in some German home, I
+guess, over my shirts; they were real good shirts. This tweed suit I
+have is all the wardrobe I've got in the world. All my money--good
+American notes--well, they laughed at them. And when I produced English
+gold they suspected me of being English and put me under arrest.... I
+can assure you that the English are most unpopular in Germany at the
+present time, thoroughly unpopular.... Considering that they are getting
+exactly what they were asking for, these Germans are really remarkably
+annoyed.... Well, I had to get the American consul to advance me money,
+and I've done more waiting about and irregular fasting and travelling on
+an empty stomach and viewing the world, so far as it was permitted, from
+railway sidings--for usually they made us pull the blinds down when
+anything important was on the track--than any cow that ever came to
+Chicago.... I was handed as freight--low grade freight.... It doesn't
+bear recalling."
+
+Mr. Direck assumed as grave and gloomy an expression as the facial
+habits of years would permit.
+
+"I tell you I never knew there was such a thing as war until this
+happened to me. In America we don't know there is such a thing. It's
+like pestilence and famine; something in the story books. We've
+forgotten it for anything real. There's just a few grandfathers go
+around talking about it. Judge Holmes and sage old fellows like him.
+Otherwise it's just a game the kids play at.... And then suddenly here's
+everybody running about in the streets--hating and threatening--and nice
+old gentlemen with white moustaches and fathers of families scheming and
+planning to burn houses and kill and hurt and terrify. And nice young
+women, too, looking for an Englishman to spit at; I tell you I've been
+within range and very uncomfortable several times.... And what one can't
+believe is that they are really doing these things. There's a little
+village called Vise near the Dutch frontier; some old chap got fooling
+there with a fowling-piece; and they've wiped it out. Shot the people by
+the dozen, put them out in rows three deep and shot them, and burnt the
+place. Short of scalping, Red Indians couldn't have done worse.
+Respectable German soldiers....
+
+"No one in England really seems to have any suspicion what is going on
+in Belgium. You hear stories--People tell them in Holland. It takes your
+breath away. They have set out just to cow those Belgians. They have
+started in to be deliberately frightful. You do not begin to
+understand.... Well.... Outrages. The sort of outrages Americans have
+never heard of. That one doesn't speak of.... Well.... Rape.... They
+have been raping women for disciplinary purposes on tables in the
+market-place of Liege. Yes, sir. It's a fact. I was told it by a man who
+had just come out of Belgium. Knew the people, knew the place, knew
+everything. People over here do not seem to realise that those women are
+the same sort of women that you might find in Chester or Yarmouth, or in
+Matching's Easy for the matter of that. They still seem to think that
+Continental women are a different sort of women--more amenable to that
+sort of treatment. They seem to think there is some special Providential
+law against such things happening to English people. And it's within
+two hundred miles of you--even now. And as far as I can see there's
+precious little to prevent it coming nearer...."
+
+Mr. Britling thought there were a few little obstacles.
+
+"I've seen the new British army drilling in London, Mr. Britling. I
+don't know if you have. I saw a whole battalion. And they hadn't got
+half-a-dozen uniforms, and not a single rifle to the whole battalion.
+
+"You don't begin to realise in England what you are up against. You have
+no idea what it means to be in a country where everybody, the women, the
+elderly people, the steady middle-aged men, are taking war as seriously
+as business. They haven't the slightest compunction. I don't know what
+Germany was like before the war, I had hardly gotten out of my train
+before the war began; but Germany to-day is one big armed camp. It's all
+crawling with soldiers. And every soldier has his uniform and his boots
+and his arms and his kit.
+
+"And they're as sure of winning as if they had got London now. They mean
+to get London. They're cocksure they are going to walk through Belgium,
+cocksure they will get to Paris by Sedan day, and then they are going to
+destroy your fleet with Zeppelins and submarines and make a dash across
+the Channel. They say it's England they are after, in this invasion of
+Belgium. They'll just down France by the way. They say they've got guns
+to bombard Dover from Calais. They make a boast of it. They know for
+certain you can't arm your troops. They know you can't turn out ten
+thousand rifles a week. They come and talk to any one in the trains, and
+explain just how your defeat is going to be managed. It's just as though
+they were talking of rounding up cattle."
+
+Mr. Britling said they would soon be disillusioned.
+
+Mr. Direck, with the confidence of his authentic observations, remarked
+after a perceptible interval, "I wonder how."
+
+He reverted to the fact that had most struck upon his imagination.
+
+"Grown-up people, ordinary intelligent experienced people, taking war
+seriously, talking of punishing England; it's a revelation. A sort of
+solemn enthusiasm. High and low....
+
+"And the trainloads of men and the trainloads of guns...."
+
+"Liege," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Liege was just a scratch on the paint," said Mr. Direck. "A few
+thousand dead, a few score thousand dead, doesn't matter--not a red cent
+to them. There's a man arrived at the Cecil who saw them marching into
+Brussels. He sat at table with me at lunch yesterday. All day it went
+on, a vast unending river of men in grey. Endless waggons, endless guns,
+the whole manhood of a nation and all its stuff, marching....
+
+"I thought war," said Mr. Direck, "was a thing when most people stood
+about and did the shouting, and a sort of special team did the fighting.
+Well, Germany isn't fighting like that.... I confess it, I'm scared....
+It's the very biggest thing on record; it's the very limit in wars.... I
+dreamt last night of a grey flood washing everything in front of it. You
+and me--and Miss Corner--curious thing, isn't it? that she came into
+it--were scrambling up a hill higher and higher, with that flood pouring
+after us. Sort of splashing into a foam of faces and helmets and
+bayonets--and clutching hands--and red stuff.... Well, Mr. Britling, I
+admit I'm a little bit overwrought about it, but I can assure you you
+don't begin to realise in England what it is you've butted against...."
+
+
+Section 15
+
+Cissie did not come up to the Dower House that afternoon, and so Mr.
+Direck, after some vague and transparent excuses, made his way to the
+cottage.
+
+Here his report become even more impressive. Teddy sat on the writing
+desk beside the typewriter and swung his legs slowly. Letty brooded in
+the armchair. Cissie presided over certain limited crawling operations
+of the young heir.
+
+"They could have the equal of the whole British Army killed three times
+over and scarcely know it had happened. They're _all_ in it. It's a
+whole country in arms."
+
+Teddy nodded thoughtfully.
+
+"There's our fleet," said Letty.
+
+"Well, _that_ won't save Paris, will it?"
+
+Mr. Direck didn't, he declared, want to make disagreeable talk, but this
+was a thing people in England had to face. He felt like one of them
+himself--"naturally." He'd sort of hurried home to them--it was just
+like hurrying home--to tell them of the tremendous thing that was going
+to hit them. He felt like a man in front of a flood, a great grey flood.
+He couldn't hide what he had been thinking. "Where's our army?" asked
+Letty suddenly.
+
+"Lost somewhere in France," said Teddy. "Like a needle in a bottle of
+hay."
+
+"What I keep on worrying at is this," Mr. Direck resumed. "Suppose they
+did come, suppose somehow they scrambled over, sixty or seventy thousand
+men perhaps."
+
+"Every man would turn out and take a shot at them," said Letty.
+
+"But there's no rifles!"
+
+"There's shot guns."
+
+"That's exactly what I'm afraid of," said Mr. Direck. "They'd
+massacre....
+
+"You may be the bravest people on earth," said Mr. Direck, "but if you
+haven't got arms and the other chaps have--you're just as if you were
+sheep."
+
+He became gloomily pensive.
+
+He roused himself to describe his experiences at some length, and the
+extraordinary disturbance of his mind. He related more particularly his
+attempts to see the sights of Cologne during the stir of mobilisation.
+After a time his narrative flow lost force, and there was a general
+feeling that he ought to be left alone with Cissie. Teddy had a letter
+that must be posted; Letty took the infant to crawl on the mossy stones
+under the pear tree. Mr. Direck leant against the window-sill and became
+silent for some moments after the door had closed on Letty.
+
+"As for you, Cissie," he began at last, "I'm anxious. I'm real anxious.
+I wish you'd let me throw the mantle of Old Glory over you."
+
+He looked at her earnestly.
+
+"Old Glory?" asked Cissie.
+
+"Well--the Stars and Stripes. I want you to be able to claim American
+citizenship--in certain eventualities. It wouldn't be so very difficult.
+All the world over, Cissie, Americans are respected.... Nobody dares
+touch an American citizen. We are--an inviolate people."
+
+He paused. "But how?" asked Cissie.
+
+"It would be perfectly easy--perfectly."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Just marry an American citizen," said Mr. Direck, with his face beaming
+with ingenuous self-approval. "Then you'd be safe, and I'd not have to
+worry."
+
+"Because we're in for a stiff war!" cried Cissie, and Direck perceived
+he had blundered.
+
+"Because we may be invaded!" she said, and Mr. Direck's sense of error
+deepened.
+
+"I vow--" she began.
+
+"No!" cried Mr. Direck, and held out a hand.
+
+There was a moment of crisis.
+
+"Never will I desert my country--while she is at war," said Cissie,
+reducing her first fierce intention, and adding as though she regretted
+her concession, "Anyhow."
+
+"Then it's up to me to end the war, Cissie," said Mr. Direck, trying to
+get her back to a less spirited attitude.
+
+But Cissie wasn't to be got back so easily. The war was already
+beckoning to them in the cottage, and drawing them down from the
+auditorium into the arena.
+
+"This is the rightest war in history," she said. "If I was an American I
+should be sorry to be one now and to have to stand out of it. I wish I
+was a man now so that I could do something for all the decency and
+civilisation the Germans have outraged. I can't understand how any man
+can be content to keep out of this, and watch Belgium being destroyed.
+It is like looking on at a murder. It is like watching a dog killing a
+kitten...."
+
+Mr. Direck's expression was that of a man who is suddenly shown strange
+lights upon the world.
+
+
+Section 16
+
+Mr. Britling found Mr. Direck's talk very indigestible.
+
+He was parting very reluctantly from his dream of a disastrous collapse
+of German imperialism, of a tremendous, decisive demonstration of the
+inherent unsoundness of militarist monarchy, to be followed by a world
+conference of chastened but hopeful nations, and--the Millennium. He
+tried now to think that Mr. Direck had observed badly and misconceived
+what he saw. An American, unused to any sort of military occurrences,
+might easily mistake tens of thousands for millions, and the excitement
+of a few commercial travellers for the enthusiasm of a united people.
+But the newspapers now, with a kindred reluctance, were beginning to
+qualify, bit by bit, their first representation of the German attack
+through Belgium as a vast and already partly thwarted parade of
+incompetence. The Germans, he gathered, were being continually beaten in
+Belgium; but just as continually they advanced. Each fresh newspaper
+name he looked up on the map marked an oncoming tide. Alost--Charleroi.
+Farther east the French were retreating from the Saales Pass. Surely the
+British, who had now been in France for a fortnight, would presently be
+manifest, stemming the onrush; somewhere perhaps in Brabant or East
+Flanders. It gave Mr. Britling an unpleasant night to hear at Claverings
+that the French were very ill-equipped; had no good modern guns either
+at Lille or Maubeuge, were short of boots and equipment generally, and
+rather depressed already at the trend of things. Mr. Britling dismissed
+this as pessimistic talk, and built his hopes on the still invisible
+British army, hovering somewhere--
+
+He would sit over the map of Belgium, choosing where he would prefer to
+have the British hover....
+
+Namur fell. The place names continued to shift southward and westward.
+The British army or a part of it came to light abruptly at Mons. It had
+been fighting for thirty-eight hours and defeating enormously superior
+forces of the enemy. That was reassuring until a day or so later "the
+Cambray--Le Cateau line" made Mr. Britling realise that the victorious
+British had recoiled five and twenty miles....
+
+And then came the Sunday of _The Times_ telegram, which spoke of a
+"retreating and a broken army." Mr. Britling did not see this, but Mr.
+Manning brought over the report of it in a state of profound
+consternation. Things, he said, seemed to be about as bad as they could
+be. The English were retreating towards the coast and in much disorder.
+They were "in the air" and already separated from the Trench. They had
+narrowly escaped "a Sedan" under the fortifications of Maubeuge.... Mr.
+Britling was stunned. He went to his study and stared helplessly at
+maps. It was as if David had flung his pebble--and missed!
+
+But in the afternoon Mr. Manning telephoned to comfort his friend. A
+reassuring despatch from General French had been published and--all was
+well--practically--and the British had been splendid. They had been
+fighting continuously for several days round and about Mons; they had
+been attacked at odds of six to one, and they had repulsed and
+inflicted enormous losses on the enemy. They had established an
+incontestable personal superiority over the Germans. The Germans had
+been mown down in heaps; the British had charged through their cavalry
+like charging through paper. So at last and very gloriously for the
+British, British and German had met in battle. After the hard fighting
+of the 26th about Landrecies, the British had been comparatively
+unmolested, reinforcements covering double the losses had joined them
+and the German advance was definitely checked ... Mr. Britling's mind
+swung back to elation. He took down the entire despatch from Mr.
+Manning's dictation, and ran out with it into the garden where Mrs.
+Britling, with an unwonted expression of anxiety, was presiding over the
+teas of the usual casual Sunday gathering.... The despatch was read
+aloud twice over. After that there was hockey and high spirits, and then
+Mr. Britling went up to his study to answer a letter from Mrs.
+Harrowdean, the first letter that had come from her since their breach
+at the outbreak of the war, and which he was now in a better mood to
+answer than he had been hitherto.
+
+She had written ignoring his silence and absence, or rather treating it
+as if it were an incident of no particular importance. Apparently she
+had not called upon the patient and devoted Oliver as she had
+threatened; at any rate, there were no signs of Oliver in her
+communication. But she reproached Mr. Britling for deserting her, and
+she clamoured for his presence and for kind and strengthening words. She
+was, she said, scared by this war. She was only a little thing, and it
+was all too dreadful, and there was not a soul in the world to hold her
+hand, at least no one who understood in the slightest degree how she
+felt. (But why was not Oliver holding her hand?) She was like a child
+left alone in the dark. It was perfectly horrible the way that people
+were being kept in the dark. The stories one heard, "_often from quite
+trustworthy sources_," were enough to depress and terrify any one.
+Battleship after battleship had been sunk by German torpedoes, a thing
+kept secret from us for no earthly reason, and Prince Louis of
+Battenberg had been discovered to be a spy and had been sent to the
+Tower. Haldane too was a spy. Our army in France had been "practically
+_sold_" by the French. Almost all the French generals were in German
+pay. The censorship and the press were keeping all this back, but what
+good was it to keep it back? It was folly not to trust people! But it
+was all too dreadful for a poor little soul whose only desire was to
+live happily. Why didn't he come along to her and make her feel she had
+protecting arms round her? She couldn't think in the daytime: she
+couldn't sleep at night....
+
+Then she broke away into the praises of serenity. Never had she thought
+so much of his beautiful "Silent Places" as she did now. How she longed
+to take refuge in some such dreamland from violence and treachery and
+foolish rumours! She was weary of every reality. She wanted to fly away
+into some secret hiding-place and cultivate her simple garden there--as
+Voltaire had done.... Sometimes at night she was afraid to undress. She
+imagined the sound of guns, she imagined landings and frightful scouts
+"in masks" rushing inland on motor bicycles....
+
+It was an ill-timed letter. The nonsense about Prince Louis of
+Battenberg and Lord Haldane and the torpedoed battleships annoyed him
+extravagantly. He had just sufficient disposition to believe such tales
+as to find their importunity exasperating. The idea of going over to
+Pyecrafts to spend his days in comforting a timid little dear obsessed
+by such fears, attracted him not at all. He had already heard enough
+adverse rumours at Claverings to make him thoroughly uncomfortable. He
+had been doubting whether after all his "Examination of War" was really
+much less of a futility than "And Now War Ends"; his mind was full of a
+sense of incomplete statements and unsubstantial arguments. He was
+indeed in a state of extreme intellectual worry. He was moreover
+extraordinarily out of love with Mrs. Harrowdean. Never had any
+affection in the whole history of Mr. Britling's heart collapsed so
+swiftly and completely. He was left incredulous of ever having cared for
+her at all. Probably he hadn't. Probably the whole business had been
+deliberate illusion from first to last. The "dear little thing"
+business, he felt, was all very well as a game of petting, but times
+were serious now, and a woman of her intelligence should do something
+better than wallow in fears and elaborate a winsome feebleness. A very
+unnecessary and tiresome feebleness. He came almost to the pitch of
+writing that to her.
+
+The despatch from General French put him into a kindlier frame of mind.
+He wrote instead briefly but affectionately. As a gentleman should. "How
+could you doubt our fleet or our army?" was the gist of his letter. He
+ignored completely every suggestion of a visit to Pyecrafts that her
+letter had conveyed. He pretended that it had contained nothing of the
+sort.... And with that she passed out of his mind again under the stress
+of more commanding interests....
+
+Mr. Britling's mood of relief did not last through the week. The
+defeated Germans continued to advance. Through a week of deepening
+disillusionment the main tide of battle rolled back steadily towards
+Paris. Lille was lost without a struggle. It was lost with mysterious
+ease.... The next name to startle Mr. Britling as he sat with newspaper
+and atlas following these great events was Compiegne. "Here!" Manifestly
+the British were still in retreat. Then the Germans were in possession
+of Laon and Rheims and still pressing south. Maubeuge surrounded and cut
+off for some days, had apparently fallen....
+
+It was on Sunday, September the sixth, that the final capitulation of
+Mr. Britling's facile optimism occurred.
+
+He stood in the sunshine reading the _Observer_ which the gardener's boy
+had just brought from the May Tree. He had spread it open on a garden
+table under the blue cedar, and father and son were both reading it,
+each as much as the other would let him. There was fresh news from
+France, a story of further German advances, fighting at Senlis--"But
+that is quite close to Paris!"--and the appearance of German forces at
+Nogent-sur-Seine. "Sur Seine!" cried Mr. Britling. "But where can that
+be? South of the Marne? Or below Paris perhaps?"
+
+It was not marked upon the _Observer's_ map, and Hugh ran into the house
+for the atlas.
+
+When he returned Mr. Manning was with his father, and they both looked
+grave.
+
+Hugh opened the map of northern France. "Here it is," he said.
+
+Mr. Britling considered the position.
+
+"Manning says they are at Rouen," he told Hugh. "Our base is to be moved
+round to La Rochelle...."
+
+He paused before the last distasteful conclusion.
+
+"Practically," he admitted, taking his dose, "they have got Paris. It is
+almost surrounded now."
+
+He sat down to the map. Mr. Manning and Hugh stood regarding him. He
+made a last effort to imagine some tremendous strategic reversal, some
+stone from an unexpected sling that should fell this Goliath in the
+midst of his triumph.
+
+"Russia," he said, without any genuine hope....
+
+
+Section 17
+
+And then it was that Mr. Britling accepted the truth.
+
+"One talks," he said, "and then weeks and months later one learns the
+meaning of the things one has been saying. I was saying a month ago that
+this is the biggest thing that has happened in history. I said that
+this was the supreme call upon the will and resources of England. I
+said there was not a life in all our empire that would not be vitally
+changed by this war. I said all these things; they came through my
+mouth; I suppose there was a sort of thought behind them.... Only at
+this moment do I understand what it is that I said. Now--let me say it
+over as if I had never said it before; this _is_ the biggest thing in
+history, that we _are_ all called upon to do our utmost to resist this
+tremendous attack upon the peace and freedom of the world. Well, doing
+our utmost does not mean standing about in pleasant gardens waiting for
+the newspaper.... It means the abandonment of ease and security....
+
+"How lazy we English are nowadays! How readily we grasp the comforting
+delusion that excuses us from exertion. For the last three weeks I have
+been deliberately believing that a little British army--they say it is
+scarcely a hundred thousand men--would somehow break this rush of
+millions. But it has been driven back, as any one not in love with easy
+dreams might have known it would be driven back--here and then here and
+then here. It has been fighting night and day. It has made the most
+splendid fight--and the most ineffectual fight.... You see the vast
+swing of the German flail through Belgium. And meanwhile we have been
+standing about talking of the use we would make of our victory....
+
+"We have been asleep," he said. "This country has been asleep....
+
+"At the back of our minds," he went on bitterly, "I suppose we thought
+the French would do the heavy work on land--while we stood by at sea. So
+far as we thought at all. We're so temperate-minded; we're so full of
+qualifications and discretions.... And so leisurely.... Well, France is
+down. We've got to fight for France now over the ruins of Paris. Because
+you and I, Manning, didn't grasp the scale of it, because we indulged in
+generalisations when we ought to have been drilling and working.
+Because we've been doing 'business as usual' and all the rest of that
+sort of thing, while Western civilisation has been in its death agony.
+If this is to be another '71, on a larger scale and against not merely
+France but all Europe, if Prussianism is to walk rough-shod over
+civilisation, if France is to be crushed and Belgium murdered, then life
+is not worth having. Compared with such an issue as that no other issue,
+no other interest matters. Yet what are we doing to decide it--you and
+I? How can it end in anything but a German triumph if you and I, by the
+million, stand by...."
+
+He paused despairfully and stared at the map.
+
+"What ought we to be doing?" asked Mr. Manning.
+
+"Every man ought to be in training," said Mr. Britling. "Every one ought
+to be participating.... In some way.... At any rate we ought not to be
+taking our ease at Matching's Easy any more...."
+
+
+Section 18
+
+"It interrupts everything," said Hugh suddenly. "These Prussians are the
+biggest nuisance the world has ever seen."
+
+He considered. "It's like every one having to run out because the house
+catches fire. But of course we have to beat them. It has to be done. And
+every one has to take a share.
+
+"Then we can get on with our work again."
+
+Mr. Britling turned his eyes to his eldest son with a startled
+expression. He had been speaking--generally. For the moment he had
+forgotten Hugh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE SECOND
+
+TAKING PART
+
+
+Section 1
+
+There were now two chief things in the mind of Mr. Britling. One was a
+large and valiant thing, a thing of heroic and processional quality, the
+idea of taking up one's share in the great conflict, of leaving the
+Dower House and its circle of habits and activities and going out--.
+From that point he wasn't quite sure where he was to go, nor exactly
+what he meant to do. His imagination inclined to the figure of a
+volunteer in an improvised uniform inflicting great damage upon a
+raiding invader from behind a hedge. The uniform, one presumes, would
+have been something in the vein of the costume in which he met Mr.
+Direck. With a "brassard." Or he thought of himself as working at a
+telephone or in an office engaged upon any useful quasi-administrative
+work that called for intelligence rather than training. Still, of
+course, with a "brassard." A month ago he would have had doubts about
+the meaning of "brassard"; now it seemed to be the very keyword for
+national organisation. He had started for London by the early train on
+Monday morning with the intention of immediate enrolment in any such
+service that offered; of getting, in fact, into his brassard at once.
+The morning papers he bought at the station dashed his conviction of the
+inevitable fall of Paris into hopeful doubts, but did not shake his
+resolution. The effect of rout and pursuit and retreat and retreat and
+retreat had disappeared from the news. The German right was being
+counter-attacked, and seemed in danger of getting pinched between Paris
+and Verdun with the British on its flank. This relieved his mind, but
+it did nothing to modify his new realisation of the tremendous gravity
+of the war. Even if the enemy were held and repulsed a little there was
+still work for every man in the task of forcing them back upon their own
+country. This war was an immense thing, it would touch everybody....
+That meant that every man must give himself. That he had to give
+himself. He must let nothing stand between him and that clear
+understanding. It was utterly shameful now to hold back and not to do
+one's utmost for civilisation, for England, for all the ease and safety
+one had been given--against these drilled, commanded, obsessed millions.
+
+Mr. Britling was a flame of exalted voluntaryism, of patriotic devotion,
+that day.
+
+But behind all this bravery was the other thing, the second thing in the
+mind of Mr. Britling, a fear. He was prepared now to spread himself like
+some valiant turkey-gobbler, every feather at its utmost, against the
+aggressor. He was prepared to go out and flourish bayonets, march and
+dig to the limit of his power, shoot, die in a ditch if needful, rather
+than permit German militarism to dominate the world. He had no fear for
+himself. He was prepared to perish upon the battlefield or cut a valiant
+figure in the military hospital. But what he perceived very clearly and
+did his utmost not to perceive was this qualifying and discouraging
+fact, that the war monster was not nearly so disposed to meet him as he
+was to meet the war, and that its eyes were fixed on something beside
+and behind him, that it was already only too evidently stretching out a
+long and shadowy arm past him towards Teddy--and towards Hugh....
+
+The young are the food of war....
+
+Teddy wasn't Mr. Britling's business anyhow. Teddy must do as he thought
+proper. Mr. Britling would not even advise upon that. And as for Hugh--
+
+Mr. Britling did his best to brazen it out.
+
+"My eldest boy is barely seventeen," he said. "He's keen to go, and I'd
+be sorry if he wasn't. He'll get into some cadet corps of course--he's
+already done something of that kind at school. Or they'll take him into
+the Territorials. But before he's nineteen everything will be over, one
+way or another. I'm afraid, poor chap, he'll feel sold...."
+
+And having thrust Hugh safely into the background of his mind
+as--juvenile, doing a juvenile share, no sort of man yet--Mr. Britling
+could give a free rein to his generous imaginations of a national
+uprising. From the idea of a universal participation in the struggle he
+passed by an easy transition to an anticipation of all Britain armed and
+gravely embattled. Across gulfs of obstinate reality. He himself was
+prepared to say, and accordingly he felt that the great mass of the
+British must be prepared to say to the government: "Here we are at your
+disposal. This is not a diplomatists' war nor a War Office war; this is
+a war of the whole people. We are all willing and ready to lay aside our
+usual occupations and offer our property and ourselves. Whim and
+individual action are for peace times. Take us and use us as you think
+fit. Take all we possess." When he thought of the government in this
+way, he forgot the governing class he knew. The slack-trousered Raeburn,
+the prim, attentive Philbert, Lady Frensham at the top of her voice,
+stern, preposterous Carson, boozy Bandershoot and artful Taper, wily
+Asquith, the eloquent yet unsubstantial George, and the immobile Grey,
+vanished out of his mind; all those representative exponents of the way
+things are done in Great Britain faded in the glow of his imaginative
+effort; he forgot the dreary debates, the floundering newspapers, the
+"bluffs," the intrigues, the sly bargains of the week-end party, the
+"schoolboy honour" of grown men, the universal weak dishonesty in
+thinking; he thought simply of a simplified and ideal government that
+governed. He thought vaguely of something behind and beyond them,
+England, the ruling genius of the land; something with a dignified
+assurance and a stable will. He imagined this shadowy ruler miraculously
+provided with schemes and statistics against this supreme occasion which
+had for so many years been the most conspicuous probability before the
+country. His mind leaping forwards to the conception of a great nation
+reluctantly turning its vast resources to the prosecution of a righteous
+defensive war, filled in the obvious corollaries of plan and
+calculation. He thought that somewhere "up there" there must be people
+who could count and who had counted everything that we might need for
+such a struggle, and organisers who had schemed and estimated down to
+practicable and manageable details....
+
+Such lapses from knowledge to faith are perhaps necessary that human
+heroism may be possible....
+
+His conception of his own share in the great national uprising was a
+very modest one. He was a writer, a footnote to reality; he had no trick
+of command over men, his role was observation rather than organisation,
+and he saw himself only as an insignificant individual dropping from his
+individuality into his place in a great machine, taking a rifle in a
+trench, guarding a bridge, filling a cartridge--just with a brassard or
+something like that on--until the great task was done. Sunday night was
+full of imaginations of order, of the countryside standing up to its
+task, of roads cleared and resources marshalled, of the petty interests
+of the private life altogether set aside. And mingling with that it was
+still possible for Mr. Britling, he was still young enough, to produce
+such dreams of personal service, of sudden emergencies swiftly and
+bravely met, of conspicuous daring and exceptional rewards, such dreams
+as hover in the brains of every imaginative recruit....
+
+The detailed story of Mr. Britling's two days' search for some easy and
+convenient ladder into the service of his threatened country would be a
+voluminous one. It would begin with the figure of a neatly brushed
+patriot, with an intent expression upon his intelligent face, seated in
+the Londonward train, reading the war news--the first comforting war
+news for many days--and trying not to look as though his life was torn
+up by the roots and all his being aflame with devotion; and it would
+conclude after forty-eight hours of fuss, inquiry, talk, waiting,
+telephoning, with the same gentleman, a little fagged and with a kind of
+weary apathy in his eyes, returning by the short cut from the station
+across Claverings park to resume his connection with his abandoned
+roots. The essential process of the interval had been the correction of
+Mr. Britling's temporary delusion that the government of the British
+Empire is either intelligent, instructed, or wise.
+
+The great "Business as Usual" phase was already passing away, and London
+was in the full tide of recruiting enthusiasm. That tide was breaking
+against the most miserable arrangements for enlistment it is possible to
+imagine. Overtaxed and not very competent officers, whose one idea of
+being very efficient was to refuse civilian help and be very, very slow
+and circumspect and very dignified and overbearing, sat in dirty little
+rooms and snarled at this unheard-of England that pressed at door and
+window for enrolment. Outside every recruiting office crowds of men and
+youths waited, leaning against walls, sitting upon the pavements, waited
+for long hours, waiting to the end of the day and returning next
+morning, without shelter, without food, many sick with hunger; men who
+had hurried up from the country, men who had thrown up jobs of every
+kind, clerks, shopmen, anxious only to serve England and "teach those
+damned Germans a lesson." Between them and this object they had
+discovered a perplexing barrier; an inattention. As Mr. Britling made
+his way by St. Martin's Church and across Trafalgar Square and marked
+the weary accumulation of this magnificently patriotic stuff, he had his
+first inkling of the imaginative insufficiency of the War Office that
+had been so suddenly called upon to organise victory. He was to be more
+fully informed when he reached his club.
+
+His impression of the streets through which he passed was an impression
+of great unrest. There were noticeably fewer omnibuses and less road
+traffic generally, but there was a quite unusual number of drifting
+pedestrians. The current on the pavements was irritatingly sluggish.
+There were more people standing about, and fewer going upon their
+business. This was particularly the case with the women he saw. Many of
+them seemed to have drifted in from the suburbs and outskirts of London
+in a state of vague expectation, unable to stay in their homes.
+
+Everywhere there were the flags of the Allies; in shop windows, over
+doors, on the bonnets of automobiles, on people's breasts, and there was
+a great quantity of recruiting posters on the hoardings and in windows:
+"Your King and Country Need You" was the chief text, and they still
+called for "A Hundred Thousand Men" although the demand of Lord
+Kitchener had risen to half a million. There were also placards calling
+for men on nearly all the taxicabs. The big windows of the offices of
+the Norddeutscher Lloyd in Cockspur Street were boarded up, and
+plastered thickly with recruiting appeals.
+
+At his club Mr. Britling found much talk and belligerent stir. In the
+hall Wilkins the author was displaying a dummy rifle of bent iron rod to
+several interested members. It was to be used for drilling until rifles
+could be got, and it could be made for eighteen pence. This was the
+first intimation Mr. Britling got that the want of foresight of the War
+Office only began with its unpreparedness for recruits. Men were talking
+very freely in the club; one of the temporary effects of the war in its
+earlier stages was to produce a partial thaw in the constitutional
+British shyness; and men who had glowered at Mr. Britling over their
+lunches and had been glowered at by Mr. Britling in silence for years
+now started conversations with him.
+
+"What is a man of my sort to do?" asked a clean-shaven barrister.
+
+"Exactly what I have been asking," said Mr. Britling. "They are fixing
+the upward age for recruits at thirty; it's absurdly low. A man well
+over forty like myself is quite fit to line a trench or guard a bridge.
+I'm not so bad a shot...."
+
+"We've been discussing home defence volunteers," said the barrister.
+"Anyhow we ought to be drilling. But the War Office sets its face as
+sternly against our doing anything of the sort as though we were going
+to join the Germans. It's absurd. Even if we older men aren't fit to go
+abroad, we could at least release troops who could."
+
+"If you had the rifles," said a sharp-featured man in grey to the right
+of Mr. Britling.
+
+"I suppose they are to be got," said Mr. Britling.
+
+The sharp-featured man indicated by appropriate facial action and
+head-shaking that this was by no means the case.
+
+"Every dead man, many wounded men, most prisoners," he said, "mean each
+one a rifle lost. We have lost five-and-twenty thousand rifles alone
+since the war began. Quite apart from arming new troops we have to
+replace those rifles with the drafts we send out. Do you know what is
+the maximum weekly output of rifles at the present time in this
+country?"
+
+Mr. Britling did not know.
+
+"Nine thousand."
+
+Mr. Britling suddenly understood the significance of Wilkins and his
+dummy gun.
+
+The sharp-featured man added with an air of concluding the matter: "It's
+the barrels are the trouble. Complicated machinery. We haven't got it
+and we can't make it in a hurry. And there you are!"
+
+The sharp-featured man had a way of speaking almost as if he was
+throwing bombs. He threw one now. "Zinc," he said.
+
+"We're not short of zinc?" said the lawyer.
+
+The sharp-featured man nodded, and then became explicit.
+
+Zinc was necessary for cartridges; it had to be refined zinc and very
+pure, or the shooting went wrong. Well, we had let the refining business
+drift away from England to Belgium and Germany. There were just one or
+two British firms still left.... Unless we bucked up tremendously we
+should get caught short of cartridges.... At any rate of cartridges so
+made as to ensure good shooting. "And there you are!" said the
+sharp-featured man.
+
+But the sharp-featured man did not at that time represent any
+considerable section of public thought. "I suppose after all we can get
+rifles from America," said the lawyer. "And as for zinc, if the shortage
+is known the shortage will be provided for...."
+
+The prevailing topic in the smoking-room upstairs was the inability of
+the War Office to deal with the flood of recruits that was pouring in,
+and its hostility to any such volunteering as Mr. Britling had in mind.
+Quite a number of members wanted to volunteer; there was much talk of
+their fitness; "I'm fifty-four," said one, "and I could do my
+twenty-five miles in marching kit far better than half those boys of
+nineteen." Another was thirty-eight. "I must hold the business
+together," he said; "but why anyhow shouldn't I learn to shoot and use a
+bayonet?" The personal pique of the rejected lent force to their
+criticisms of the recruiting and general organisation. "The War Office
+has one incurable system," said a big mine-owner. "During peace time it
+runs all its home administration with men who will certainly be wanted
+at the front directly there is a war. Directly war comes, therefore,
+there is a shift all round, and a new untried man--usually a dug-out in
+an advanced state of decay--is stuck into the job. Chaos follows
+automatically. The War Office always has done this, and so far as one
+can see it always will. It seems incapable of realising that another
+man will be wanted until the first is taken away. Its imagination
+doesn't even run to that."
+
+Mr. Britling found a kindred spirit in Wilkins.
+
+Wilkins was expounding his tremendous scheme for universal volunteering.
+Everybody was to be accepted. Everybody was to be assigned and
+registered and--_badged_.
+
+"A brassard," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It doesn't matter whether we really produce a fighting force or not,"
+said Wilkins. "Everybody now is enthusiastic--and serious. Everybody is
+willing to put on some kind of uniform and submit to some sort of
+orders. And the thing to do is to catch them in the willing stage. Now
+is the time to get the country lined up and organised, ready to meet the
+internal stresses that are bound to come later. But there's no
+disposition whatever to welcome this universal offering. It's just as
+though this war was a treat to which only the very select friends of the
+War Office were to be admitted. And I don't admit that the national
+volunteers would be ineffective--even from a military point of view.
+There are plenty of fit men of our age, and men of proper age who are
+better employed at home--armament workers for example, and there are all
+the boys under the age. They may not be under the age before things are
+over...."
+
+He was even prepared to plan uniforms.
+
+"A brassard," repeated Mr. Britling, "and perhaps coloured strips on the
+revers of a coat."
+
+"Colours for the counties," said Wilkins, "and if there isn't coloured
+cloth to be got there's--red flannel. Anything is better than leaving
+the mass of people to mob about...."
+
+A momentary vision danced before Mr. Britling's eyes of red flannel
+petticoats being torn up in a rapid improvisation of soldiers to resist
+a sudden invasion. Passing washerwomen suddenly requisitioned. But one
+must not let oneself be laughed out of good intentions because of
+ridiculous accessories. The idea at any rate was the sound one....
+
+The vision of what ought to be done shone brightly while Mr. Britling
+and Mr. Wilkins maintained it. But presently under discouraging
+reminders that there were no rifles, no instructors, and, above all, the
+open hostility of the established authorities, it faded again....
+
+Afterwards in other conversations Mr. Britling reverted to more modest
+ambitions.
+
+"Is there no clerical work, no minor administrative work, a man might be
+used for?" he asked.
+
+"Any old dug-out," said the man with the thin face, "any old doddering
+Colonel Newcome, is preferred to you in that matter...."
+
+Mr. Britling emerged from his club about half-past three with his mind
+rather dishevelled and with his private determination to do something
+promptly for his country's needs blunted by a perplexing "How?" His
+search for doors and ways where no doors and ways existed went on with a
+gathering sense of futility.
+
+He had a ridiculous sense of pique at being left out, like a child shut
+out from a room in which a vitally interesting game is being played.
+
+"After all, it is _our_ war," he said.
+
+He caught the phrase as it dropped from his lips with a feeling that it
+said more than he intended. He turned it over and examined it, and the
+more he did so the more he was convinced of its truth and soundness....
+
+
+Section 2
+
+By night there was a new strangeness about London. The authorities were
+trying to suppress the more brilliant illumination of the chief
+thoroughfares, on account of the possibility of an air raid. Shopkeepers
+were being compelled to pull down their blinds, and many of the big
+standard lights were unlit. Mr. Britling thought these precautions were
+very fussy and unnecessary, and likely to lead to accidents amidst the
+traffic. But it gave a Rembrandtesque quality to the London scene,
+turned it into mysterious arrangements of brown shadows and cones and
+bars of light. At first many people were recalcitrant, and here and
+there a restaurant or a draper's window still blazed out and broke the
+gloom. There were also a number of insubordinate automobiles with big
+head-lights. But the police were being unusually firm....
+
+"It will all glitter again in a little time," he told himself.
+
+He heard an old lady who was projecting from an offending automobile at
+Piccadilly Circus in hot dispute with a police officer. "Zeppelins
+indeed!" she said. "What nonsense! As if they would _dare_ to come here!
+Who would _let_ them, I should like to know?"
+
+Probably a friend of Lady Frensham's, he thought. Still--the idea of
+Zeppelins over London did seem rather ridiculous to Mr. Britling. He
+would not have liked to have been caught talking of it himself.... There
+never had been Zeppelins over London. They were gas bags....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+On Wednesday morning Mr. Britling returned to the Dower House, and he
+was still a civilian unassigned.
+
+In the hall he found a tall figure in khaki standing and reading _The
+Times_ that usually lay upon the hall table. The figure turned at Mr.
+Britling's entry, and revealed the aquiline features of Mr. Lawrence
+Carmine. It was as if his friend had stolen a march on him.
+
+But Carmine's face showed nothing of the excitement and patriotic
+satisfaction that would have seemed natural to Mr. Britling. He was
+white and jaded, as if he had not slept for many nights. "You see," he
+explained almost apologetically of the three stars upon his sleeve, "I
+used to be a captain of volunteers." He had been put in charge of a
+volunteer force which had been re-embodied and entrusted with the care
+of the bridges, gasworks, factories and railway tunnels, and with a
+number of other minor but necessary duties round about Easinghampton.
+"I've just got to shut up my house," said Captain Carmine, "and go into
+lodgings. I confess I hate it.... But anyhow it can't last six
+months.... But it's beastly.... Ugh!..."
+
+He seemed disposed to expand that "Ugh," and then thought better of it.
+And presently Mr. Britling took control of the conversation.
+
+His two days in London had filled him with matter, and he was glad to
+have something more than Hugh and Teddy and Mrs. Britling to talk it
+upon. What was happening now in Great Britain, he declared, was
+_adjustment_. It was an attempt on the part of a great unorganised
+nation, an attempt, instinctive at present rather than intelligent, to
+readjust its government and particularly its military organisation to
+the new scale of warfare that Germany had imposed upon the world. For
+two strenuous decades the British navy had been growing enormously under
+the pressure of German naval preparations, but the British military
+establishment had experienced no corresponding expansion. It was true
+there had been a futile, rather foolishly conducted agitation for
+universal military service, but there had been no accumulation of
+material, no preparation of armament-making machinery, no planning and
+no foundations for any sort of organisation that would have facilitated
+the rapid expansion of the fighting forces of a country in a time of
+crisis. Such an idea was absolutely antagonistic to the mental habits of
+the British military caste. The German method of incorporating all the
+strength and resources of the country into one national fighting machine
+was quite strange to the British military mind--still. Even after a
+month of war. War had become the comprehensive business of the German
+nation; to the British it was an incidental adventure. In Germany the
+nation was militarised, in England the army was specialised. The nation
+for nearly every practical purpose got along without it. Just as
+political life had also become specialised.... Now suddenly we wanted a
+government to speak for every one, and an army of the whole people. How
+were we to find it?
+
+Mr. Britling dwelt upon this idea of the specialised character of the
+British army and navy and government. It seemed to him to be the clue to
+everything that was jarring in the London spectacle. The army had been a
+thing aloof, for a special end. It had developed all the characteristics
+of a caste. It had very high standards along the lines of its
+specialisation, but it was inadaptable and conservative. Its
+exclusiveness was not so much a deliberate culture as a consequence of
+its detached function. It touched the ordinary social body chiefly
+through three other specialised bodies, the court, the church, and the
+stage. Apart from that it saw the great unofficial civilian world as
+something vague, something unsympathetic, something possibly
+antagonistic, which it comforted itself by snubbing when it dared and
+tricking when it could, something that projected members of Parliament
+towards it and was stingy about money. Directly one grasped how apart
+the army lived from the ordinary life of the community, from
+industrialism or from economic necessities, directly one understood that
+the great mass of Englishmen were simply "outsiders" to the War Office
+mind, just as they were "outsiders" to the political clique, one began
+to realise the complete unfitness of either government or War Office for
+the conduct of so great a national effort as was now needed. These
+people "up there" did not know anything of the broad mass of English
+life at all, they did not know how or where things were made; when they
+wanted things they just went to a shop somewhere and got them. This was
+the necessary psychology of a small army under a clique government.
+Nothing else was to be expected. But now--somehow--the nation had to
+take hold of the government that it had neglected so long....
+
+"You see," said Mr. Britling, repeating a phrase that was becoming more
+and more essential to his thoughts, "this is _our_ war....
+
+"Of course," said Mr. Britling, "these things are not going to be done
+without a conflict. We aren't going to take hold of our country which we
+have neglected so long without a lot of internal friction. But in
+England we can make these readjustments without revolution. It is our
+strength....
+
+"At present England is confused--but it's a healthy confusion. It's
+astir. We have more things to defeat than just Germany....
+
+"These hosts of recruits--weary, uncared for, besieging the recruiting
+stations. It's symbolical.... Our tremendous reserves of will and
+manhood. Our almost incredible insufficiency of direction....
+
+"Those people up there have no idea of the Will that surges up in
+England. They are timid little manoeuvring people, afraid of property,
+afraid of newspapers, afraid of trade-unions. They aren't leading us
+against the Germans; they are just being shoved against the Germans by
+necessity...."
+
+From this Mr. Britling broke away into a fresh addition to his already
+large collection of contrasts between England and Germany. Germany was a
+nation which has been swallowed up and incorporated by an army and an
+administration; the Prussian military system had assimilated to itself
+the whole German life. It was a State in a state of repletion, a State
+that had swallowed all its people. Britain was not a State. It was an
+unincorporated people. The British army, the British War Office, and the
+British administration had assimilated nothing; they were little old
+partial things; the British nation lay outside them, beyond their
+understanding and tradition; a formless new thing, but a great thing;
+and now this British nation, this real nation, the "outsiders," had to
+take up arms. Suddenly all the underlying ideas of that outer, greater
+English life beyond politics, beyond the services, were challenged, its
+tolerant good humour, its freedom, and its irresponsibility. It was not
+simply English life that was threatened; it was all the latitudes of
+democracy, it was every liberal idea and every liberty. It was
+civilisation in danger. The uncharted liberal system had been taken by
+the throat; it had to "make good" or perish....
+
+"I went up to London expecting to be told what to do. There is no one to
+tell any one what to do.... Much less is there any one to compel us what
+to do....
+
+"There's a War Office like a college during a riot, with its doors and
+windows barred; there's a government like a cockle boat in an Atlantic
+gale....
+
+"One feels the thing ought to have come upon us like the sound of a
+trumpet. Instead, until now, it has been like a great noise, that we
+just listened to, in the next house.... And now slowly the nation
+awakes. London is just like a dazed sleeper waking up out of a deep
+sleep to fire and danger, tumult and cries for help, near at hand. The
+streets give you exactly that effect. People are looking about and
+listening. One feels that at any moment, in a pause, in a silence, there
+may come, from far away, over the houses, faint and little, the boom of
+guns or the small outcries of little French or Belgian villages in
+agony...."
+
+Such was the gist of Mr. Britling's discourse.
+
+He did most of the table talk, and all that mattered. Teddy was an
+assenting voice, Hugh was silent and apparently a little inattentive,
+Mrs. Britling was thinking of the courses and the servants and the boys,
+and giving her husband only half an ear, Captain Carmine said little and
+seemed to be troubled by some disagreeable preoccupation. Now and then
+he would endorse or supplement the things Mr. Britling was saying.
+Thrice he remarked: "People still do not begin to understand."...
+
+
+Section 4
+It was only when they sat together in the barn court out of the way of
+Mrs. Britling and the children that Captain Carmine was able to explain
+his listless bearing and jaded appearance. He was suffering from a bad
+nervous shock. He had hardly taken over his command before one of his
+men had been killed--and killed in a manner that had left a scar upon
+his mind.
+
+The man had been guarding a tunnel, and he had been knocked down by one
+train when crossing the line behind another. So it was that the bomb of
+Sarajevo killed its first victim in Essex. Captain Carmine had found the
+body. He had found the body in a cloudy moonlight; he had almost fallen
+over it; and his sensations and emotions had been eminently
+disagreeable. He had had to drag the body--it was very dreadfully
+mangled--off the permanent way, the damaged, almost severed head had
+twisted about very horribly in the uncertain light, and afterwards he
+had found his sleeves saturated with blood. He had not noted this at the
+time, and when he had discovered it he had been sick. He had thought the
+whole thing more horrible and hateful than any nightmare, but he had
+succeeded in behaving with a sufficient practicality to set an example
+to his men. Since this had happened he had not had an hour of dreamless
+sleep.
+
+"One doesn't expect to be called upon like that," said Captain Carmine,
+"suddenly here in England.... When one is smoking after supper...."
+
+Mr. Britling listened to this experience with distressed brows. All his
+talking and thinking became to him like the open page of a monthly
+magazine. Across it this bloody smear, this thing of red and black, was
+dragged....
+
+
+Section 5
+
+The smear was still bright red in Mr. Britling's thoughts when Teddy
+came to him.
+
+"I must go," said Teddy, "I can't stop here any longer."
+
+"Go where?"
+
+"Into khaki. I've been thinking of it ever since the war began. Do you
+remember what you said when we were bullying off at hockey on Bank
+Holiday--the day before war was declared?"
+
+Mr. Britling had forgotten completely; he made an effort. "What did I
+say?"
+
+"You said, 'What the devil are we doing at this hockey? We ought to be
+drilling or shooting against those confounded Germans!' ... I've never
+forgotten it.... I ought to have done it before. I've been a
+scout-master. In a little while they will want officers. In London, I'm
+told, there are a lot of officers' training corps putting men through
+the work as quickly as possible.... If I could go...."
+
+"What does Letty think?" said Mr. Britling after a pause. This was
+right, of course--the only right thing--and yet he was surprised.
+
+"She says if you'd let her try to do my work for a time...."
+
+"She _wants_ you to go?"
+
+"Of course she does," said Teddy. "She wouldn't like me to be a
+shirker.... But I can't unless you help."
+
+"I'm quite ready to do that," said Mr. Britling. "But somehow I didn't
+think it of you. I hadn't somehow thought of _you_--"
+
+"What _did_ you think of me?" asked Teddy.
+
+"It's bringing the war home to us.... Of course you ought to go--if you
+want to go."
+
+He reflected. It was odd to find Teddy in this mood, strung up and
+serious and businesslike. He felt that in the past he had done Teddy
+injustice; this young man wasn't as trivial as he had thought him....
+
+They fell to discussing ways and means; there might have to be a loan
+for Teddy's outfit, if he did presently secure a commission. And there
+were one or two other little matters.... Mr. Britling dismissed a
+ridiculous fancy that he was paying to send Teddy away to something that
+neither that young man nor Letty understood properly....
+
+The next day Teddy vanished Londonward on his bicycle. He was going to
+lodge in London in order to be near his training. He was zealous. Never
+before had Teddy been zealous. Mrs. Teddy came to the Dower House for
+the correspondence, trying not to look self-conscious and important.
+
+Two Mondays later a very bright-eyed, excited little boy came running to
+Mr. Britling, who was smoking after lunch in the rose garden. "Daddy!"
+squealed the small boy. "Teddy! In khaki!"
+
+The other junior Britling danced in front of the hero, who was walking
+beside Mrs. Britling and trying not to be too aggressively a soldierly
+figure. He looked a very man in khaki and more of a boy than ever. Mrs.
+Teddy came behind, quietly elated.
+
+Mr. Britling had a recurrence of that same disagreeable fancy that these
+young people didn't know exactly what they were going into. He wished he
+was in khaki himself; then he fancied this compunction wouldn't trouble
+him quite so much.
+
+The afternoon with them deepened his conviction that they really didn't
+in the slightest degree understand. Life had been so good to them
+hitherto, that even the idea of Teddy's going off to the war seemed a
+sort of fun to them. It was just a thing he was doing, a serious,
+seriously amusing, and very creditable thing. It involved his dressing
+up in these unusual clothes, and receiving salutes in the street....
+They discussed every possible aspect of his military outlook with the
+zest of children, who recount the merits of a new game. They were
+putting Teddy through his stages at a tremendous pace. In quite a little
+time he thought he would be given the chance of a commission.
+
+"They want subalterns badly. Already they've taken nearly a third of our
+people," he said, and added with the wistfulness of one who glances at
+inaccessible delights: "one or two may get out to the front quite soon."
+
+He spoke as a young actor might speak of a star part. And with a touch
+of the quality of one who longs to travel in strange lands.... One must
+be patient. Things come at last....
+
+"If I'm killed she gets eighty pounds a year," Teddy explained among
+many other particulars.
+
+He smiled--the smile of a confident immortal at this amusing idea.
+
+"He's my little annuity," said Letty, also smiling, "dead or alive."
+
+"We'll miss Teddy in all sorts of ways," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It's only for the duration of the war," said Teddy. "And Letty's very
+intelligent. I've done my best to chasten the evil in her."
+
+"If you think you're going to get back your job after the war," said
+Letty, "you're very much mistaken. I'm going to raise the standard."
+
+"_You_!" said Teddy, regarding her coldly, and proceeded ostentatiously
+to talk of other things.
+
+
+Section 6
+
+"Hugh's going to be in khaki too," the elder junior told Teddy. "He's
+too young to go out in Kitchener's army, but he's joined the
+Territorials. He went off on Thursday.... I wish Gilbert and me was
+older...."
+
+Mr. Britling had known his son's purpose since the evening of Teddy's
+announcement.
+
+Hugh had come to his father's study as he was sitting musing at his
+writing-desk over the important question whether he should continue his
+"Examination of War" uninterruptedly, or whether he should not put that
+on one side for a time and set himself to state as clearly as possible
+the not too generally recognised misfit between the will and strength of
+Britain on the one hand and her administrative and military organisation
+on the other. He felt that an enormous amount of human enthusiasm and
+energy was being refused and wasted; that if things went on as they were
+going there would continue to be a quite disastrous shortage of gear,
+and that some broadening change was needed immediately if the swift
+exemplary victory over Germany that his soul demanded was to be ensured.
+Suppose he were to write some noisy articles at once, an article, for
+instance, to be called "The War of the Mechanics" or "The War of Gear,"
+and another on "Without Civil Strength there is no Victory." If he wrote
+such things would they be noted or would they just vanish
+indistinguishably into the general mental tumult? Would they be audible
+and helpful shouts, or just waste of shouting?... That at least was what
+he supposed himself to be thinking; it was, at any rate, the main
+current of his thinking; but all the same, just outside the circle of
+his attention a number of other things were dimly apprehended, bobbing
+up and down in the flood and ready at the slightest chance to swirl into
+the centre of his thoughts. There was, for instance, Captain Carmine in
+the moonlight lugging up a railway embankment something horrible,
+something loose and wet and warm that had very recently been a man.
+There was Teddy, serious and patriotic--filling a futile penman with
+incredulous respect. There was the thin-faced man at the club, and a
+curious satisfaction he had betrayed in the public disarrangement. And
+there was Hugh. Particularly there was Hugh, silent but watchful. The
+boy never babbled. He had his mother's gift of deep dark silences. Out
+of which she was wont to flash, a Black Princess waving a sword. He
+wandered for a little while among memories.... But Hugh didn't come out
+like that, though it always seemed possible he might--perhaps he didn't
+come out because he was a son. Revelation to his father wasn't his
+business.... What was he thinking of it all? What was he going to do?
+Mr. Britling was acutely anxious that his son should volunteer; he was
+almost certain that he would volunteer, but there was just a little
+shadow of doubt whether some extraordinary subtlety of mind mightn't
+have carried the boy into a pacifist attitude. No! that was impossible.
+In the face of Belgium.... But as greatly--and far more deeply in the
+warm flesh of his being--did Mr. Britling desire that no harm, no evil
+should happen to Hugh....
+
+The door opened, and Hugh came in....
+
+Mr. Britling glanced over his shoulder with an affectation of
+indifference. "Hal-_lo!_" he said. "What do you want?"
+
+Hugh walked awkwardly to the hearthrug.
+
+"Oh!" he said in an off-hand tone; "I suppose I've got to go soldiering
+for a bit. I just thought--I'd rather like to go off with a man I know
+to-morrow...."
+
+Mr. Britling's manner remained casual.
+
+"It's the only thing to do now, I'm afraid," he said.
+
+He turned in his chair and regarded his son. "What do you mean to do?
+O.T.C.?"
+
+"I don't think I should make much of an officer. I hate giving orders to
+other people. We thought we'd just go together into the Essex Regiment
+as privates...."
+
+There was a little pause. Both father and son had rehearsed this scene
+in their minds several times, and now they found that they had no use
+for a number of sentences that had been most effective in these
+rehearsals. Mr. Britling scratched his cheek with the end of his pen.
+"I'm glad you want to go, Hugh," he said.
+
+"I _don't_ want to go," said Hugh with his hands deep in his pockets. "I
+want to go and work with Cardinal. But this job has to be done by every
+one. Haven't you been saying as much all day?... It's like turning out
+to chase a burglar or suppress a mad dog. It's like necessary
+sanitation...."
+
+"You aren't attracted by soldiering?"
+
+"Not a bit. I won't pretend it, Daddy. I think the whole business is a
+bore. Germany seems to me now just like some heavy horrible dirty mass
+that has fallen across Belgium and France. We've got to shove the stuff
+back again. That's all...."
+
+He volunteered some further remarks to his father's silence.
+
+"You know I can't get up a bit of tootle about this business," he said.
+"I think killing people or getting killed is a thoroughly nasty
+habit.... I expect my share will be just drilling and fatigue duties and
+route marches, and loafing here in England...."
+
+"You can't possibly go out for two years," said Mr. Britling, as if he
+regretted it.
+
+A slight hesitation appeared in Hugh's eyes. "I suppose not," he said.
+
+"Things ought to be over by then--anyhow," Mr. Britling added, betraying
+his real feelings.
+
+"So it's really just helping at the furthest end of the shove," Hugh
+endorsed, but still with that touch of reservation in his manner....
+
+The pause had the effect of closing the theoretical side of the
+question. "Where do you propose to enlist?" said Mr. Britling, coming
+down to practical details.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+The battle of the Marne passed into the battle of the Aisne, and then
+the long lines of the struggle streamed north-westward until the British
+were back in Belgium failing to clutch Menin and then defending Ypres.
+The elation of September followed the bedazzlement and dismay of August
+into the chapter of forgotten moods; and Mr. Britling's sense of the
+magnitude, the weight and duration of this war beyond all wars,
+increased steadily. The feel of it was less and less a feeling of crisis
+and more and more a feeling of new conditions. It wasn't as it had
+seemed at first, the end of one human phase and the beginning of
+another; it was in itself a phase. It was a new way of living. And still
+he could find no real point of contact for himself with it all except
+the point of his pen. Only at his writing-desk, and more particularly at
+night, were the great presences of the conflict his. Yet he was always
+desiring some more personal and physical participation.
+
+Hugh came along one day in October in an ill-fitting uniform, looking
+already coarser in fibre and with a nose scorched red by the autumnal
+sun. He said the life was rough, but it made him feel extraordinarily
+well; perhaps man was made to toil until he dropped asleep from
+exhaustion, to fast for ten or twelve hours and then eat like a wolf. He
+was acquiring a taste for Woodbine cigarettes, and a heady variety of
+mineral waters called Monsters. He feared promotion; he felt he could
+never take the high line with other human beings demanded of a corporal.
+He was still trying to read a little chemistry and crystallography, but
+it didn't "go with the life." In the scanty leisure of a recruit in
+training it was more agreeable to lie about and write doggerel verses
+and draw caricatures of the men in one's platoon. Invited to choose what
+he liked by his family, he demanded a large tuckbox such as he used to
+have at school, only "_much_ larger," and a big tin of insect powder.
+It must be able to kill ticks....
+
+When he had gone, the craving for a personal share in the nation's
+physical exertions became overpowering in Mr. Britling. He wanted, he
+felt, to "get his skin into it." He had decided that the volunteer
+movement was a hopeless one. The War Office, after a stout resistance to
+any volunteer movement at all, decided to recognise it in such a manner
+as to make it ridiculous. The volunteers were to have no officers and no
+uniforms that could be remotely mistaken for those of the regulars, so
+that in the event of an invasion the Germans would be able to tell what
+they had to deal with miles away. Wilkins found his conception of a
+whole nation, all enrolled, all listed and badged according to capacity,
+his dream of every one falling into place in one great voluntary
+national effort, treated as the childish dreaming of that most ignorant
+of all human types, a "novelist." _Punch_ was delicately funny about
+him; he was represented as wearing a preposterous cocked hat of his own
+design, designing cocked hats for every one. Wilkins was told to "shut
+up" in a multitude of anonymous letters, and publicly and privately to
+"leave things to Kitchener." To bellow in loud clear tones "leave things
+to Kitchener," and to depart for the theatre or the river or an
+automobile tour, was felt very generally at that time to be the proper
+conduct for a patriot. There was a very general persuasion that to
+become a volunteer when one ought to be just modestly doing nothing at
+all, was in some obscure way a form of disloyalty....
+
+So Mr. Britling was out of conceit with volunteering, and instead he
+went and was duly sworn and entrusted with the badge of a special
+constable. The duties of a special constable were chiefly not to
+understand what was going on in the military sphere, and to do what he
+was told in the way of watching and warding conceivably vulnerable
+points. He had also to be available in the event of civil disorder. Mr.
+Britling was provided with a truncheon and sent out to guard various
+culverts, bridges, and fords in the hilly country to the north-westward
+of Matching's Easy. It was never very clear to him what he would do if
+he found a motor-car full of armed enemies engaged in undermining a
+culvert, or treacherously deepening some strategic ford. He supposed he
+would either engage them in conversation, or hit them with his
+truncheon, or perhaps do both things simultaneously. But as he really
+did not believe for a moment that any human being was likely to tamper
+with the telegraphs, telephones, ways and appliances committed to his
+care, his uncertainty did not trouble him very much. He prowled the
+lonely lanes and paths in the darkness, and became better acquainted
+with a multitude of intriguing little cries and noises that came from
+the hedges and coverts at night. One night he rescued a young leveret
+from a stoat, who seemed more than half inclined to give him battle for
+its prey until he cowed and defeated it with the glare of his electric
+torch....
+
+As he prowled the countryside under the great hemisphere of Essex sky,
+or leant against fences or sat drowsily upon gates or sheltered from
+wind and rain under ricks or sheds, he had much time for meditation, and
+his thoughts went down and down below his first surface impressions of
+the war. He thought no longer of the rights and wrongs of this
+particular conflict but of the underlying forces in mankind that made
+war possible; he planned no more ingenious treaties and conventions
+between the nations, and instead he faced the deeper riddles of
+essential evil and of conceivable changes in the heart of man. And the
+rain assailed him and thorns tore him, and the soaked soft meadows
+bogged and betrayed his wandering feet, and the little underworld of the
+hedges and ditches hissed and squealed in the darkness and pursued and
+fled, and devoured or were slain.
+
+And one night in April he was perplexed by a commotion among the
+pheasants and a barking of distant dogs, and then to his great
+astonishment he heard noises like a distant firework display and saw
+something like a phantom yellowish fountain-pen in the sky far away to
+the east lit intermittently by a quivering search-light and going very
+swiftly. And after he had rubbed his eyes and looked again, he realised
+that he was looking at a Zeppelin--a Zeppelin flying Londonward over
+Essex.
+
+And all that night was wonder....
+
+
+Section 8
+
+While Mr. Britling was trying to find his duty in the routine of a
+special constable, Mrs. Britling set to work with great energy to attend
+various classes and qualify herself for Red Cross work. And early in
+October came the great drive of the Germans towards Antwerp and the sea,
+the great drive that was apparently designed to reach Calais, and which
+swept before it multitudes of Flemish refugees. There was an exodus of
+all classes from Antwerp into Holland and England, and then a huge
+process of depopulation in Flanders and the Pas de Calais. This flood
+came to the eastern and southern parts of England and particularly to
+London, and there hastily improvised organisations distributed it to a
+number of local committees, each of which took a share of the refugees,
+hired and furnished unoccupied houses for the use of the penniless, and
+assisted those who had means into comfortable quarters. The Matching's
+Easy committee found itself with accommodation for sixty people, and
+with a miscellaneous bag of thirty individuals entrusted to its care,
+who had been part of the load of a little pirate steam-boat from Ostend.
+There were two Flemish peasant families, and the rest were more or less
+middle-class refugees from Antwerp. They were brought from the station
+to the Tithe barn at Claverings, and there distributed, under the
+personal supervision of Lady Homartyn and her agent, among those who
+were prepared for their entertainment. There was something like
+competition among the would-be hosts; everybody was glad of the chance
+of "doing something," and anxious to show these Belgians what England
+thought of their plucky little country. Mr. Britling was proud to lead
+off a Mr. Van der Pant, a neat little bearded man in a black tail-coat,
+a black bowler hat, and a knitted muffler, with a large rucksack and a
+conspicuously foreign-looking bicycle, to the hospitalities of Dower
+House. Mr. Van der Pant had escaped from Antwerp at the eleventh hour,
+he had caught a severe cold and, it would seem, lost his wife and family
+in the process; he had much to tell Mr. Britling, and in his zeal to
+tell it he did not at once discover that though Mr. Britling knew French
+quite well he did not know it very rapidly.
+
+The dinner that night at the Dower House marked a distinct fresh step in
+the approach of the Great War to the old habits and securities of
+Matching's Easy. The war had indeed filled every one's mind to the
+exclusion of all other topics since its very beginning; it had carried
+off Herr Heinrich to Germany, Teddy to London, and Hugh to Colchester,
+it had put a special brassard round Mr. Britling's arm and carried him
+out into the night, given Mrs. Britling several certificates, and
+interrupted the frequent visits and gossip of Mr. Lawrence Carmine; but
+so far it had not established a direct contact between the life of
+Matching's Easy and the grim business of shot, shell, and bayonet at the
+front. But now here was the Dower House accomplishing wonderful idioms
+in Anglo-French, and an animated guest telling them--sometimes one
+understood clearly and sometimes the meaning was clouded--of men blown
+to pieces under his eyes, of fragments of human beings lying about in
+the streets; there was trouble over the expression _omoplate d'une
+femme_, until one of the youngsters got the dictionary and found out it
+was the shoulder-blade of a woman; of pools of blood--everywhere--and
+of flight in the darkness.
+
+Mr. Van der Pant had been in charge of the dynamos at the Antwerp Power
+Station, he had been keeping the electrified wires in the entanglements
+"alive," and he had stuck to his post until the German high explosives
+had shattered his wires and rendered his dynamos useless. He gave vivid
+little pictures of the noises of the bombardment, of the dead lying
+casually in the open spaces, of the failure of the German guns to hit
+the bridge of boats across which the bulk of the defenders and refugees
+escaped. He produced a little tourist's map of the city of Antwerp, and
+dotted at it with a pencil-case. "The--what do you call?--_obus_, ah,
+shells! fell, so and so and so." Across here he had fled on his
+_becane_, and along here and here. He had carried off his rifle, and hid
+it with the rifles of various other Belgians between floor and ceiling
+of a house in Zeebrugge. He had found the pirate steamer in the harbour,
+its captain resolved to extract the uttermost fare out of every refugee
+he took to London. When they were all aboard and started they found
+there was no food except the hard ration biscuits of some Belgian
+soldiers. They had portioned this out like shipwrecked people on a
+raft.... The _mer_ had been _calme_; thank Heaven! All night they had
+been pumping. He had helped with the pumps. But Mr. Van der Pant hoped
+still to get a reckoning with the captain of that ship.
+
+Mr. Van der Pant had had shots at various Zeppelins. When the Zeppelins
+came to Antwerp everybody turned out on the roofs and shot at them. He
+was contemptuous of Zeppelins. He made derisive gestures to express his
+opinion of them. They could do nothing unless they came low, and if they
+came low you could hit them. One which ventured down had been riddled;
+it had had to drop all its bombs--luckily they fell in an open field--in
+order to make its lame escape. It was all nonsense to say, as the
+English papers did, that they took part in the final bombardment. Not a
+Zeppelin.... So he talked, and the Britling family listened and
+understood as much as they could, and replied and questioned in
+Anglo-French. Here was a man who but a few days ago had been steering
+his bicycle in the streets of Antwerp to avoid shell craters, pools of
+blood, and the torn-off arms and shoulder-blades of women. He had seen
+houses flaring, set afire by incendiary bombs, and once at a corner he
+had been knocked off his bicycle by the pouff of a bursting shell....
+Not only were these things in the same world with us, they were sitting
+at our table.
+
+He told one grim story of an invalid woman unable to move, lying in bed
+in her _appartement_, and of how her husband went out on the balcony to
+look at the Zeppelin. There was a great noise of shooting. Ever and
+again he would put his head back into the room and tell her things, and
+then after a time he was silent and looked in no more. She called to
+him, and called again. Becoming frightened, she raised herself by a
+great effort and peered through the glass. At first she was too puzzled
+to understand what had happened. He was hanging over the front of the
+balcony, with his head twisted oddly. Twisted and shattered. He had been
+killed by shrapnel fired from the outer fortifications....
+
+These are the things that happen in histories and stories. They do not
+happen at Matching's Easy....
+
+Mr. Van der Pant did not seem to be angry with the Germans. But he
+manifestly regarded them as people to be killed. He denounced nothing
+that they had done; he related. They were just an evil accident that had
+happened to Belgium and mankind. They had to be destroyed. He gave Mr.
+Britling an extraordinary persuasion that knives were being sharpened in
+every cellar in Brussels and Antwerp against the day of inevitable
+retreat, of a resolution to exterminate the invader that was far too
+deep to be vindictive.... And the man was most amazingly unconquered.
+Mr. Britling perceived the label on his habitual dinner wine with a
+slight embarrassment. "Do you care," he asked, "to drink a German wine?
+This is Berncasteler from the Moselle." Mr. Van der Pant reflected. "But
+it is a good wine," he said. "After the peace it will be Belgian....
+Yes, if we are to be safe in the future from such a war as this, we must
+have our boundaries right up to the Rhine."
+
+So he sat and talked, flushed and, as it were, elated by the vividness
+of all that he had undergone. He had no trace of tragic quality, no hint
+of subjugation. But for his costume and his trimmed beard and his
+language he might have been a Dubliner or a Cockney.
+
+He was astonishingly cut off from all his belongings. His house in
+Antwerp was abandoned to the invader; valuables and cherished objects
+very skilfully buried in the garden; he had no change of clothing except
+what the rucksack held. His only footwear were the boots he came in. He
+could not get on any of the slippers in the house, they were all too
+small for him, until suddenly Mrs. Britling bethought herself of Herr
+Heinrich's pair, still left unpacked upstairs. She produced them, and
+they fitted exactly. It seemed only poetical justice, a foretaste of
+national compensations, to annex them to Belgium forthwith....
+
+Also it became manifest that Mr. Van der Pant was cut off from all his
+family. And suddenly he became briskly critical of the English way of
+doing things. His wife and child had preceded him to England, crossing
+by Ostend and Folkestone a fortnight ago; her parents had come in
+August; both groups had been seized upon by improvised British
+organisations and very thoroughly and completely lost. He had written to
+the Belgian Embassy and they had referred him to a committee in London,
+and the committee had begun its services by discovering a Madame Van der
+Pant hitherto unknown to him at Camberwell, and displaying a certain
+suspicion and hostility when he said she would not do. There had been
+some futile telegrams. "What," asked Mr. Van der Pant, "ought one to
+do?"
+
+Mr. Britling temporised by saying he would "make inquiries," and put Mr.
+Van der Pant off for two days. Then he decided to go up to London with
+him and "make inquiries on the spot." Mr. Van der Pant did not discover
+his family, but Mr. Britling discovered the profound truth of a comment
+of Herr Heinrich's which he had hitherto considered utterly trivial, but
+which had nevertheless stuck in his memory. "The English," Herr Heinrich
+had said, "do not understanding indexing. It is the root of all good
+organisation."
+
+Finally, Mr. Van der Pant adopted the irregular course of asking every
+Belgian he met if they had seen any one from his district in Antwerp, if
+they had heard of the name of "Van der Pant," if they had encountered
+So-and-so or So-and-so. And by obstinacy and good fortune he really got
+on to the track of Madame Van der Pant; she had been carried off into
+Kent, and a day later the Dower House was the scene of a happy reunion.
+Madame was a slender lady, dressed well and plainly, with a Belgian
+common sense and a Catholic reserve, and Andre was like a child of wax,
+delicate and charming and unsubstantial. It seemed incredible that he
+could ever grow into anything so buoyant and incessant as his father.
+The Britling boys had to be warned not to damage him. A sitting-room was
+handed over to the Belgians for their private use, and for a time the
+two families settled into the Dower House side by side. Anglo-French
+became the table language of the household. It hampered Mr. Britling
+very considerably. And both families set themselves to much unrecorded
+observation, much unspoken mutual criticism, and the exercise of great
+patience. It was tiresome for the English to be tied to a language that
+crippled all spontaneous talk; these linguistic gymnastics were fun to
+begin with, but soon they became very troublesome; and the Belgians
+suspected sensibilities in their hosts and a vast unwritten code of
+etiquette that did not exist; at first they were always waiting, as it
+were, to be invited or told or included; they seemed always
+deferentially backing out from intrusions. Moreover, they would not at
+first reveal what food they liked or what they didn't like, or whether
+they wanted more or less.... But these difficulties were soon smoothed
+away, they Anglicised quickly and cleverly. Andre grew bold and
+cheerful, and lost his first distrust of his rather older English
+playmates. Every day at lunch he produced a new, carefully prepared
+piece of English, though for some time he retained a marked preference
+for "Good morning, Saire," and "Thank you very mush," over all other
+locutions, and fell back upon them on all possible and many impossible
+occasions. And he could do some sleight-of-hand tricks with remarkable
+skill and humour, and fold paper with quite astonishing results.
+Meanwhile Mr. Van der Pant sought temporary employment in England, went
+for long rides upon his bicycle, exchanged views with Mr. Britling upon
+a variety of subjects, and became a wonderful player of hockey.
+
+He played hockey with an extraordinary zest and nimbleness. Always he
+played in the tail coat, and the knitted muffler was never relinquished;
+he treated the game entirely as an occasion for quick tricks and
+personal agility; he bounded about the field like a kitten, he
+pirouetted suddenly, he leapt into the air and came down in new
+directions; his fresh-coloured face was alive with delight, the coat
+tails and the muffler trailed and swished about breathlessly behind his
+agility. He never passed to other players; he never realised his
+appointed place in the game; he sought simply to make himself a leaping
+screen about the ball as he drove it towards the goal. But Andre he
+would not permit to play at all, and Madame played like a lady, like a
+Madonna, like a saint carrying the instrument of her martyrdom. The
+game and its enthusiasms flowed round her and receded from her; she
+remained quite valiant but tolerant, restrained; doing her best to do
+the extraordinary things required of her, but essentially a being of
+passive dignities, living chiefly for them; Letty careering by her, keen
+and swift, was like a creature of a different species....
+
+Mr. Britling cerebrated abundantly about these contrasts.
+
+"What has been blown in among us by these German shells," he said, "is
+essentially a Catholic family. Blown clean out of its setting.... We who
+are really--Neo-Europeans....
+
+"At first you imagine there is nothing separating us but language.
+Presently you find that language is the least of our separations. These
+people are people living upon fundamentally different ideas from ours,
+ideas far more definite and complete than ours. You imagine that home in
+Antwerp as something much more rounded off, much more closed in, a cell,
+a real social unit, a different thing altogether from this place of
+meeting. Our boys play cheerfully with all comers; little Andre hasn't
+learnt to play with any outside children at all. We must seem incredibly
+_open_ to these Van der Pants. A house without sides.... Last Sunday I
+could not find out the names of the two girls who came on bicycles and
+played so well. They came with Kitty Westropp. And Van der Pant wanted
+to know how they were related to us. Or how was it they came?...
+
+"Look at Madame. She's built on a fundamentally different plan from any
+of our womenkind here. Tennis, the bicycle, co-education, the two-step,
+the higher education of women.... Say these things over to yourself, and
+think of her. It's like talking of a nun in riding breeches. She's a
+specialised woman, specialising in womanhood, her sphere is the home.
+Soft, trailing, draping skirts, slow movements, a veiled face; for no
+Oriental veil could be more effectual than her beautiful Catholic
+quiet. Catholicism invented the invisible purdah. She is far more akin
+to that sweet little Indian lady with the wonderful robes whom Carmine
+brought over with her tall husband last summer, than she is to Letty or
+Cissie. She, too, undertook to play hockey. And played it very much as
+Madame Van der Pant played it....
+
+"The more I see of our hockey," said Mr. Britling, "the more wonderful
+it seems to me as a touchstone of character and culture and
+breeding...."
+
+Mr. Manning, to whom he was delivering this discourse, switched him on
+to a new track by asking what he meant by "Neo-European."
+
+"It's a bad phrase," said Mr. Britling. "I'll withdraw it. Let me try
+and state exactly what I have in mind. I mean something that is coming
+up in America and here and the Scandinavian countries and Russia, a new
+culture, an escape from the Levantine religion and the Catholic culture
+that came to us from the Mediterranean. Let me drop Neo-European; let me
+say Northern. We are Northerners. The key, the heart, the nucleus and
+essence of every culture is its conception of the relations of men and
+women; and this new culture tends to diminish the specialisation of
+women as women, to let them out from the cell of the home into common
+citizenship with men. It's a new culture, still in process of
+development, which will make men more social and co-operative and women
+bolder, swifter, more responsible and less cloistered. It minimises
+instead of exaggerating the importance of sex....
+
+"And," said Mr. Britling, in very much the tones in which a preacher
+might say "Sixthly," "it is just all this Northern tendency that this
+world struggle is going to release. This war is pounding through Europe,
+smashing up homes, dispersing and mixing homes, setting Madame Van der
+Pant playing hockey, and Andre climbing trees with my young ruffians; it
+is killing young men by the million, altering the proportions of the
+sexes for a generation, bringing women into business and office and
+industry, destroying the accumulated wealth that kept so many of them in
+refined idleness, flooding the world with strange doubts and novel
+ideas...."
+
+
+Section 9
+
+But the conflict of manners and customs that followed the invasion of
+the English villages by French and Belgian refugees did not always
+present the immigrants as Catholics and the hosts as "Neo-European." In
+the case of Mr. Dimple it was the other way round. He met Mr. Britling
+in Claverings park and told him his troubles....
+
+"Of course," he said, "we have to do our Utmost for Brave Little
+Belgium. I would be the last to complain of any little inconvenience one
+may experience in doing that. Still, I must confess I think you and dear
+Mrs. Britling are fortunate, exceptionally fortunate, in the Belgians
+you have got. My guests--it's unfortunate--the man is some sort of
+journalist and quite--oh! much too much--an Atheist. An open positive
+one. Not simply Honest Doubt. I'm quite prepared for honest doubt
+nowadays. You and I have no quarrel over that. But he is aggressive. He
+makes remarks about miracles, quite derogatory remarks, and not always
+in French. Sometimes he almost speaks English. And in front of my
+sister. And he goes out, he says, looking for a Cafe. He never finds a
+Cafe, but he certainly finds every public house within a radius of
+miles. And he comes back smelling dreadfully of beer. When I drop a
+Little Hint, he blames the beer. He says it is not good beer--our good
+Essex beer! He doesn't understand any of our simple ways. He's
+sophisticated. The girls about here wear Belgian flags--and air their
+little bits of French. And he takes it as an encouragement. Only
+yesterday there was a scene. It seems he tried to kiss the Hickson girl
+at the inn--Maudie.... And his wife; a great big slow woman--in every
+way she is--Ample; it's dreadful even to seem to criticise, but I do so
+_wish_ she would not see fit to sit down and nourish her baby in my poor
+old bachelor drawing-room--often at the most _unseasonable_ times.
+And--so lavishly...."
+
+Mr. Britling attempted consolations.
+
+"But anyhow," said Mr. Dimple, "I'm better off than poor dear Mrs.
+Bynne. She secured two milliners. She insisted upon them. And their
+clothes were certainly beautifully made--even my poor old unworldly eye
+could tell that. And she thought two milliners would be so useful with a
+large family like hers. They certainly _said_ they were milliners. But
+it seems--I don't know what we shall do about them.... My dear Mr.
+Britling, those young women are anything but milliners--anything but
+milliners...."
+
+A faint gleam of amusement was only too perceptible through the good
+man's horror.
+
+"Sirens, my dear Mr. Britling. Sirens. By profession."...
+
+
+Section 10
+
+October passed into November, and day by day Mr. Britling was forced to
+apprehend new aspects of the war, to think and rethink the war, to have
+his first conclusions checked and tested, twisted askew, replaced. His
+thoughts went far and wide and deeper--until all his earlier writing
+seemed painfully shallow to him, seemed a mere automatic response of
+obvious comments to the stimulus of the war's surprise. As his ideas
+became subtler and profounder, they became more difficult to express; he
+talked less; he became abstracted and irritable at table. To two people
+in particular Mr. Britling found his real ideas inexpressible, to Mr.
+Direck and to Mr. Van der Pant.
+
+Each of these gentlemen brought with him the implication or the
+intimation of a critical attitude towards England. It was all very well
+for Mr. Britling himself to be critical of England; that is an
+Englishman's privilege. To hear Mr. Van der Pant questioning British
+efficiency or to suspect Mr. Direck of high, thin American superiorities
+to war, was almost worse than to hear Mrs. Harrowdean saying hostile
+things about Edith. It roused an even acuter protective emotion.
+
+In the case of Mr. Van der Pant matters were complicated by the
+difficulty of the language, which made anything but the crudest
+statements subject to incalculable misconception.
+
+Mr. Van der Pant had not the extreme tactfulness of his so typically
+Catholic wife; he made it only too plain that he thought the British
+postal and telegraph service slow and slack, and the management of the
+Great Eastern branch lines wasteful and inefficient. He said the workmen
+in the fields and the workmen he saw upon some cottages near the
+junction worked slowlier and with less interest than he had ever seen
+any workman display in all his life before. He marvelled that Mr.
+Britling lit his house with acetylene and not electric light. He thought
+fresh eggs were insanely dear, and his opinion of Matching's Easy
+pig-keeping was uncomplimentary. The roads, he said, were not a means of
+getting from place to place, they were a _dedale_; he drew derisive maps
+with his finger on the table-cloth of the lane system about the Dower
+House. He was astonished that there was no Cafe in Matching's Easy; he
+declared that the "public house" to which he went with considerable
+expectation was no public house at all; it was just a sly place for
+drinking beer.... All these were things Mr. Britling might have remarked
+himself; from a Belgian refugee he found them intolerable.
+
+He set himself to explain to Mr. Van der Pant firstly that these things
+did not matter in the slightest degree, the national attention, the
+national interest ran in other directions; and secondly that they were,
+as a matter of fact and on the whole, merits slightly disguised. He
+produced a pleasant theory that England is really not the Englishman's
+field, it is his breeding place, his resting place, a place not for
+efficiency but good humour. If Mr. Van der Pant were to make inquiries
+he would find there was scarcely a home in Matching's Easy that had not
+sent some energetic representative out of England to become one of the
+English of the world. England was the last place in which English energy
+was spent. These hedges, these dilatory roads were full of associations.
+There was a road that turned aside near Market Saffron to avoid Turk's
+wood; it had been called Turk's wood first in the fourteenth century
+after a man of that name. He quoted Chesterton's happy verses to justify
+these winding lanes.
+
+ "The road turned first towards the left,
+ Where Perkin's quarry made the cleft;
+ The path turned next towards the right,
+ Because the mastiff used to bite...."
+
+And again:
+
+ "And I should say they wound about
+ To find the town of Roundabout,
+ The merry town of Roundabout
+ That makes the world go round."
+
+If our easy-going ways hampered a hard efficiency, they did at least
+develop humour and humanity. Our diplomacy at any rate had not failed
+us....
+
+He did not believe a word of this stuff. His deep irrational love for
+England made him say these things.... For years he had been getting
+himself into hot water because he had been writing and hinting just such
+criticisms as Mr. Van der Pant expressed so bluntly.... But he wasn't
+going to accept foreign help in dissecting his mother....
+
+And another curious effect that Mr. Van der Pant had upon Mr. Britling
+was to produce an obstinate confidence about the war and the nearness
+of the German collapse. He would promise Mr. Van der Pant that he should
+be back in Antwerp before May; that the Germans would be over the Rhine
+by July. He knew perfectly well that his ignorance of all the military
+conditions was unqualified, but still he could not restrain himself from
+this kind of thing so soon as he began to speak Entente
+Cordiale--Anglo-French, that is to say. Something in his relationship to
+Mr. Van der Pant obliged him to be acutely and absurdly the protecting
+British.... At times he felt like a conscious bankrupt talking off the
+hour of disclosure. But indeed all that Mr. Britling was trying to say
+against the difficulties of a strange language and an alien temperament,
+was that the honour of England would never be cleared until Belgium was
+restored and avenged....
+
+While Mr. Britling was patrolling unimportant roads and entertaining Mr.
+Van der Pant with discourses upon the nearness of victory and the subtle
+estimableness of all that was indolent, wasteful and evasive in English
+life, the war was passing from its first swift phases into a slower,
+grimmer struggle. The German retreat ended at the Aisne, and the long
+outflanking manoeuvres of both hosts towards the Channel began. The
+English attempts to assist Belgium in October came too late for the
+preservation of Antwerp, and after a long and complicated struggle in
+Flanders the British failed to outflank the German right, lost Ghent,
+Menin and the Belgian coast, but held Ypres and beat back every attempt
+of the enemy to reach Dunkirk and Calais. Meanwhile the smaller German
+colonies and islands were falling to the navy, the Australian battleship
+_Sydney_ smashed the _Emden_ at Cocos Island, and the British naval
+disaster of Coronel was wiped out by the battle of the Falklands. The
+Russians were victorious upon their left and took Lemberg, and after
+some vicissitudes of fortune advanced to Przemysl, occupying the larger
+part of Galicia; but the disaster of Tannenberg had broken their
+progress in East Prussia, and the Germans were pressing towards Warsaw.
+Turkey had joined the war, and suffered enormous losses in the Caucasus.
+The Dardanelles had been shelled for the first time, and the British
+were at Basra on the Euphrates.
+
+
+Section 11
+
+The Christmas of 1914 found England, whose landscape had hitherto been
+almost as peaceful and soldierless as Massachusetts, already far gone
+along the path of transformation into a country full of soldiers and
+munition makers and military supplies. The soldiers came first, on the
+well-known and greatly admired British principle of "first catch your
+hare" and then build your kitchen. Always before, Christmas had been a
+time of much gaiety and dressing up and prancing and two-stepping at the
+Dower House, but this year everything was too uncertain to allow of any
+gathering of guests. Hugh got leave for the day after Christmas, but
+Teddy was tied; and Cissie and Letty went off with the small boy to take
+lodgings near him. The Van der Pants had hoped to see an English
+Christmas at Matching's Easy, but within three weeks of Christmas Day
+Mr. Van der Pant found a job that he could do in Nottingham, and carried
+off his family. The two small boys cheered their hearts with paper
+decorations, but the Christmas Tree was condemned as too German, and it
+was discovered that Santa Claus had suddenly become Old Father Christmas
+again. The small boys discovered that the price of lead soldiers had
+risen, and were unable to buy electric torches, on which they had set
+their hearts. There was to have been a Christmas party at Claverings,
+but at the last moment Lady Homartyn had to hurry off to an orphan
+nephew who had been seriously wounded near Ypres, and the light of
+Claverings was darkened.
+
+Soon after Christmas there were rumours of an impending descent of the
+Headquarters staff of the South-Eastern army upon Claverings. Then Mr.
+Britling found Lady Homartyn back from France, and very indignant
+because after all the Headquarters were to go to Lady Wensleydale at
+Ladyholt. It was, she felt, a reflection upon Claverings. Lady Homartyn
+became still more indignant when presently the new armies, which were
+gathering now all over England like floods in a low-lying meadow, came
+pouring into the parishes about Claverings to the extent of a battalion
+and a Territorial battery. Mr. Britling heard of their advent only a day
+or two before they arrived; there came a bright young officer with an
+orderly, billeting; he was much exercised to get, as he expressed it
+several times, a quart into a pint bottle. He was greatly pleased with
+the barn. He asked the size of it and did calculations. He could "stick
+twenty-five men into it--easy." It would go far to solve his problems.
+He could manage without coming into the house at all. It was a ripping
+place. "No end."
+
+"But beds," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"Lord! they don't want _beds_," said the young officer....
+
+The whole Britling family, who were lamenting the loss of their
+Belgians, welcomed the coming of the twenty-five with great enthusiasm.
+It made them feel that they were doing something useful once more. For
+three days Mrs. Britling had to feed her new lodgers--the kitchen motors
+had as usual gone astray--and she did so in a style that made their
+boastings about their billet almost insufferable to the rest of their
+battery. The billeting allowance at that time was ninepence a head, and
+Mr. Britling, ashamed of making a profit out of his country, supplied
+not only generous firing and lighting, but unlimited cigarettes, cards
+and games, illustrated newspapers, a cocoa supper with such little
+surprises as sprats and jam roly-poly, and a number of more incidental
+comforts. The men arrived fasting under the command of two very sage
+middle-aged corporals, and responded to Mrs. Britling's hospitalities by
+a number of good resolutions, many of which they kept. They never made
+noises after half-past ten, or at least only now and then when a
+singsong broke out with unusual violence; they got up and went out at
+five or six in the morning without a sound; they were almost
+inconveniently helpful with washing-up and tidying round.
+
+In quite a little time Mrs. Britling's mind had adapted itself to the
+spectacle of half-a-dozen young men in khaki breeches and shirts
+performing their toilets in and about her scullery, or improvising an
+unsanctioned game of football between the hockey goals. These men were
+not the miscellaneous men of the new armies; they were the earlier
+Territorial type with no heroics about them; they came from the
+midlands; and their two middle-aged corporals kept them well in hand and
+ruled them like a band of brothers. But they had an illegal side, that
+developed in directions that set Mr. Britling theorising. They seemed,
+for example, to poach by nature, as children play and sing. They
+possessed a promiscuous white dog. They began to add rabbits to their
+supper menu, unaccountable rabbits. One night there was a mighty smell
+of frying fish from the kitchen, and the cook reported trout. "Trout!"
+said Mr. Britling to one of the corporals; "now where did you chaps get
+trout?"
+
+The "fisherman," they said, had got them with a hair noose. They
+produced the fisherman, of whom they were manifestly proud. It was, he
+explained, a method of fishing he had learnt when in New York Harbour.
+He had been a stoker. He displayed a confidence in Mr. Britling that
+made that gentleman an accessory after his offence, his very serious
+offence against pre-war laws and customs. It was plain that the trout
+were the trout that Mr. Pumshock, the stock-broker and amateur
+gentleman, had preserved so carefully in the Easy. Hitherto the
+countryside had been forced to regard Mr. Pumshock's trout with an
+almost superstitious respect. A year ago young Snooker had done a month
+for one of those very trout. But now things were different.
+
+"But I don't really fancy fresh-water fish," said the fisherman. "It's
+just the ketchin' of 'em I like...."
+
+And a few weeks later the trumpeter, an angel-faced freckled child with
+deep-blue eyes, brought in a dozen partridge eggs which he wanted Mary
+to cook for him....
+
+The domesticity of the sacred birds, it was clear, was no longer safe in
+England....
+
+Then again the big guns would go swinging down the road and into
+Claverings park, and perform various exercises with commendable
+smartness and a profound disregard for Lady Homartyn's known objection
+to any departure from the public footpath....
+
+And one afternoon as Mr. Britling took his constitutional walk, a
+reverie was set going in his mind by the sight of a neglected-looking
+pheasant with a white collar. The world of Matching's Easy was getting
+full now of such elderly birds. Would _that_ go on again after the war?
+He imagined his son Hugh as a grandfather, telling the little ones about
+parks and preserves and game laws, and footmen and butlers and the
+marvellous game of golf, and how, suddenly, Mars came tramping through
+the land in khaki and all these things faded and vanished, so that
+presently it was discovered they were gone....
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE THIRD
+
+MALIGNITY
+
+
+Section 1
+
+And while the countryside of England changed steadily from its lax
+pacific amenity to the likeness of a rather slovenly armed camp, while
+long-fixed boundaries shifted and dissolved and a great irreparable
+wasting of the world's resources gathered way, Mr. Britling did his duty
+as a special constable, gave his eldest son to the Territorials,
+entertained Belgians, petted his soldiers in the barn, helped Teddy to
+his commission, contributed to war charities, sold out securities at a
+loss and subscribed to the War Loan, and thought, thought endlessly
+about the war.
+
+He could think continuously day by day of nothing else. His mind was as
+caught as a galley slave, as unable to escape from tugging at this oar.
+All his universe was a magnetic field which oriented everything, whether
+he would have it so or not, to this one polar question.
+
+His thoughts grew firmer and clearer; they went deeper and wider. His
+first superficial judgments were endorsed and deepened or replaced by
+others. He thought along the lonely lanes at night; he thought at his
+desk; he thought in bed; he thought in his bath; he tried over his
+thoughts in essays and leading articles and reviewed them and corrected
+them. Now and then came relaxation and lassitude, but never release. The
+war towered over him like a vigilant teacher, day after day, week after
+week, regardless of fatigue and impatience, holding a rod in its hand.
+
+
+Section 2
+
+Certain things had to be forced upon Mr. Britling because they jarred so
+greatly with his habits of mind that he would never have accepted them
+if he could have avoided doing so.
+
+Notably he would not recognise at first the extreme bitterness of this
+war. He would not believe that the attack upon Britain and Western
+Europe generally expressed the concentrated emotion of a whole nation.
+He thought that the Allies were in conflict with a system and not with a
+national will. He fought against the persuasion that the whole mass of a
+great civilised nation could be inspired by a genuine and sustained
+hatred. Hostility was an uncongenial thing to him; he would not
+recognise that the greater proportion of human beings are more readily
+hostile than friendly. He did his best to believe--in his "And Now War
+Ends" he did his best to make other people believe--that this war was
+the perverse exploit of a small group of people, of limited but powerful
+influences, an outrage upon the general geniality of mankind. The
+cruelty, mischief, and futility of war were so obvious to him that he
+was almost apologetic in asserting them. He believed that war had but to
+begin and demonstrate its quality among the Western nations in order to
+unify them all against its repetition. They would exclaim: "But we can't
+do things like this to one another!" He saw the aggressive imperialism
+of Germany called to account even by its own people; a struggle, a
+collapse, a liberal-minded conference of world powers, and a universal
+resumption of amiability upon a more assured basis of security. He
+believed--and many people in England believed with him--that a great
+section of the Germans would welcome triumphant Allies as their
+liberators from intolerable political obsessions.
+
+The English because of their insularity had been political amateurs for
+endless generations. It was their supreme vice, it was their supreme
+virtue, to be easy-going. They had lived in an atmosphere of comedy, and
+denied in the whole tenor of their lives that life is tragic. Not even
+the Americans had been more isolated. The Americans had had their
+Indians, their negroes, their War of Secession. Until the Great War the
+Channel was as broad as the Atlantic for holding off every vital
+challenge. Even Ireland was away--a four-hour crossing. And so the
+English had developed to the fullest extent the virtues and vices of
+safety and comfort; they had a hatred of science and dramatic behaviour;
+they could see no reason for exactness or intensity; they disliked
+proceeding "to extremes." Ultimately everything would turn out all
+right. But they knew what it is to be carried into conflicts by
+energetic minorities and the trick of circumstances, and they were ready
+to understand the case of any other country which has suffered that
+fate. All their habits inclined them to fight good-temperedly and
+comfortably, to quarrel with a government and not with a people. It took
+Mr. Britling at least a couple of months of warfare to understand that
+the Germans were fighting in an altogether different spirit.
+
+The first intimations of this that struck upon his mind were the news of
+the behaviour of the Kaiser and the Berlin crowd upon the declaration of
+war, and the violent treatment of the British subjects seeking to return
+to their homes. Everywhere such people had been insulted and
+ill-treated. It was the spontaneous expression of a long-gathered
+bitterness. While the British ambassador was being howled out of Berlin,
+the German ambassador to England was taking a farewell stroll, quite
+unmolested, in St. James's Park.... One item that struck particularly
+upon Mr. Britling's imagination was the story of the chorus of young
+women who assembled on the railway platform of the station through which
+the British ambassador was passing to sing--to his drawn
+blinds--"Deutschland, Deutschland ueber Alles." Mr. Britling could
+imagine those young people, probably dressed more or less uniformly in
+white, with flushed faces and shining eyes, letting their voices go,
+full throated, in the modern German way....
+
+And then came stories of atrocities, stories of the shooting of old men
+and the butchery of children by the wayside, stories of wounded men
+bayoneted or burnt alive, of massacres of harmless citizens, of looting
+and filthy outrages....
+
+Mr. Britling did his utmost not to believe these things. They
+contradicted his habitual world. They produced horrible strains in his
+mind. They might, he hoped, be misreported so as to seem more violent or
+less justifiable than they were. They might be the acts of stray
+criminals, and quite disconnected from the normal operations of the war.
+Here and there some weak-minded officer may have sought to make himself
+terrible.... And as for the bombardment of cathedrals and the crime of
+Louvain, well, Mr. Britling was prepared to argue that Gothic
+architecture is not sacrosanct if military necessity cuts through it....
+It was only after the war had been going on some months that Mr.
+Britling's fluttering, unwilling mind was pinned down by official
+reports and a cloud of witnesses to a definite belief in the grim
+reality of systematic rape and murder, destruction, dirtiness and
+abominable compulsions that blackened the first rush of the Prussians
+into Belgium and Champagne....
+
+They came hating and threatening the lands they outraged. They sought
+occasion to do frightful deeds.... When they could not be frightful in
+the houses they occupied, then to the best of their ability they were
+destructive and filthy. The facts took Mr. Britling by the throat....
+
+The first thing that really pierced Mr. Britling with the conviction
+that there was something essentially different in the English and the
+German attitude towards the war was the sight of a bale of German comic
+papers in the study of a friend in London. They were filled with
+caricatures of the Allies and more particularly of the English, and they
+displayed a force and quality of passion--an incredible force and
+quality of passion. Their amazing hate and their amazing filthiness
+alike overwhelmed Mr. Britling. There was no appearance of national
+pride or national dignity, but a bellowing patriotism and a limitless
+desire to hurt and humiliate. They spat. They were red in the face and
+they spat. He sat with these violent sheets in his hands--_ashamed_.
+
+"But I say!" he said feebly. "It's the sort of thing that might come out
+of a lunatic asylum...."
+
+One incredible craving was manifest in every one of them. The German
+caricaturist seemed unable to represent his enemies except in extremely
+tight trousers or in none; he was equally unable to represent them
+without thrusting a sword or bayonet, spluttering blood, into the more
+indelicate parts of their persons. This was the _leit-motif_ of the war
+as the German humorists presented it. "But," said Mr. Britling, "these
+things can't represent anything like the general state of mind in
+Germany."
+
+"They do," said his friend.
+
+"But it's blind fury--at the dirt-throwing stage."
+
+"The whole of Germany is in that blind fury," said his friend. "While we
+are going about astonished and rather incredulous about this war, and
+still rather inclined to laugh, that's the state of mind of Germany....
+There's a sort of deliberation in it. They think it gives them strength.
+They _want_ to foam at the mouth. They do their utmost to foam more.
+They write themselves up. Have you heard of the 'Hymn of Hate'?"
+
+Mr. Britling had not.
+
+"There was a translation of it in last week's _Spectator_.... This is
+the sort of thing we are trying to fight in good temper and without
+extravagance. Listen, Britling!
+
+ "_You_ will we hate with a lasting hate;
+ We will never forgo our hate--
+ Hate by water and hate by land,
+ Hate of the head and hate of the hand,
+ Hate of the hammer and hate of the crown,
+ Hate of seventy millions, choking down;
+ We love as one, we hate as one,
+ We have _one_ foe, and one alone--
+ ENGLAND!"
+
+He read on to the end.
+
+"Well," he said when he had finished reading, "what do you think of it?"
+
+"I want to feel his bumps," said Mr. Britling after a pause. "It's
+incomprehensible."
+
+"They're singing that up and down Germany. Lissauer, I hear, has been
+decorated...."
+
+"It's--stark malignity," said Mr. Britling. "What have we done?"
+
+"It's colossal. What is to happen to the world if these people prevail?"
+
+"I can't believe it--even with this evidence before me.... No! I want to
+feel their bumps...."
+
+
+Section 3
+
+"You see," said Mr. Britling, trying to get it into focus, "I have known
+quite decent Germans. There must be some sort of misunderstanding.... I
+wonder what makes them hate us. There seems to me no reason in it."
+
+"I think it is just thoroughness," said his friend. "They are at war. To
+be at war is to hate."
+
+"That isn't at all my idea."
+
+"We're not a thorough people. When we think of anything, we also think
+of its opposite. When we adopt an opinion we also take in a provisional
+idea that it is probably nearly as wrong as it is right. We
+are--atmospheric. They are concrete.... All this filthy, vile, unjust
+and cruel stuff is honest genuine war. We pretend war does not hurt.
+They know better.... The Germans are a simple honest people. It is
+their virtue. Possibly it is their only virtue...."
+
+
+Section 4
+
+Mr. Britling was only one of a multitude who wanted to feel the bumps of
+Germany at that time. The effort to understand a people who had suddenly
+become incredible was indeed one of the most remarkable facts in English
+intellectual life during the opening phases of the war. The English
+state of mind was unlimited astonishment. There was an enormous sale of
+any German books that seemed likely to illuminate the mystery of this
+amazing concentration of hostility; the works of Bernhardi, Treitschke,
+Nietzsche, Houston Stewart Chamberlain, became the material of countless
+articles and interminable discussions. One saw little clerks on the way
+to the office and workmen going home after their work earnestly reading
+these remarkable writers. They were asking, just as Mr. Britling was
+asking, what it was the British Empire had struck against. They were
+trying to account for this wild storm of hostility that was coming at
+them out of Central Europe.
+
+It was a natural next stage to this, when after all it became manifest
+that instead of there being a liberal and reluctant Germany at the back
+of imperialism and Junkerdom, there was apparently one solid and
+enthusiastic people, to suppose that the Germans were in some
+distinctive way evil, that they were racially more envious, arrogant,
+and aggressive than the rest of mankind. Upon that supposition a great
+number of English people settled. They concluded that the Germans had a
+peculiar devil of their own--and had to be treated accordingly. That was
+the second stage in the process of national apprehension, and it was
+marked by the first beginnings of a spy hunt, by the first denunciation
+of naturalised aliens, and by some anti-German rioting among the mixed
+alien population in the East End. Most of the bakers in the East End of
+London were Germans, and for some months after the war began they went
+on with their trade unmolested. Now many of these shops were wrecked....
+It was only in October that the British gave these first signs of a
+sense that they were fighting not merely political Germany but the
+Germans.
+
+But the idea of a peculiar malignity in the German quality as a key to
+the broad issue of the war was even less satisfactory and less permanent
+in Mr. Britling's mind than his first crude opposition of militarism and
+a peaceful humanity as embodied respectively in the Central Powers and
+the Russo-Western alliance. It led logically to the conclusion that the
+extermination of the German peoples was the only security for the
+general amiability of the world, a conclusion that appealed but weakly
+to his essential kindliness. After all, the Germans he had met and seen
+were neither cruel nor hate-inspired. He came back to that obstinately.
+From the harshness and vileness of the printed word and the unclean
+picture, he fell back upon the flesh and blood, the humanity and
+sterling worth, of--as a sample--young Heinrich.
+
+Who was moreover a thoroughly German young German--a thoroughly Prussian
+young Prussian.
+
+At times young Heinrich alone stood between Mr. Britling and the belief
+that Germany and the whole German race was essentially wicked,
+essentially a canting robber nation. Young Heinrich became a sort of
+advocate for his people before the tribunal of Mr. Britling's mind. (And
+on his shoulder sat an absurdly pampered squirrel.) s fresh, pink,
+sedulous face, very earnest, adjusting his glasses, saying "Please,"
+intervened and insisted upon an arrest of judgment....
+
+Since the young man's departure he had sent two postcards of greeting
+directly to the "Familie Britling," and one letter through the friendly
+intervention of Mr. Britling's American publisher. Once also he sent a
+message through a friend in Norway. The postcards simply recorded
+stages in the passage of a distraught pacifist across Holland to his
+enrolment. The letter by way of America came two months later. He had
+been converted into a combatant with extreme rapidity. He had been
+trained for three weeks, had spent a fortnight in hospital with a severe
+cold, and had then gone to Belgium as a transport driver--his father had
+been a horse-dealer and he was familiar with horses. "If anything
+happens to me," he wrote, "please send my violin at least very carefully
+to my mother." It was characteristic that he reported himself as very
+comfortably quartered in Courtrai with "very nice people." The niceness
+involved restraints. "Only never," he added, "do we talk about the war.
+It is better not to do so." He mentioned the violin also in the later
+communication through Norway. Therein he lamented the lost fleshpots of
+Courtrai. He had been in Posen, and now he was in the Carpathians, up to
+his knees in snow and "very uncomfortable...."
+
+And then abruptly all news from him ceased.
+
+Month followed month, and no further letter came.
+
+"Something has happened to him. Perhaps he is a prisoner...."
+
+"I hope our little Heinrich hasn't got seriously damaged.... He may be
+wounded...."
+
+"Or perhaps they stop his letters.... Very probably they stop his
+letters."
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Mr. Britling would sit in his armchair and stare at his fire, and recall
+conflicting memories of Germany--of a pleasant land, of friendly people.
+He had spent many a jolly holiday there. So recently as 1911 all the
+Britling family had gone up the Rhine from Rotterdam, had visited a
+string of great cities and stayed for a cheerful month of sunshine at
+Neunkirchen in the Odenwald.
+
+The little village perches high among the hills and woods, and at its
+very centre is the inn and the linden tree and--Adam Meyer. Or at least
+Adam Meyer _was_ there. Whether he is there now, only the spirit of
+change can tell; if he live to be a hundred no friendly English will
+ever again come tramping along by the track of the Blaue Breiecke or the
+Weisse Streiche to enjoy his hospitality; there are rivers of blood
+between, and a thousand memories of hate....
+
+It was a village distended with hospitalities. Not only the inn but all
+the houses about the place of the linden tree, the shoe-maker's, the
+post-mistress's, the white house beyond, every house indeed except the
+pastor's house, were full of Adam Meyer's summer guests. And about it
+and over it went and soared Adam Meyer, seeing they ate well, seeing
+they rested well, seeing they had music and did not miss the
+moonlight--a host who forgot profit in hospitality, an inn-keeper with
+the passion of an artist for his inn.
+
+Music, moonlight, the simple German sentiment, the hearty German voices,
+the great picnic in a Stuhl Wagen, the orderly round games the boys
+played with the German children, and the tramps and confidences Hugh had
+with Kurt and Karl, and at last a crowning jollification, a dance, with
+some gipsy musicians whom Mr. Britling discovered, when the Germans
+taught the English various entertaining sports with baskets and potatoes
+and forfeits and the English introduced the Germans to the licence of
+the two-step. And everybody sang "Britannia, Rule the Waves," and
+"Deutschland, Deutschland ueber Alles," and Adam Meyer got on a chair and
+made a tremendous speech more in dialect than ever, and there was much
+drinking of beer and sirops in the moonlight under the linden....
+
+Afterwards there had been a periodic sending of postcards and greetings,
+which indeed only the war had ended.
+
+Right pleasant people those Germans had been, sun and green-leaf lovers,
+for whom "Frisch Auf" seemed the most natural of national cries. Mr.
+Britling thought of the individual Germans who had made up the
+assembly, of the men's amusingly fierce little hats of green and blue
+with an inevitable feather thrust perkily into the hatband behind, of
+the kindly plumpnesses behind their turned-up moustaches, of the blonde,
+sedentary women, very wise about the comforts of life and very kind to
+the children, of their earnest pleasure in landscape and Art and Great
+Writers, of their general frequent desire to sing, of their plasticity
+under the directing hands of Adam Meyer. He thought of the mellow south
+German landscape, rolling away broad and fair, of the little clean
+red-roofed townships, the old castles, the big prosperous farms, the
+neatly marked pedestrian routes, the hospitable inns, and the artless
+abundant Aussichtthurms....
+
+He saw all those memories now through a veil of indescribable
+sadness--as of a world lost, gone down like the cities of Lyonesse
+beneath deep seas....
+
+Right pleasant people in a sunny land! Yet here pressing relentlessly
+upon his mind were the murders of Vise, the massacres of Dinant, the
+massacres of Louvain, murder red-handed and horrible upon an inoffensive
+people, foully invaded, foully treated; murder done with a sickening
+cant of righteousness and racial pretension....
+
+The two pictures would not stay steadily in his mind together. When he
+thought of the broken faith that had poured those slaughtering hosts
+into the decent peace of Belgium, that had smashed her cities, burnt her
+villages and filled the pretty gorges of the Ardennes with blood and
+smoke and terror, he was flooded with self-righteous indignation, a
+self-righteous indignation that was indeed entirely Teutonic in its
+quality, that for a time drowned out his former friendship and every
+kindly disposition towards Germany, that inspired him with destructive
+impulses, and obsessed him with a desire to hear of death and more death
+and yet death in every German town and home....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+It will be an incredible thing to the happier reader of a coming age--if
+ever this poor record of experience reaches a reader in the days to
+come--to learn how much of the mental life of Mr. Britling was occupied
+at this time with the mere horror and atrocity of warfare. It is idle
+and hopeless to speculate now how that future reader will envisage this
+war; it may take on broad dramatic outlines, it may seem a thing, just,
+logical, necessary, the burning of many barriers, the destruction of
+many obstacles. Mr. Britling was too near to the dirt and pain and heat
+for any such broad landscape consolations. Every day some new detail of
+evil beat into his mind. Now it would be the artless story of some
+Belgian refugee. There was a girl from Alost in the village for example,
+who had heard the fusillade that meant the shooting of citizens, the
+shooting of people she had known, she had seen the still blood-stained
+wall against which two murdered cousins had died, the streaked sand
+along which their bodies had been dragged; three German soldiers had
+been quartered in her house with her and her invalid mother, and had
+talked freely of the massacres in which they had been employed. One of
+them was in civil life a young schoolmaster, and he had had, he said, to
+kill a woman and a baby. The girl had been incredulous. Yes, he had done
+so! Of course he had done so! His officer had made him do it, had stood
+over him. He could do nothing but obey. But since then he had been
+unable to sleep, unable to forget.
+
+"We had to punish the people," he said. "They had fired on us."
+
+And besides, his officer had been drunk. It had been impossible to
+argue. His officer had an unrelenting character at all times....
+
+Over and over again Mr. Britling would try to imagine that young
+schoolmaster soldier at Alost. He imagined with a weak staring face and
+watery blue eyes behind his glasses, and that memory of murder....
+
+Then again it would be some incident of death and mutilation in Antwerp,
+that Van der Pant described to him. The Germans in Belgium were shooting
+women frequently, not simply for grave spying but for trivial
+offences.... Then came the battleship raid on Whitby and Scarborough,
+and the killing among other victims of a number of children on their way
+to school. This shocked Mr. Britling absurdly, much more than the
+Belgian crimes had done. They were _English_ children. At home!... The
+drowning of a great number of people on a torpedoed ship full of
+refugees from Flanders filled his mind with pitiful imaginings for days.
+The Zeppelin raids, with their slow crescendo of blood-stained futility,
+began before the end of 1914.... It was small consolation for Mr.
+Britling to reflect that English homes and women and children were,
+after all, undergoing only the same kind of experience that our ships
+have inflicted scores of times in the past upon innocent people in the
+villages of Africa and Polynesia....
+
+Each month the war grew bitterer and more cruel. Early in 1915 the
+Germans began their submarine war, and for a time Mr. Britling's concern
+was chiefly for the sailors and passengers of the ships destroyed. He
+noted with horror the increasing indisposition of the German submarines
+to give any notice to their victims; he did not understand the grim
+reasons that were turning every submarine attack into a desperate
+challenge of death. For the Germans under the seas had pitted themselves
+against a sea power far more resourceful, more steadfast and skilful,
+sterner and more silent, than their own. It was not for many months that
+Mr. Britling learnt the realities of the submarine blockade. Submarine
+after submarine went out of the German harbours into the North Sea,
+never to return. No prisoners were reported, no boasting was published
+by the British fishers of men; U boat after U boat vanished into a
+chilling mystery.... Only later did Mr. Britling begin to hear whispers
+and form ideas of the noiseless, suffocating grip that sought through
+the waters for its prey.
+
+The _Falaba_ crime, in which the German sailors were reported to have
+jeered at the drowning victims in the water, was followed by the sinking
+of the _Lusitania_. At that a wave of real anger swept through the
+Empire. Hate was begetting hate at last. There were violent riots in
+Great Britain and in South Africa. Wretched little German hairdressers
+and bakers and so forth fled for their lives, to pay for the momentary
+satisfaction of the Kaiser and Herr Ballin. Scores of German homes in
+England were wrecked and looted; hundreds of Germans maltreated. War is
+war. Hard upon the _Lusitania_ storm came the publication of the Bryce
+Report, with its relentless array of witnesses, its particulars of
+countless acts of cruelty and arrogant unreason and uncleanness in
+Belgium and the occupied territory of France. Came also the gasping
+torture of "gas," the use of flame jets, and a new exacerbation of the
+savagery of the actual fighting. For a time it seemed as though the
+taking of prisoners along the western front would cease. Tales of
+torture and mutilation, tales of the kind that arise nowhere and out of
+nothing, and poison men's minds to the most pitiless retaliations,
+drifted along the opposing fronts....
+
+The realities were evil enough without any rumours. Over various
+dinner-tables Mr. Britling heard this and that first-hand testimony of
+harshness and spite. One story that stuck in his memory was of British
+prisoners on the journey into Germany being put apart at a station from
+their French companions in misfortune, and forced to "run the gauntlet"
+back to their train between the fists and bayonets of files of German
+soldiers. And there were convincing stories of the same prisoners robbed
+of overcoats in bitter weather, baited with dogs, separated from their
+countrymen, and thrust among Russians and Poles with whom they could
+hold no speech. So Lissauer's Hate Song bore its fruit in a thousand
+cruelties to wounded and defenceless men. The English had cheated great
+Germany of another easy victory like that of '71. They had to be
+punished. That was all too plainly the psychological process. At one
+German station a woman had got out of a train and crossed a platform to
+spit on the face of a wounded Englishman.... And there was no monopoly
+of such things on either side. At some journalistic gathering Mr.
+Britling met a little white-faced, resolute lady who had recently been
+nursing in the north of France. She told of wounded men lying among the
+coal of coal-sheds, of a shortage of nurses and every sort of material,
+of an absolute refusal to permit any share in such things to reach the
+German "swine." ... "Why have they come here? Let our own boys have it
+first. Why couldn't they stay in their own country? Let the filth die."
+
+Two soldiers impressed to carry a wounded German officer on a stretcher
+had given him a "joy ride," pitching him up and down as one tosses a man
+in a blanket. "He was lucky to get off with that."...
+
+"All _our_ men aren't angels," said a cheerful young captain back from
+the front. "If you had heard a little group of our East London boys
+talking of what they meant to do when they got into Germany, you'd feel
+anxious...."
+
+"But that was just talk," said Mr. Britling weakly, after a pause....
+
+There were times when Mr. Britling's mind was imprisoned beyond any hope
+of escape amidst such monstrous realities....
+
+He was ashamed of his one secret consolation. For nearly two years yet
+Hugh could not go out to it. There would surely be peace before
+that....
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Tormenting the thought of Mr. Britling almost more acutely than this
+growing tale of stupidly inflicted suffering and waste and sheer
+destruction was the collapse of the British mind from its first fine
+phase of braced-up effort into a state of bickering futility.
+
+Too long had British life been corrupted by the fictions of loyalty to
+an uninspiring and alien Court, of national piety in an official Church,
+of freedom in a politician-rigged State, of justice in an economic
+system where the advertiser, the sweater and usurer had a hundred
+advantages over the producer and artisan, to maintain itself now
+steadily at any high pitch of heroic endeavour. It had bought its
+comfort with the demoralisation of its servants. It had no completely
+honest organs; its spirit was clogged by its accumulated insincerities.
+Brought at last face to face with a bitter hostility and a powerful and
+unscrupulous enemy, an enemy socialistic, scientific and efficient to an
+unexampled degree, it seemed indeed to be inspired for a time by an
+unwonted energy and unanimity. Youth and the common people shone. The
+sons of every class went out to fight and die, full of a splendid dream
+of this war. Easy-going vanished from the foreground of the picture. But
+only to creep back again as the first inspiration passed. Presently the
+older men, the seasoned politicians, the owners and hucksters, the
+charming women and the habitual consumers, began to recover from this
+blaze of moral exaltation. Old habits of mind and procedure reasserted
+themselves. The war which had begun so dramatically missed its climax;
+there was neither heroic swift defeat nor heroic swift victory. There
+was indecision; the most trying test of all for an undisciplined people.
+There were great spaces of uneventful fatigue. Before the Battle of the
+Yser had fully developed the dramatic quality had gone out of the war.
+It had ceased to be either a tragedy or a triumph; for both sides it
+became a monstrous strain and wasting. It had become a wearisome
+thrusting against a pressure of evils....
+
+Under that strain the dignity of England broke, and revealed a malignity
+less focussed and intense than the German, but perhaps even more
+distressing. No paternal government had organised the British spirit for
+patriotic ends; it became now peevish and impatient, like some
+ill-trained man who is sick, it directed itself no longer against the
+enemy alone but fitfully against imagined traitors and shirkers; it
+wasted its energies in a deepening and spreading net of internal
+squabbles and accusations. Now it was the wily indolence of the Prime
+Minister, now it was the German culture of the Lord Chancellor, now the
+imaginative enterprise of the First Lord of the Admiralty that focussed
+a vindictive campaign. There began a hunt for spies and of suspects of
+German origin in every quarter except the highest; a denunciation now of
+"traitors," now of people with imaginations, now of scientific men, now
+of the personal friend of the Commander-in-Chief, now of this group and
+then of that group.... Every day Mr. Britling read his three or four
+newspapers with a deepening disappointment.
+
+When he turned from the newspaper to his post, he would find the
+anonymous letter-writer had been busy....
+
+Perhaps Mr. Britling had remarked that Germans were after all human
+beings, or that if England had listened to Matthew Arnold in the
+'eighties our officers by this time might have added efficiency to their
+courage and good temper. Perhaps he had himself put a touch of irritant
+acid into his comment. Back flared the hate. "Who are _you_, Sir? What
+are _you_, Sir? What right have _you_, Sir? What claim have _you_,
+Sir?"...
+
+
+Section 8
+
+"Life had a wrangling birth. On the head of every one of us rests the
+ancestral curse of fifty million murders."
+
+So Mr. Britling's thoughts shaped themselves in words as he prowled one
+night in March, chill and melancholy, across a rushy meadow under an
+overcast sky. The death squeal of some little beast caught suddenly in a
+distant copse had set loose this train of thought. "Life struggling
+under a birth curse?" he thought. "How nearly I come back at times to
+the Christian theology!... And then, Redemption by the shedding of
+blood."
+
+"Life, like a rebellious child, struggling out of the control of the
+hate which made it what it is."
+
+But that was Mr. Britling's idea of Gnosticism, not of orthodox
+Christianity. He went off for a time into faded reminiscences of
+theological reading. What had been the Gnostic idea? That the God of the
+Old Testament was the Devil of the New? But that had been the idea of
+the Manichaeans!...
+
+Mr. Britling, between the black hedges, came back presently from his
+attempts to recall his youthful inquiries into man's ancient
+speculations, to the enduring riddles that have outlasted a thousand
+speculations. Has hate been necessary, and is it still necessary, and
+will it always be necessary? Is all life a war forever? The rabbit is
+nimble, lives keenly, is prevented from degenerating into a diseased
+crawling eater of herbs by the incessant ferret. Without the ferret of
+war, what would life become?... War is murder truly, but is not Peace
+decay?
+
+It was during these prowling nights in the first winter of the war that
+Mr. Britling planned a new writing that was to go whole abysses beneath
+the facile superficiality of "And Now War Ends." It was to be called the
+"Anatomy of Hate." It was to deal very faithfully with the function of
+hate as a corrective to inefficiency. So long as men were slack, men
+must be fierce. This conviction pressed upon him....
+
+In spite of his detestation of war Mr. Britling found it impossible to
+maintain that any sort of peace state was better than a state of war. If
+wars produced destructions and cruelties, peace could produce indolence,
+perversity, greedy accumulation and selfish indulgences. War is
+discipline for evil, but peace may be relaxation from good. The poor man
+may be as wretched in peace time as in war time. The gathering forces of
+an evil peace, the malignity and waste of war, are but obverse and
+reverse of the medal of ill-adjusted human relationships. Was there no
+Greater Peace possible; not a mere recuperative pause in killing and
+destruction, but a phase of noble and creative living, a phase of
+building, of discovery, of beauty and research? He remembered, as one
+remembers the dead, dreams he had once dreamt of the great cities, the
+splendid freedoms, of a coming age, of marvellous enlargements of human
+faculty, of a coming science that would be light and of art that could
+be power....
+
+But would that former peace have ever risen to that?...
+
+After all, had such visions ever been more than idle dreams? Had the war
+done more than unmask reality?...
+
+He came to a gate and leant over it.
+
+The darkness drizzled about him; he turned up his collar and watched the
+dim shapes of trees and hedges gather out of the night to meet the
+dismal dawn. He was cold and hungry and weary.
+
+He may have drowsed; at least he had a vision, very real and plain, a
+vision very different from any dream of Utopia.
+
+It seemed to him that suddenly a mine burst under a great ship at sea,
+that men shouted and women sobbed and cowered, and flares played upon
+the rain-pitted black waves; and then the picture changed and showed a
+battle upon land, and searchlights were flickering through the rain and
+shells flashed luridly, and men darkly seen in silhouette against red
+flames ran with fixed bayonets and slipped and floundered over the mud,
+and at last, shouting thinly through the wind, leapt down into the enemy
+trenches....
+
+And then he was alone again staring over a wet black field towards a dim
+crest of shapeless trees.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+Abruptly and shockingly, this malignity of warfare, which had been so
+far only a festering cluster of reports and stories and rumours and
+suspicions, stretched out its arm into Essex and struck a barb of
+grotesque cruelty into the very heart of Mr. Britling. Late one
+afternoon came a telegram from Filmington-on-Sea, where Aunt Wilshire
+had been recovering her temper in a boarding-house after a round of
+visits in Yorkshire and the moorlands. And she had been "very seriously
+injured" by an overnight German air raid. It was a raid that had not
+been even mentioned in the morning's papers. She had asked to see him.
+
+It was, ran the compressed telegraphic phrase, "advisable to come at
+once."
+
+Mrs. Britling helped him pack a bag, and came with him to the station in
+order to drive the car back to the Dower House; for the gardener's boy
+who had hitherto attended to these small duties had now gone off as an
+unskilled labourer to some munition works at Chelmsford. Mr. Britling
+sat in the slow train that carried him across country to the junction
+for Filmington, and failed altogether to realise what had happened to
+the old lady. He had an absurd feeling that it was characteristic of her
+to intervene in affairs in this manner. She had always been so tough and
+unbent an old lady that until he saw her he could not imagine her as
+being really seriously and pitifully hurt....
+
+But he found her in the hospital very much hurt indeed. She had been
+smashed in some complicated manner that left the upper part of her body
+intact, and lying slantingly upon pillows. Over the horror of bandaged
+broken limbs and tormented flesh below sheets and a counterpane were
+drawn. Morphia had been injected, he understood, to save her from pain,
+but presently it might be necessary for her to suffer. She lay up in her
+bed with an effect of being enthroned, very white and still, her strong
+profile with its big nose and her straggling hair and a certain dignity
+gave her the appearance of some very important, very old man, of an aged
+pope for instance, rather than of an old woman. She had made no remark
+after they had set her and dressed her and put her to bed except "send
+for Hughie Britling, The Dower House, Matching's Easy. He is the best of
+the bunch." She had repeated the address and this commendation firmly
+over and over again, in large print as it were, even after they had
+assured her that a telegram had been despatched.
+
+In the night, they said, she had talked of him.
+
+He was not sure at first that she knew of his presence.
+
+"Here I am, Aunt Wilshire," he said.
+
+She gave no sign.
+
+"Your nephew Hugh."
+
+"Mean and preposterous," she said very distinctly.
+
+But she was not thinking of Mr. Britling. She was talking of something
+else.
+
+She was saying: "It should not have been known I was here. There are
+spies everywhere. Everywhere. There is a spy now--or a lump very like a
+spy. They pretend it is a hot-water bottle. Pretext.... Oh, yes! I
+admit--absurd. But I have been pursued by spies. Endless spies. Endless,
+endless spies. Their devices are almost incredible.... He has never
+forgiven me....
+
+"All this on account of a carpet. A palace carpet. Over which I had no
+control. I spoke my mind. He knew I knew of it. I never concealed it.
+So I was hunted. For years he had meditated revenge. Now he has it. But
+at what a cost! And they call him Emperor. Emperor!
+
+"His arm is withered; his son--imbecile. He will die--without
+dignity...."
+
+Her voice weakened, but it was evident she wanted to say something more.
+
+"I'm here," said Mr. Britling. "Your nephew Hughie."
+
+She listened.
+
+"Can you understand me?" he asked.
+
+She became suddenly an earnest, tender human being. "My dear!" she said,
+and seemed to search for something in her mind and failed to find it.
+
+"You have always understood me," she tried.
+
+"You have always been a good boy to me, Hughie," she said, rather
+vacantly, and added after some moments of still reflection, "_au fond_."
+
+After that she was silent for some minutes, and took no notice of his
+whispers.
+
+Then she recollected what had been in her mind. She put out a hand that
+sought for Mr. Britling's sleeve.
+
+"Hughie!"
+
+"I'm here, Auntie," said Mr. Britling. "I'm here."
+
+"Don't let him get at _your_ Hughie.... Too good for it, dear. Oh!
+much--much too good.... People let these wars and excitements run away
+with them.... They put too much into them.... They aren't--they aren't
+worth it. Don't let him get at your Hughie."
+
+"No!"
+
+"You understand me, Hughie?"
+
+"Perfectly, Auntie."
+
+"Then don't forget it. Ever."
+
+She had said what she wanted to say. She had made her testament. She
+closed her eyes. He was amazed to find this grotesque old creature had
+suddenly become beautiful, in that silvery vein of beauty one sometimes
+finds in very old men. She was exalted as great artists will sometimes
+exalt the portraits of the aged. He was moved to kiss her forehead.
+
+There came a little tug at his sleeve.
+
+"I think that is enough," said the nurse, who had stood forgotten at his
+elbow.
+
+"But I can come again?"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+She indicated departure by a movement of her hand.
+
+
+Section 10
+
+The next day Aunt Wilshire was unconscious of her visitor.
+
+They had altered her position so that she lay now horizontally, staring
+inflexibly at the ceiling and muttering queer old disconnected things.
+
+The Windsor Castle carpet story was still running through her mind, but
+mixed up with it now were scraps of the current newspaper controversies
+about the conduct of the war. And she was still thinking of the dynastic
+aspects of the war. And of spies. She had something upon her mind about
+the King's more German aunts.
+
+"As a precaution," she said, "as a precaution. Watch them all.... The
+Princess Christian.... Laying foundation stones.... Cement.... Guns. Or
+else why should they always be laying foundation stones?... Always....
+Why?... Hushed up....
+
+"None of these things," she said, "in the newspapers. They ought to be."
+
+And then after an interval, very distinctly, "The Duke of Wellington. My
+ancestor--in reality.... Publish and be damned."
+
+After that she lay still....
+
+The doctors and nurses could hold out only very faint hopes to Mr.
+Britling's inquiries; they said indeed it was astonishing that she was
+still alive.
+
+And about seven o'clock that evening she died....
+
+
+Section 11
+
+Mr. Britling, after he had looked at his dead cousin for the last time,
+wandered for an hour or so about the silent little watering-place before
+he returned to his hotel. There was no one to talk to and nothing else
+to do but to think of her death.
+
+The night was cold and bleak, but full of stars. He had already mastered
+the local topography, and he knew now exactly where all the bombs that
+had been showered upon the place had fallen. Here was the corner of
+blackened walls and roasted beams where three wounded horses had been
+burnt alive in a barn, here the row of houses, some smashed, some almost
+intact, where a mutilated child had screamed for two hours before she
+could be rescued from the debris that had pinned her down, and taken to
+the hospital. Everywhere by the dim light of the shaded street lamps he
+could see the black holes and gaps of broken windows; sometimes
+abundant, sometimes rare and exceptional, among otherwise uninjured
+dwellings. Many of the victims he had visited in the little cottage
+hospital where Aunt Wilshire had just died. She was the eleventh dead.
+Altogether fifty-seven people had been killed or injured in this
+brilliant German action. They were all civilians, and only twelve were
+men.
+
+Two Zeppelins had come in from over the sea, and had been fired at by an
+anti-aircraft gun coming on an automobile from Ipswich. The first
+intimation the people of the town had had of the raid was the report of
+this gun. Many had run out to see what was happening. It was doubtful if
+any one had really seen the Zeppelins, though every one testified to the
+sound of their engines. Then suddenly the bombs had come streaming
+down. Only six had made hits upon houses or people; the rest had fallen
+ruinously and very close together on the local golf links, and at least
+half had not exploded at all and did not seem to have been released to
+explode.
+
+A third at least of the injured people had been in bed when destruction
+came upon them.
+
+The story was like a page from some fantastic romance of Jules Verne's;
+the peace of the little old town, the people going to bed, the quiet
+streets, the quiet starry sky, and then for ten minutes an uproar of
+guns and shells, a clatter of breaking glass, and then a fire here, a
+fire there, a child's voice pitched high by pain and terror, scared
+people going to and fro with lanterns, and the sky empty again, the
+raiders gone....
+
+Five minutes before, Aunt Wilshire had been sitting in the
+boarding-house drawing-room playing a great stern "Patience," the
+Emperor Patience ("Napoleon, my dear!--not that Potsdam creature") that
+took hours to do. Five minutes later she was a thing of elemental terror
+and agony, bleeding wounds and shattered bones, plunging about in the
+darkness amidst a heap of wreckage. And already the German airmen were
+buzzing away to sea again, proud of themselves, pleased no doubt--like
+boys who have thrown a stone through a window, beating their way back to
+thanks and rewards, to iron crosses and the proud embraces of delighted
+Fraus and Fraeuleins....
+
+For the first time it seemed to Mr. Britling he really saw the immediate
+horror of war, the dense cruel stupidity of the business, plain and
+close. It was as if he had never perceived anything of the sort before,
+as if he had been dealing with stories, pictures, shows and
+representations that he knew to be shams. But that this dear, absurd old
+creature, this thing of home, this being of familiar humours and
+familiar irritations, should be torn to pieces, left in torment like a
+smashed mouse over which an automobile has passed, brought the whole
+business to a raw and quivering focus. Not a soul among all those who
+had been rent and torn and tortured in this agony of millions, but was
+to any one who understood and had been near to it, in some way lovable,
+in some way laughable, in some way worthy of respect and care. Poor Aunt
+Wilshire was but the sample thrust in his face of all this mangled
+multitude, whose green-white lips had sweated in anguish, whose broken
+bones had thrust raggedly through red dripping flesh.... The detested
+features of the German Crown Prince jerked into the centre of Mr.
+Britling's picture. The young man stood in his dapper uniform and
+grinned under his long nose, carrying himself jauntily, proud of his
+extreme importance to so many lives....
+
+And for a while Mr. Britling could do nothing but rage.
+
+"Devils they are!" he cried to the stars.
+
+"Devils! Devilish fools rather. Cruel blockheads. Apes with all science
+in their hands! My God! but _we will teach them a lesson yet!_..."
+
+That was the key of his mood for an hour of aimless wandering, wandering
+that was only checked at last by a sentinel who turned him back towards
+the town....
+
+He wandered, muttering. He found great comfort in scheming vindictive
+destruction for countless Germans. He dreamt of swift armoured
+aeroplanes swooping down upon the flying airship, and sending it reeling
+earthward, the men screaming. He imagined a shattered Zeppelin
+staggering earthward in the fields behind the Dower House, and how he
+would himself run out with a spade and smite the Germans down. "Quarter
+indeed! Kamerad! Take _that_, you foul murderer!"
+
+In the dim light the sentinel saw the retreating figure of Mr. Britling
+make an extravagant gesture, and wondered what it might mean.
+Signalling? What ought an intelligent sentry to do? Let fly at him?
+Arrest him?... Take no notice?...
+
+Mr. Britling was at that moment killing Count Zeppelin and beating out
+his brains. Count Zeppelin was killed that night and the German Emperor
+was assassinated; a score of lesser victims were offered up to the
+_manes_ of Aunt Wilshire; there were memorable cruelties before the
+wrath and bitterness of Mr. Britling was appeased. And then suddenly he
+had had enough of these thoughts; they were thrust aside, they vanished
+out of his mind.
+
+
+Section 12
+
+All the while that Mr. Britling had been indulging in these imaginative
+slaughterings and spending the tears and hate that had gathered in his
+heart, his reason had been sitting apart and above the storm, like the
+sun waiting above thunder, like a wise nurse watching and patient above
+the wild passions of a child. And all the time his reason had been
+maintaining silently and firmly, without shouting, without speech, that
+the men who had made this hour were indeed not devils, were no more
+devils than Mr. Britling was a devil, but sinful men of like nature with
+himself, hard, stupid, caught in the same web of circumstance. "Kill
+them in your passion if you will," said reason, "but understand. This
+thing was done neither by devils nor fools, but by a conspiracy of
+foolish motives, by the weak acquiescences of the clever, by a crime
+that was no man's crime but the natural necessary outcome of the
+ineffectiveness, the blind motives and muddleheadedness of all mankind."
+
+So reason maintained her thesis, like a light above the head of Mr.
+Britling at which he would not look, while he hewed airmen to quivering
+rags with a spade that he had sharpened, and stifled German princes with
+their own poison gas, given slowly and as painfully as possible. "And
+what of the towns _our_ ships have bombarded?" asked reason unheeded.
+"What of those Tasmanians _our_ people utterly swept away?"
+
+"What of French machine-guns in the Atlas?" reason pressed the case. "Of
+Himalayan villages burning? Of the things we did in China? Especially
+of the things we did in China...."
+
+Mr. Britling gave no heed to that.
+
+"The Germans in China were worse than we were," he threw out....
+
+He was maddened by the thought of the Zeppelin making off, high and far
+in the sky, a thing dwindling to nothing among the stars, and the
+thought of those murderers escaping him. Time after time he stood still
+and shook his fist at Booetes, slowly sweeping up the sky....
+
+And at last, sick and wretched, he sat down on a seat upon the deserted
+parade under the stars, close to the soughing of the invisible sea
+below....
+
+His mind drifted back once more to those ancient heresies of the
+Gnostics and the Manichaeans which saw the God of the World as altogether
+evil, which sought only to escape by the utmost abstinences and evasions
+and perversions from the black wickedness of being. For a while his soul
+sank down into the uncongenial darknesses of these creeds of despair. "I
+who have loved life," he murmured, and could have believed for a time
+that he wished he had never had a son....
+
+Is the whole scheme of nature evil? Is life in its essence cruel? Is man
+stretched quivering upon the table of the eternal vivisector for no
+end--and without pity?
+
+These were thoughts that Mr. Britling had never faced before the war.
+They came to him now, and they came only to be rejected by the inherent
+quality of his mind. For weeks, consciously and subconsciously, his mind
+had been grappling with this riddle. He had thought of it during his
+lonely prowlings as a special constable; it had flung itself in
+monstrous symbols across the dark canvas of his dreams. "Is there indeed
+a devil of pure cruelty? Does any creature, even the very cruellest of
+creatures, really apprehend the pain it causes, or inflict it for the
+sake of the infliction?" He summoned a score of memories, a score of
+imaginations, to bear their witness before the tribunal of his mind. He
+forgot cold and loneliness in this speculation. He sat, trying all
+Being, on this score, under the cold indifferent stars.
+
+He thought of certain instances of boyish cruelty that had horrified him
+in his own boyhood, and it was clear to him that indeed it was not
+cruelty, it was curiosity, dense textured, thick skinned, so that it
+could not feel even the anguish of a blinded cat. Those boys who had
+wrung his childish soul to nigh intolerable misery, had not indeed been
+tormenting so much as observing torment, testing life as wantonly as one
+breaks thin ice in the early days of winter. In very much cruelty the
+real motive is surely no worse than that obtuse curiosity; a mere step
+of understanding, a mere quickening of the nerves and mind, makes it
+impossible. But that is not true of all or most cruelty. Most cruelty
+has something else in it, something more than the clumsy plunging into
+experience of the hobbledehoy; it is vindictive or indignant; it is
+never tranquil and sensuous; it draws its incentive, however crippled
+and monstrous the justification may be, from something punitive in man's
+instinct, something therefore that implies a sense, however misguided,
+of righteousness and vindication. That factor is present even in spite;
+when some vile or atrocious thing is done out of envy or malice, that
+envy and malice has in it always--_always?_ Yes, always--a genuine
+condemnation of the hated thing as an unrighteous thing, as an unjust
+usurpation, as an inexcusable privilege, as a sinful overconfidence.
+Those men in the airship?--he was coming to that. He found himself
+asking himself whether it was possible for a human being to do any cruel
+act without an excuse--or, at least, without the feeling of
+excusability. And in the case of these Germans and the outrages they had
+committed and the retaliations they had provoked, he perceived that
+always there was the element of a perceptible if inadequate
+justification. Just as there would be if presently he were to maltreat a
+fallen German airman. There was anger in their vileness. These Germans
+were an unsubtle people, a people in the worst and best sense of the
+words, plain and honest; they were prone to moral indignation; and moral
+indignation is the mother of most of the cruelty in the world. They
+perceived the indolence of the English and Russians, they perceived
+their disregard of science and system, they could not perceive the
+longer reach of these greater races, and it seemed to them that the
+mission of Germany was to chastise and correct this laxity. Surely, they
+had argued, God was not on the side of those who kept an untilled field.
+So they had butchered these old ladies and slaughtered these children
+just to show us the consequences:
+
+ "All along of dirtiness, all along of mess,
+ All along of doing things rather more or less."
+
+The very justification our English poet has found for a thousand
+overbearing actions in the East! "Forget not order and the real," that
+was the underlying message of bomb and gas and submarine. After all,
+what right had we English _not_ to have a gun or an aeroplane fit to
+bring down that Zeppelin ignominiously and conclusively? Had we not
+undertaken Empire? Were we not the leaders of great nations? Had we
+indeed much right to complain if our imperial pose was flouted? "There,
+at least," said Mr. Britling's reason, "is one of the lines of thought
+that brought that unseen cruelty out of the night high over the houses
+of Filmington-on-Sea. That, in a sense, is the cause of this killing.
+Cruel it is and abominable, yes, but is it altogether cruel? Hasn't it,
+after all, a sort of stupid rightness?--isn't it a stupid reaction to an
+indolence at least equally stupid?"
+
+What was this rightness that lurked below cruelty? What was the
+inspiration of this pressure of spite, this anger that was aroused by
+ineffective gentleness and kindliness? Was it indeed an altogether evil
+thing; was it not rather an impulse, blind as yet, but in its ultimate
+quality _as good as mercy_, greater perhaps in its ultimate values than
+mercy?
+
+This idea had been gathering in Mr. Britling's mind for many weeks; it
+had been growing and taking shape as he wrote, making experimental
+beginnings for his essay, "The Anatomy of Hate." Is there not, he now
+asked himself plainly, a creative and corrective impulse behind all
+hate? Is not this malignity indeed only the ape-like precursor of the
+great disciplines of a creative state?
+
+The invincible hopefulness of his sanguine temperament had now got Mr.
+Britling well out of the pessimistic pit again. Already he had been on
+the verge of his phrase while wandering across the rushy fields towards
+Market Saffron; now it came to him again like a legitimate monarch
+returning from exile.
+
+"When hate shall have become creative energy....
+
+"Hate which passes into creative power; gentleness which is indolence
+and the herald of euthanasia....
+
+"Pity is but a passing grace; for mankind will not always be pitiful."
+
+But meanwhile, meanwhile.... How long were men so to mingle wrong with
+right, to be energetic without mercy and kindly without energy?...
+
+For a time Mr. Britling sat on the lonely parade under the stars and in
+the sound of the sea, brooding upon these ideas.
+
+His mind could make no further steps. It had worked for its spell. His
+rage had ebbed away now altogether. His despair was no longer infinite.
+But the world was dark and dreadful still. It seemed none the less dark
+because at the end there was a gleam of light. It was a gleam of light
+far beyond the limits of his own life, far beyond the life of his son.
+It had no balm for these sufferings. Between it and himself stretched
+the weary generations still to come, generations of bickering and
+accusation, greed and faintheartedness, and half truth and the hasty
+blow. And all those years would be full of pitiful things, such pitiful
+things as the blackened ruins in the town behind, the little grey-faced
+corpses, the lives torn and wasted, the hopes extinguished and the
+gladness gone....
+
+He was no longer thinking of the Germans as diabolical. They were human;
+they had a case. It was a stupid case, but our case, too, was a stupid
+case. How stupid were all our cases! What was it we missed? Something,
+he felt, very close to us, and very elusive. Something that would
+resolve a hundred tangled oppositions....
+
+His mind hung at that. Back upon his consciousness came crowding the
+horrors and desolations that had been his daily food now for three
+quarters of a year. He groaned aloud. He struggled against that renewed
+envelopment of his spirit. "Oh, blood-stained fools!" he cried, "oh,
+pitiful, tormented fools!
+
+"Even that vile airship was a ship of fools!
+
+"We are all fools still. Striving apes, irritated beyond measure by our
+own striving, easily moved to anger."
+
+Some train of subconscious suggestion brought a long-forgotten speech
+back into Mr. Britling's mind, a speech that is full of that light which
+still seeks so mysteriously and indefatigably to break through the
+darkness and thickness of the human mind.
+
+He whispered the words. No unfamiliar words could have had the same
+effect of comfort and conviction.
+
+He whispered it of those men whom he still imagined flying far away
+there eastward, through the clear freezing air beneath the stars, those
+muffled sailors and engineers who had caused so much pain and agony in
+this little town.
+
+"_Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do._"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FOURTH
+
+IN THE WEB OF THE INEFFECTIVE
+
+
+Section 1
+
+Hugh's letters were becoming a very important influence upon Mr.
+Britling's thought. Hugh had always been something of a letter-writer,
+and now what was perhaps an inherited desire to set things down was
+manifest. He had been accustomed to decorate his letters from school
+with absurd little sketches--sometimes his letters had been all
+sketches--and now he broke from drawing to writing and back to drawing
+in a way that pleased his father mightily. The father loved this queer
+trick of caricature; he did not possess it himself, and so it seemed to
+him the most wonderful of all Hugh's little equipment of gifts. Mr.
+Britling used to carry these letters about until their edges got grimy;
+he would show them to any one he felt capable of appreciating their
+youthful freshness; he would quote them as final and conclusive evidence
+to establish this or that. He did not dream how many thousands of
+mothers and fathers were treasuring such documents. He thought other
+sons were dull young men by comparison with Hugh.
+
+The earlier letters told much of the charms of discipline and the open
+air. "All the bother about what one has to do with oneself is over,"
+wrote Hugh. "One has disposed of oneself. That has the effect of a great
+relief. Instead of telling oneself that one ought to get up in the
+morning, a bugle tells you that.... And there's no nonsense about it, no
+chance of lying and arguing about it with oneself.... I begin to see the
+sense of men going into monasteries and putting themselves under rules.
+One is carried along in a sort of moral automobile instead of trudging
+the road...."
+
+And he was also sounding new physical experiences.
+
+"Never before," he declared, "have I known what fatigue is. It's a
+miraculous thing. One drops down in one's clothes on any hard old thing
+and sleeps...."
+
+And in his early letters he was greatly exercised by the elementary
+science of drill and discipline, and the discussion of whether these
+things were necessary. He began by assuming that their importance was
+overrated. He went on to discover that they constituted the very
+essentials of all good soldiering. "In a crisis," he concluded, "there
+is no telling what will get hold of a man, his higher instincts or his
+lower. He may show courage of a very splendid sort--or a hasty
+discretion. A habit is much more trustworthy than an instinct. So
+discipline sets up a habit of steady and courageous bearing. If you keep
+your head you are at liberty to be splendid. If you lose it, the habit
+will carry you through."
+
+The young man was also very profound upon the effects of the suggestion
+of various exercises upon the mind.
+
+"It is surprising how bloodthirsty one feels in a bayonet charge. We
+have to shout; we are encouraged to shout. The effect is to paralyse
+one's higher centres. One ceases to question--anything. One becomes a
+'bayoneteer.' As I go bounding forward I imagine fat men, succulent men
+ahead, and I am filled with the desire to do them in neatly. This sort
+of thing--"
+
+A sketch of slaughter followed, with a large and valiant Hugh leaving a
+train of fallen behind him.
+
+"Not like this. This is how I used to draw it in my innocent childhood,
+but it is incorrect. More than one German on the bayonet at a time is an
+incumbrance. And it would be swank--a thing we detest in the army."
+
+The second sketch showed the same brave hero with half a dozen of the
+enemy skewered like cat's-meat.
+
+"As for the widows and children, I disregard 'em."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+But presently Hugh began to be bored.
+
+"Route marching again," he wrote. "For no earthly reason than that they
+can do nothing else with us. We are getting no decent musketry training
+because there are no rifles. We are wasting half our time. If you
+multiply half a week by the number of men in the army you will see we
+waste centuries weekly.... If most of these men here had just been
+enrolled and left to go about their business while we trained officers
+and instructors and got equipment for them, and if they had then been
+put through their paces as rapidly as possible, it would have been
+infinitely better for the country.... In a sort of way we are keeping
+raw; in a sort of way we are getting stale.... I get irritated by this.
+I feel we are not being properly done by.
+
+"Half our men are educated men, reasonably educated, but we are always
+being treated as though we were too stupid for words....
+
+"No good grousing, I suppose, but after Statesminster and a glimpse of
+old Cardinal's way of doing things, one gets a kind of toothache in the
+mind at the sight of everything being done twice as slowly and half as
+well as it need be."
+
+He went off at a tangent to describe the men in his platoon. "The best
+man in our lot is an ex-grocer's assistant, but in order to save us from
+vain generalisations it happens that the worst man--a moon-faced
+creature, almost incapable of lacing up his boots without help and
+objurgation--is also an ex-grocer's assistant. Our most offensive member
+is a little cad with a snub nose, who has read Kipling and imagines he
+is the nearest thing that ever has been to Private Ortheris. He goes
+about looking for the other two of the Soldiers Three; it is rather like
+an unpopular politician trying to form a ministry. And he is
+conscientiously foul-mouthed. He feels losing a chance of saying
+'bloody' as acutely as a snob feels dropping an H. He goes back
+sometimes and says the sentence over again and puts the 'bloody' in. I
+used to swear a little out of the range of your parental ear, but
+Ortheris has cured me. When he is about I am mincing in my speech. I
+perceive now that cursing is a way of chewing one's own dirt. In a
+platoon there is no elbow-room for indifference; you must either love or
+hate. I have a feeling that my first taste of battle will not be with
+Germans, but with Private Ortheris...."
+
+And one letter was just a picture, a parody of the well-known picture of
+the bivouac below and the soldier's dream of return to his beloved
+above. But Master Hugh in the dream was embracing an enormous retort,
+while a convenient galvanometer registered his emotion and little
+tripods danced around him.
+
+
+Section 3
+
+Then came a letter which plunged abruptly into criticism.
+
+"My dear Parent, this is a swearing letter. I must let go to somebody.
+And somehow none of the other chaps are convenient. I don't know if I
+ought to be put against a wall and shot for it, but I hereby declare
+that all the officers of this battalion over and above the rank of
+captain are a constellation of incapables--and several of the captains
+are herewith included. Some of them are men of a pleasant disposition
+and carefully aborted mental powers, and some are men of an unpleasant
+disposition and no mental powers at all. And I believe--a little
+enlightened by your recent letter to _The Times_--that they are a fair
+sample of the entire 'army' class which has got to win this war. Usually
+they are indolent, but when they are thoroughly roused they are fussy.
+The time they should spend in enlarging their minds and increasing their
+military efficiency they devote to keeping fit. They are, roughly
+speaking, fit--for nothing. They cannot move us thirty miles without
+getting half of us left about, without losing touch with food and
+shelter, and starving us for thirty-six hours or so in the process, and
+they cannot count beyond the fingers of one hand, not having learnt to
+use the nose for arithmetical operations.... I conclude this war is
+going to be a sort of Battle of Inkerman on a large scale. We chaps in
+the ranks will have to do the job. Leading is 'off.'...
+
+"All of this, my dear Parent, is just a blow off. I have been needlessly
+starved, and fagged to death and exasperated. We have moved
+five-and-twenty miles across country--in fifty-seven hours. And without
+food for about eighteen hours. I have been with my Captain, who has been
+billeting us here in Cheasingholt. Oh, he is a MUFF! Oh God! oh God of
+Heaven! what a MUFF! He is afraid of printed matter, but he controls
+himself heroically. He prides himself upon having no 'sense of locality,
+confound it!' Prides himself! He went about this village, which is a
+little dispersed, at a slight trot, and wouldn't avail himself of the
+one-inch map I happened to have. He judged the capacity of each room
+with his eye and wouldn't let me measure, even with God's own paces. Not
+with the legs I inherit. 'We'll put five fellahs hea!' he said. 'What
+d'you want to measure the room for? We haven't come to lay down
+carpets.' Then, having assigned men by _coup d'oeil_, so as to congest
+half the village miserably, he found the other half unoccupied and had
+to begin all over again. 'If you measured the floor space first, sir,' I
+said, 'and made a list of the houses--' 'That isn't the way I'm going to
+do it,' he said, fixing me with a pitiless eye....
+
+"That isn't the way they are going to do it, Daddy! The sort of thing
+that is done over here in the green army will be done over there in the
+dry. They won't be in time; they'll lose their guns where now they lose
+our kitchens. I'm a mute soldier; I've got to do what I'm told; still,
+I begin to understand the Battle of Neuve Chapelle.
+
+"They say the relations of men and officers in the new army are
+beautiful. Some day I may learn to love my officer--but not just yet.
+Not till I've forgotten the operations leading up to the occupation of
+Cheasingholt.... He muffs his real job without a blush, and yet he would
+rather be shot than do his bootlaces up criss-cross. What I say about
+officers applies only and solely to him really.... How well I understand
+now the shooting of officers by their men.... But indeed, fatigue and
+exasperation apart, this shift has been done atrociously...."
+
+The young man returned to these criticisms in a later letter.
+
+"You will think I am always carping, but it does seem to me that nearly
+everything is being done here in the most wasteful way possible. We
+waste time, we waste labour, we waste material, oh Lord! how we waste
+our country's money. These aren't, I can assure you, the opinions of a
+conceited young man. It's nothing to be conceited about.... We're bored
+to death by standing about this infernal little village. There is
+nothing to do--except trail after a small number of slatternly young
+women we despise and hate. I _don't_, Daddy. And I don't drink. Why have
+I inherited no vices? We had a fight here yesterday--sheer boredom.
+Ortheris has a swollen lip, and another private has a bad black eye.
+There is to be a return match. I perceive the chief horror of warfare is
+boredom....
+
+"Our feeding here is typical of the whole system. It is a system
+invented not with any idea of getting the best results--that does not
+enter into the War Office philosophy--but to have a rule for everything,
+and avoid arguments. There is rather too generous an allowance of bread
+and stuff per man, and there is a very fierce but not very efficient
+system of weighing and checking. A rather too generous allowance is, of
+course, a direct incentive to waste or stealing--as any one but our
+silly old duffer of a War Office would know. The checking is for
+quantity, which any fool can understand, rather than for quality. The
+test for the quality of army meat is the smell. If it doesn't smell bad,
+it is good....
+
+"Then the raw material is handed over to a cook. He is a common soldier
+who has been made into a cook by a simple ceremony. He is told, 'You are
+a cook.' He does his best to be. Usually he roasts or bakes to begin
+with, guessing when the joint is done, afterwards he hacks up what is
+left of his joints and makes a stew for next day. A stew is hacked meat
+boiled up in a big pot. It has much fat floating on the top. After you
+have eaten your fill you want to sit about quiet. The men are fed
+usually in a large tent or barn. We have a barn. It is not a clean barn,
+and just to make it more like a picnic there are insufficient plates,
+knives and forks. (I tell you, no army people can count beyond eight or
+ten.) The corporals after their morning's work have to carve. When they
+have done carving they tell me they feel they have had enough dinner.
+They sit about looking pale, and wander off afterwards to the village
+pub. (I shall probably become a corporal soon.) In these islands before
+the war began there was a surplus of women over men of about a million.
+(See the publications of the Fabian Society, now so popular among the
+young.) None of these women have been trusted by the government with the
+difficult task of cooking and giving out food to our soldiers. No man of
+the ordinary soldier class ever cooks anything until he is a soldier....
+All food left over after the stew or otherwise rendered uneatable by the
+cook is thrown away. We throw away pail-loads. _We bury meat_....
+
+"Also we get three pairs of socks. We work pretty hard. We don't know
+how to darn socks. When the heels wear through, come blisters. Bad
+blisters disable a man. Of the million of surplus women (see above) the
+government has not had the intelligence to get any to darn our socks.
+So a certain percentage of us go lame. And so on. And so on.
+
+"You will think all this is awful grousing, but the point I want to
+make--I hereby to ease my feelings make it now in a fair round hand--is
+that all this business could be done far better and far cheaper if it
+wasn't left to these absolutely inexperienced and extremely exclusive
+military gentlemen. They think they are leading England and showing us
+all how; instead of which they are just keeping us back. Why in thunder
+are they doing everything? Not one of them, when he is at home, is
+allowed to order the dinner or poke his nose into his own kitchen or
+check the household books.... The ordinary British colonel is a helpless
+old gentleman; he ought to have a nurse.... This is not merely the
+trivial grievance of my insulted stomach, it is a serious matter for the
+country. Sooner or later the country may want the food that is being
+wasted in all these capers. In the aggregate it must amount to a daily
+destruction of tons of stuff of all sorts. Tons.... Suppose the war
+lasts longer than we reckon!"
+
+From this point Hugh's letter jumped to a general discussion of the
+military mind.
+
+"Our officers are beastly good chaps, nearly all of them. That's where
+the perplexity of the whole thing comes in. If only they weren't such
+good chaps! If only they were like the Prussian officers to their men,
+then we'd just take on a revolution as well as the war, and make
+everything tidy at once. But they are decent, they are charming.... Only
+they do not think hard, and they do not understand that doing a job
+properly means doing it as directly and thought-outly as you possibly
+can. They won't worry about things. If their tempers were worse perhaps
+their work might be better. They won't use maps or timetables or books
+of reference. When we move to a new place they pick up what they can
+about it by hearsay; not one of our lot has the gumption to possess a
+contoured map or a Michelin guide. They have hearsay minds. They are
+fussy and petty and wasteful--and, in the way of getting things done,
+pretentious. By their code they're paragons of honour. Courage--they're
+all right about that; no end of it; honesty, truthfulness, and so
+on--high. They have a kind of horsey standard of smartness and pluck,
+too, that isn't bad, and they have a fine horror of whiskers and being
+unbuttoned. But the mistake they make is to class thinking with
+whiskers, as a sort of fussy sidegrowth. Instead of classing it with
+unbuttonedupness. They hate economy. And preparation....
+
+"They won't see that inefficiency is a sort of dishonesty. If a man
+doesn't steal sixpence, they think it a light matter if he wastes half a
+crown. Here follows wisdom! _From the point of view of a nation at war,
+sixpence is just a fifth part of half a crown_....
+
+"When I began this letter I was boiling with indignation, complicated, I
+suspect, by this morning's 'stew'; now I have written thus far I feel
+I'm an ungenerous grumbler.... It is remarkable, my dear Parent, that I
+let off these things to you. I like writing to you. I couldn't possibly
+say the things I can write. Heinrich had a confidential friend at
+Breslau to whom he used to write about his Soul. I never had one of
+those Teutonic friendships. And I haven't got a Soul. But I have to
+write. One must write to some one--and in this place there is nothing
+else to do. And now the old lady downstairs is turning down the gas; she
+always does at half-past ten. She didn't ought. She gets--ninepence
+each. Excuse the pencil...."
+
+That letter ended abruptly. The next two were brief and cheerful. Then
+suddenly came a new note.
+
+"We've got rifles! We're real armed soldiers at last. Every blessed man
+has got a rifle. And they come from Japan! They are of a sort of light
+wood that is like new oak and art furniture, and makes one feel that
+one belongs to the First Garden Suburb Regiment; but I believe much can
+be done with linseed oil. And they are real rifles, they go bang. We are
+a little light-headed about them. Only our training and discipline
+prevent our letting fly at incautious spectators on the skyline. I saw a
+man yesterday about half a mile off. I was possessed by the idea that I
+could get him--right in the middle.... Ortheris, the little beast, has
+got a motor-bicycle, which he calls his 'b----y oto'--no one knows
+why--and only death or dishonourable conduct will save me, I gather,
+from becoming a corporal in the course of the next month...."
+
+
+Section 4
+
+A subsequent letter threw fresh light on the career of the young man
+with the "oto." Before the rifle and the "oto," and in spite of his
+fights with some person or persons unknown, Ortheris found trouble. Hugh
+told the story with the unblushing _savoir-faire_ of the very young.
+
+"By the by, Ortheris, following the indications of his creator and
+succumbing to the universal boredom before the rifles came, forgot Lord
+Kitchener's advice and attempted 'seduktion.' With painful results which
+he insists upon confiding to the entire platoon. He has been severely
+smacked and scratched by the proposed victim, and warned off the
+premises (licensed premises) by her father and mother--both formidable
+persons. They did more than warn him off the premises. They had
+displayed neither a proper horror of Don Juan nor a proper respect for
+the King's uniform. Mother, we realise, got hold of him and cuffed him
+severely. 'What the 'ell's a chap to do?' cried Ortheris. 'You can't go
+'itting a woman back.' Father had set a dog on him. A less ingenuous
+character would be silent about such passages--I should be too
+egotistical and humiliated altogether--but that is not his quality. He
+tells us in tones of naive wonder. He talks about it and talks about
+it. 'I don't care what the old woman did,' he says, 'not--reely. What
+'urts me about it is that I jest made a sort of mistake 'ow _she'd_ tike
+it. You see, I sort of feel I've 'urt and insulted _'er_. And reely I
+didn't mean to. Swap me, I didn't mean to. Gawd 'elp me. I wouldn't 'ave
+'ad it 'appened as it 'as 'appened, not for worlds. And now I can't get
+round to 'er, or anyfing, not to explain.... You chaps may laugh, but
+you don't know what there is _in_ it.... I tell you it worries me
+something frightful. You think I'm just a little cad who took liberties
+he didn't ought to. (Note of anger drowning uncharitable grunts of
+assent.) 'Ow the 'ell is 'e to know _when_ 'e didn't ought to? ... I
+_swear_ she liked me....'
+
+"This kind of thing goes on for hours--in the darkness.
+
+"'I'd got regular sort of fond of 'er.'
+
+"And the extraordinary thing is it makes me begin to get regular fond of
+Ortheris.
+
+"I think it is because the affair has surprised him right out of acting
+Ortheris and Tommy Atkins for a bit, into his proper self. He's
+frightfully like some sort of mongrel with a lot of wiry-haired terrier
+and a touch of Airedale in it. A mongrel you like in spite of the
+flavour of all the horrid things he's been nosing into. And he's as hard
+as nails and, my dear daddy! he can't box for nuts."
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Mr. Britling, with an understanding much quickened by Hugh's letters,
+went about Essex in his automobile, and on one or two journeys into
+Berkshire and Buckinghamshire, and marked the steady conversion of the
+old pacific countryside into an armed camp. He was disposed to minimise
+Hugh's criticisms. He found in them something of the harshness of youth,
+which is far too keen-edged to be tolerant with half performance and
+our poor human evasion of perfection's overstrain. "Our poor human
+evasion of perfection's overstrain"; this phrase was Mr. Britling's. To
+Mr. Britling, looking less closely and more broadly, the new army was a
+pride and a marvel.
+
+He liked to come into some quiet village and note the clusters of sturdy
+khaki-clad youngsters going about their business, the tethered horses,
+the air of subdued bustle, the occasional glimpses of guns and
+ammunition trains. Wherever one went now there were soldiers and still
+more soldiers. There was a steady flow of men into Flanders, and
+presently to Gallipoli, but it seemed to have no effect upon the
+multitude in training at home. He was pleasantly excited by the evident
+increase in the proportion of military material upon the railways; he
+liked the promise and mystery of the long lines of trucks bearing
+tarpaulin-covered wagons and carts and guns that he would pass on his
+way to Liverpool Street station. He could apprehend defeat in the
+silence of the night, but when he saw the men, when he went about the
+land, then it was impossible to believe in any end but victory....
+
+But through the spring and summer there was no victory. The "great
+offensive" of May was checked and abandoned after a series of
+ineffective and very costly attacks between Ypres and Soissons. The
+Germans had developed a highly scientific defensive in which
+machine-guns replaced rifles and a maximum of punishment was inflicted
+upon an assaulting force with a minimum of human loss. The War Office
+had never thought much of machine-guns before, but now it thought a good
+deal. Moreover, the energies of Britain were being turned more and more
+towards the Dardanelles.
+
+The idea of an attack upon the Dardanelles had a traditional
+attractiveness for the British mind. Old men had been brought up from
+childhood with "forcing the Dardanelles" as a familiar phrase; it had
+none of the flighty novelty and vulgarity about it that made an "aerial
+offensive" seem so unwarrantable a proceeding. Forcing the Dardanelles
+was historically British. It made no break with tradition. Soon after
+Turkey entered the war British submarines appeared in the Sea of
+Marmora, and in February a systematic bombardment of the Dardanelles
+began; this was continued intermittently for a month, the defenders
+profiting by their experiences and by spells of bad weather to
+strengthen their works. This first phase of the attack culminated in the
+loss of the _Irresistible_, _Ocean_, and _Bouvet_, when on the 17th of
+March the attacking fleet closed in upon the Narrows. After an interlude
+of six weeks to allow of further preparations on the part of the
+defenders, who were now thoroughly alive to what was coming, the Allied
+armies gathered upon the scene, and a difficult and costly landing was
+achieved at two points upon the peninsula of Gallipoli. With that began
+a slow and bloody siege of the defences of the Dardanelles, clambering
+up to the surprise landing of a fresh British army in Suvla Bay in
+August, and its failure in the battle of Anafarta, through incompetent
+commanders and a general sloppiness of leading, to cut off and capture
+Maidos and the Narrows defences.... Meanwhile the Russian hosts, which
+had reached their high-water mark in the capture of Przemysl, were being
+forced back first in the south and then in the north. The Germans
+recaptured Lemberg, entered Warsaw, and pressed on to take Brest
+Litowsk. The Russian lines rolled back with an impressive effect of
+defeat, and the Germans thrust towards Riga and Petrograd, reaching
+Vilna about the middle of September....
+
+Day after day Mr. Britling traced the swaying fortunes of the conflict,
+with impatience, with perplexity, but with no loss of confidence in the
+ultimate success of Britain. The country was still swarming with troops,
+and still under summer sunshine. A second hay harvest redeemed the
+scantiness of the first, the wheat crops were wonderful, and the great
+fig tree at the corner of the Dower House had never borne so bountifully
+nor such excellent juicy figs....
+
+And one day in early June while those figs were still only a hope, Teddy
+appeared at the Dower House with Letty, to say good-bye before going to
+the front. He was going out in a draft to fill up various gaps and
+losses; he did not know where. Essex was doing well but bloodily over
+there. Mrs. Britling had tea set out upon the lawn under the blue cedar,
+and Mr. Britling found himself at a loss for appropriate sayings, and
+talked in his confusion almost as though Teddy's departure was of no
+significance at all. He was still haunted by that odd sense of
+responsibility for Teddy. Teddy was not nearly so animated as he had
+been in his pre-khaki days; there was a quiet exaltation in his manner
+rather than a lively excitement. He knew now what he was in for. He knew
+now that war was not a lark, that for him it was to be the gravest
+experience he had ever had or was likely to have. There were no more
+jokes about Letty's pension, and a general avoidance of the topics of
+high explosives and asphyxiating gas....
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Britling took the young people to the gate.
+
+"Good luck!" cried Mr. Britling as they receded.
+
+Teddy replied with a wave of the hand.
+
+Mr. Britling stood watching them for some moments as they walked towards
+the little cottage which was to be the scene of their private parting.
+
+"I don't like his going," he said. "I hope it will be all right with
+him.... Teddy's so grave nowadays. It's a mean thing, I know, it has
+none of the Roman touch, but I am glad that this can't happen with
+Hugh--" He computed. "Not for a year and three months, even if they
+march him into it upon his very birthday....
+
+"It may all he over by then...."
+
+
+Section 6
+
+In that computation he reckoned without Hugh.
+
+Within a month Hugh was also saying "Good-bye."
+
+"But how's this?" protested Mr. Britling, who had already guessed the
+answer. "You're not nineteen."
+
+"I'm nineteen enough for this job," said Hugh. "In fact, I enlisted as
+nineteen."
+
+Mr. Britling said nothing for a little while. Then he spoke with a catch
+in his breath. "I don't blame you," he said. "It was--the right spirit."
+
+Drill and responsibilities of non-commissioned rank had imposed a novel
+manliness upon the bearing of Corporal Britling. "I always classified a
+little above my age at Statesminster," he said as though that cleared up
+everything.
+
+He looked at a rosebud as though it interested him. Then he remarked
+rather casually:
+
+"I thought," he said, "that if I was to go to war I'd better do the
+thing properly. It seemed--sort of half and half--not to be eligible for
+the trenches.... I ought to have told you...."
+
+"Yes," Mr. Britling decided.
+
+"I was shy about it at first.... I thought perhaps the war would be over
+before it was necessary to discuss anything.... Didn't want to go into
+it."
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Britling as though that was a complete explanation.
+
+"It's been a good year for your roses," said Hugh.
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Hugh was to stop the night. He spent what seemed to him and every one a
+long, shy, inexpressive evening. Only the small boys were really natural
+and animated. They were much impressed and excited by his departure, and
+wanted to ask a hundred questions about the life in the trenches. Many
+of them Hugh had to promise to answer when he got there. Then he would
+see just exactly how things were. Mrs. Britling was motherly and
+intelligent about his outfit. "Will you want winter things?" she
+asked....
+
+But when he was alone with his father after every one had gone to bed
+they found themselves able to talk.
+
+"This sort of thing seems more to us than it would be to a French
+family," Hugh remarked, standing on the hearthrug.
+
+"Yes," agreed Mr. Britling. "Their minds would be better prepared....
+They'd have their appropriate things to say. They have been educated by
+the tradition of service--and '71."
+
+Then he spoke--almost resentfully.
+
+"The older men ought to go before you boys. Who is to carry on if a lot
+of you get killed?"
+
+Hugh reflected. "In the stiffest battle that ever can be the odds are
+against getting killed," he said.
+
+"I suppose they are."
+
+"One in three or four in the very hottest corners."
+
+Mr. Britling expressed no satisfaction.
+
+"Every one is going through something of this sort."
+
+"All the decent people, at any rate," said Mr. Britling....
+
+"It will be an extraordinary experience. Somehow it seems out of
+proportion--"
+
+"With what?"
+
+"With life generally. As one has known it."
+
+"It isn't in proportion," Mr. Britling admitted.
+
+"Incommensurables," said Hugh.
+
+He considered his phrasing. "It's not," he said, "as though one was
+going into another part of the same world, or turning up another side of
+the world one was used to. It is just as if one had been living in a
+room and one had been asked to step outside.... It makes me think of a
+queer little thing that happened when I was in London last winter. I
+got into Queer Company. I don't think I told you. I went to have supper
+with some students in Chelsea. I hadn't been to the place before, but
+they seemed all right--just people like me--and everybody. And after
+supper they took me on to some people _they_ didn't know very well;
+people who had to do with some School of Dramatic Art. There were two or
+three young actresses there and a singer and people of that sort,
+sitting about smoking cigarettes, and we began talking plays and books
+and picture shows and all that stuff; and suddenly there was a knocking
+at the door and some one went out and found a policeman with a warrant
+on the landing. They took off our host's son.... It had to do with a
+murder...."
+
+Hugh paused. "It was the Bedford Mansions mystery. I don't suppose you
+remember about it or read about it at the time. He'd killed a man.... It
+doesn't matter about the particulars anyhow, but what I mean is the
+effect. The effect of a comfortable well-lit orderly room and the sense
+of harmless people--and then the door opening and the policeman and the
+cold draught flowing in. _Murder!_ A girl who seemed to know the people
+well explained to me in whispers what was happening. It was like the
+opening of a trap-door going down into some pit you have always known
+was there, but never really believed in."
+
+"I know," said Mr. Britling. "I know."
+
+"That's just how I feel about this war business. There's no real death
+over here. It's laid out and boxed up. And accidents are all padded
+about. If one got a toss from a horse here, you'd be in bed and
+comfortable in no time.... And there; it's like another planet. It's
+outside.... I'm going outside.... Instead of there being no death
+anywhere, it is death everywhere, outside there. We shall be using our
+utmost wits to kill each other. A kind of reverse to this world."
+
+Mr. Britling nodded.
+
+"I've never seen a dead body yet. In Dower-House land there aren't dead
+bodies."
+
+"We've kept things from you--horrid things of that sort."
+
+"I'm not complaining," said Hugh.... "But--Master Hugh--the Master Hugh
+you kept things from--will never come back."
+
+He went on quickly as his father raised distressed eyes to him. "I mean
+that anyhow _this_ Hugh will never come back. Another one may. But I
+shall have been outside, and it will all be different...."
+
+He paused. Never had Mr. Britling been so little disposed to take up the
+discourse.
+
+"Like a man," he said, seeking an image and doing no more than imitate
+his son's; "who goes out of a busy lighted room through a trap-door into
+a blizzard, to mend the roof...."
+
+For some moments neither father nor son said anything more. They had a
+queer sense of insurmountable insufficiency. Neither was saying what he
+had wanted to say to the other, but it was not clear to them now what
+they had to say to one another....
+
+"It's wonderful," said Mr. Britling.
+
+Hugh could only manage: "The world has turned right over...."
+
+"The job has to be done," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"The job has to be done," said Hugh.
+
+The pause lengthened.
+
+"You'll be getting up early to-morrow," said Mr. Britling....
+
+
+Section 8
+
+When Mr. Britling was alone in his own room all the thoughts and
+feelings that had been held up downstairs began to run more and more
+rapidly and abundantly through his mind.
+
+He had a feeling--every now and again in the last few years he had had
+the same feeling--as though he was only just beginning to discover Hugh.
+This perpetual rediscovery of one's children is the experience of every
+observant parent. He had always considered Hugh as a youth, and now a
+man stood over him and talked, as one man to another. And this man, this
+very new man, mint new and clean and clear, filled Mr. Britling with
+surprise and admiration.
+
+It was as if he perceived the beauty of youth for the first time in
+Hugh's slender, well balanced, khaki-clad body. There was infinite
+delicacy in his clear complexion, his clear eyes; the delicately
+pencilled eyebrow that was so exactly like his mother's. And this thing
+of brightness and bravery talked as gravely and as wisely as any
+weather-worn, shop-soiled, old fellow....
+
+The boy was wise.
+
+Hugh thought for himself; he thought round and through his position, not
+egotistically but with a quality of responsibility. He wasn't just
+hero-worshipping and imitating, just spinning some self-centred romance.
+If he was a fair sample of his generation then it was a better
+generation than Mr. Britling's had been....
+
+At that Mr. Britling's mind went off at a tangent to the grievance of
+the rejected volunteer. It was acutely shameful to him that all these
+fine lads should be going off to death and wounds while the men of forty
+and over lay snug at home. How stupid it was to fix things like that!
+Here were the fathers, who had done their work, shot their bolts,
+returned some value for the costs of their education, unable to get
+training, unable to be of any service, shamefully safe, doing April fool
+work as special constables; while their young innocents, untried, all
+their gathering possibilities of service unbroached, went down into the
+deadly trenches.... The war would leave the world a world of cripples
+and old men and children....
+
+He felt himself as a cowardly brute, fat, wheezy, out of training,
+sheltering behind this dear one branch of Mary's life.
+
+He writhed with impotent humiliation....
+
+How stupidly the world is managed.
+
+He began to fret and rage. He could not lie in peace in his bed; he got
+up and prowled about his room, blundering against chairs and tables in
+the darkness.... We were too stupid to do the most obvious things; we
+were sending all these boys into hardship and pitiless danger; we were
+sending them ill-equipped, insufficiently supported, we were sending our
+children through the fires to Moloch, because essentially we English
+were a world of indolent, pampered, sham good-humoured, old and
+middle-aged men. (So he distributed the intolerable load of
+self-accusation.) Why was he doing nothing to change things, to get them
+better? What was the good of an assumed modesty, an effort at tolerance
+for and confidence in these boozy old lawyers, these ranting platform
+men, these stiff-witted officers and hide-bound officials? They were
+butchering the youth of England. Old men sat out of danger contriving
+death for the lads in the trenches. That was the reality of the thing.
+"My son!" he cried sharply in the darkness. His sense of our national
+deficiencies became tormentingly, fantastically acute. It was as if all
+his cherished delusions had fallen from the scheme of things.... What
+was the good of making believe that up there they were planning some
+great counter-stroke that would end in victory? It was as plain as
+daylight that they had neither the power of imagination nor the
+collective intelligence even to conceive of a counter-stroke. Any dull
+mass may resist, but only imagination can strike. Imagination! To the
+end we should not strike. We might strike through the air. We might
+strike across the sea. We might strike hard at Gallipoli instead of
+dribbling inadequate armies thither as our fathers dribbled men at the
+Redan.... But the old men would sit at their tables, replete and sleepy,
+and shake their cunning old heads. The press would chatter and make odd
+ambiguous sounds like a shipload of monkeys in a storm. The political
+harridans would get the wrong men appointed, would attack every possible
+leader with scandal and abuse and falsehood....
+
+The spirit and honour and drama had gone out of this war.
+
+Our only hope now was exhaustion. Our only strategy was to barter blood
+for blood--trusting that our tank would prove the deeper....
+
+While into this tank stepped Hugh, young and smiling....
+
+The war became a nightmare vision....
+
+
+Section 9
+
+In the morning Mr. Britling's face was white from his overnight brain
+storm, and Hugh's was fresh from wholesome sleep. They walked about the
+lawn, and Mr. Britling talked hopefully of the general outlook until it
+was time for them to start to the station....
+
+The little old station-master grasped the situation at once, and
+presided over their last hand-clasp.
+
+"Good luck, Hugh!" cried Mr. Britling.
+
+"Good luck!" cried the little old station-master.
+
+"It's not easy a-parting," he said to Mr. Britling as the train slipped
+down the line. "There's been many a parting hea' since this here old war
+began. Many. And some as won't come back again neether."
+
+
+Section 10
+
+For some days Mr. Britling could think of nothing but Hugh, and always
+with a dull pain at his heart. He felt as he had felt long ago while he
+had waited downstairs and Hugh upstairs had been under the knife of a
+surgeon. But this time the operation went on and still went on. At the
+worst his boy had but one chance in five of death or serious injury, but
+for a time he could think of nothing but that one chance. He felt it
+pressing upon his mind, pressing him down....
+
+Then instead of breaking under that pressure, he was released by the
+trick of the sanguine temperament. His mind turned over, abruptly, to
+the four chances out of five. It was like a dislocated joint slipping
+back into place. It was as sudden as that. He found he had adapted
+himself to the prospect of Hugh in mortal danger. It had become a fact
+established, a usual thing. He could bear with it and go about his
+affairs.
+
+He went up to London, and met other men at the club in the same
+emotional predicament. He realised that it was neither very wonderful
+nor exceptionally tragic now to have a son at the front.
+
+"My boy is in Gallipoli," said one. "It's tough work there."
+
+"My lad's in Flanders," said Mr. Britling. "Nothing would satisfy him
+but the front. He's three months short of eighteen. He misstated his
+age."
+
+And they went on to talk newspaper just as if the world was where it had
+always been.
+
+But until a post card came from Hugh Mr. Britling watched the postman
+like a lovesick girl.
+
+Hugh wrote more frequently than his father had dared to hope, pencilled
+letters for the most part. It was as if he was beginning to feel an
+inherited need for talk, and was a little at a loss for a sympathetic
+ear. Park, his schoolmate, who had enlisted with him, wasn't, it seemed,
+a theoriser. "Park becomes a martinet," Hugh wrote. "Also he is a
+sergeant now, and this makes rather a gulf between us." Mr. Britling had
+the greatest difficulty in writing back. There were many grave deep
+things he wanted to say, and never did. Instead he gave elaborate
+details of the small affairs of the Dower House. Once or twice, with a
+half-unconscious imitation of his boy's style, he took a shot at the
+theological and philosophical hares that Hugh had started. But the
+exemplary letters that he composed of nights from a Father to a Son at
+War were never written down. It was just as well, for there are many
+things of that sort that are good to think and bad to say....
+
+Hugh was not very explicit about his position or daily duties. What he
+wrote now had to pass through the hands of a Censor, and any sort of
+definite information might cause the suppression of his letter. Mr.
+Britling conceived him for the most part as quartered some way behind
+the front, but in a flat, desolated country and within hearing of great
+guns. He assisted his imagination with the illustrated papers. Sometimes
+he put him farther back into pleasant old towns after the fashion of
+Beauvais, and imagined loitering groups in the front of cafes; sometimes
+he filled in the obvious suggestions of the phrase that all the Pas de
+Calais was now one vast British camp. Then he crowded the picture with
+tethered horses and tents and grey-painted wagons, and Hugh in the
+foreground--bare-armed, with a bucket....
+
+Hugh's letters divided themselves pretty fairly between two main topics;
+the first was the interest of the art of war, the second the reaction
+against warfare. "After one has got over the emotion of it," he wrote,
+"and when one's mind has just accepted and forgotten (as it does) the
+horrors and waste of it all, then I begin to perceive that war is
+absolutely the best game in the world. That is the real strength of war,
+I submit. Not as you put it in that early pamphlet of yours; ambition,
+cruelty, and all those things. Those things give an excuse for war, they
+rush timid and base people into war, but the essential matter is the
+hold of the thing itself upon an active imagination. It's such a big
+game. Instead of being fenced into a field and tied down to one set of
+tools as you are in almost every other game, you have all the world to
+play and you may use whatever you can use. You can use every scrap of
+imagination and invention that is in you. And it's wonderful.... But
+real soldiers aren't cruel. And war isn't cruel in its essence. Only in
+its consequences. Over here one gets hold of scraps of talk that light
+up things. Most of the barbarities were done--it is quite clear--by an
+excited civilian sort of men, men in a kind of inflamed state. The great
+part of the German army in the early stage of the war was really an army
+of demented civilians. Trained civilians no doubt, but civilians in
+soul. They were nice orderly clean law-abiding men suddenly torn up by
+the roots and flung into quite shocking conditions. They felt they were
+rushing at death, and that decency was at an end. They thought every
+Belgian had a gun behind the hedge and a knife in his trouser leg. They
+saw villages burning and dead people, and men smashed to bits. They
+lived in a kind of nightmare. They didn't know what they were doing.
+They did horrible things just as one does them sometimes in dreams...."
+
+He flung out his conclusion with just his mother's leaping
+consecutiveness. "Conscript soldiers are the ruin of war.... Half the
+Germans and a lot of the French ought never to have been brought within
+ten miles of a battlefield.
+
+"What makes all this so plain are the diaries the French and English
+have been finding on the dead. You know at the early state of the war
+every German soldier was expected to keep a diary. He was ordered to do
+it. The idea was to keep him interested in the war. Consequently, from
+the dead and wounded our people have got thousands.... It helps one to
+realise that the Germans aren't really soldiers at all. Not as our men
+are. They are obedient, law-abiding, intelligent people, who have been
+shoved into this. They have to see the war as something romantic and
+melodramatic, or as something moral, or as tragic fate. They have to
+bellow songs about 'Deutschland,' or drag in 'Gott.' They don't take to
+the game as our men take to the game....
+
+"I confess I'm taking to the game. I wish at times I had gone into the
+O.T.C. with Teddy, and got a better hold of it. I was too high-browed
+about this war business. I dream now of getting a commission....
+
+"That diary-hunting strategy is just the sort of thing that makes this
+war intellectually fascinating. Everything is being thought out and then
+tried over that can possibly make victory. The Germans go in for
+psychology much more than we do, just as they go in for war more than we
+do, but they don't seem to be really clever about it. So they set out to
+make all their men understand the war, while our chaps are singing
+'Tipperary.' But what the men put down aren't the beautiful things they
+ought to put down; most of them shove down lists of their meals, some of
+the diaries are all just lists of things eaten, and a lot of them have
+written the most damning stuff about outrages and looting. Which the
+French are translating and publishing. The Germans would give anything
+now to get back these silly diaries. And now they have made an order
+that no one shall go into battle with any written papers at all.... Our
+people got so keen on documenting and the value of chance writings that
+one of the principal things to do after a German attack had failed had
+been to hook in the documentary dead, and find out what they had on
+them.... It's a curious sport, this body fishing. You have a sort of
+triple hook on a rope, and you throw it and drag. They do the same. The
+other day one body near Hooghe was hooked by both sides, and they had a
+tug-of-war. With a sharpshooter or so cutting in whenever our men got
+too excited. Several men were hit. The Irish--it was an Irish
+regiment--got him--or at least they got the better part of him....
+
+"Now that I am a sergeant, Park talks to me again about all these
+things, and we have a first lieutenant too keen to resist such technical
+details. They are purely technical details. You must take them as that.
+One does not think of the dead body as a man recently deceased, who had
+perhaps a wife and business connections and a weakness for oysters or
+pale brandy. Or as something that laughed and cried and didn't like
+getting hurt. That would spoil everything. One thinks of him merely as a
+uniform with marks upon it that will tell us what kind of stuff we have
+against us, and possibly with papers that will give us a hint of how far
+he and his lot are getting sick of the whole affair....
+
+"There's a kind of hardening not only of the body but of the mind
+through all this life out here. One is living on a different level. You
+know--just before I came away--you talked of Dower-House-land--and
+outside. This is outside. It's different. Our men here are kind enough
+still to little things--kittens or birds or flowers. Behind the front,
+for example, everywhere there are Tommy gardens. Some are quite bright
+little patches. But it's just nonsense to suppose we are tender to the
+wounded up here--and, putting it plainly, there isn't a scrap of pity
+left for the enemy. Not a scrap. Not a trace of such feeling. They were
+tender about the wounded in the early days--men tell me--and reverent
+about the dead. It's all gone now. There have been atrocities, gas,
+unforgettable things. Everything is harder. Our people are inclined now
+to laugh at a man who gets hit, and to be annoyed at a man with a
+troublesome wound. The other day, they say, there was a big dead German
+outside the Essex trenches. He became a nuisance, and he was dragged in
+and taken behind the line and buried. After he was buried, a kindly soul
+was putting a board over him with 'Somebody's Fritz' on it, when a shell
+burst close by. It blew the man with the board a dozen yards and wounded
+him, and it restored Fritz to the open air. He was lifted clean out. He
+flew head over heels like a windmill. This was regarded as a tremendous
+joke against the men who had been at the pains of burying him. For a
+time nobody else would touch Fritz, who was now some yards behind his
+original grave. Then as he got worse and worse he was buried again by
+some devoted sanitarians, and this time the inscription was 'Somebody's
+Fritz. R.I.P.' And as luck would have it, he was spun up again. In
+pieces. The trench howled with laughter and cries of 'Good old Fritz!'
+'This isn't the Resurrection, Fritz.'...
+
+"Another thing that appeals to the sunny humour of the trenches as a
+really delicious practical joke is the trick of the fuses. We have two
+kinds of fuse, a slow-burning fuse such as is used for hand-grenades and
+such-like things, a sort of yard-a-minute fuse, and a rapid fuse that
+goes a hundred yards a second--for firing mines and so on. The latter is
+carefully distinguished from the former by a conspicuous red thread.
+Also, as you know, it is the habit of the enemy and ourselves when the
+trenches are near enough, to enliven each other by the casting of homely
+but effective hand-grenades made out of tins. When a grenade drops in a
+British trench somebody seizes it instantly and throws it back. To hoist
+the German with his own petard is particularly sweet to the British
+mind. When a grenade drops into a German trench everybody runs. (At
+least that is what I am told happens by the men from our trenches;
+though possibly each side has its exceptions.) If the bomb explodes, it
+explodes. If it doesn't, Hans and Fritz presently come creeping back to
+see what has happened. Sometimes the fuse hasn't caught properly, it has
+been thrown by a nervous man; or it hasn't burnt properly. Then Hans or
+Fritz puts in a new fuse and sends it back with loving care. To hoist
+the Briton with his own petard is particularly sweet to the German
+mind.... But here it is that military genius comes in. Some gifted
+spirit on our side procured (probably by larceny) a length of mine fuse,
+the rapid sort, and spent a laborious day removing the red thread and
+making it into the likeness of its slow brother. Then bits of it were
+attached to tin-bombs and shied--unlit of course--into the German
+trenches. A long but happy pause followed. I can see the chaps holding
+themselves in. Hans and Fritz were understood to be creeping back, to be
+examining the unlit fuse, to be applying a light thereunto, in order to
+restore it to its maker after their custom....
+
+"A loud bang in the German trenches indicated the moment of lighting,
+and the exit of Hans and Fritz to worlds less humorous.
+
+"The genius in the British trenches went on with the preparation of the
+next surprise bomb--against the arrival of Kurt and Karl....
+
+"Hans, Fritz, Kurt, Karl, Michael and Wilhelm; it went for quite a long
+time before they grew suspicious....
+
+"You once wrote that all fighting ought to be done nowadays by metal
+soldiers. I perceive, my dear Daddy, that all real fighting is...."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+Not all Hugh's letters were concerned with these grim technicalities. It
+was not always that news and gossip came along; it was rare that a young
+man with a commission would condescend to talk shop to two young men
+without one; there were few newspapers and fewer maps, and even in
+France and within sound of guns, Hugh could presently find warfare
+almost as much a bore as it had been at times in England. But his
+criticism of military methods died away. "Things are done better out
+here," he remarked, and "We're nearer reality here. I begin to respect
+my Captain. Who is developing a sense of locality. Happily for our
+prospects." And in another place he speculated in an oddly
+characteristic manner whether he was getting used to the army way,
+whether he was beginning to see the sense of the army way, or whether
+it really was that the army way braced up nearer and nearer to
+efficiency as it got nearer to the enemy. "And here one hasn't the
+haunting feeling that war is after all an hallucination. It's already
+common sense and the business of life....
+
+"In England I always had a sneaking idea that I had 'dressed up' in my
+uniform....
+
+"I never dreamt before I came here how much war is a business of waiting
+about and going through duties and exercises that were only too
+obviously a means of preventing our discovering just how much waiting
+about we were doing. I suppose there is no great harm in describing the
+place I am in here; it's a kind of scenery that is somehow all of a
+piece with the life we lead day by day. It is a village that has been
+only partly smashed up; it has never been fought through, indeed the
+Germans were never within two miles of it, but it was shelled
+intermittently for months before we made our advance. Almost all the
+houses are still standing, but there is not a window left with a square
+foot of glass in the place. One or two houses have been burnt out, and
+one or two are just as though they had been kicked to pieces by a
+lunatic giant. We sleep in batches of four or five on the floors of the
+rooms; there are very few inhabitants about, but the village inn still
+goes on. It has one poor weary billiard-table, very small with very big
+balls, and the cues are without tops; it is The Amusement of the place.
+Ortheris does miracles at it. When he leaves the army he says he's going
+to be a marker, 'a b----y marker.' The country about us is
+flat--featureless--desolate. How I long for hills, even for Essex mud
+hills. Then the road runs on towards the front, a brick road frightfully
+worn, lined with poplars. Just at the end of the village mechanical
+transport ends and there is a kind of depot from which all the stuff
+goes up by mules or men or bicycles to the trenches. It is the only
+movement in the place, and I have spent hours watching men shift grub or
+ammunition or lending them a hand. All day one hears guns, a kind of
+thud at the stomach, and now and then one sees an aeroplane, very high
+and small. Just beyond this point there is a group of poplars which have
+been punished by a German shell. They are broken off and splintered in
+the most astonishing way; all split and ravelled out like the end of a
+cane that has been broken and twisted to get the ends apart. The choice
+of one's leisure is to watch the A.S.C. or play football, twenty a side,
+or sit about indoors, or stand in the doorway, or walk down to the
+Estaminet and wait five or six deep for the billiard-table. Ultimately
+one sits. And so you get these unconscionable letters."
+
+"Unconscionable," said Mr. Britling. "Of course--he will grow out of
+that sort of thing.
+
+"And he'll write some day, sure enough. He'll write."
+
+He went on reading the letter.
+
+"We read, of course. But there never could be a library here big enough
+to keep us going. We can do with all sorts of books, but I don't think
+the ordinary sensational novel is quite the catch it was for a lot of
+them in peace time. Some break towards serious reading in the oddest
+fashion. Old Park, for example, says he wants books you can chew; he is
+reading a cheap edition of 'The Origin of Species.' He used to regard
+Florence Warden and William le Queux as the supreme delights of print. I
+wish you could send him Metchnikoff's 'Nature of Man' or Pearson's
+'Ethics of Freethought.' I feel I am building up his tender mind. Not
+for me though, Daddy. Nothing of that sort for me. These things take
+people differently. What I want here is literary opium. I want something
+about fauns and nymphs in broad low glades. I would like to read
+Spenser's 'Faerie Queen.' I don't think I have read it, and yet I have a
+very distinct impression of knights and dragons and sorcerers and wicked
+magic ladies moving through a sort of Pre-Raphaelite tapestry
+scenery--only with a light on them. I could do with some Hewlett of the
+'Forest Lovers' kind. Or with Joseph Conrad in his Kew Palm-house mood.
+And there is a book, I once looked into it at a man's room in London; I
+don't know the title, but it was by Richard Garnett, and it was all
+about gods who were in reduced circumstances but amidst sunny
+picturesque scenery. Scenery without steel or poles or wire. A thing
+after the manner of Heine's 'Florentine Nights.' Any book about Greek
+gods would be welcome, anything about temples of ivory-coloured stone
+and purple seas, red caps, chests of jewels, and lizards in the sun. I
+wish there was another 'Thais.' The men here are getting a kind of
+newspaper sheet of literature scraps called _The Times_ Broadsheets.
+Snippets, but mostly from good stuff. They're small enough to stir the
+appetite, but not to satisfy it. Rather an irritant--and one wants no
+irritant.... I used to imagine reading was meant to be a stimulant. Out
+here it has to be an anodyne....
+
+"Have you heard of a book called 'Tom Cringle's Log'?
+
+"War is an exciting game--that I never wanted to play. It excites once
+in a couple of months. And the rest of it is dirt and muddle and
+boredom, and smashed houses and spoilt roads and muddy scenery and
+boredom, and the lumbering along of supplies and the lumbering back of
+the wounded and weary--and boredom, and continual vague guessing of how
+it will end and boredom and boredom and boredom, and thinking of the
+work you were going to do and the travel you were going to have, and the
+waste of life and the waste of days and boredom, and splintered poplars
+and stink, everywhere stink and dirt and boredom.... And all because
+these accursed Prussians were too stupid to understand what a boredom
+they were getting ready when they pranced and stuck their chests out and
+earnt the praises of Mr. Thomas Carlyle.... _Gott strafe
+Deutschland_.... So send me some books, books of dreams, books about
+China and the willow-pattern plate and the golden age and fairyland. And
+send them soon and address them very carefully...."
+
+
+Section 12
+
+Teddy's misadventure happened while figs were still ripening on Mr.
+Britling's big tree. It was Cissie brought the news to Mr. Britling. She
+came up to the Dower House with a white, scared face.
+
+"I've come up for the letters," she said. "There's bad news of Teddy,
+and Letty's rather in a state."
+
+"He's not--?" Mr. Britling left the word unsaid.
+
+"He's wounded and missing," said Cissie.
+
+"A prisoner!" said Mr. Britling.
+
+"And wounded. _How_, we don't know."
+
+She added: "Letty has gone to telegraph."
+
+"Telegraph to whom?"
+
+"To the War Office, to know what sort of wound he has. They tell
+nothing. It's disgraceful."
+
+"It doesn't say _severely_?"
+
+"It says just nothing. Wounded and missing! Surely they ought to give us
+particulars."
+
+Mr. Britling thought. His first thought was that now news might come at
+any time that Hugh was wounded and missing. Then he set himself to
+persuade Cissie that the absence of "seriously" meant that Teddy was
+only quite bearably wounded, and that if he was also "missing" it might
+be difficult for the War Office to ascertain at once just exactly what
+she wanted to know. But Cissie said merely that "Letty was in an awful
+state," and after Mr. Britling had given her a few instructions for his
+typing, he went down to the cottage to repeat these mitigatory
+considerations to Letty. He found her much whiter than her sister, and
+in a state of cold indignation with the War Office. It was clear she
+thought that organisation ought to have taken better care of Teddy. She
+had a curious effect of feeling that something was being kept back from
+her. It was manifest too that she was disposed to regard Mr. Britling as
+biased in favour of the authorities.
+
+"At any rate," she said, "they could have answered my telegram
+promptly. I sent it at eight. Two hours of scornful silence."
+
+This fierce, strained, unjust Letty was a new aspect to Mr. Britling.
+Her treatment of his proffered consolations made him feel slightly
+henpecked.
+
+"And just fancy!" she said. "They have no means of knowing if he has
+arrived safely on the German side. How can they know he is a prisoner
+without knowing that?"
+
+"But the word is 'missing.'"
+
+"That _means_ a prisoner," said Letty uncivilly....
+
+
+Section 13
+
+Mr. Britling returned to the Dower House perplexed and profoundly
+disturbed. He had a distressful sense that things were far more serious
+with Teddy than he had tried to persuade Letty they were; that "wounded
+and missing" meant indeed a man abandoned to very sinister
+probabilities. He was distressed for Teddy, and still more acutely
+distressed for Mrs. Teddy, whose every note and gesture betrayed
+suppositions even more sinister than his own. And that preposterous
+sense of liability, because he had helped Teddy to get his commission,
+was more distressful than it had ever been. He was surprised that Letty
+had not assailed him with railing accusations.
+
+And this event had wiped off at one sweep all the protective scab of
+habituation that had gathered over the wound of Hugh's departure. He was
+back face to face with the one evil chance in five....
+
+In the hall there was lying a letter from Hugh that had come by the
+second post. It was a relief even to see it....
+
+Hugh had had his first spell in the trenches.
+
+Before his departure he had promised his half brothers a long and
+circumstantial account of what the trenches were really like. Here he
+redeemed his promise. He had evidently written with the idea that the
+letter would be handed over to them.
+
+"Tell the bruddykinses I'm glad they're going to Brinsmead school. Later
+on, I suppose, they will go on to Statesminster. I suppose that you
+don't care to send them so far in these troubled times....
+
+"And now about those trenches--as I promised. The great thing to grasp
+is that they are narrow. They are a sort of negative wall. They are more
+like giant cracks in the ground than anything else.... But perhaps I had
+better begin by telling how we got there. We started about one in the
+morning ladened up with everything you can possibly imagine on a
+soldier, and in addition I had a kettle--filled with water--most of the
+chaps had bundles of firewood, and some had extra bread. We marched out
+of our quarters along the road for a mile or more, and then we took the
+fields, and presently came to a crest and dropped into a sort of maze of
+zigzag trenches going up to the front trench. These trenches, you know,
+are much deeper than one's height; you don't see anything. It's like
+walking along a mud-walled passage. You just trudge along them in single
+file. Every now and then some one stumbles into a soakaway for rainwater
+or swears at a soft place, or somebody blunders into the man in front of
+him. This seems to go on for hours and hours. It certainly went on for
+an hour; so I suppose we did two or three miles of it. At one place we
+crossed a dip in the ground and a ditch, and the trench was built up
+with sandbags up to the ditch and there was a plank. Overhead there were
+stars, and now and then a sort of blaze thing they send up lit up the
+edges of the trench and gave one a glimpse of a treetop or a factory
+roof far away. Then for a time it was more difficult to go on because
+you were blinded. Suddenly just when you were believing that this sort
+of trudge was going on forever, we were in the support trenches behind
+the firing line, and found the men we were relieving ready to come
+back.
+
+"And the firing line itself? Just the same sort of ditch with a parapet
+of sandbags, but with dug-outs, queer big holes helped out with sleepers
+from a nearby railway track, opening into it from behind. Dug-outs vary
+a good deal. Many are rather like the cubby-house we made at the end of
+the orchard last summer; only the walls are thick enough to stand a high
+explosive shell. The best dug-out in our company's bit of front was
+quite a dressy affair with some woodwork and a door got from the ruins
+of a house twenty or thirty yards behind us. It had a stove in it too,
+and a chimbley, and pans to keep water in. It was the best dug-out for
+miles. This house had a well, and there was a special trench ran back to
+that, and all day long there was a coming and going for water. There had
+once been a pump over the well, but a shell had smashed that....
+
+"And now you expect me to tell of Germans and the fight and shelling and
+all sorts of things. _I haven't seen a live German_; I haven't been
+within two hundred yards of a shell burst, there has been no attack and
+I haven't got the V.C. I have made myself muddy beyond describing; I've
+been working all the time, but I've not fired a shot or fought a
+ha'porth. We were busy all the time--just at work, repairing the
+parapet, which had to be done gingerly because of snipers, bringing our
+food in from the rear in big carriers, getting water, pushing our trench
+out from an angle slantingways forward. Getting meals, clearing up and
+so on takes a lot of time. We make tea in big kettles in the big
+dug-out, which two whole companies use for their cooking, and carry them
+with a pole through the handles to our platoons. We wash up and wash and
+shave. Dinner preparation (and consumption) takes two or three hours.
+Tea too uses up time. It's like camping out and picnicking in the park.
+This first time (and next too) we have been mixed with some Sussex men
+who have been here longer and know the business.... It works out that we
+do most of the fatigue. Afterwards we shall go up alone to a pitch of
+our own....
+
+"But all the time you want to know about the Germans. They are a quarter
+of a mile away at this part, or nearly a quarter of a mile. When you
+snatch a peep at them it is like a low parti-coloured stone wall--only
+the stones are sandbags. The Germans have them black and white, so that
+you cannot tell which are loopholes and which are black bags. Our people
+haven't been so clever--and the War Office love of uniformity has given
+us only white bags. No doubt it looks neater. But it makes our loopholes
+plain. For a time black sandbags were refused. The Germans sniped at us,
+but not very much. Only one of our lot was hit, by a chance shot that
+came through the sandbag at the top of the parapet. He just had a cut in
+the neck which didn't prevent his walking back. They shelled the
+trenches half a mile to the left of us though, and it looked pretty hot.
+The sandbags flew about. But the men lie low, and it looks worse than it
+is. The weather was fine and pleasant, as General French always says.
+And after three days and nights of cramped existence and petty chores,
+one in the foremost trench and two a little way back, and then two days
+in support, we came back--and here we are again waiting for our second
+Go.
+
+"The night time is perhaps a little more nervy than the day. You get
+your head up and look about, and see the flat dim country with its
+ruined houses and its lumps of stuff that are dead bodies and its long
+vague lines of sandbags, and the searchlights going like white windmill
+arms and an occasional flare or star shell. And you have a nasty feeling
+of people creeping and creeping all night between the trenches....
+
+"Some of us went out to strengthen a place in the parapet that was only
+one sandbag thick, where a man had been hit during the day. We made it
+four bags thick right up to the top. All the while you were doing it,
+you dreaded to find yourself in the white glare of a searchlight, and
+you had a feeling that something would hit you suddenly from behind. I
+had to make up my mind not to look round, or I should have kept on
+looking round.... Also our chaps kept shooting over us, within a foot of
+one's head. Just to persuade the Germans that we were not out of the
+trench....
+
+"Nothing happened to us. We got back all right. It was silly to have
+left that parapet only one bag thick. There's the truth, and all of my
+first time in the trenches.
+
+"And the Germans?
+
+"I tell you there was no actual fighting at all. I never saw the head of
+one.
+
+"But now see what a good bruddykins I am. I have seen a fight, a real
+exciting fight, and I have kept it to the last to tell you about.... It
+was a fight in the air. And the British won. It began with a German
+machine appearing, very minute and high, sailing towards our lines a
+long way to the left. We could tell it was a German because of the black
+cross; they decorate every aeroplane with a black Iron Cross on its
+wings and tail; that our officer could see with his glasses. (He let me
+look.) Suddenly whack, whack, whack, came a line of little puffs of
+smoke behind it, and then one in front of it, which meant that our
+anti-aircraft guns were having a go at it. Then, as suddenly, Archibald
+stopped, and we could see the British machine buzzing across the path of
+the German. It was just like two birds circling in the air. Or wasps.
+They buzzed like wasps. There was a little crackling--like brushing your
+hair in frosty weather. They were shooting at each other. Then our
+lieutenant called out, 'Hit, by Jove!' and handed the glasses to Park
+and instantly wanted them back. He says he saw bits of the machine
+flying off.
+
+"When he said that you could fancy you saw it too, up there in the blue.
+
+"Anyhow the little machine cocked itself up on end. Rather slowly....
+Then down it came like dropping a knife....
+
+"It made you say 'Ooooo!' to see that dive. It came down, seemed to get
+a little bit under control, and then dive down again. You could hear the
+engine roar louder and louder as it came down. I never saw anything fall
+so fast. We saw it hit the ground among a lot of smashed-up buildings on
+the crest behind us. It went right over and flew to pieces, all to
+smithereens....
+
+"It hurt your nose to see it hit the ground....
+
+"Somehow--I was sort of overcome by the thought of the men in that dive.
+I was trying to imagine how they felt it. From the moment when they
+realised they were going.
+
+"What on earth must it have seemed like at last?
+
+"They fell seven thousand feet, the men say; some say nine thousand
+feet. A mile and a half!
+
+"But all the chaps were cheering.... And there was our machine hanging
+in the sky. You wanted to reach up and pat it on the back. It went up
+higher and away towards the German lines, as though it was looking for
+another German. It seemed to go now quite slowly. It was an English
+machine, though for a time we weren't sure; our machines are done in
+tri-colour just as though they were French. But everybody says it was
+English. It was one of our crack fighting machines, and from first to
+last it has put down seven Germans.... And that's really all the
+fighting there was. There has been fighting here; a month ago. There are
+perhaps a dozen dead Germans lying out still in front of the lines.
+Little twisted figures, like overthrown scarecrows, about a hundred
+yards away. But that is all.
+
+"No, the trenches have disappointed me. They are a scene of tiresome
+domesticity. They aren't a patch on our quarters in the rear. There
+isn't the traffic. I've not found a single excuse for firing my rifle. I
+don't believe I shall ever fire my rifle at an enemy--ever....
+
+"You've seen Rendezvous' fresh promotion, I suppose? He's one of the men
+the young officers talk about. Everybody believes in him. Do you
+remember how Manning used to hide from him?..."
+
+
+Section 14
+
+Mr. Britling read this through, and then his thoughts went back to
+Teddy's disappearance and then returned to Hugh. The youngster was right
+in the front now, and one had to steel oneself to the possibilities of
+the case. Somehow Mr. Britling had not expected to find Hugh so speedily
+in the firing line, though he would have been puzzled to find a reason
+why this should not have happened. But he found he had to begin the
+lesson of stoicism all over again.
+
+He read the letter twice, and then he searched for some indication of
+its date. He suspected that letters were sometimes held back....
+
+Four days later this suspicion was confirmed by the arrival of another
+letter from Hugh in which he told of his second spell in the trenches.
+This time things had been much more lively. They had been heavily
+shelled and there had been a German attack. And this time he was writing
+to his father, and wrote more freely. He had scribbled in pencil.
+
+"Things are much livelier here than they were. Our guns are getting to
+work. They are firing in spells of an hour or so, three or four times a
+day, and just when they seem to be leaving off they begin again. The
+Germans suddenly got the range of our trenches the day before yesterday,
+and begun to pound us with high explosive.... Well, it's trying. You
+never seem quite to know when the next bang is coming, and that keeps
+your nerves hung up; it seems to tighten your muscles and tire you.
+We've done nothing but lie low all day, and I feel as weary as if I had
+marched twenty miles. Then 'whop,' one's near you, and there is a flash
+and everything flies. It's a mad sort of smash-about. One came much too
+close to be pleasant; as near as the old oil jars are from the barn
+court door. It bowled me clean over and sent a lot of gravel over me.
+When I got up there was twenty yards of trench smashed into a mere hole,
+and men lying about, and some of them groaning and one three-quarters
+buried. We had to turn to and get them out as well as we could....
+
+"I felt stunned and insensitive; it was well to have something to do....
+
+"Our guns behind felt for the German guns. It was the damnest racket.
+Like giant lunatics smashing about amidst colossal pots and pans. They
+fired different sorts of shells; stink shells as well as Jack Johnsons,
+and though we didn't get much of that at our corner there was a sting of
+chlorine in the air all through the afternoon. Most of the stink shells
+fell short. We hadn't masks, but we rigged up a sort of protection with
+our handkerchiefs. And it didn't amount to very much. It was rather like
+the chemistry room after Heinrich and the kids had been mixing things.
+Most of the time I was busy helping with the men who had got hurt.
+Suddenly there came a lull. Then some one said the Germans were coming,
+and I had a glimpse of them.
+
+"You don't look at anything steadily while the guns are going. When a
+big gun goes off or a shell bursts anywhere near you, you seem neither
+to see nor hear for a moment. You keep on being intermittently stunned.
+One sees in a kind of flicker in between the impacts....
+
+"Well, there they were. This time I saw them. They were coming out and
+running a little way and dropping, and our shell was bursting among them
+and behind them. A lot of it was going too far. I watched what our men
+were doing, and poured out a lot of cartridges ready to my hand and
+began to blaze away. Half the German attack never came out of their
+trench. If they really intended business against us, which I doubt, they
+were half-hearted in carrying it out. They didn't show for five
+minutes, and they left two or three score men on the ground. Whenever we
+saw a man wriggle we were told to fire at him; it might be an unwounded
+man trying to crawl back. For a time our guns gave them beans. Then it
+was practically over, but about sunset their guns got back at us again,
+and the artillery fight went on until it was moonlight. The chaps in our
+third company caught it rather badly, and then our guns seemed to find
+something and get the upper hand....
+
+"In the night some of our men went out to repair the wire entanglements,
+and one man crawled halfway to the enemy trenches to listen. But I had
+done my bit for the day, and I was supposed to sleep in the dug-out. I
+was far too excited to sleep. All my nerves were jumping about, and my
+mind was like a lot of flying fragments flying about very fast....
+
+"They shelled us again next day and our tea dixy was hit; so that we
+didn't get any tea....
+
+"I slept thirty hours after I got back here. And now I am slowly
+digesting these experiences. Most of our fellows are. My mind and nerves
+have been rather bumped and bruised by the shelling, but not so much as
+you might think. I feel as though I'd presently not think very much of
+it. Some of our men have got the stun of it a lot more than I have. It
+gets at the older men more. Everybody says that. The men of over
+thirty-five don't recover from a shelling for weeks. They go about--sort
+of hesitatingly....
+
+"Life is very primitive here--which doesn't mean that one is getting
+down to anything fundamental, but only going back to something immediate
+and simple. It's fetching and carrying and getting water and getting
+food and going up to the firing line and coming back. One goes on for
+weeks, and then one day one finds oneself crying out, 'What is all this
+for? When is it to end?' I seemed to have something ahead of me before
+this war began, education, science, work, discoveries; all sorts of
+things; but it is hard to feel that there is anything ahead of us
+here....
+
+"Somehow the last spell in the fire trench has shaken up my mind a lot.
+I was getting used to the war before, but now I've got back to my
+original amazement at the whole business. I find myself wondering what
+we are really up to, why the war began, why we were caught into this
+amazing routine. It looks, it feels orderly, methodical, purposeful. Our
+officers give us orders and get their orders, and the men back there get
+their orders. Everybody is getting orders. Back, I suppose, to Lord
+Kitchener. It goes on for weeks with the effect of being quite sane and
+intended and the right thing, and then, then suddenly it comes whacking
+into one's head, 'But this--this is utterly _mad_!' This going to and
+fro and to and fro and to and fro; this monotony which breaks ever and
+again into violence--violence that never gets anywhere--is exactly the
+life that a lunatic leads. Melancholia and mania.... It's just a
+collective obsession--by war. The world is really quite mad. I happen to
+be having just one gleam of sanity, that won't last after I have
+finished this letter. I suppose when an individual man goes mad and gets
+out of the window because he imagines the door is magically impossible,
+and dances about in the street without his trousers jabbing at
+passers-by with a toasting-fork, he has just the same sombre sense of
+unavoidable necessity that we have, all of us, when we go off with our
+packs into the trenches....
+
+"It's only by an effort that I can recall how life felt in the spring of
+1914. Do you remember Heinrich and his attempt to make a table chart of
+the roses, so that we could sit outside the barn and read the names of
+all the roses in the barn court? Like the mountain charts they have on
+tables in Switzerland. What an inconceivable thing that is now! For all
+I know I shot Heinrich the other night. For all I know he is one of the
+lumps that we counted after the attack went back.
+
+"It's a queer thing, Daddy, but I have a sort of _seditious_ feeling in
+writing things like this. One gets to feel that it is wrong to think.
+It's the effect of discipline. Of being part of a machine. Still, I
+doubt if I ought to think. If one really looks into things in this
+spirit, where is it going to take us? Ortheris--his real name by the by
+is Arthur Jewell--hasn't any of these troubles. 'The b----y Germans
+butted into Belgium,' he says. 'We've got to 'oof 'em out again. That's
+all abart it. Leastways it's all _I_ know.... I don't know nothing about
+Serbia, I don't know nothing about anything, except that the Germans got
+to stop this sort of gime for Everlasting, Amen.'...
+
+"Sometimes I think he's righter than I am. Sometimes I think he is only
+madder."
+
+
+Section 15
+
+These letters weighed heavily upon Mr. Britling's mind. He perceived
+that this precociously wise, subtle youngster of his was now close up to
+the line of injury and death, going to and fro from it, in a perpetual,
+fluctuating danger. At any time now in the day or night the evil thing
+might wing its way to him. If Mr. Britling could have prayed, he would
+have prayed for Hugh. He began and never finished some ineffectual
+prayers.
+
+He tried to persuade himself of a Roman stoicism; that he would be
+sternly proud, sternly satisfied, if this last sacrifice for his country
+was demanded from him. He perceived he was merely humbugging himself....
+
+This war had no longer the simple greatness that would make any such
+stern happiness possible....
+
+The disaster to Teddy and Mrs. Teddy hit him hard. He winced at the
+thought of Mrs. Teddy's white face; the unspoken accusation in her eyes.
+He felt he could never bring himself to say his one excuse to her: "I
+did not keep Hugh back. If I had done that, then you might have the
+right to blame."
+
+If he had overcome every other difficulty in the way to an heroic pose
+there was still Hugh's unconquerable lucidity of outlook. War _was_ a
+madness....
+
+But what else was to be done? What else could be done? We could not give
+in to Germany. If a lunatic struggles, sane men must struggle too....
+
+Mr. Britling had ceased to write about the war at all. All his later
+writings about it had been abandoned unfinished. He could not imagine
+them counting, affecting any one, producing any effect. Indeed he was
+writing now very intermittently. His contributions to _The Times_ had
+fallen away. He was perpetually thinking now about the war, about life
+and death, about the religious problems that had seemed so remote in the
+days of the peace; but none of his thinking would become clear and
+definite enough for writing. All the clear stars of his mind were hidden
+by the stormy clouds of excitement that the daily newspaper perpetually
+renewed and by the daily developments of life. And just as his
+professional income shrank before his mental confusion and impotence,
+the private income that came from his and his wife's investments became
+uncertain. She had had two thousand pounds in the Constantinople loan,
+seven hundred in debentures of the Ottoman railway; he had held similar
+sums in two Hungarian and one Bulgarian loan, in a linoleum factory at
+Rouen and in a Swiss Hotel company. All these stopped payments, and the
+dividends from their other investments shrank. There seemed no limit set
+to the possibilities of shrinkage of capital and income. Income tax had
+leapt to colossal dimensions, the cost of most things had risen, and the
+tangle of life was now increased by the need for retrenchments and
+economies. He decided that Gladys, the facetiously named automobile, was
+a luxury, and sold her for a couple of hundred pounds. He lost his
+gardener, who had gone to higher priced work with a miller, and he had
+great trouble to replace him, so that the garden became disagreeably
+unkempt and unsatisfactory. He had to give up his frequent trips to
+London. He was obliged to defer Statesminster for the boys. For a time
+at any rate they must go as day boys to Brinsmead. At every point he met
+this uncongenial consideration of ways and means. For years now he had
+gone easy, lived with a certain self-indulgence. It was extraordinarily
+vexatious to have one's greater troubles for one's country and one's son
+and one's faith crossed and complicated by these little troubles of the
+extra sixpence and the untimely bill.
+
+What worried his mind perhaps more than anything else was his gradual
+loss of touch with the essential issues of the war. At first the
+militarism, the aggression of Germany, had seemed so bad that he could
+not see the action of Britain and her allies as anything but entirely
+righteous. He had seen the war plainly and simply in the phrase, "Now
+this militarism must end." He had seen Germany as a system, as
+imperialism and junkerism, as a callous materialist aggression, as the
+spirit that makes war, and the Allies as the protest of humanity against
+all these evil things.
+
+Insensibly, in spite of himself, this first version of the war was
+giving place to another. The tawdry, rhetorical German Emperor, who had
+been the great antagonist at the outset, the last upholder of Caesarism,
+God's anointed with the withered arm and the mailed fist, had receded
+from the foreground of the picture; that truer Germany which is thought
+and system, which is the will to do things thoroughly, the Germany of
+Ostwald and the once rejected Hindenburg, was coming to the fore. It
+made no apology for the errors and crimes that had been imposed upon it
+by its Hohenzollern leadership, but it fought now to save itself from
+the destruction and division that would be its inevitable lot if it
+accepted defeat too easily; fought to hold out, fought for a second
+chance, with discipline, with skill and patience, with a steadfast
+will. It fought with science, it fought with economy, with machines and
+thought against all too human antagonists. It necessitated an implacable
+resistance, but also it commanded respect. Against it fought three great
+peoples with as fine a will; but they had neither the unity, the
+habitual discipline, nor the science of Germany, and it was the latter
+defect that became more and more the distressful matter of Mr.
+Britling's thoughts. France after her initial experiences, after her
+first reeling month, had risen from the very verge of defeat to a steely
+splendour of resolution, but England and Russia, those twin slack
+giants, still wasted force, were careless, negligent, uncertain.
+Everywhere up and down the scale, from the stupidity of the uniform
+sandbags and Hugh's young officer who would not use a map, to the
+general conception and direction of the war, Mr. Britling's inflamed and
+oversensitised intelligence perceived the same bad qualities for which
+he had so often railed upon his countrymen in the days of the peace,
+that impatience, that indolence, that wastefulness and inconclusiveness,
+that failure to grip issues and do obviously necessary things. The same
+lax qualities that had brought England so close to the supreme
+imbecility of a civil war in Ireland in July, 1914, were now muddling
+and prolonging the war, and postponing, it might be for ever, the
+victory that had seemed so certain only a year ago. The politician still
+intrigued, the ineffectives still directed. Against brains used to the
+utmost their fight was a stupid thrusting forth of men and men and yet
+more men, men badly trained, under-equipped, stupidly led. A press
+clamour for invention and scientific initiative was stifled under a
+committee of elderly celebrities and eminent dufferdom; from the outset,
+the Ministry of Munitions seemed under the influence of the "business
+man."...
+
+It is true that righteousness should triumph over the tyrant and the
+robber, but have carelessness and incapacity any right to triumph over
+capacity and foresight? Men were coming now to dark questionings
+between this intricate choice. And, indeed, was our cause all
+righteousness?
+
+There surely is the worst doubt of all for a man whose son is facing
+death.
+
+Were we indeed standing against tyranny for freedom?
+
+There came drifting to Mr. Britling's ears a confusion of voices, voices
+that told of reaction, of the schemes of employers to best the trade
+unions, of greedy shippers and greedy house landlords reaping their
+harvest, of waste and treason in the very households of the Ministry, of
+religious cant and intolerance at large, of self-advertisement written
+in letters of blood, of forestalling and jobbery, of irrational and
+exasperating oppressions in India and Egypt.... It came with a shock to
+him, too, that Hugh should see so little else than madness in the war,
+and have so pitiless a realisation of its essential futility. The boy
+forced his father to see--what indeed all along he had been seeing more
+and more clearly. The war, even by the standards of adventure and
+conquest, had long since become a monstrous absurdity. Some way there
+must be out of this bloody entanglement that was yielding victory to
+neither side, that was yielding nothing but waste and death beyond all
+precedent. The vast majority of people everywhere must be desiring
+peace, willing to buy peace at any reasonable price, and in all the
+world it seemed there was insufficient capacity to end the daily
+butchery and achieve the peace that was so universally desired, the
+peace that would be anything better than a breathing space for further
+warfare.... Every day came the papers with the balanced story of
+battles, losses, destructions, ships sunk, towns smashed. And never a
+decision, never a sign of decision.
+
+One Saturday afternoon Mr. Britling found himself with Mrs. Britling at
+Claverings. Lady Homartyn was in mourning for her two nephews, the
+Glassington boys, who had both been killed, one in Flanders, the other
+in Gallipoli. Raeburn was there too, despondent and tired-looking.
+There were three young men in khaki, one with the red of a staff
+officer; there were two or three women whom Mr. Britling had not met
+before, and Miss Sharsper the novelist, fresh from nursing experience
+among the convalescents in the south of France. But he was disgusted to
+find that the gathering was dominated by his old antagonist, Lady
+Frensham, unsubdued, unaltered, rampant over them all, arrogant,
+impudent, insulting. She was in mourning, she had the most splendid
+black furs Mr. Britling had ever seen; her large triumphant profile came
+out of them like the head of a vulture out of its ruff; her elder
+brother was a wounded prisoner in Germany, her second was dead; it would
+seem that hers were the only sacrifices the war had yet extorted from
+any one. She spoke as though it gave her the sole right to criticise the
+war or claim compensation for the war.
+
+Her incurable propensity to split the country, to make mischievous
+accusations against classes and districts and public servants, was
+having full play. She did her best to provoke Mr. Britling into a
+dispute, and throw some sort of imputation upon his patriotism as
+distinguished from her own noisy and intolerant conceptions of
+"loyalty."
+
+She tried him first with conscription. She threw out insults at the
+shirkers and the "funk classes." All the middle-class people clung on to
+their wretched little businesses, made any sort of excuse....
+
+Mr. Britling was stung to defend them. "A business," he said acidly,
+"isn't like land, which waits and grows rich for its owner. And these
+people can't leave ferrety little agents behind them when they go off to
+serve. Tens of thousands of middle-class men have ruined themselves and
+flung away every prospect they had in the world to go to this war."
+
+"And scores of thousands haven't!" said Lady Frensham. "They are the men
+I'm thinking of."...
+
+Mr. Britling ran through a little list of aristocratic stay-at-homes
+that began with a duke.
+
+"And not a soul speaks to them in consequence," she said.
+
+She shifted her attack to the Labour people. They would rather see the
+country defeated than submit to a little discipline.
+
+"Because they have no faith in the house of lawyers or the house of
+landlords," said Mr. Britling. "Who can blame them?"
+
+She proceeded to tell everybody what she would do with strikers. She
+would give them "short shrift." She would give them a taste of the
+Prussian way--homoeopathic treatment. "But of course old vote-catching
+Asquith daren't--he daren't!" Mr. Britling opened his mouth and said
+nothing; he was silenced. The men in khaki listened respectfully but
+ambiguously; one of the younger ladies it seemed was entirely of Lady
+Frensham's way of thinking, and anxious to show it. The good lady having
+now got her hands upon the Cabinet proceeded to deal faithfully with its
+two-and-twenty members. Winston Churchill had overridden Lord Fisher
+upon the question of Gallipoli, and incurred terrible responsibilities.
+Lord Haldane--she called him "Tubby Haldane"--was a convicted traitor.
+"The man's a German out and out. Oh! what if he hasn't a drop of German
+blood in his veins? He's a German by choice--which is worse."
+
+"I thought he had a certain capacity for organisation," said Mr.
+Britling.
+
+"We don't want his organisation, and we don't want _him_," said Lady
+Frensham.
+
+Mr. Britling pleaded for particulars of the late Lord Chancellor's
+treasons. There were no particulars. It was just an idea the good lady
+had got into her head, that had got into a number of accessible heads.
+There was only one strong man in all the country now, Lady Frensham
+insisted. That was Sir Edward Carson.
+
+Mr. Britling jumped in his chair.
+
+"But has he ever done anything?" he cried, "except embitter Ireland?"
+
+Lady Frensham did not hear that question. She pursued her glorious
+theme. Lloyd George, who had once been worthy only of the gallows, was
+now the sole minister fit to put beside her hero. He had won her heart
+by his condemnation of the working man. He was the one man who was not
+afraid to speak out, to tell them they drank, to tell them they shirked
+and loafed, to tell them plainly that if defeat came to this country the
+blame would fall upon _them_!
+
+"_No!_" cried Mr. Britling.
+
+"Yes," said Lady Frensham. "Upon them and those who have flattered and
+misled them...."
+
+And so on....
+
+It presently became necessary for Lady Homartyn to rescue Mr. Britling
+from the great lady's patriotic tramplings. He found himself drifting
+into the autumnal garden--the show of dahlias had never been so
+wonderful--in the company of Raeburn and the staff officer and a small
+woman who was presently discovered to be remarkably well-informed. They
+were all despondent. "I think all this promiscuous blaming of people is
+quite the worst--and most ominous--thing about us just now," said Mr.
+Britling after the restful pause that followed the departure from the
+presence of Lady Frensham.
+
+"It goes on everywhere," said the staff officer.
+
+"Is it really--honest?" said Mr. Britling.
+
+Raeburn, after reflection, decided to answer. "As far as it is stupid,
+yes. There's a lot of blame coming; there's bound to be a day of
+reckoning, and I suppose we've all got an instinctive disposition to
+find a scapegoat for our common sins. The Tory press is pretty rotten,
+and there's a strong element of mere personal spite--in the Churchill
+attacks for example. Personal jealousy probably. Our 'old families'
+seem to have got vulgar-spirited imperceptibly--in a generation or so.
+They quarrel and shirk and lay blame exactly as bad servants do--and
+things are still far too much in their hands. Things are getting muffed,
+there can be no doubt about that--not fatally, but still rather
+seriously. And the government--it was human before the war, and we've
+added no archangels. There's muddle. There's mutual suspicion. You never
+know what newspaper office Lloyd George won't be in touch with next.
+He's honest and patriotic and energetic, but he's mortally afraid of old
+women and class intrigues. He doesn't know where to get his backing.
+He's got all a labour member's terror of the dagger at his back. There's
+a lack of nerve, too, in getting rid of prominent officers--who have
+friends."
+
+The staff officer nodded.
+
+"Northcliffe seems to me to have a case," said Mr. Britling. "Every one
+abuses him."
+
+"I'd stop his _Daily Mail_," said Raeburn. "I'd leave _The Times_, but
+I'd stop the _Daily Mail_ on the score of its placards alone. It
+overdoes Northcliffe. It translates him into the shrieks and yells of
+underlings. The plain fact is that Northcliffe is scared out of his wits
+by German efficiency--and in war time when a man is scared out of his
+wits, whether he is honest or not, you put his head in a bag or hold a
+pistol to it to calm him.... What is the good of all this clamouring for
+a change of government? We haven't a change of government. It's like
+telling a tramp to get a change of linen. Our men, all our public men,
+are second-rate men, with the habits of advocates. There is nothing
+masterful in their minds. How can you expect the system to produce
+anything else? But they are doing as well as they can, and there is no
+way of putting in any one else now, and there you are."
+
+"Meanwhile," said Mr. Britling, "our boys--get killed."
+
+"They'd get killed all the more if you had--let us say--Carson and
+Lloyd George and Northcliffe and Lady Frensham, with, I suppose, Austin
+Harrison and Horatio Bottomley thrown in--as a Strong Silent
+Government.... I'd rather have Northcliffe as dictator than that.... We
+can't suddenly go back on the past and alter our type. We didn't listen
+to Matthew Arnold. We've never thoroughly turned out and cleaned up our
+higher schools. We've resisted instruction. We've preferred to maintain
+our national luxuries of a bench of bishops and party politics. And
+compulsory Greek and the university sneer. And Lady Frensham. And all
+that sort of thing. And here we are!... Well, damn it, we're in for it
+now; we've got to plough through with it--with what we have--as what we
+are."
+
+The young staff officer nodded. He thought that was "about it."
+
+"You've got no sons," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"I'm not even married," said Raeburn, as though he thanked God.
+
+The little well-informed lady remarked abruptly that she had two sons;
+one was just home wounded from Suvla Bay. What her son told her made her
+feel very grave. She said that the public was still quite in the dark
+about the battle of Anafarta. It had been a hideous muddle, and we had
+been badly beaten. The staff work had been awful. Nothing joined up,
+nothing was on the spot and in time. The water supply, for example, had
+gone wrong; the men had been mad with thirst. One regiment which she
+named had not been supported by another; when at last the first came
+back the two battalions fought in the trenches regardless of the enemy.
+There had been no leading, no correlation, no plan. Some of the guns,
+she declared, had been left behind in Egypt. Some of the train was
+untraceable to this day. It was mislaid somewhere in the Levant. At the
+beginning Sir Ian Hamilton had not even been present. He had failed to
+get there in time. It had been the reckless throwing away of an army.
+And so hopeful an army! Her son declared it meant the complete failure
+of the Dardanelles project....
+
+"And when one hears how near we came to victory!" she cried, and left it
+at that.
+
+"Three times this year," said Raeburn, "we have missed victories because
+of the badness of our staff work. It's no good picking out scapegoats.
+It's a question of national habit. It's because the sort of man we turn
+out from our public schools has never learnt how to catch trains, get to
+an office on the minute, pack a knapsack properly, or do anything
+smartly and quickly--anything whatever that he can possibly get done for
+him. You can't expect men who are habitually easy-going to keep bucked
+up to a high pitch of efficiency for any length of time. All their
+training is against it. All their tradition. They hate being prigs. An
+Englishman will be any sort of stupid failure rather than appear a prig.
+That's why we've lost three good fights that we ought to have won--and
+thousands and thousands of men--and material and time, precious beyond
+reckoning. We've lost a year. We've dashed the spirit of our people."
+
+"My boy in Flanders," said Mr. Britling, "says about the same thing. He
+says our officers have never learnt to count beyond ten, and that they
+are scared at the sight of a map...."
+
+"And the war goes on," said the little woman.
+
+"How long, oh Lord! how long?" cried Mr. Britling.
+
+"I'd give them another year," said the staff officer. "Just going as we
+are going. Then something _must_ give way. There will be no money
+anywhere. There'll be no more men.... I suppose they'll feel that
+shortage first anyhow. Russia alone has over twenty millions."
+
+"That's about the size of it," said Raeburn....
+
+"Do you think, sir, there'll be civil war?" asked the young staff
+officer abruptly after a pause.
+
+There was a little interval before any one answered this surprising
+question.
+
+"After the peace, I mean," said the young officer.
+
+"There'll be just the devil to pay," said Raeburn.
+
+"One thing after another in the country is being pulled up by its
+roots," reflected Mr. Britling.
+
+"We've never produced a plan for the war, and it isn't likely we shall
+have one for the peace," said Raeburn, and added: "and Lady Frensham's
+little lot will be doing their level best to sit on the safety-valve....
+They'll rake up Ireland and Ulster from the very start. But I doubt if
+Ulster will save 'em."
+
+"We shall squabble. What else do we ever do?"
+
+No one seemed able to see more than that. A silence fell on the little
+party.
+
+"Well, thank heaven for these dahlias," said Raeburn, affecting the
+philosopher.
+
+The young staff officer regarded the dahlias without enthusiasm....
+
+
+Section 16
+
+Mr. Britling sat one September afternoon with Captain Lawrence Carmine
+in the sunshine of the barn court, and smoked with him and sometimes
+talked and sometimes sat still.
+
+"When it began I did not believe that this war could be like other
+wars," he said. "I did not dream it. I thought that we had grown wiser
+at last. It seemed to me like the dawn of a great clearing up. I thought
+the common sense of mankind would break out like a flame, an indignant
+flame, and consume all this obsolete foolery of empires and banners and
+militarism directly it made its attack upon human happiness. A score of
+things that I see now were preposterous, I thought must
+happen--naturally. I thought America would declare herself against the
+Belgian outrage; that she would not tolerate the smashing of the great
+sister republic--if only for the memory of Lafayette. Well--I gather
+America is chiefly concerned about our making cotton contraband. I
+thought the Balkan States were capable of a reasonable give and take; of
+a common care for their common freedom. I see now three German royalties
+trading in peasants, and no men in their lands to gainsay them. I saw
+this war, as so many Frenchmen have seen it, as something that might
+legitimately command a splendid enthusiasm of indignation.... It was all
+a dream, the dream of a prosperous comfortable man who had never come to
+the cutting edge of life. Everywhere cunning, everywhere small feuds and
+hatreds, distrusts, dishonesties, timidities, feebleness of purpose,
+dwarfish imaginations, swarm over the great and simple issues.... It is
+a war now like any other of the mobbing, many-aimed cataclysms that have
+shattered empires and devastated the world; it is a war without point, a
+war that has lost its soul, it has become mere incoherent fighting and
+destruction, a demonstration in vast and tragic forms of the stupidity
+and ineffectiveness of our species...."
+
+He stopped, and there was a little interval of silence.
+
+Captain Carmine tossed the fag end of his cigar very neatly into a tub
+of hydrangeas. "Three thousand years ago in China," he said, "there were
+men as sad as we are, for the same cause."
+
+"Three thousand years ahead perhaps," said Mr. Britling, "there will
+still be men with the same sadness.... And yet--and yet.... No. Just now
+I have no elasticity. It is not in my nature to despair, but things are
+pressing me down. I don't recover as I used to recover. I tell myself
+still that though the way is long and hard the spirit of hope, the
+spirit of creation, the generosities and gallantries in the heart of
+man, must end in victory. But I say that over as one repeats a worn-out
+prayer. The light is out of the sky for me. Sometimes I doubt if it will
+ever come back. Let younger men take heart and go on with the world. If
+I could die for the right thing now--instead of just having to live on
+in this world of ineffective struggle--I would be glad to die now,
+Carmine...."
+
+
+Section 17
+
+In these days also Mr. Direck was very unhappy.
+
+For Cissie, at any rate, had not lost touch with the essential issues of
+the war. She was as clear as ever that German militarism and the German
+attack on Belgium and France was the primary subject of the war. And she
+dismissed all secondary issues. She continued to demand why America did
+not fight. "We fight for Belgium. Won't you fight for the Dutch and
+Norwegian ships? Won't you even fight for your own ships that the
+Germans are sinking?"
+
+Mr. Direck attempted explanations that were ill received.
+
+"You were ready enough to fight the Spaniards when they blew up the
+_Maine_. But the Germans can sink the _Lusitania_! That's--as you say--a
+different proposition."
+
+His mind was shot by an extraordinary suspicion that she thought the
+_Lusitania_ an American vessel. But Mr. Direck was learning his Cissie,
+and he did not dare to challenge her on this score.
+
+"You haven't got hold of the American proposition," he said. "We're
+thinking beyond wars."
+
+"That's what we have been trying to do," said Cissie. "Do you think we
+came into it for the fun of the thing?"
+
+"Haven't I shown in a hundred ways that I sympathise?"
+
+"Oh--sympathy!..."
+
+He fared little better at Mr. Britling's hands. Mr. Britling talked
+darkly, but pointed all the time only too plainly at America. "There's
+two sorts of liberalism," said Mr. Britling, "that pretend to be the
+same thing; there's the liberalism of great aims and the liberalism of
+defective moral energy...."
+
+
+Section 18
+
+It was not until Teddy had been missing for three weeks that Hugh wrote
+about him. The two Essex battalions on the Flanders front were
+apparently wide apart, and it was only from home that Hugh learnt what
+had happened.
+
+"You can't imagine how things narrow down when one is close up against
+them. One does not know what is happening even within a few miles of us,
+until we get the newspapers. Then, with a little reading between the
+lines and some bold guessing, we fit our little bit of experience with a
+general shape. Of course I've wondered at times about Teddy. But oddly
+enough I've never thought of him very much as being out here. It's
+queer, I know, but I haven't. I can't imagine why....
+
+"I don't know about 'missing.' We've had nothing going on here that has
+led to any missing. All our men have been accounted for. But every few
+miles along the front conditions alter. His lot may have been closer up
+to the enemy, and there may have been a rush and a fight for a bit of
+trench either way. In some parts the German trenches are not thirty
+yards away, and there is mining, bomb throwing, and perpetual creeping
+up and give and take. Here we've been getting a bit forward. But I'll
+tell you about that presently. And, anyhow, I don't understand about
+'missing.' There's very few prisoners taken now. But don't tell Letty
+that. I try to imagine old Teddy in it....
+
+"Missing's a queer thing. It isn't tragic--or pitiful. Or partly
+reassuring like 'prisoner.' It just sends one speculating and
+speculating. I can't find any one who knows where the 14th Essex are.
+Things move about here so mysteriously that for all I know we may find
+them in the next trench next time we go up. But there _is_ a chance for
+Teddy. It's worth while bucking Letty all you can. And at the same time
+there's odds against him. There plainly and unfeelingly is how things
+stand in my mind. I think chiefly of Letty. I'm glad Cissie is with her,
+and I'm glad she's got the boy. Keep her busy. She was frightfully fond
+of him. I've seen all sorts of things between them, and I know that....
+I'll try and write to her soon, and I'll find something hopeful to tell
+her.
+
+"Meanwhile I've got something to tell you. I've been through a fight, a
+big fight, and I haven't got a scratch. I've taken two prisoners with my
+lily hand. Men were shot close to me. I didn't mind that a bit. It was
+as exciting as one of those bitter fights we used to have round the
+hockey goal. I didn't mind anything till afterwards. Then when I was in
+the trench in the evening I trod on something slippery--pah! And after
+it was all over one of my chums got it--sort of unfairly. And I keep on
+thinking of those two things so much that all the early part is just
+dreamlike. It's more like something I've read in a book, or seen in the
+_Illustrated London News_ than actually been through. One had been
+thinking so often, how will it feel? how shall I behave? that when it
+came it had an effect of being flat and ordinary.
+
+"They say we hadn't got enough guns in the spring or enough ammunition.
+That's all right now--anyhow. They started in plastering the Germans
+overnight, and right on until it was just daylight. I never heard such a
+row, and their trenches--we could stand up and look at them without
+getting a single shot at us--were flying about like the crater of a
+volcano. We were not in our firing trench. We had gone back into some
+new trenches, at the rear--I think to get out of the way of the counter
+fire. But this morning they weren't doing very much. For once our guns
+were on top. There was a feeling of anticipation--very like waiting for
+an examination paper to be given out; then we were at it. Getting out of
+a trench to attack gives you an odd feeling of being just hatched.
+Suddenly the world is big. I don't remember our gun fire stopping. And
+then you rush. 'Come on! Come on!' say the officers. Everybody gives a
+sort of howl and rushes. When you see men dropping, you rush the faster.
+The only thing that checks you at all is the wire twisted about
+everywhere. You don't want to trip over that. The frightening thing is
+the exposure. After being in the trenches so long you feel naked. You
+run like a scared child for the German trench ahead. I can't understand
+the iron nerve of a man who can expose his back by turning to run away.
+And there's a thirsty feeling with one's bayonet. But they didn't wait.
+They dropped rifles and ran. But we ran so fast after them that we
+caught one or two in the second trench. I got down into that, heard a
+voice behind me, and found my two prisoners lying artful in a dug-out.
+They held up their hands as I turned. If they hadn't I doubt if I should
+have done anything to them. I didn't feel like it. I felt _friendly_.
+
+"Not all the Germans ran. Three or four stuck to their machine-guns
+until they got bayoneted. Both the trenches were frightfully smashed
+about, and in the first one there were little knots and groups of dead.
+We got to work at once shying the sandbags over from the old front of
+the trench to the parados. Our guns had never stopped all the time; they
+were now plastering the third line trenches. And almost at once the
+German shells began dropping into us. Of course they had the range to an
+inch. One didn't have any time to feel and think; one just set oneself
+with all one's energy to turn the trench over....
+
+"I don't remember that I helped or cared for a wounded man all the time,
+or felt anything about the dead except to step over them and not on
+them. I was just possessed by the idea that we had to get the trench
+into a sheltering state before they tried to come back. And then stick
+there. I just wanted to win, and there was nothing else in my mind....
+
+"They did try to come back, but not very much....
+
+"Then when I began to feel sure of having got hold of the trench for
+good, I began to realise just how tired I was and how high the sun had
+got. I began to look about me, and found most of the other men working
+just as hard as I had been doing. 'We've done it!' I said, and that was
+the first word I'd spoken since I told my two Germans to come out of it,
+and stuck a man with a wounded leg to watch them. 'It's a bit of All
+Right,' said Ortheris, knocking off also, and lighting a half-consumed
+cigarette. He had been wearing it behind his ear, I believe, ever since
+the charge. Against this occasion. He'd kept close up to me all the
+time, I realised. And then old Park turned up very cheerful with a weak
+bayonet jab in his forearm that he wanted me to rebandage. It was good
+to see him practically all right too.
+
+"'I took two prisoners,' I said, and everybody I spoke to I told that. I
+was fearfully proud of it.
+
+"I thought that if I could take two prisoners in my first charge I was
+going to be some soldier.
+
+"I had stood it all admirably. I didn't feel a bit shaken. I was as
+tough as anything. I'd seen death and killing, and it was all just
+hockey.
+
+"And then that confounded Ortheris must needs go and get killed.
+
+"The shell knocked me over, and didn't hurt me a bit. I was a little
+stunned, and some dirt was thrown over me, and when I got up on my knees
+I saw Jewell lying about six yards off--and his legs were all smashed
+about. Ugh! Pulped!
+
+"He looked amazed. 'Bloody,' he said, 'bloody.' He fixed his eyes on me,
+and suddenly grinned. You know we'd once had two fights about his saying
+'bloody,' I think I told you at the time, a fight and a return match,
+he couldn't box for nuts, but he stood up like a Briton, and it appealed
+now to his sense of humour that I should be standing there too dazed to
+protest at the old offence. 'I thought _you_ was done in,' he said. 'I'm
+in a mess--a bloody mess, ain't I? Like a stuck pig. Bloody--right
+enough. Bloody! I didn't know I 'ad it _in_ me.'
+
+"He looked at me and grinned with a sort of pale satisfaction in keeping
+up to the last--dying good Ortheris to the finish. I just stood up
+helpless in front of him, still rather dazed.
+
+"He said something about having a thundering thirst on him.
+
+"I really don't believe he felt any pain. He would have done if he had
+lived.
+
+"And then while I was fumbling with my water-bottle, he collapsed. He
+forgot all about Ortheris. Suddenly he said something that cut me all to
+ribbons. His face puckered up just like the face of a fretful child
+which refuses to go to bed. 'I didn't want to be aut of it,' he said
+petulantly. 'And I'm done!' And then--then he just looked discontented
+and miserable and died--right off. Turned his head a little way over. As
+if he was impatient at everything. Fainted--and fluttered out.
+
+"For a time I kept trying to get him to drink....
+
+"I couldn't believe he was dead....
+
+"And suddenly it was all different. I began to cry. Like a baby. I kept
+on with the water-bottle at his teeth long after I was convinced he was
+dead. I didn't want him to be aut of it! God knows how I didn't. I
+wanted my dear little Cockney cad back. Oh! most frightfully I wanted
+him back.
+
+"I shook him. I was like a scared child. I blubbered and howled
+things.... It's all different since he died.
+
+"My dear, dear Father, I am grieving and grieving--and it's altogether
+nonsense. And it's all mixed up in my mind with the mess I trod on. And
+it gets worse and worse. So that I don't seem to feel anything really,
+even for Teddy.
+
+"It's been just the last straw of all this hellish foolery....
+
+"If ever there was a bigger lie, my dear Daddy, than any other, it is
+that man is a reasonable creature....
+
+"War is just foolery--lunatic foolery--hell's foolery....
+
+"But, anyhow, your son is sound and well--if sorrowful and angry. We
+were relieved that night. And there are rumours that very soon we are to
+have a holiday and a refit. We lost rather heavily. We have been
+praised. But all along, Essex has done well. I can't reckon to get back
+yet, but there are such things as leave for eight-and-forty hours or so
+in England....
+
+"I shall be glad of that sort of turning round....
+
+"I'm tired. Oh! I'm tired....
+
+"I wanted to write all about Jewell to his mother or his sweetheart or
+some one; I wanted to wallow in his praises, to say all the things I
+really find now that I thought about him, but I haven't even had that
+satisfaction. He was a Poor Law child; he was raised in one of those
+awful places between Sutton and Banstead in Surrey. I've told you of all
+the sweethearting he had. 'Soldiers Three' was his Bible; he was always
+singing 'Tipperary,' and he never got the tune right nor learnt more
+than three lines of it. He laced all his talk with 'b----y'; it was his
+jewel, his ruby. But he had the pluck of a robin or a squirrel; I never
+knew him scared or anything but cheerful. Misfortunes, humiliations,
+only made him chatty. And he'd starve to have something to give away.
+
+"Well, well, this is the way of war, Daddy. This is what war is. Damn
+the Kaiser! Damn all fools.... Give my love to the Mother and the
+bruddykins and every one...."
+
+
+Section 19
+
+It was just a day or so over three weeks after this last letter from
+Hugh that Mr. Direck reappeared at Matching's Easy. He had had a trip to
+Holland--a trip that was as much a flight from Cissie's reproaches as a
+mission of inquiry. He had intended to go on into Belgium, where he had
+already been doing useful relief work under Mr. Hoover, but the
+confusion of his own feelings had checked him and brought him back.
+
+Mr. Direck's mind was in a perplexity only too common during the
+stresses of that tragic year. He was entangled in a paradox; like a
+large majority of Americans at that time his feelings were quite
+definitely pro-Ally, and like so many in that majority he had a very
+clear conviction that it would be wrong and impossible for the United
+States to take part in the war. His sympathies were intensely with the
+Dower House and its dependent cottage; he would have wept with generous
+emotion to see the Stars and Stripes interwoven with the three other
+great banners of red, white and blue that led the world against German
+imperialism and militarism, but for all that his mind would not march to
+that tune. Against all these impulses fought something very fundamental
+in Mr. Direck's composition, a preconception of America that had grown
+almost insensibly in his mind, the idea of America as a polity aloof
+from the Old World system, as a fresh start for humanity, as something
+altogether too fine and precious to be dragged into even the noblest of
+European conflicts. America was to be the beginning of the fusion of
+mankind, neither German nor British nor French nor in any way national.
+She was to be the great experiment in peace and reasonableness. She had
+to hold civilisation and social order out of this fray, to be a refuge
+for all those finer things that die under stress and turmoil; it was her
+task to maintain the standards of life and the claims of humanitarianism
+in the conquered province and the prisoners' compound, she had to be
+the healer and arbitrator, the remonstrance and not the smiting hand.
+Surely there were enough smiting hands.
+
+But this idea of an America judicial, remonstrating, and aloof, led him
+to a conclusion that scandalised him. If America will not, and should
+not use force in the ends of justice, he argued, then America has no
+right to make and export munitions of war. She must not trade in what
+she disavows. He had a quite exaggerated idea of the amount of munitions
+that America was sending to the Allies, he was inclined to believe that
+they were entirely dependent upon their transatlantic supplies, and so
+he found himself persuaded that the victory of the Allies and the honour
+of America were incompatible things. And--in spite of his ethical
+aloofness--he loved the Allies. He wanted them to win, and he wanted
+America to abandon a course that he believed was vitally necessary to
+their victory. It was an intellectual dilemma. He hid this
+self-contradiction from Matching's Easy with much the same feelings that
+a curate might hide a poisoned dagger at a tea-party....
+
+It was entirely against his habits of mind to hide anything--more
+particularly an entanglement with a difficult proposition--but he
+perceived quite clearly that neither Cecily nor Mr. Britling were really
+to be trusted to listen calmly to what, under happier circumstances,
+might be a profoundly interesting moral complication. Yet it was not in
+his nature to conceal; it was in his nature to state.
+
+And Cecily made things much more difficult. She was pitiless with him.
+She kept him aloof. "How can I let you make love to me," she said, "when
+our English men are all going to the war, when Teddy is a prisoner and
+Hugh is in the trenches. If I were a man--!"
+
+She couldn't be induced to see any case for America. England was
+fighting for freedom, and America ought to be beside her. "All the
+world ought to unite against this German wickedness," she said.
+
+"I'm doing all I can to help in Belgium," he protested. "Aren't I
+working? We've fed four million people."
+
+He had backbone, and he would not let her, he was resolved, bully him
+into a falsehood about his country. America was aloof. She was right to
+be aloof.... At the same time, Cecily's reproaches were unendurable. And
+he could feel he was drifting apart from her....
+
+_He_ couldn't make America go to war.
+
+In the quiet of his London hotel he thought it all out. He sat at a
+writing-table making notes of a perfectly lucid statement of the
+reasonable, balanced liberal American opinion. An instinct of caution
+determined him to test it first on Mr. Britling.
+
+But Mr. Britling realised his worst expectations. He was beyond
+listening.
+
+"I've not heard from my boy for more than three weeks," said Mr.
+Britling in the place of any salutation. "This morning makes
+three-and-twenty days without a letter."
+
+It seemed to Mr. Direck that Mr. Britling had suddenly grown ten years
+older. His face was more deeply lined; the colour and texture of his
+complexion had gone grey. He moved restlessly and badly; his nerves were
+manifestly unstrung.
+
+"It's intolerable that one should be subjected to this ghastly suspense.
+The boy isn't three hundred miles away."
+
+Mr. Direck made obvious inquiries.
+
+"Always before he's written--generally once a fortnight."
+
+They talked of Hugh for a time, but Mr. Britling was fitful and
+irritable and quite prepared to hold Mr. Direck accountable for the
+laxity of the War Office, the treachery of Bulgaria, the ambiguity of
+Roumania or any other barb that chanced to be sticking into his
+sensibilities. They lunched precariously. Then they went into the study
+to smoke.
+
+There Mr. Direck was unfortunate enough to notice a copy of that
+innocent American publication _The New Republic_, lying close to two or
+three numbers of _The Fatherland_, a pro-German periodical which at that
+time inflicted itself upon English writers with the utmost
+determination. Mr. Direck remarked that _The New Republic_ was an
+interesting effort on the part of "_la Jeunesse Americaine_." Mr.
+Britling regarded the interesting effort with a jaded, unloving eye.
+
+"You Americans," he said, "are the most extraordinary people in the
+world."
+
+"Our conditions are exceptional," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"You think they are," said Mr. Britling, and paused, and then began to
+deliver his soul about America in a discourse of accumulating
+bitterness. At first he reasoned and explained, but as he went on he
+lost self-control; he became dogmatic, he became denunciatory, he became
+abusive. He identified Mr. Direck more and more with his subject; he
+thrust the uncivil "You" more and more directly at him. He let his cigar
+go out, and flung it impatiently into the fire. As though America was
+responsible for its going out....
+
+Like many Britons Mr. Britling had that touch of patriotic feeling
+towards America which takes the form of impatient criticism. No one in
+Britain ever calls an American a foreigner. To see faults in Germany or
+Spain is to tap boundless fountains of charity; but the faults of
+America rankle in an English mind almost as much as the faults of
+England. Mr. Britling could explain away the faults of England readily
+enough; our Hanoverian monarchy, our Established Church and its
+deadening effect on education, our imperial obligations and the strain
+they made upon our supplies of administrative talent were all very
+serviceable for that purpose. But there in America was the old race,
+without Crown or Church or international embarrassment, and it was
+still falling short of splendid. His speech to Mr. Direck had the
+rancour of a family quarrel. Let me only give a few sentences that were
+to stick in Mr. Direck's memory.
+
+"You think you are out of it for good and all. So did we think. We were
+as smug as you are when France went down in '71.... Yours is only one
+further degree of insularity. You think this vacuous aloofness of yours
+is some sort of moral superiority. So did we, so did we....
+
+"It won't last you ten years if we go down....
+
+"Do you think that our disaster will leave the Atlantic for you? Do you
+fancy there is any Freedom of the Seas possible beyond such freedom as
+we maintain, except the freedom to attack you? For forty years the
+British fleet has guarded all America from European attack. Your Monroe
+doctrine skulks behind it now....
+
+"I'm sick of this high thin talk of yours about the war.... You are a
+nation of ungenerous onlookers--watching us throttle or be throttled.
+You gamble on our winning. And we shall win; we shall win. And you will
+profit. And when we have won a victory only one shade less terrible than
+defeat, then you think you will come in and tinker with our peace. Bleed
+us a little more to please your hyphenated patriots...."
+
+He came to his last shaft. "You talk of your New Ideals of Peace. You
+say that you are too proud to fight. But your business men in New York
+give the show away. There's a little printed card now in half the
+offices in New York that tells of the real pacificism of America.
+They're busy, you know. Trade's real good. And so as not to interrupt it
+they stick up this card: 'Nix on the war!' Think of it!--'Nix on the
+war!' Here is the whole fate of mankind at stake, and America's
+contribution is a little grumbling when the Germans sank the
+_Lusitania_, and no end of grumbling when we hold up a ship or two and
+some fool of a harbour-master makes an overcharge. Otherwise--'Nix on
+the war!'...
+
+"Well, let it be Nix on the war! Don't come here and talk to me! You who
+were searching registers a year ago to find your Essex kin. Let it be
+Nix! Explanations! What do I want with explanations? And"--he mocked his
+guest's accent and his guest's mode of thought--"dif'cult prap'sitions."
+
+He got up and stood irresolute. He knew he was being preposterously
+unfair to America, and outrageously uncivil to a trusting guest; he knew
+he had no business now to end the talk in this violent fashion. But it
+was an enormous relief. And to mend matters--_No!_ He was glad he'd said
+these things....
+
+He swung a shoulder to Mr. Direck, and walked out of the room....
+
+Mr. Direck heard him cross the hall and slam the door of the little
+parlour....
+
+Mr. Direck had been stirred deeply by the tragic indignation of this
+explosion, and the ring of torment in Mr. Britling's voice. He had stood
+up also, but he did not follow his host.
+
+"It's his boy," said Mr. Direck at last, confidentially to the
+writing-desk. "How can one argue with him? It's just hell for him...."
+
+
+Section 20
+
+Mr. Direck took his leave of Mrs. Britling, and went very slowly towards
+the little cottage. But he did not go to the cottage. He felt he would
+only find another soul in torment there.
+
+"What's the good of hanging round talking?" said Mr. Direck.
+
+He stopped at the stile in the lane, and sat thinking deeply. "Only one
+thing will convince her," he said.
+
+He held out his fingers. "First this," he whispered, "and then that.
+Yes."
+
+He went on as far as the bend from which one sees the cottage, and stood
+for a little time regarding it.
+
+He returned still more sorrowfully to the junction, and with every step
+he took it seemed to him that he would rather see Cecily angry and
+insulting than not see her at all.
+
+At the post office he stopped and wrote a letter-card.
+
+"Dear Cissie," he wrote. "I came down to-day to see you--and thought
+better of it. I'm going right off to find out about Teddy. Somehow I'll
+get that settled. I'll fly around and do that somehow if I have to go up
+to the German front to do it. And when I've got that settled I've got
+something else in my mind--well, it will wipe out all this little
+trouble that's got so big between us about neutrality. And I love you
+dearly, Cissie."
+
+That was all the card would hold.
+
+
+Section 21
+
+And then as if it were something that every one in the Dower House had
+been waiting for, came the message that Hugh had been killed.
+
+The telegram was brought up by a girl in a pinafore instead of the boy
+of the old dispensation, for boys now were doing the work of youths and
+youths the work of the men who had gone to the war.
+
+Mr. Britling was standing at the front door; he had been surveying the
+late October foliage, touched by the warm light of the afternoon, when
+the messenger appeared. He opened the telegram, hoping as he had hoped
+when he opened any telegram since Hugh had gone to the front that it
+would not contain the exact words he read; that it would say wounded,
+that at the worst it would say "missing," that perhaps it might even
+tell of some pleasant surprise, a brief return to home such as the last
+letter had foreshadowed. He read the final, unqualified statement, the
+terse regrets. He stood quite still for a moment or so, staring at the
+words....
+
+It was a mile and a quarter from the post office to the Dower House, and
+it was always his custom to give telegraph messengers who came to his
+house twopence, and he wanted very much to get rid of the telegraph
+girl, who stood expectantly before him holding her red bicycle. He felt
+now very sick and strained; he had a conviction that if he did not by an
+effort maintain his bearing cool and dry he would howl aloud. He felt in
+his pocket for money; there were some coppers and a shilling. He pulled
+it all out together and stared at it.
+
+He had an absurd conviction that this ought to be a sixpenny telegram.
+The thing worried him. He wanted to give the brat sixpence, and he had
+only threepence and a shilling, and he didn't know what to do and his
+brain couldn't think. It would be a shocking thing to give her a
+shilling, and he couldn't somehow give just coppers for so important a
+thing as Hugh's death. Then all this problem vanished and he handed the
+child the shilling. She stared at him, inquiring, incredulous. "Is there
+a reply, Sir, please?"
+
+"No," he said, "that's for you. All of it.... This is a peculiar sort of
+telegram.... It's news of importance...."
+
+As he said this he met her eyes, and had a sudden persuasion that she
+knew exactly what it was the telegram had told him, and that she was
+shocked at this gala-like treatment of such terrible news. He hesitated,
+feeling that he had to say something else, that he was socially
+inadequate, and then he decided that at any cost he must get his face
+away from her staring eyes. She made no movement to turn away. She
+seemed to be taking him in, recording him, for repetition, greedily,
+with every fibre of her being.
+
+He stepped past her into the garden, and instantly forgot about her
+existence....
+
+
+Section 22
+
+He had been thinking of this possibility for the last few weeks almost
+continuously, and yet now that it had come to him he felt that he had
+never thought about it before, that he must go off alone by himself to
+envisage this monstrous and terrible fact, without distraction or
+interruption.
+
+He saw his wife coming down the alley between the roses.
+
+He was wrenched by emotions as odd and unaccountable as the emotions of
+adolescence. He had exactly the same feeling now that he had had when in
+his boyhood some unpleasant admission had to be made to his parents. He
+felt he could not go through a scene with her yet, that he could not
+endure the task of telling her, of being observed. He turned abruptly to
+his left. He walked away as if he had not seen her, across his lawn
+towards the little summer-house upon a knoll that commanded the high
+road. She called to him, but he did not answer....
+
+He would not look towards her, but for a time all his senses were alert
+to hear whether she followed him. Safe in the summer-house he could
+glance back.
+
+It was all right. She was going into the house.
+
+He drew the telegram from his pocket again furtively, almost guiltily,
+and re-read it. He turned it over and read it again....
+
+_Killed._
+
+Then his own voice, hoarse and strange to his ears, spoke his thought.
+
+"My God! how unutterably silly.... Why did I let him go? Why did I let
+him go?"
+
+
+Section 23
+
+Mrs. Britling did not learn of the blow that had struck them until after
+dinner that night. She was so accustomed to ignore his incomprehensible
+moods that she did not perceive that there was anything tragic about
+him until they sat at table together. He seemed heavy and sulky and
+disposed to avoid her, but that sort of moodiness was nothing very
+strange to her. She knew that things that seemed to her utterly trivial,
+the reading of political speeches in _The Times_, little comments on
+life made in the most casual way, mere movements, could so avert him.
+She had cultivated a certain disregard of such fitful darknesses. But at
+the dinner-table she looked up, and was stabbed to the heart to see a
+haggard white face and eyes of deep despair regarding her ambiguously.
+
+"Hugh!" she said, and then with a chill intimation, "_What is it?_"
+
+They looked at each other. His face softened and winced.
+
+"My Hugh," he whispered, and neither spoke for some seconds.
+
+"_Killed_," he said, and suddenly stood up whimpering, and fumbled with
+his pocket.
+
+It seemed he would never find what he sought. It came at last, a
+crumpled telegram. He threw it down before her, and then thrust his
+chair back clumsily and went hastily out of the room. She heard him sob.
+She had not dared to look at his face again.
+
+"Oh!" she cried, realising that an impossible task had been thrust upon
+her.
+
+"But what can I _say_ to him?" she said, with the telegram in her hand.
+
+The parlourmaid came into the room.
+
+"Clear the dinner away!" said Mrs. Britling, standing at her place.
+"Master Hugh is killed...." And then wailing: "Oh! what can I _say_?
+What can I _say_?"
+
+
+Section 24
+
+That night Mrs. Britling made the supreme effort of her life to burst
+the prison of self-consciousness and inhibition in which she was
+confined. Never before in all her life had she so desired to be
+spontaneous and unrestrained; never before had she so felt herself
+hampered by her timidity, her self-criticism, her deeply ingrained habit
+of never letting herself go. She was rent by reflected distress. It
+seemed to her that she would be ready to give her life and the whole
+world to be able to comfort her husband now. And she could conceive no
+gesture of comfort. She went out of the dining-room into the hall and
+listened. She went very softly upstairs until she came to the door of
+her husband's room. There she stood still. She could hear no sound from
+within. She put out her hand and turned the handle of the door a little
+way, and then she was startled by the loudness of the sound it made and
+at her own boldness. She withdrew her hand, and then with a gesture of
+despair, with a face of white agony, she flitted along the corridor to
+her own room.
+
+Her mind was beaten to the ground by this catastrophe, of which to this
+moment she had never allowed herself to think. She had never allowed
+herself to think of it. The figure of her husband, like some pitiful
+beast, wounded and bleeding, filled her mind. She gave scarcely a
+thought to Hugh. "Oh, what can I _do_ for him?" she asked herself,
+sitting down before her unlit bedroom fire.... "What can I say or do?"
+
+She brooded until she shivered, and then she lit her fire....
+
+It was late that night and after an eternity of resolutions and doubts
+and indecisions that Mrs. Britling went to her husband. He was sitting
+close up to the fire with his chin upon his hands, waiting for her; he
+felt that she would come to him, and he was thinking meanwhile of Hugh
+with a slow unprogressive movement of the mind. He showed by a movement
+that he heard her enter the room, but he did not turn to look at her. He
+shrank a little from her approach.
+
+She came and stood beside him. She ventured to touch him very softly,
+and to stroke his head. "My dear," she said. "My poor dear!
+
+"It is so dreadful for you," she said, "it is so dreadful for you. I
+know how you loved him...."
+
+He spread his hands over his face and became very still.
+
+"My poor dear!" she said, still stroking his hair, "my poor dear!"
+
+And then she went on saying "poor dear," saying it presently because
+there was nothing more had come into her mind. She desired supremely to
+be his comfort, and in a little while she was acting comfort so poorly
+that she perceived her own failure. And that increased her failure, and
+that increased her paralysing sense of failure....
+
+And suddenly her stroking hand ceased. Suddenly the real woman cried out
+from her.
+
+"I can't _reach_ you!" she cried aloud. "I can't reach you. I would do
+anything.... You! You with your heart half broken...."
+
+She turned towards the door. She moved clumsily, she was blinded by her
+tears.
+
+Mr. Britling uncovered his face. He stood up astonished, and then pity
+and pitiful understanding came storming across his grief. He made a step
+and took her in his arms. "My dear," he said, "don't go from me...."
+
+She turned to him weeping, and put her arms about his neck, and he too
+was weeping.
+
+"My poor wife!" he said, "my dear wife. If it were not for you--I think
+I could kill myself to-night. Don't cry, my dear. Don't, don't cry. You
+do not know how you comfort me. You do not know how you help me."
+
+He drew her to him; he put her cheek against his own....
+
+His heart was so sore and wounded that he could not endure that another
+human being should go wretched. He sat down in his chair and drew her
+upon his knees, and said everything he could think of to console her
+and reassure her and make her feel that she was of value to him. He
+spoke of every pleasant aspect of their lives, of every aspect, except
+that he never named that dear pale youth who waited now.... He could
+wait a little longer....
+
+At last she went from him.
+
+"Good night," said Mr. Britling, and took her to the door. "It was very
+dear of you to come and comfort me," he said....
+
+
+Section 25
+
+He closed the door softly behind her.
+
+The door had hardly shut upon her before he forgot her. Instantly he was
+alone again, utterly alone. He was alone in an empty world....
+
+Loneliness struck him like a blow. He had dependents, he had cares. He
+had never a soul to whom he might weep....
+
+For a time he stood beside his open window. He looked at the bed--but no
+sleep he knew would come that night--until the sleep of exhaustion came.
+He looked at the bureau at which he had so often written. But the
+writing there was a shrivelled thing....
+
+This room was unendurable. He must go out. He turned to the window, and
+outside was a troublesome noise of night-jars and a distant roaring of
+stags, black trees, blacknesses, the sky clear and remote with a great
+company of stars.... The stars seemed attentive. They stirred and yet
+were still. It was as if they were the eyes of watchers. He would go out
+to them....
+
+Very softly he went towards the passage door, and still more softly felt
+his way across the landing and down the staircase. Once or twice he
+paused to listen.
+
+He let himself out with elaborate precautions....
+
+Across the dark he went, and suddenly his boy was all about him,
+playing, climbing the cedars, twisting miraculously about the lawn on a
+bicycle, discoursing gravely upon his future, lying on the grass,
+breathing very hard and drawing preposterous caricatures. Once again
+they walked side by side up and down--it was athwart this very
+spot--talking gravely but rather shyly....
+
+And here they had stood a little awkwardly, before the boy went in to
+say good-bye to his stepmother and go off with his father to the
+station....
+
+"I will work to-morrow again," whispered Mr. Britling, "but
+to-night--to-night.... To-night is yours.... Can you hear me, can you
+hear? Your father ... who had counted on you...."
+
+
+Section 26
+
+He went into the far corner of the hockey paddock, and there he moved
+about for a while and then stood for a long time holding the fence with
+both hands and staring blankly into the darkness. At last he turned
+away, and went stumbling and blundering towards the rose garden. A spray
+of creeper tore his face and distressed him. He thrust it aside
+fretfully, and it scratched his hand. He made his way to the seat in the
+arbour, and sat down and whispered a little to himself, and then became
+very still with his arm upon the back of the seat and his head upon his
+arm.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+BOOK III
+
+THE TESTAMENT OF MATCHING'S EASY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE FIRST
+
+MRS. TEDDY GOES FOR A WALK
+
+
+Section 1
+
+All over England now, where the livery of mourning had been a rare thing
+to see, women and children went about in the October sunshine in new
+black clothes. Everywhere one met these fresh griefs, mothers who had
+lost their sons, women who had lost their men, lives shattered and hopes
+destroyed. The dyers had a great time turning coloured garments to
+black. And there was also a growing multitude of crippled and disabled
+men. It was so in England, much more was it so in France and Russia, in
+all the countries of the Allies, and in Germany and Austria; away into
+Asia Minor and Egypt, in India and Japan and Italy there was mourning,
+the world was filled with loss and mourning and impoverishment and
+distress.
+
+And still the mysterious powers that required these things of mankind
+were unappeased, and each day added its quota of heart-stabbing messages
+and called for new mourning, and sent home fresh consignments of broken
+and tormented men.
+
+Some clung to hopes that became at last almost more terrible than black
+certainties....
+
+Mrs. Teddy went about the village in a coloured dress bearing herself
+confidently. Teddy had been listed now as "missing, since reported
+killed," and she had had two letters from his comrades. They said Teddy
+had been left behind in the ruins of a farm with one or two other
+wounded, and that when the Canadians retook the place these wounded had
+all been found butchered. None had been found alive. Afterwards the
+Canadians had had to fall back. Mr. Direck had been at great pains to
+hunt up wounded men from Teddy's company, and also any likely Canadians
+both at the base hospital in France and in London, and to get what he
+could from them. He had made it a service to Cissie. Only one of his
+witnesses was quite clear about Teddy, but he, alas! was dreadfully
+clear. There had been only one lieutenant among the men left behind, he
+said, and obviously that must have been Teddy. "He had been prodded in
+half-a-dozen places. His head was nearly severed from his body."
+
+Direck came down and told the story to Cissie. "Shall I tell it to her?"
+he asked.
+
+Cissie thought. "Not yet," she said....
+
+Letty's face changed in those pitiful weeks when she was denying death.
+She lost her pretty colour, she became white; her mouth grew hard and
+her eyes had a hard brightness. She never wept, she never gave a sign of
+sorrow, and she insisted upon talking about Teddy, in a dry offhand
+voice. Constantly she referred to his final return. "Teddy," she said,
+"will be surprised at this," or "Teddy will feel sold when he sees how I
+have altered that."
+
+"Presently we shall see his name in a list of prisoners," she said. "He
+is a wounded prisoner in Germany."
+
+She adopted that story. She had no justification for it, but she would
+hear no doubts upon it. She presently began to prepare parcels to send
+him. "They want almost everything," she told people. "They are treated
+abominably. He has not been able to write to me yet, but I do not think
+I ought to wait until he asks me."
+
+Cissie was afraid to interfere with this.
+
+After a time Letty grew impatient at the delay in getting any address
+and took her first parcel to the post office.
+
+"Unless you know what prison he is at," said the postmistress.
+
+"Pity!" said Letty. "I don't know that. Must it wait for that? I
+thought the Germans were so systematic that it didn't matter."
+
+The postmistress made tedious explanations that Letty did not seem to
+hear. She stared straight in front of her at nothing. Then in a pause in
+the conversation she picked up her parcel.
+
+"It's tiresome for him to have to wait," she said. "But it can't be long
+before I know."
+
+She took the parcel back to the cottage.
+
+"After all," she said, "it gives us time to get the better sort of
+throat lozenges for him--the sort the syndicate shop doesn't keep."
+
+She put the parcel conspicuously upon the dresser in the kitchen where
+it was most in the way, and set herself to make a jersey for Teddy
+against the coming of the cold weather.
+
+But one night the white mask fell for a moment from her face.
+
+Cissie and she had been sitting in silence before the fire. She had been
+knitting--she knitted very badly--and Cissie had been pretending to
+read, and had been watching her furtively. Cissie eyed the slow,
+toilsome growth of the slack woolwork for a time, and the touch of angry
+effort in every stroke of the knitting needles. Then she was stirred to
+remonstrance.
+
+"Poor Letty!" she said very softly. "Suppose after all, he is dead?"
+
+Letty met her with a pitiless stare.
+
+"He is a prisoner," she said. "Isn't that enough? Why do you jab at me
+by saying that? A wounded prisoner. Isn't that enough despicable
+trickery for God even to play on Teddy--our Teddy? To the very last
+moment he shall not be dead. Until the war is over. Until six months
+after the war....
+
+"I will tell you why, Cissie...."
+
+She leant across the table and pointed her remarks with her knitting
+needles, speaking in a tone of reasonable remonstrance. "You see," she
+said, "if people like Teddy are to be killed, then all our ideas that
+life is meant for, honesty and sweetness and happiness, are wrong, and
+this world is just a place of devils; just a dirty cruel hell. Getting
+born would be getting damned. And so one must not give way to that idea,
+however much it may seem likely that he is dead....
+
+"You see, if he _is_ dead, then Cruelty is the Law, and some one must
+pay me for his death.... Some one must pay me.... I shall wait for six
+months after the war, dear, and then I shall go off to Germany and learn
+my way about there. And I will murder some German. Not just a common
+German, but a German who belongs to the guilty kind. A sacrifice. It
+ought, for instance, to be comparatively easy to kill some of the
+children of the Crown Prince or some of the Bavarian princes. I shall
+prefer German children. I shall sacrifice them to Teddy. It ought not to
+be difficult to find people who can be made directly responsible, the
+people who invented the poison gas, for instance, and kill them, or to
+kill people who are dear to them. Or necessary to them.... Women can do
+that so much more easily than men....
+
+"That perhaps is the only way in which wars of this kind will ever be
+brought to an end. By women insisting on killing the kind of people who
+make them. Rooting them out. By a campaign of pursuit and assassination
+that will go on for years and years after the war itself is over....
+Murder is such a little gentle punishment for the crime of war.... It
+would be hardly more than a reproach for what has happened. Falling like
+snow. Death after death. Flake by flake. This prince. That statesman.
+The count who writes so fiercely for war.... That is what I am going to
+do. If Teddy is really dead.... We women were ready enough a year or so
+ago to starve and die for the Vote, and that was quite a little thing in
+comparison with this business.... Don't you see what I mean? It's so
+plain and sensible, Cissie. Whenever a man sits and thinks whether he
+will make a war or not, then he will think too of women, women with
+daggers, bombs; of a vengeance that will never tire nor rest; of
+consecrated patient women ready to start out upon a pilgrimage that will
+only end with his death.... I wouldn't hurt these war makers. No. In
+spite of the poison gas. In spite of trench feet and the men who have
+been made blind and the wounded who have lain for days, dying slowly in
+the wet. Women ought not to hurt. But I would kill. Like killing
+dangerous vermin. It would go on year by year. Balkan kings, German
+princes, chancellors, they would have schemed for so much--and come to
+just a rattle in the throat.... And if presently other kings and
+emperors began to prance about and review armies, they too would go....
+
+"Until all the world understood that women would not stand war any more
+forever....
+
+"Of course I shall do something of the sort. What else is there to do
+now for me?"
+
+Letty's eyes were bright and intense, but her voice was soft and
+subdued. She went on after a pause in the same casual voice. "You see
+now, Cissie, why I cling to the idea that Teddy is alive. If Teddy is
+alive, then even if he is wounded, he will get some happiness out of
+it--and all this won't be--just rot. If he is dead then everything is so
+desperately silly and cruel from top to bottom--"
+
+She smiled wanly to finish her sentence.
+
+"But, Letty!" said Cissie, "there is the boy!"
+
+"I shall leave the boy to you. Compared with Teddy I don't care _that_
+for the boy. I never did. What is the good of pretending? Some women are
+made like that."
+
+She surveyed her knitting. "Poor stitches," she said....
+
+"I'm hard stuff, Cissie. I take after mother more than father. Teddy is
+my darling. All the tenderness of my life is Teddy. If it goes, it
+goes.... I won't crawl about the world like all these other snivelling
+widows. If they've killed my man I shall kill. Blood for blood and loss
+for loss. I shall get just as close to the particular Germans who made
+this war as I can, and I shall kill them and theirs....
+
+"The Women's Association for the Extirpation of the whole breed of War
+Lords," she threw out. "If I _do_ happen to hurt--does it matter?"
+
+She looked at her sister's shocked face and smiled again.
+
+"You think I go about staring at nothing," she remarked.... "Not a bit
+of it! I have been planning all sorts of things.... I have been thinking
+how I could get to Germany.... Or one might catch them in
+Switzerland.... I've had all sorts of plans. They can't go guarded for
+ever....
+
+"Oh, it makes me despise humanity to see how many soldiers and how few
+assassins there are in the world.... After the things we have seen. If
+people did their duty by the dagger there wouldn't be such a thing as a
+War Lord in the world. Not one.... The Kaiser and his sons and his sons'
+sons would know nothing but fear now for all their lives. Fear would
+only cease to pursue as the coffin went down into the grave. Fear by
+sea, fear by land, for the vessel he sailed in, the train he travelled
+in, fear when he slept for the death in his dreams, fear when he waked
+for the death in every shadow; fear in every crowd, fear whenever he was
+alone. Fear would stalk him through the trees, hide in the corner of the
+staircase; make all his food taste perplexingly, so that he would want
+to spit it out...."
+
+She sat very still brooding on that idea for a time, and then stood up.
+
+"What nonsense one talks!" she cried, and yawned. "I wonder why poor
+Teddy doesn't send me a post card or something to tell me his address. I
+tell you what I _am_ afraid of sometimes about him, Cissie."
+
+"Yes?" said Cissie.
+
+"Loss of memory. Suppose a beastly lump of shell or something whacked
+him on the head.... I had a dream of him looking strange about the eyes
+and not knowing me. That, you know, really _may_ have happened.... It
+would be beastly, of course...."
+
+Cissie's eyes were critical, but she had nothing ready to say.
+
+There were some moments of silence.
+
+"Oh! bed," said Letty. "Though I shall just lie scheming."
+
+
+Section 2
+
+Cissie lay awake that night thinking about her sister as if she had
+never thought about her before.
+
+She began to weigh the concentrated impressions of a thousand memories.
+She and her sister were near in age; they knew each other with an
+extreme intimacy, and yet it seemed to Cissie that night as though she
+did not know Letty at all. A year ago she would have been certain she
+knew everything about her. But the old familiar Letty, with the bright
+complexion, and the wicked eye, with her rebellious schoolgirl
+insistence upon the beautifulness of "Boof'l young men," and her frank
+and glowing passion for Teddy, with her delight in humorous
+mystifications and open-air exercise and all the sunshine and laughter
+of life, this sister Letty, who had been so satisfactory and complete
+and final, had been thrust aside like a mask. Cissie no longer knew her
+sister's eyes. Letty's hand had become thin and unfamiliar and a little
+wrinkled; she was sharp-featured and thin-lipped; her acts, which had
+once been predictable, were incomprehensible, and Cissie was thrown back
+upon speculations. In their schooldays Letty had had a streak of intense
+sensibility; she had been easily moved to tears. But never once had she
+wept or given any sign of weeping since Teddy's name had appeared in the
+casualty list.... What was the strength of this tragic tension? How far
+would it carry her? Was Letty really capable of becoming a Charlotte
+Corday? Of carrying out a scheme of far-seeing vengeance, of making her
+way through long months and years nearer and nearer to revenge?
+
+Were such revenges possible?
+
+Would people presently begin to murder the makers of the Great War? What
+a strange thing it would be in history if so there came a punishment and
+end to the folly of kings!
+
+Only a little while ago Cissie's imagination might have been captured by
+so romantic a dream. She was still but a year or so out of the stage of
+melodrama. But she was out of it. She was growing up now to a subtler
+wisdom. People, she was beginning to realise, do not do these simple
+things. They make vows of devotion and they are not real vows of
+devotion; they love--quite honestly--and qualify. There are no great
+revenges but only little mean ones; no life-long vindications except the
+unrelenting vengeance of the law. There is no real concentration of
+people's lives anywhere such as romance demands. There is change, there
+is forgetfulness. Everywhere there is dispersal. Even to the tragic
+story of Teddy would come the modifications of time. Even to the
+wickedness of the German princes would presently be added some
+conflicting aspects. Could Letty keep things for years in her mind, hard
+and terrible, as they were now? Surely they would soften; other things
+would overlay them....
+
+There came a rush of memories of Letty in a dozen schoolgirl adventures,
+times when she had ventured, and times when she had failed; Letty
+frightened, Letty vexed, Letty launching out to great enterprises, going
+high and hard and well for a time, and then failing. She had seen Letty
+snivelling and dirty; Letty shamed and humiliated. She knew her Letty to
+the soul. Poor Letty! Poor dear Letty! With a sudden clearness of vision
+Cissie realised what was happening in her sister's mind. All this tense
+scheming of revenges was the imaginative play with which Letty warded
+off the black alternative to her hope; it was not strength, it was
+weakness. It was a form of giving way. She could not face starkly the
+simple fact of Teddy's death. That was too much for her. So she was
+building up this dream of a mission of judgment against the day when she
+could resist the facts no longer. She was already persuaded, only she
+would not be persuaded until her dream was ready. If this state of
+suspense went on she might establish her dream so firmly that it would
+at last take complete possession of her mind. And by that time also she
+would have squared her existence at Matching's Easy with the elaboration
+of her reverie.
+
+She would go about the place then, fancying herself preparing for this
+tremendous task she would never really do; she would study German maps;
+she would read the papers about German statesmen and rulers; perhaps she
+would even make weak attempts to obtain a situation in Switzerland or in
+Germany. Perhaps she would buy a knife or a revolver. Perhaps presently
+she would begin to hover about Windsor or Sandringham when peace was
+made, and the German cousins came visiting again....
+
+Into Cissie's mind came the image of the thing that might be; Letty,
+shabby, draggled, with her sharp bright prettiness become haggard, an
+assassin dreamer, still dependent on Mr. Britling, doing his work rather
+badly, in a distraught unpunctual fashion.
+
+She must be told, she must be convinced soon, or assuredly she would
+become an eccentric, a strange character, a Matching's Easy Miss
+Flite....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+Cissie could think more clearly of Letty's mind than of her own.
+
+She herself was in a tangle. She had grown to be very fond of Mr.
+Direck, and to have a profound trust and confidence in him, and her
+fondness seemed able to find no expression at all except a constant
+girding at his and America's avoidance of war. She had fallen in love
+with him when he was wearing fancy dress; she was a young woman with a
+stronger taste for body and colour than she supposed; what indeed she
+resented about him, though she did not know it, was that he seemed never
+disposed to carry the spirit of fancy dress into everyday life. To begin
+with he had touched both her imagination and senses, and she wanted him
+to go on doing that. Instead of which he seemed lapsing more and more
+into reiterated assurances of devotion and the flat competent discharge
+of humanitarian duties. Always nowadays he was trying to persuade her
+that what he was doing was the right and honourable thing for him to do;
+what he did not realise, what indeed she did not realise, was the
+exasperation his rightness and reasonableness produced in her. When he
+saw he exasperated her he sought very earnestly to be righter and
+reasonabler and more plainly and demonstrably right and reasonable than
+ever.
+
+Withal, as she felt and perceived, he was such a good thing, such a very
+good thing; so kind, so trustworthy, with a sort of slow strength, with
+a careful honesty, a big good childishness, a passion for fairness. And
+so helpless in her hands. She could lash him and distress him. Yet she
+could not shake his slowly formed convictions.
+
+When Cissie had dreamt of the lover that fate had in store for her in
+her old romantic days, he was to be _perfect_ always, he and she were
+always to be absolutely in the right (and, if the story needed it, the
+world in the wrong). She had never expected to find herself tied by her
+affections to a man with whom she disagreed, and who went contrary to
+her standards, very much as if she was lashed on the back of a very nice
+elephant that would wince to but not obey the goad....
+
+So she nagged him and taunted him, and would hear no word of his case.
+And he wanted dreadfully to discuss his case. He felt that the point of
+conscience about the munitions was particularly fine and difficult. He
+wished she would listen and enter into it more. But she thought with
+that more rapid English flash which is not so much thinking as feeling.
+He loved that flash in her in spite of his persuasion of its injustice.
+
+Her thought that he ought to go to the war made him feel like a
+renegade; but her claim that he was somehow still English held him in
+spite of his reason. In the midst of such perplexities he was glad to
+find one neutral task wherein he could find himself whole-heartedly with
+and for Cissie.
+
+He hunted up the evidence of Teddy's fate with a devoted pertinacity.
+
+And in the meanwhile the other riddle resolved itself. He had had a
+certain idea in his mind for some time. He discovered one day that it
+was an inspiration. He could keep his conscientious objection about
+America, and still take a line that would satisfy Cissie. He took it.
+
+When he came down to Matching's Easy at her summons to bear his
+convincing witness of Teddy's fate, he came in an unwonted costume. It
+was a costume so wonderful in his imagination that it seemed to cry
+aloud, to sound like a trumpet as he went through London to Liverpool
+Street station; it was a costume like an international event; it was a
+costume that he felt would blare right away to Berlin. And yet it was a
+costume so commonplace, so much the usual wear now, that Cissie, meeting
+him at the station and full of the thought of Letty's trouble, did not
+remark it, felt indeed rather than observed that he was looking more
+strong and handsome than he had ever done since he struck upon her
+imagination in the fantastic wrap that Teddy had found for him in the
+merry days when there was no death in the world. And Letty too,
+resistant, incalculable, found no wonder in the wonderful suit.
+
+He bore his testimony. It was the queer halting telling of a
+patched-together tale....
+
+"I suppose," said Letty, "if I tell you now that I don't believe that
+that officer was Teddy you will think I am cracked.... But I don't."
+
+She sat staring straight before her for a time after saying this. Then
+suddenly she got up and began taking down her hat and coat from the peg
+behind the kitchen door. The hanging strap of the coat was twisted and
+she struggled with it petulantly until she tore it.
+
+"Where are you going?" cried Cissie.
+
+Letty's voice over her shoulder was the harsh voice of a scolding woman.
+
+"I'm going out--anywhere." She turned, coat in hand. "Can't I go out if
+I like?" she asked. "It's a beautiful day.... Mustn't I go out?... I
+suppose you think I ought to take in what you have told me in a moment.
+Just smile and say '_Indeed!_' ... Abandoned!--while his men retreated!
+How jolly! And then not think of it any more.... Besides, I must go out.
+You two want to be left together. You want to canoodle. Do it while you
+can!"
+
+Then she put on coat and hat, jamming her hat down on her head, and said
+something that Cissie did not immediately understand.
+
+"_He'll_ have his turn in the trenches soon enough. Now that he's made
+up his mind.... He might have done it sooner...."
+
+She turned her back as though she had forgotten them. She stood for a
+moment as though her feet were wooden, not putting her feet as she
+usually put her feet. She took slow, wide, unsure steps. She went
+out--like something that is mortally injured and still walks--into the
+autumnal sunshine. She left the door wide open behind her.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+And Cissie, with eyes full of distress for her sister, had still to
+grasp the fact that Direck was wearing a Canadian uniform....
+
+He stood behind her, ashamed that in such a moment this fact and its
+neglect by every one could be so vivid in his mind.
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Cissie's estimate of her sister's psychology had been just. The reverie
+of revenge had not yet taken a grip upon Letty's mind sufficiently
+strong to meet the challenge of this conclusive evidence of Teddy's
+death. She walked out into a world of sunshine now almost completely
+convinced that Teddy was dead, and she knew quite well that her dream of
+some dramatic and terrible vindication had gone from her. She knew that
+in truth she could do nothing of that sort....
+
+She walked out with a set face and eyes that seemed unseeing, and yet it
+was as if some heavy weight had been lifted from her shoulders. It was
+over; there was no more to hope for and there was nothing more to fear.
+She would have been shocked to realise that her mind was relieved.
+
+She wanted to be alone. She wanted to be away from every eye. She was
+like some creature that after a long nightmare incubation is at last
+born into a clear, bleak day. She had to feel herself; she had to
+stretch her mind in this cheerless sunshine, this new world, where there
+was to be no more Teddy and no real revenge nor compensation for Teddy.
+Teddy was past....
+
+Hitherto she had had an angry sense of being deprived of Teddy--almost
+as though he were keeping away from her. Now, there was no more Teddy to
+be deprived of....
+
+She went through the straggling village, and across the fields to the
+hillside that looks away towards Mertonsome and its steeple. And where
+the hill begins to fall away she threw herself down under the hedge by
+the path, near by the stile into the lane, and lay still. She did not so
+much think as remain blank, waiting for the beginning of impressions....
+
+It was as it were a blank stare at the world....
+
+She did not know if it was five minutes or half an hour later that she
+became aware that some one was looking at her. She turned with a start,
+and discovered the Reverend Dimple with one foot on the stile, and an
+expression of perplexity and consternation upon his chubby visage.
+
+Instantly she understood. Already on four different occasions since
+Teddy's disappearance she had seen the good man coming towards her,
+always with a manifest decision, always with the same faltering doubt as
+now. Often in their happy days had she and Teddy discussed him and
+derided him and rejoiced over him. They had agreed he was as good as
+Jane Austen's Mr. Collins. He really was very like Mr. Collins, except
+that he was plumper. And now, it was as if he was transparent to her
+hard defensive scrutiny. She knew he was impelled by his tradition, by
+his sense of fitness, by his respect for his calling, to offer her his
+ministrations and consolations, to say his large flat amiabilities over
+her and pat her kindly with his hands. And she knew too that he dreaded
+her. She knew that the dear old humbug knew at the bottom of his heart
+quite certainly that he was a poor old humbug, and that she was in his
+secret. And at the bottom of his heart he found himself too honest to
+force his poor platitudes upon any who would not be glad of them. If she
+could have been glad of them he would have had no compunction. He was a
+man divided against himself; failing to carry through his rich
+pretences, dismayed.
+
+He had been taking his afternoon "constitutional." He had discovered her
+beyond the stile just in time to pull up. Then had come a fatal, a
+preposterous hesitation. She stared at him now, with hard,
+expressionless eyes.
+
+He stared back at her, until his plump pink face was all consternation.
+He was extraordinarily distressed. It was as if a thousand unspoken
+things had been said between them.
+
+"No wish," he said, "intrude."
+
+If he had had the certain balm, how gladly would he have given it!
+
+He broke the spell by stepping back into the lane. He made a gesture
+with his hands, as if he would have wrung them. And then he had fled
+down the lane--almost at a run.
+
+"Po' girl," he shouted. "Po' girl," and left her staring.
+
+Staring--and then she laughed.
+
+This was good. This was the sort of thing one could tell Teddy, when at
+last he came back and she could tell him anything. And then she realised
+again; there was no more Teddy, there would be no telling. And suddenly
+she fell weeping.
+
+"Oh, Teddy, Teddy," she cried through her streaming tears. "How could
+you leave me? How can I bear it?"
+
+Never a tear had she shed since the news first came, and now she could
+weep, she could weep her grief out. She abandoned herself unreservedly
+to this blessed relief....
+
+
+Section 6
+
+There comes an end to weeping at last, and Letty lay still, in the red
+light of the sinking sun.
+
+She lay so still that presently a little foraging robin came dirting
+down to the grass not ten yards away and stopped and looked at her. And
+then it came a hop or so nearer.
+
+She had been lying in a state of passive abandonment, her swollen wet
+eyes open, regardless of everything. But those quick movements caught
+her back to attention. She began to watch the robin, and to note how it
+glanced sidelong at her and appeared to meditate further approaches. She
+made an almost imperceptible movement, and straightway the little
+creature was in a projecting spray of berried hawthorn overhead.
+
+Her tear-washed mind became vaguely friendly. With an unconscious
+comfort it focussed down to the robin. She rolled over, sat up, and
+imitated his friendly "cheep."
+
+
+Section 7
+
+Presently she became aware of footsteps rustling through the grass
+towards her.
+
+She looked over her shoulder and discovered Mr. Britling approaching by
+the field path. He looked white and tired and listless, even his
+bristling hair and moustache conveyed his depression; he was dressed in
+an old tweed knickerbocker suit and carrying a big atlas and some
+papers. He had an effect of hesitation in his approach. It was as if he
+wanted to talk to her and doubted her reception for him.
+
+He spoke without any preface. "Direck has told you?" he said, standing
+over her.
+
+She answered with a sob.
+
+"I was afraid it was so, and yet I did not believe it," said Mr.
+Britling. "Until now."
+
+He hesitated as if he would go on, and then he knelt down on the grass a
+little way from her and seated himself. There was an interval of
+silence.
+
+"At first it hurts like the devil," he said at last, looking away at
+Mertonsome spire and speaking as if he spoke to no one in particular.
+"And then it hurts. It goes on hurting.... And one can't say much to any
+one...."
+
+He said no more for a time. But the two of them comforted one another,
+and knew that they comforted each other. They had a common feeling of
+fellowship and ease. They had been stricken by the same thing; they
+understood how it was with each other. It was not like the attempted
+comfort they got from those who had not loved and dreaded....
+
+She took up a little broken twig and dug small holes in the ground with
+it.
+
+"It's strange," she said, "but I'm glad I know for sure."
+
+"I can understand that," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It stops the nightmares.... It isn't hopes I've had so much as
+fears.... I wouldn't admit he was dead or hurt. Because--I couldn't
+think it without thinking it--horrible. _Now_--"
+
+"It's final," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It's definite," she said after a pause. "It's like thinking he's
+asleep--for good."
+
+But that did not satisfy her. There was more than this in her mind. "It
+does away with the half and half," she said. "He's dead or he is
+alive...."
+
+She looked up at Mr. Britling as if she measured his understanding.
+
+"You don't still doubt?" he said.
+
+"I'm content now in my mind--in a way. He wasn't anyhow there--unless he
+was dead. But if I saw Teddy coming over the hedge there to me--It would
+be just natural.... No, don't stare at me. I know really he is dead. And
+it is a comfort. It is peace.... All the thoughts of him being crushed
+dreadfully or being mutilated or lying and screaming--or things like
+that--they've gone. He's out of his spoilt body. He's my unbroken Teddy
+again.... Out of sight somewhere.... Unbroken.... Sleeping."
+
+She resumed her excavation with the little stick, with the tears running
+down her face.
+
+Mr. Britling presently went on with the talk. "For me it came all at
+once, without a doubt or a hope. I hoped until the last that nothing
+would touch Hugh. And then it was like a black shutter falling--in an
+instant...."
+
+He considered. "Hugh, too, seems just round the corner at times. But at
+times, it's a blank place....
+
+"At times," said Mr. Britling, "I feel nothing but astonishment. The
+whole thing becomes incredible. Just as for weeks after the war began I
+couldn't believe that a big modern nation could really go to
+war--seriously--with its whole heart.... And they have killed Teddy and
+Hugh....
+
+"They have killed millions. Millions--who had fathers and mothers and
+wives and sweethearts...."
+
+
+Section 8
+
+"Somehow I can't talk about this to Edith. It is ridiculous, I know. But
+in some way I can't.... It isn't fair to her. If I could, I would....
+Quite soon after we were married I ceased to talk to her. I mean talking
+really and simply--as I do to you. And it's never come back. I don't
+know why.... And particularly I can't talk to her of Hugh.... Little
+things, little shadows of criticism, but enough to make it
+impossible.... And I go about thinking about Hugh, and what has happened
+to him sometimes... as though I was stifling."
+
+Letty compared her case.
+
+"I don't want to talk about Teddy--not a word."
+
+"That's queer.... But perhaps--a son is different. Now I come to think
+of it--I've never talked of Mary.... Not to any one ever. I've never
+thought of that before. But I haven't. I couldn't. No. Losing a lover,
+that's a thing for oneself. I've been through that, you see. But a
+son's more outside you. Altogether. And more your own making. It's not
+losing a thing _in_ you; it's losing a hope and a pride.... Once when I
+was a little boy I did a drawing very carefully. It took me a long
+time.... And a big boy tore it up. For no particular reason. Just out of
+cruelty.... That--that was exactly like losing Hugh...."
+
+Letty reflected.
+
+"No," she confessed, "I'm more selfish than that."
+
+"It isn't selfish," said Mr. Britling. "But it's a different thing. It's
+less intimate, and more personally important."
+
+"I have just thought, 'He's gone. He's gone.' Sometimes, do you know, I
+have felt quite angry with him. Why need he have gone--so soon?"
+
+Mr. Britling nodded understandingly.
+
+"I'm not angry. I'm not depressed. I'm just bitterly hurt by the ending
+of something I had hoped to watch--always--all my life," he said. "I
+don't know how it is between most fathers and sons, but I admired Hugh.
+I found exquisite things in him. I doubt if other people saw them. He
+was quiet. He seemed clumsy. But he had an extraordinary fineness. He
+was a creature of the most delicate and rapid responses.... These aren't
+my fond delusions. It was so.... You know, when he was only a few days
+old, he would start suddenly at any strange sound. He was alive like an
+AEolian harp from the very beginning.... And his hair when he was
+born--he had a lot of hair--was like the down on the breast of a bird. I
+remember that now very vividly--and how I used to like to pass my hand
+over it. It was silk, spun silk. Before he was two he could talk--whole
+sentences. He had the subtlest ear. He loved long words.... And then,"
+he said with tears in his voice, "all this beautiful fine structure,
+this brain, this fresh life as nimble as water--as elastic as a steel
+spring, it is destroyed....
+
+"I don't make out he wasn't human. Often and often I have been angry
+with him, and disappointed in him. There were all sorts of weaknesses in
+him. We all knew them. And we didn't mind them. We loved him the better.
+And his odd queer cleverness!.... And his profound wisdom. And then all
+this beautiful and delicate fabric, all those clear memories in his dear
+brain, all his whims, his sudden inventions....
+
+"You know, I have had a letter from his chum Park. He was shot through a
+loophole. The bullet went through his eye and brow.... Think of it!
+
+"An amazement ... a blow ... a splattering of blood. Rags of tormented
+skin and brain stuff.... In a moment. What had taken eighteen
+years--love and care...."
+
+He sat thinking for an interval, and then went on, "The reading and
+writing alone! I taught him to read myself--because his first governess,
+you see, wasn't very clever. She was a very good methodical sort, but
+she had no inspiration. So I got up all sorts of methods for teaching
+him to read. But it wasn't necessary. He seemed to leap all sorts of
+difficulties. He leapt to what one was trying to teach him. It was as
+quick as the movement of some wild animal....
+
+"He came into life as bright and quick as this robin looking for
+food....
+
+"And he's broken up and thrown away.... Like a cartridge case by the
+side of a covert...."
+
+He choked and stopped speaking. His elbows were on his knees, and he put
+his face between his hands and shuddered and became still. His hair was
+troubled. The end of his stumpy moustache and a little roll of flesh
+stood out at the side of his hand, and made him somehow twice as
+pitiful. His big atlas, from which papers projected, seemed forgotten by
+his side. So he sat for a long time, and neither he nor Letty moved or
+spoke. But they were in the same shadow. They found great comfort in
+one another. They had not been so comforted before since their losses
+came upon them.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+It was Mr. Britling who broke silence. And when he drew his hands down
+from his face and spoke, he said one of the most amazing and unexpected
+things she had ever heard in her life.
+
+"The only possible government in Albania," he said, looking steadfastly
+before him down the hill-side, "is a group of republican cantons after
+the Swiss pattern. I can see no other solution that is not offensive to
+God. It does not matter in the least what we owe to Serbia or what we
+owe to Italy. We have got to set this world on a different footing. We
+have got to set up the world at last--on justice and reason."
+
+Then, after a pause, "The Treaty of Bucharest was an evil treaty. It
+must be undone. Whatever this German King of Bulgaria does, that treaty
+must be undone and the Bulgarians united again into one people. They
+must have themselves, whatever punishment they deserve, they must have
+nothing more, whatever reward they win."
+
+She could not believe her ears.
+
+"After this precious blood, after this precious blood, if we leave one
+plot of wickedness or cruelty in the world--"
+
+And therewith he began to lecture Letty on the importance of
+international politics--to every one. How he and she and every one must
+understand, however hard it was to understand.
+
+"No life is safe, no happiness is safe, there is no chance of bettering
+life until we have made an end to all that causes war....
+
+"We have to put an end to the folly and vanity of kings, and to any
+people ruling any people but themselves. There is no convenience, there
+is no justice in any people ruling any people but themselves; the ruling
+of men by others, who have not their creeds and their languages and
+their ignorances and prejudices, that is the fundamental folly that has
+killed Teddy and Hugh--and these millions. To end that folly is as much
+our duty and business as telling the truth or earning a living...."
+
+"But how can you alter it?"
+
+He held out a finger at her. "Men may alter anything if they have motive
+enough and faith enough."
+
+He indicated the atlas beside him.
+
+"Here I am planning the real map of the world," he said. "Every sort of
+district that has a character of its own must have its own rule; and the
+great republic of the united states of the world must keep the federal
+peace between them all. That's the plain sense of life; the federal
+world-republic. Why do we bother ourselves with loyalties to any other
+government but that? It needs only that sufficient men should say it,
+and that republic would be here now. Why have we loitered so long--until
+these tragic punishments come? We have to map the world out into its
+states, and plan its government and the way of its tolerations."
+
+"And you think it will come?"
+
+"It will come."
+
+"And you believe that men will listen to such schemes?" said Letty.
+
+Mr. Britling, with his eyes far away over the hills, seemed to think.
+"Yes," he said. "Not perhaps to-day--not steadily. But kings and empires
+die; great ideas, once they are born, can never die again. In the end
+this world-republic, this sane government of the world, is as certain as
+the sunset. Only...."
+
+He sighed, and turned over a page of his atlas blindly.
+
+"Only we want it soon. The world is weary of this bloodshed, weary of
+all this weeping, of this wasting of substance and this killing of sons
+and lovers. We want it soon, and to have it soon we must work to bring
+it about. We must give our lives. What is left of our lives....
+
+"That is what you and I must do, Letty. What else is there left for us
+to do?... I will write of nothing else, I will think of nothing else now
+but of safety and order. So that all these dear dead--not one of them
+but will have brought the great days of peace and man's real beginning
+nearer, and these cruel things that make men whimper like children, that
+break down bright lives into despair and kill youth at the very moment
+when it puts out its clean hands to take hold of life--these cruelties,
+these abominations of confusion, shall cease from the earth forever."
+
+
+Section 10
+
+Letty regarded him, frowning, and with her chin between her fists....
+
+"But do you really believe," said Letty, "that things can be better than
+they are?"
+
+"But--_Yes!_" said Mr. Britling.
+
+"I don't," said Letty. "The world is cruel. It is just cruel. So it will
+always be."
+
+"It need not be cruel," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"It is just a place of cruel things. It is all set with knives. It is
+full of diseases and accidents. As for God--either there is no God or he
+is an idiot. He is a slobbering idiot. He is like some idiot who pulls
+off the wings of flies."
+
+"No," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"There is no progress. Nothing gets better. How can _you_ believe in God
+after Hugh? _Do_ you believe in God?"
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Britling after a long pause; "I do believe in God."
+
+"Who lets these things happen!" She raised herself on her arm and thrust
+her argument at him with her hand. "Who kills my Teddy and your
+Hugh--and millions."
+
+"No," said Mr. Britling.
+
+"But he _must_ let these things happen. Or why do they happen?"
+
+"No," said Mr. Britling. "It is the theologians who must answer that.
+They have been extravagant about God. They have had silly absolute
+ideas--that He is all powerful. That He's omni-everything. But the
+common sense of men knows better. Every real religious thought denies
+it. After all, the real God of the Christians is Christ, not God
+Almighty; a poor mocked and wounded God nailed on a cross of matter....
+Some day He will triumph.... But it is not fair to say that He causes
+all things now. It is not fair to make out a case against him. You have
+been misled. It is a theologian's folly. God is not absolute; God is
+finite.... A finite God who struggles in his great and comprehensive way
+as we struggle in our weak and silly way--who is _with_ us--that is the
+essence of all real religion.... I agree with you so--Why! if I thought
+there was an omnipotent God who looked down on battles and deaths and
+all the waste and horror of this war--able to prevent these
+things--doing them to amuse Himself--I would spit in his empty face...."
+
+"Any one would...."
+
+"But it's your teachers and catechisms have set you against God.... They
+want to make out He owns all Nature. And all sorts of silly claims. Like
+the heralds in the Middle Ages who insisted that Christ was certainly a
+great gentleman entitled to bear arms. But God is within Nature and
+necessity. Necessity is a thing beyond God--beyond good and ill, beyond
+space and time, a mystery everlastingly impenetrable. God is nearer than
+that. Necessity is the uttermost thing, but God is the innermost thing.
+Closer He is than breathing and nearer than hands and feet. He is the
+Other Thing than this world. Greater than Nature or Necessity, for he is
+a spirit and they are blind, but not controlling them.... Not yet...."
+
+"They always told me He was the maker of Heaven and Earth."
+
+"That's the Jew God the Christians took over. It's a Quack God, a
+Panacea. It's not my God."
+
+Letty considered these strange ideas.
+
+"I never thought of Him like that," she said at last. "It makes it all
+seem different."
+
+"Nor did I. But I do now.... I have suddenly found it and seen it plain.
+I see it so plain that I am amazed that I have not always seen it.... It
+is, you see, so easy to understand that there is a God, and how complex
+and wonderful and brotherly He is, when one thinks of those dear boys
+who by the thousand, by the hundred thousand, have laid down their
+lives.... Ay, and there were German boys too who did the same.... The
+cruelties, the injustice, the brute aggression--they saw it differently.
+They laid down their lives--they laid down their lives.... Those dear
+lives, those lives of hope and sunshine....
+
+"Don't you see that it must be like that, Letty? Don't you see that it
+must be like that?"
+
+"No," she said, "I've seen things differently from that."
+
+"But it's so plain to me," said Mr. Britling. "If there was nothing else
+in all the world but our kindness for each other, or the love that made
+you weep in this kind October sunshine, or the love I bear Hugh--if
+there was nothing else at all--if everything else was cruelty and
+mockery and filthiness and bitterness, it would still be certain that
+there was a God of love and righteousness. If there were no signs of God
+in all the world but the godliness we have seen in those two boys of
+ours; if we had no other light but the love we have between us....
+
+"You don't mind if I talk like this?" said Mr. Britling. "It's all I can
+think of now--this God, this God who struggles, who was in Hugh and
+Teddy, clear and plain, and how He must become the ruler of the
+world...."
+
+"This God who struggles," she repeated. "I have never thought of Him
+like that."
+
+"Of course He must be like that," said Mr. Britling. "How can God be a
+Person; how can He be anything that matters to man, unless He is limited
+and defined and--human like ourselves.... With things outside Him and
+beyond Him."
+
+
+Section 11
+
+Letty walked back slowly through the fields of stubble to her cottage.
+
+She had been talking to Mr. Britling for an hour, and her mind was full
+of the thought of this changed and simplified man, who talked of God as
+he might have done of a bird he had seen or of a tree he had sheltered
+under. And all mixed up with this thought of Mr. Britling was this
+strange idea of God who was also a limited person, who could come as
+close as Teddy, whispering love in the darkness. She had a ridiculous
+feeling that God really struggled like Mr. Britling, and that with only
+some indefinable inferiority of outlook Mr. Britling loved like God. She
+loved him for his maps and his dreams and the bareness of his talk to
+her. It was strange how the straining thought of the dead Teddy had
+passed now out of her mind. She was possessed by a sense of ending and
+beginning, as though a page had turned over in her life and everything
+was new. She had never given religion any thought but contemptuous
+thought for some years, since indeed her growing intelligence had
+dismissed it as a scheme of inexcusable restraints and empty pretences,
+a thing of discords where there were no discords except of its making.
+She had been a happy Atheist. She had played in the sunshine, a natural
+creature with the completest confidence in the essential goodness of the
+world in which she found herself. She had refused all thought of
+painful and disagreeable things. Until the bloody paw of war had wiped
+out all her assurance. Teddy, the playmate, was over, the love game was
+ended for ever; the fresh happy acceptance of life as life; and in the
+place of Teddy was the sorrow of life, the pity of life, and this coming
+of God out of utter remoteness into a conceivable relation to her own
+existence.
+
+She had left Mr. Britling to his atlas. He lay prone under the hedge
+with it spread before him. His occupation would have seemed to her only
+a little while ago the absurdest imaginable. He was drawing boundaries
+on his maps very carefully in red ink, with a fountain pen. But now she
+understood.
+
+She knew that those red ink lines of Mr. Britling's might in the end
+prove wiser and stronger than the bargains of the diplomats....
+
+In the last hour he had come very near to her. She found herself full of
+an unwonted affection for him. She had never troubled her head about her
+relations with any one except Teddy before. Now suddenly she seemed to
+be opening out to all the world for kindness. This new idea of a
+friendly God, who had a struggle of his own, who could be thought of as
+kindred to Mr. Britling, as kindred to Teddy--had gripped her
+imagination. He was behind the autumnal sunshine; he was in the little
+bird that had seemed so confident and friendly. Whatever was kind,
+whatever was tender; there was God. And a thousand old phrases she had
+read and heard and given little heed to, that had lain like dry bones in
+her memory, suddenly were clothed in flesh and became alive. This
+God--if this was God--then indeed it was not nonsense to say that God
+was love, that he was a friend and companion.... With him it might be
+possible to face a world in which Teddy and she would never walk side by
+side again nor plan any more happiness for ever. After all she had been
+very happy; she had had wonderful happiness. She had had far more
+happiness, far more love, in her short years or so than most people had
+in their whole lives. And so in the reaction of her emotions, Letty, who
+had gone out with her head full of murder and revenge, came back through
+the sunset thinking of pity, of the thousand kindnesses and tendernesses
+of Teddy that were, after all, perhaps only an intimation of the
+limitless kindnesses and tendernesses of God.... What right had she to a
+white and bitter grief, self-centred and vindictive, while old Britling
+could still plan an age of mercy in the earth and a red-gold sunlight
+that was warm as a smile from Teddy lay on all the world....
+
+She must go into the cottage and kiss Cissie, and put away that parcel
+out of sight until she could find some poor soldier to whom she could
+send it. She had been pitiless towards Cissie in her grief. She had, in
+the egotism of her sorrow, treated Cissie as she might have treated a
+chair or a table, with no thought that Cissie might be weary, might
+dream of happiness still to come. Cissie had still to play the lover,
+and her man was already in khaki. There would be no such year as Letty
+had had in the days before the war darkened the world. Before Cissie's
+marrying the peace must come, and the peace was still far away. And
+Direck too would have to take his chances....
+
+Letty came through the little wood and over the stile that brought her
+into sight of the cottage. The windows of the cottage as she saw it
+under the bough of the big walnut tree, were afire from the sun. The
+crimson rambler over the porch that she and Teddy had planted was still
+bearing roses. The door was open and people were moving in the porch.
+
+Some one was coming out of the cottage, a stranger, in an unfamiliar
+costume, and behind him was a man in khaki--but that was Mr. Direck! And
+behind him again was Cissie.
+
+But the stranger!
+
+He came out of the frame of the porch towards the garden gate....
+
+Who--who was this stranger?
+
+It was a man in queer-looking foreign clothes, baggy trousers of some
+soft-looking blue stuff and a blouse, and he had a white-bandaged left
+arm. He had a hat stuck at the back of his head, and a beard....
+
+He was entirely a stranger, a foreigner. Was she going insane? Of course
+he was a stranger!
+
+And then he moved a step, he made a queer sideways pace, a caper, on the
+path, and instantly he ceased to be strange and foreign. He became
+amazingly, incredibly, familiar by virtue of that step....
+
+_No!_
+
+Her breath stopped. All Letty's being seemed to stop. And this stranger
+who was also incredibly familiar, after he had stared at her motionless
+form for a moment, waved his hat with a gesture--a gesture that crowned
+and scaled the effect of familiarity. She gave no sign in reply.
+
+No, that familiarity was just a mad freakishness in things.
+
+This strange man came from Belgium perhaps, to tell something about
+Teddy....
+
+And then she surprised herself by making a groaning noise, an absurd
+silly noise, just like the noise when one imitates a cow to a child. She
+said "Mooo-oo."
+
+And she began to run forward, with legs that seemed misfits, waving her
+hands about, and as she ran she saw more and more certainly that this
+wounded man in strange clothing was Teddy. She ran faster and still
+faster, stumbling and nearly falling. If she did not get to him speedily
+the world would burst.
+
+To hold him, to hold close to him!...
+
+"Letty! Letty! Just one arm...."
+
+She was clinging to him and he was holding her....
+
+It was all right. She had always known it was all right. (Hold close to
+him.) Except just for a little while. But that had been foolishness.
+Hadn't she always known he was alive? And here he was alive! (Hold close
+to him.) Only it was so good to be sure--after all her torment; to hold
+him, to hang about him, to feel the solid man, kissing her, weeping too,
+weeping together with her. "Teddy my love!"
+
+
+Section 12
+
+Letty was in the cottage struggling to hear and understand things too
+complicated for her emotion-crowded mind. There was something that Mr.
+Direck was trying to explain about a delayed telegram that had come soon
+after she had gone out. There was much indeed that Mr. Direck was trying
+to explain. What did any explanation really matter when you had Teddy,
+with nothing but a strange beard and a bandaged arm between him and
+yourself? She had an absurd persuasion at first that those two
+strangenesses would also presently be set aside, so that Teddy would
+become just exactly what Teddy had always been.
+
+Teddy had been shot through the upper arm....
+
+"My hand has gone, dear little Letty. It's my left hand, luckily. I
+shall have to wear a hook like some old pirate...."
+
+There was something about his being taken prisoner. "That other
+officer"--that was Mr. Direck's officer--"had been lying there for
+days." Teddy had been shot through the upper arm, and stunned by a
+falling beam. When he came to he was disarmed, with a German standing
+over him....
+
+Then afterwards he had escaped. In quite a little time he had escaped.
+He had been in a railway station somewhere in Belgium; locked in a
+waiting-room with three or four French prisoners, and the junction had
+been bombed by French and British aeroplanes. Their guard and two of the
+prisoners had been killed. In the confusion the others had got away into
+the town. There were trucks of hay on fire, and a store of petrol was
+in danger. "After that one was bound to escape. One would have been shot
+if one had been found wandering about."
+
+The bomb had driven some splinters of glass and corrugated iron into
+Teddy's wrist; it seemed a small place at first; it didn't trouble him
+for weeks. But then some dirt got into it.
+
+In the narrow cobbled street beyond the station he had happened upon a
+woman who knew no English, but who took him to a priest, and the priest
+had hidden him.
+
+Letty did not piece together the whole story at first. She did not want
+the story very much; she wanted to know about this hand and arm.
+
+There would be queer things in the story when it came to be told. There
+was an old peasant who had made Teddy work in his fields in spite of his
+smashed and aching arm, and who had pointed to a passing German when
+Teddy demurred; there were the people called "they" who had at that time
+organised the escape of stragglers into Holland. There was the night
+watch, those long nights in succession before the dash for liberty. But
+Letty's concern was all with the hand. Inside the sling there was
+something that hurt the imagination, something bandaged, a stump. She
+could not think of it. She could not get away from the thought of it.
+
+"But why did you lose your hand?"
+
+It was only a little place at first, and then it got painful....
+
+"But I didn't go into a hospital because I was afraid they would intern
+me, and so I wouldn't be able to come home. And I was dying to come
+home. I was--homesick. No one was ever so homesick. I've thought of this
+place and the garden, and how one looked out of the window at the
+passers-by, a thousand times. I seemed always to be seeing them. Old
+Dimple with his benevolent smile, and Mrs. Wolker at the end cottage,
+and how she used to fetch her beer and wink when she caught us looking
+at her, and little Charlie Slobberface sniffing on his way to the pigs
+and all the rest of them. And you, Letty. Particularly you. And how we
+used to lean on the window-sill with our shoulders touching, and your
+cheek just in front of my eyes.... And nothing aching at all in one....
+
+"How I thought of that and longed for that!...
+
+"And so, you see, I didn't go to the hospital. I kept hoping to get to
+England first. And I left it too long...."
+
+"Life's come back to me with you!" said Letty. "Until just to-day I've
+believed you'd come back. And to-day--I doubted.... I thought it was all
+over--all the real life, love and the dear fun of things, and that there
+was nothing before me, nothing before me but just holding out--and
+keeping your memory.... Poor arm. Poor arm. And being kind to people.
+And pretending you were alive somewhere.... I'll not care about the arm.
+In a little while.... I'm glad you've gone, but I'm gladder you're back
+and can never go again.... And I will be your right hand, dear, and your
+left hand and all your hands. Both my hands for your dear lost left one.
+You shall have three hands instead of two...."
+
+
+Section 13
+
+Letty stood by the window as close as she could to Teddy in a world that
+seemed wholly made up of unexpected things. She could not heed the
+others, it was only when Teddy spoke to the others, or when they spoke
+to Teddy, that they existed for her.
+
+For instance, Teddy was presently talking to Mr. Direck.
+
+They had spoken about the Canadians who had come up and relieved the
+Essex men after the fight in which Teddy had been captured. And then it
+was manifest that Mr. Direck was talking of his regiment. "I'm not the
+only American who has gone Canadian--for the duration of the war."
+
+He had got to his explanation at last.
+
+"I've told a lie," he said triumphantly. "I've shifted my birthplace six
+hundred miles.
+
+"Mind you, I don't admit a thing that Cissie has ever said about
+America--not one thing. You don't understand the sort of proposition
+America is up against. America is the New World, where there are no
+races and nations any more; she is the Melting Pot, from which we will
+cast the better state. I've believed that always--in spite of a thousand
+little things I believe it now. I go back on nothing. I'm not fighting
+as an American either. I'm fighting simply as myself.... I'm not going
+fighting for England, mind you. Don't you fancy that. I don't know I'm
+so particularly in love with a lot of English ways as to do that. I
+don't see how any one can be very much in love with your Empire, with
+its dead-alive Court, its artful politicians, its lords and ladies and
+snobs, its way with the Irish and its way with India, and everybody
+shifting responsibility and telling lies about your common people. I'm
+not going fighting for England. I'm going fighting for Cissie--and
+justice and Belgium and all that--but more particularly for Cissie. And
+anyhow I can't look Pa Britling in the face any more.... And I want to
+see those trenches--close. I reckon they're a thing it will be
+interesting to talk about some day.... So I'm going," said Mr. Direck.
+"But chiefly--it's Cissie. See?"
+
+Cissie had come and stood by the side of him.
+
+She looked from poor broken Teddy to him and back again.
+
+"Up to now," she said, "I've wanted you to go...."
+
+Tears came into her eyes.
+
+"I suppose I must let you go," she said. "Oh! I'd hate you not to
+go...."
+
+
+Section 14
+
+"Good God! how old the Master looks!" cried Teddy suddenly.
+
+He was standing at the window, and as Mr. Direck came forward
+inquiringly he pointed to the figure of Mr. Britling passing along the
+road towards the Dower House.
+
+"He does look old. I hadn't noticed," said Mr. Direck.
+
+"Why, he's gone grey!" cried Teddy, peering. "He wasn't grey when I
+left."
+
+They watched the knickerbockered figure of Mr. Britling receding up the
+hill, atlas and papers in his hands behind his back.
+
+"I must go out to him," said Teddy, disengaging himself from Letty.
+
+"No," she said, arresting him with her hand.
+
+"But he will be glad--"
+
+She stood in her husband's way. She had a vision of Mr. Britling
+suddenly called out of his dreams of God ruling the united states of the
+world, to rejoice at Teddy's restoration....
+
+"No," she said; "it will only make him think again of Hugh--and how he
+died. Don't go out, Teddy. Not now. What does he care for _you_?... Let
+him rest from such things.... Leave him to dream over his atlas.... He
+isn't so desolate--if you knew.... I will tell you, Teddy--when I
+can....
+
+"But just now--No, he will think of Hugh again.... Let him go.... He has
+God and his atlas there.... They're more than you think."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER THE SECOND
+
+MR. BRITLING WRITES UNTIL SUNRISE
+
+
+Section 1
+
+It was some weeks later. It was now the middle of November, and Mr.
+Britling, very warmly wrapped in his thick dressing-gown and his thick
+llama wool pyjamas, was sitting at his night desk, and working ever and
+again at an essay, an essay of preposterous ambitions, for the title of
+it was "The Better Government of the World."
+
+Latterly he had had much sleepless misery. In the day life was
+tolerable, but in the night--unless he defended himself by working, the
+losses and cruelties of the war came and grimaced at him, insufferably.
+Now he would be haunted by long processions of refugees, now he would
+think of the dead lying stiff and twisted in a thousand dreadful
+attitudes. Then again he would be overwhelmed with anticipations of the
+frightful economic and social dissolution that might lie ahead.... At
+other times he thought of wounds and the deformities of body and spirit
+produced by injuries. And sometimes he would think of the triumph of
+evil. Stupid and triumphant persons went about a world that stupidity
+had desolated, with swaggering gestures, with a smiling consciousness of
+enhanced importance, with their scornful hatred of all measured and
+temperate and kindly things turned now to scornful contempt. And
+mingling with the soil they walked on lay the dead body of Hugh, face
+downward. At the back of the boy's head, rimmed by blood-stiffened
+hair--the hair that had once been "as soft as the down of a bird"--was a
+big red hole. That hole was always pitilessly distinct. They stepped on
+him--heedlessly. They heeled the scattered stuff of his exquisite brain
+into the clay....
+
+From all such moods of horror Mr. Britling's circle of lamplight was his
+sole refuge. His work could conjure up visions, like opium visions, of a
+world of order and justice. Amidst the gloom of world bankruptcy he
+stuck to the prospectus of a braver enterprise--reckless of his chances
+of subscribers....
+
+
+Section 2
+
+But this night even this circle of lamplight would not hold his mind.
+Doubt had crept into this last fastness. He pulled the papers towards
+him, and turned over the portion he had planned.
+
+His purpose in the book he was beginning to write was to reason out the
+possible methods of government that would give a stabler, saner control
+to the world. He believed still in democracy, but he was realising more
+and more that democracy had yet to discover its method. It had to take
+hold of the consciences of men, it had to equip itself with still
+unformed organisations. Endless years of patient thinking, of
+experimenting, of discussion lay before mankind ere this great idea
+could become reality, and right, the proven right thing, could rule the
+earth.
+
+Meanwhile the world must still remain a scene of blood-stained
+melodrama, of deafening noise, contagious follies, vast irrational
+destructions. One fine life after another went down from study and
+university and laboratory to be slain and silenced....
+
+Was it conceivable that this mad monster of mankind would ever be caught
+and held in the thin-spun webs of thought?
+
+Was it, after all, anything but pretension and folly for a man to work
+out plans for the better government of the world?--was it any better
+than the ambitious scheming of some fly upon the wheel of the romantic
+gods?
+
+Man has come, floundering and wounding and suffering, out of the
+breeding darknesses of Time, that will presently crush and consume him
+again. Why not flounder with the rest, why not eat, drink, fight,
+scream, weep and pray, forget Hugh, stop brooding upon Hugh, banish all
+these priggish dreams of "The Better Government of the World," and turn
+to the brighter aspects, the funny and adventurous aspects of the war,
+the Chestertonian jolliness, _Punch_ side of things? Think you because
+your sons are dead that there will be no more cakes and ale? Let mankind
+blunder out of the mud and blood as mankind has blundered in....
+
+Let us at any rate keep our precious Sense of Humour....
+
+He pulled his manuscript towards him. For a time he sat decorating the
+lettering of his title, "The Better Government of the World," with
+little grinning gnomes' heads and waggish tails....
+
+
+Section 3
+
+On the top of Mr. Britling's desk, beside the clock, lay a letter,
+written in clumsy English and with its envelope resealed by a label
+which testified that it had been "OPENED BY CENSOR."
+
+The friendly go-between in Norway had written to tell Mr. Britling that
+Herr Heinrich also was dead; he had died a wounded prisoner in Russia
+some months ago. He had been wounded and captured, after undergoing
+great hardships, during the great Russian attack upon the passes of the
+Carpathians in the early spring, and his wound had mortified. He had
+recovered partially for a time, and then he had been beaten and injured
+again in some struggle between German and Croatian prisoners, and he had
+sickened and died. Before he died he had written to his parents, and
+once again he had asked that the fiddle he had left in Mr. Britling's
+care should if possible be returned to them. It was manifest that both
+for him and them now it had become a symbol with many associations.
+
+The substance of this letter invaded the orange circle of the lamp; it
+would have to be answered, and the potentialities of the answer were
+running through Mr. Britling's brain to the exclusion of any impersonal
+composition. He thought of the old parents away there in Pomerania--he
+believed but he was not quite sure, that Heinrich had been an only
+son--and of the pleasant spectacled figure that had now become a broken
+and decaying thing in a prisoner's shallow grave....
+
+Another son had gone--all the world was losing its sons....
+
+He found himself thinking of young Heinrich in the very manner, if with
+a lesser intensity, in which he thought about his own son, as of hopes
+senselessly destroyed. His mind took no note of the fact that Heinrich
+was an enemy, that by the reckoning of a "war of attrition" his death
+was balance and compensation for the death of Hugh. He went straight to
+the root fact that they had been gallant and kindly beings, and that the
+same thing had killed them both....
+
+By no conceivable mental gymnastics could he think of the two as
+antagonists. Between them there was no imaginable issue. They had both
+very much the same scientific disposition; with perhaps more dash and
+inspiration in the quality of Hugh; more docility and method in the case
+of Karl. Until war had smashed them one against the other....
+
+He recalled his first sight of Heinrich at the junction, and how he had
+laughed at the sight of his excessive Teutonism. The close-cropped
+shining fair head surmounted by a yellowish-white corps cap had appeared
+dodging about among the people upon the platform, and manifestly asking
+questions. The face had been very pink with the effort of an
+unaccustomed tongue. The young man had been clad in a suit of white
+flannel refined by a purple line; his boots were of that greenish yellow
+leather that only a German student could esteem "chic"; his rucksack
+was upon his back, and the precious fiddle in its case was carried very
+carefully in one hand; this same dead fiddle. The other hand held a
+stick with a carved knob and a pointed end. He had been too German for
+belief. "Herr Heinrich!" Mr. Britling had said, and straightway the
+heels had clashed together for a bow, a bow from the waist, a bow that a
+heedless old lady much burthened with garden produce had greatly
+disarranged. From first to last amidst our off-hand English ways Herr
+Heinrich had kept his bow--and always it had been getting disarranged.
+
+That had been his constant effect; a little stiff, a little absurd, and
+always clean and pink and methodical. The boys had liked him without
+reserve, Mrs. Britling had liked him; everybody had found him a likeable
+creature. He never complained of anything except picnics. But he did
+object to picnics; to the sudden departure of the family to wild
+surroundings for the consumption of cold, knifeless and forkless meals
+in the serious middle hours of the day. He protested to Mr. Britling,
+respectfully but very firmly. It was, he held, implicit in their
+understanding that he should have a cooked meal in the middle of the
+day. Otherwise his Magen was perplexed and disordered. In the evening he
+could not eat with any gravity or profit....
+
+Their disposition towards under-feeding and a certain lack of fine
+sentiment were the only flaws in the English scheme that Herr Heinrich
+admitted. He certainly found the English unfeeling. His heart went even
+less satisfied than his Magen. He was a being of expressive affections;
+he wanted great friendships, mysterious relationships, love. He tried
+very bravely to revere and to understand and be occultly understood by
+Mr. Britling; he sought long walks and deep talks with Hugh and the
+small boys; he tried to fill his heart with Cissie; he found at last
+marvels of innocence and sweetness in the Hickson girl. She wore her
+hair in a pigtail when first he met her, and it made her almost
+Marguerite. This young man had cried aloud for love, warm and filling,
+like the Mittagsessen that was implicit in their understanding. And all
+these Essex people failed to satisfy him; they were silent, they were
+subtle, they slipped through the fat yet eager fingers of his heart, so
+that he fell back at last upon himself and his German correspondents and
+the idealisation of Maud Hickson and the moral education of Billy.
+Billy. Mr. Britling's memories came back at last to the figure of young
+Heinrich with the squirrel on his shoulder, that had so often stood in
+the way of the utter condemnation of Germany. That, seen closely, was
+the stuff of one brutal Prussian. What quarrel had we with him?...
+
+Other memories of Heinrich flitted across Mr. Britling's reverie.
+Heinrich at hockey, running with extreme swiftness and little skill,
+tricked and baffled by Letty, dodged by Hugh, going headlong forward and
+headlong back, and then with a cry flinging himself flat on the ground
+exhausted.... Or again Heinrich very grave and very pink, peering
+through his glasses at his cards at Skat.... Or Heinrich in the boats
+upon the great pond, or Heinrich swimming, or Heinrich hiding very, very
+artfully from the boys about the garden on a theory of his own, or
+Heinrich in strange postures, stalking the deer in Claverings Park. For
+a time he had had a great ambition to creep quite close to a deer and
+_touch_ it.... Or Heinrich indexing. He had a passion for listing and
+indexing books, music, any loose classifiable thing. His favourite
+amusement was devising schemes for the indentation of dictionary leaves,
+so that one could turn instantly to the needed word. He had bought and
+cut the edges of three dictionaries; each in succession improved upon
+the other; he had had great hopes of patents and wealth arising
+therefrom.... And his room had been a source of strange sounds; his
+search for music upon the violin. He had hoped when he came to
+Matching's Easy to join "some string quartette." But Matching's Easy
+produced no string quartette. He had to fall back upon the pianola, and
+try to play duets with that. Only the pianola did all the duet itself,
+and in the hands of a small Britling was apt to betray a facetious
+moodiness; sudden alternations between extreme haste and extreme
+lassitude....
+
+Then there came a memory of Heinrich talking very seriously; his glasses
+magnifying his round blue eyes, talking of his ideas about life, of his
+beliefs and disbeliefs, of his ambitions and prospects in life.
+
+He confessed two principal ambitions. They varied perhaps in their
+absolute dimensions, but they were of equal importance in his mind. The
+first of these was, so soon as he had taken his doctorate in philology,
+to give himself to the perfecting of an International Language; it was
+to combine all the virtues of Esperanto and Ido. "And then," said Herr
+Heinrich, "I do not think there will be any more wars--ever." The second
+ambition, which was important first because Herr Heinrich found much
+delight in working at it, and secondly because he thought it would give
+him great wealth and opportunity for propagating the perfect speech, was
+the elaboration of his system of marginal indentations for dictionaries
+and alphabetical books of reference of all sorts. It was to be so
+complete that one would just stand over the book to be consulted, run
+hand and eye over its edges and open the book--"at the very exact spot."
+He proposed to follow this business up with a quite Germanic
+thoroughness. "Presently," he said, "I must study the machinery by which
+the edges of books are cut. It is possible I may have to invent these
+also." This was the double-barrelled scheme of Herr Heinrich's career.
+And along it he was to go, and incidentally develop his large vague
+heart that was at present so manifestly unsatisfied....
+
+Such was the brief story of Herr Heinrich.
+
+That story was over--just as Hugh's story was over. That first volume
+would never now have a second and a third. It ended in some hasty grave
+in Russia. The great scheme for marginal indices would never be
+patented, the duets with the pianola would never be played again.
+
+Imagination glimpsed a little figure toiling manfully through the slush
+and snow of the Carpathians; saw it staggering under its first
+experience of shell fire; set it amidst attacks and flights and fatigue
+and hunger and a rush perhaps in the darkness; guessed at the wounding
+blow. Then came the pitiful pilgrimage of the prisoners into captivity,
+captivity in a land desolated, impoverished and embittered. Came wounds
+wrapped in filthy rags, pain and want of occupation, and a poor little
+bent and broken Heinrich sitting aloof in a crowded compound nursing a
+mortifying wound....
+
+He used always to sit in a peculiar attitude with his arms crossed on
+his crossed legs, looking slantingly through his glasses....
+
+So he must have sat, and presently he lay on some rough bedding and
+suffered, untended, in infinite discomfort; lay motionless and thought
+at times, it may be, of Matching's Easy and wondered what Hugh and Teddy
+were doing. Then he became fevered, and the world grew bright-coloured
+and fantastic and ugly for him. Until one day an infinite weakness laid
+hold of him, and his pain grew faint and all his thoughts and memories
+grew faint--and still fainter....
+
+The violin had been brought into Mr. Britling's study that afternoon,
+and lay upon the further window-seat. Poor little broken sherd, poor
+little fragment of a shattered life! It looked in its case like a baby
+in a coffin.
+
+"I must write a letter to the old father and mother," Mr. Britling
+thought. "I can't just send the poor little fiddle--without a word. In
+all this pitiful storm of witless hate--surely there may be one
+greeting--not hateful.
+
+"From my blackness to yours," said Mr. Britling aloud. He would have to
+write it in English. But even if they knew no English some one would be
+found to translate it to them. He would have to write very plainly.
+
+
+Section 4
+
+He pushed aside the manuscript of "The Better Government of the World,"
+and began to write rather slowly, shaping his letters roundly and
+distinctly:
+
+
+ _Dear Sir,_
+
+ _I am writing this letter to you to tell you I am sending back the
+ few little things I had kept for your son at his request when the
+ war broke out. I am sending them--_
+
+Mr. Britling left that blank for the time until he could arrange the
+method of sending to the Norwegian intermediary.
+
+ _Especially I am sending his violin, which he had asked me thrice to
+ convey to you. Either it is a gift from you or it symbolised many
+ things for him that he connected with home and you. I will have it
+ packed with particular care, and I will do all in my power to ensure
+ its safe arrival._
+
+ _I want to tell you that all the stress and passion of this war has
+ not made us here in Matching's Easy forget our friend your son. He
+ was one of us, he had our affection, he had friends here who are
+ still his friends. We found him honourable and companionable, and we
+ share something of your loss. I have got together for you a few
+ snapshots I chance to possess in which you will see him in the
+ sunshine, and which will enable you perhaps to picture a little more
+ definitely than you would otherwise do the life he led here. There
+ is one particularly that I have marked. Our family is lunching
+ out-of-doors, and you will see that next to your son is a youngster,
+ a year or so his junior, who is touching glasses with him. I have
+ put a cross over his head. He is my eldest son, he was very dear to
+ me, and he too has been, killed in this war. They are, you see,
+ smiling very pleasantly at each other._
+
+While writing this Mr. Britling had been struck by the thought of the
+photographs, and he had taken them out of the little drawer into which
+he was accustomed to thrust them. He picked out the ones that showed the
+young German, but there were others, bright with sunshine, that were now
+charged with acquired significances; there were two showing the children
+and Teddy and Hugh and Cissie and Letty doing the goose step, and there
+was one of Mr. Van der Pant, smiling at the front door, in Heinrich's
+abandoned slippers. There were endless pictures of Teddy also. It is the
+happy instinct of the Kodak to refuse those days that are overcast, and
+the photographic record of a life is a chain of all its kindlier
+aspects. In the drawer above these snapshots there were Hugh's letters
+and a miscellany of trivial documents touching on his life.
+
+Mr. Britling discontinued writing and turned these papers over and
+mused. Heinrich's letters and postcards had got in among them, and so
+had a letter of Teddy's....
+
+The letters reinforced the photographs in their reminder how kind and
+pleasant a race mankind can be. Until the wild asses of nationalism came
+kicking and slaying amidst them, until suspicion and jostling greed and
+malignity poison their minds, until the fools with the high explosives
+blow that elemental goodness into shrieks of hate and splashes of blood.
+How kindly men are--up to the very instant of their cruelties! His mind
+teemed suddenly with little anecdotes and histories of the goodwill of
+men breaking through the ill-will of war, of the mutual help of sorely
+wounded Germans and English lying together in the mud and darkness
+between the trenches, of the fellowship of captors and prisoners, of
+the Saxons at Christmas fraternising with the English.... Of that he had
+seen photographs in one of the daily papers....
+
+His mind came back presently from these wanderings to the task before
+him.
+
+He tried to picture these Heinrich parents. He supposed they were
+kindly, civilised people. It was manifest the youngster had come to him
+from a well-ordered and gentle-spirited home. But he imagined them--he
+could not tell why--as people much older than himself. Perhaps young
+Heinrich had on some occasion said they were old people--he could not
+remember. And he had a curious impulse too to write to them in phrases
+of consolation; as if their loss was more pitiable than his own. He
+doubted whether they had the consolation of his sanguine temperament,
+whether they could resort as readily as he could to his faith, whether
+in Pomerania there was the same consoling possibility of an essay on the
+Better Government of the World. He did not think this very clearly, but
+that was what was at the back of his mind. He went on writing.
+
+ _If you think that these two boys have both perished, not in some
+ noble common cause but one against the other in a struggle of
+ dynasties and boundaries and trade routes and tyrannous
+ ascendancies, then it seems to me that you must feel as I feel that
+ this war is the most tragic and dreadful thing that has ever
+ happened to mankind._
+
+He sat thinking for some minutes after he had written that, and when
+presently he resumed his writing, a fresh strain of thought was
+traceable even in his opening sentence.
+
+ _If you count dead and wounds this is the most dreadful war in
+ history; for you as for me, it has been almost the extremity of
+ personal tragedy.... Black sorrow.... But is it the most dreadful
+ war?_
+
+ _I do not think it is. I can write to you and tell you that I do
+ indeed believe that our two sons have died not altogether in vain.
+ Our pain and anguish may not be wasted--may be necessary. Indeed
+ they may be necessary. Here am I bereaved and wretched--and I hope.
+ Never was the fabric of war so black; that I admit. But never was
+ the black fabric of war so threadbare. At a thousand points the
+ light is shining through._
+
+Mr. Britling's pen stopped.
+
+There was perfect stillness in the study bedroom.
+
+"The tinpot style," said Mr. Britling at last in a voice of extreme
+bitterness.
+
+He fell into an extraordinary quarrel with his style. He forgot about
+those Pomeranian parents altogether in his exasperation at his own
+inexpressiveness, at his incomplete control of these rebel words and
+phrases that came trailing each its own associations and suggestions to
+hamper his purpose with it. He read over the offending sentence.
+
+"The point is that it is true," he whispered. "It is exactly what I want
+to say."...
+
+Exactly?...
+
+His mind stuck on that "exactly."... When one has much to say style is
+troublesome. It is as if one fussed with one's uniform before a
+battle.... But that is just what one ought to do before a battle.... One
+ought to have everything in order....
+
+He took a fresh sheet and made three trial beginnings.
+
+ _"War is like a black fabric."_...
+
+ _"War is a curtain of black fabric across the pathway."_
+
+ _"War is a curtain of dense black fabric across all the hopes and
+ kindliness of mankind. Yet always it has let through some gleams of
+ light, and now--I am not dreaming--it grows threadbare, and here and
+ there and at a thousand points the light is breaking through. We owe
+ it to all these dear youths--"_
+
+His pen stopped again.
+
+"I must work on a rough draft," said Mr. Britling.
+
+
+Section 5
+
+Three hours later Mr. Britling was working by daylight, though his study
+lamp was still burning, and his letter to old Heinrich was still no
+better than a collection of material for a letter. But the material was
+falling roughly into shape, and Mr. Britling's intentions were finding
+themselves. It was clear to him now that he was no longer writing as his
+limited personal self to those two personal selves grieving, in the old,
+large, high-walled, steep-roofed household amidst pine woods, of which
+Heinrich had once shown him a picture. He knew them too little for any
+such personal address. He was writing, he perceived, not as Mr. Britling
+but as an Englishman--that was all he could be to them--and he was
+writing to them as Germans; he could apprehend them as nothing more. He
+was just England bereaved to Germany bereaved....
+
+He was no longer writing to the particular parents of one particular
+boy, but to all that mass of suffering, regret, bitterness and fatigue
+that lay behind the veil of the "front." Slowly, steadily, the manhood
+of Germany was being wiped out. As he sat there in the stillness he
+could think that at least two million men of the Central Powers were
+dead, and an equal number maimed and disabled. Compared with that our
+British losses, immense and universal as they were by the standard of
+any previous experience, were still slight; our larger armies had still
+to suffer, and we had lost irrevocably not very much more than a quarter
+of a million. But the tragedy gathered against us. We knew enough
+already to know what must be the reality of the German homes to which
+those dead men would nevermore return....
+
+If England had still the longer account to pay, the French had paid
+already nearly to the limits of endurance. They must have lost well over
+a million of their mankind, and still they bled and bled. Russia too in
+the East had paid far more than man for man in this vast swapping off of
+lives. In a little while no Censorship would hold the voice of the
+peoples. There would be no more talk of honour and annexations,
+hegemonies and trade routes, but only Europe lamenting for her dead....
+
+The Germany to which he wrote would be a nation of widows and children,
+rather pinched boys and girls, crippled men, old men, deprived men, men
+who had lost brothers and cousins and friends and ambitions. No triumph
+now on land or sea could save Germany from becoming that. France too
+would be that, Russia, and lastly Britain, each in their degree. Before
+the war there had been no Germany to which an Englishman could appeal;
+Germany had been a threat, a menace, a terrible trampling of armed men.
+It was as little possible then to think of talking to Germany as it
+would have been to have stopped the Kaiser in mid career in his hooting
+car down the Unter den Linden and demand a quiet talk with him. But the
+Germany that had watched those rushes with a slightly doubting pride had
+her eyes now full of tears and blood. She had believed, she had obeyed,
+and no real victory had come. Still she fought on, bleeding, agonising,
+wasting her substance and the substance of the whole world, to no
+conceivable end but exhaustion, so capable she was, so devoted, so proud
+and utterly foolish. And the mind of Germany, whatever it was before the
+war, would now be something residual, something left over and sitting
+beside a reading-lamp as he was sitting beside a reading-lamp, thinking,
+sorrowing, counting the cost, looking into the dark future....
+
+And to that he wrote, to that dimly apprehended figure outside a circle
+of the light like his own circle of light--which was the father of
+Heinrich, which was great Germany, Germany which lived before and which
+will yet outlive the flapping of the eagles....
+
+ _Our boys_, he wrote, _have died, fighting one against the other.
+ They have been fighting upon an issue so obscure that your German
+ press is still busy discussing what it was. For us it was that
+ Belgium was invaded and France in danger of destruction. Nothing
+ else could have brought the English into the field against you. But
+ why you invaded Belgium and France and whether that might have been
+ averted we do not know to this day. And still this war goes on and
+ still more boys die, and these men who do not fight, these men in
+ the newspaper offices and in the ministries plan campaigns and
+ strokes and counter-strokes that belong to no conceivable plan at
+ all. Except that now for them there is something more terrible than
+ war. And that is the day of reckoning with their own people._
+
+ _What have we been fighting for? What are we fighting for? Do you
+ know? Does any one know? Why am I spending what is left of my
+ substance and you what is left of yours to keep on this war against
+ each other? What have we to gain from hurting one another still
+ further? Why should we be puppets any longer in the hands of crowned
+ fools and witless diplomatists? Even if we were dumb and acquiescent
+ before, does not the blood of our sons now cry out to us that this
+ foolery should cease? We have let these people send our sons to
+ death._
+
+ _It is you and I who must stop these wars, these massacres of boys._
+
+ _Massacres of boys! That indeed is the essence of modern war. The
+ killing off of the young. It is the destruction of the human
+ inheritance, it is the spending of all the life and material of the
+ future upon present-day hate and greed. Fools and knaves,
+ politicians, tricksters, and those who trade on the suspicions and
+ thoughtless, generous angers of men, make wars; the indolence and
+ modesty of the mass of men permit them. Are you and I to suffer such
+ things until the whole fabric of our civilisation, that has been so
+ slowly and so laboriously built up, is altogether destroyed?_
+
+ _When I sat down to write to you I had meant only to write to you of
+ your son and mine. But I feel that what can be said in particular of
+ our loss, need not be said; it can be understood without saying.
+ What needs to be said and written about is this, that war must be
+ put an end to and that nobody else but you and me and all of us can
+ do it. We have to do that for the love of our sons and our race and
+ all that is human. War is no longer human; the chemist and the
+ metallurgist have changed all that. My boy was shot through the eye;
+ his brain was blown to pieces by some man who never knew what he had
+ done. Think what that means!... It is plain to me, surely it is
+ plain to you and all the world, that war is now a mere putting of
+ the torch to explosives that flare out to universal ruin. There is
+ nothing for one sane man to write to another about in these days but
+ the salvation of mankind from war._
+
+ _Now I want you to be patient with me and hear me out. There was a
+ time in the earlier part of this war when it was hard to be patient
+ because there hung over us the dread of losses and disaster. Now we
+ need dread no longer. The dreaded thing has happened. Sitting
+ together as we do in spirit beside the mangled bodies of our dead,
+ surely we can be as patient as the hills._
+
+ _I want to tell you quite plainly and simply that I think that
+ Germany which is chief and central in this war is most to blame for
+ this war. Writing to you as an Englishman to a German and with war
+ still being waged, there must be no mistake between us upon this
+ point. I am persuaded that in the decade that ended with your
+ overthrow of France in 1871, Germany turned her face towards evil,
+ and that her refusal to treat France generously and to make friends
+ with any other great power in the world, is the essential cause of
+ this war. Germany triumphed--and she trampled on the loser. She
+ inflicted intolerable indignities. She set herself to prepare for
+ further aggressions; long before this killing began she was making
+ war upon land and sea, launching warships, building strategic
+ railways, setting up a vast establishment of war material,
+ threatening, straining all the world to keep pace with her
+ threats.... At last there was no choice before any European nation
+ but submission to the German will, or war. And it was no will to
+ which righteous men could possibly submit. It came as an illiberal
+ and ungracious will. It was the will of Zabern. It is not as if you
+ had set yourselves to be an imperial people and embrace and unify
+ the world. You did not want to unify the world. You wanted to set
+ the foot of an intensely national Germany, a sentimental and
+ illiberal Germany, a Germany that treasured the portraits of your
+ ridiculous Kaiser and his litter of sons, a Germany wearing uniform,
+ reading black letter, and despising every kultur but her own, upon
+ the neck of a divided and humiliated mankind. It was an intolerable
+ prospect. I had rather the whole world died._
+
+ _Forgive me for writing "you." You are as little responsible for
+ that Germany as I am for--Sir Edward Grey. But this happened over
+ you; you did not do your utmost to prevent it--even as England has
+ happened, and I have let it happen over me...._
+
+"It is so dry; so general," whispered Mr. Britling. "And yet--it is this
+that has killed our sons."
+
+He sat still for a time, and then went on reading a fresh sheet of his
+manuscript.
+
+ _When I bring these charges against Germany I have little
+ disposition to claim any righteousness for Britain. There has been
+ small splendour in this war for either Germany or Britain or Russia;
+ we three have chanced to be the biggest of the combatants, but the
+ glory lies with invincible France. It is France and Belgium and
+ Serbia who shine as the heroic lands. They have fought defensively
+ and beyond all expectation, for dear land and freedom. This war for
+ them has been a war of simple, definite issues, to which they have
+ risen with an entire nobility. Englishman and German alike may well
+ envy them that simplicity. I look to you, as an honest man schooled
+ by the fierce lessons of this war, to meet me in my passionate
+ desire to see France, Belgium and Serbia emerge restored from all
+ this blood and struggle, enlarged to the limits of their
+ nationality, vindicated and secure. Russia I will not write about
+ here; let me go on at once to tell you about my own country;
+ remarking only that between England and Russia there are endless
+ parallelisms. We have similar complexities, kindred difficulties. We
+ have for instance an imported dynasty, we have a soul-destroying
+ State Church which cramps and poisons the education of our ruling
+ class, we have a people out of touch with a secretive government,
+ and the same traditional contempt for science. We have our Irelands
+ and Polands. Even our kings bear a curious likeness...._
+
+At this point there was a break in the writing, and Mr. Britling made,
+as it were, a fresh beginning.
+
+ _Politically the British Empire is a clumsy collection of strange
+ accidents. It is a thing as little to be proud of as the outline of
+ a flint or the shape of a potato. For the mass of English people
+ India and Egypt and all that side of our system mean less than
+ nothing; our trade is something they do not understand, our imperial
+ wealth something they do not share. Britain has been a group of
+ four democracies caught in the net of a vast yet casual imperialism;
+ the common man here is in a state of political perplexity from the
+ cradle to the grave. None the less there is a great people here even
+ as there is a great people in Russia, a people with a soul and
+ character of its own, a people of unconquerable kindliness and with
+ a peculiar genius, which still struggle towards will and expression.
+ We have been beginning that same great experiment that France and
+ America and Switzerland and China are making, the experiment of
+ democracy. It is the newest form of human association, and we are
+ still but half awake to its needs and necessary conditions. For it
+ is idle to pretend that the little city democracies of ancient times
+ were comparable to the great essays in practical republicanism that
+ mankind is making to-day. This age of the democratic republics that
+ dawn is a new age. It has not yet lasted for a century, not for a
+ paltry hundred years.... All new things are weak things; a rat can
+ kill a man-child with ease; the greater the destiny, the weaker the
+ immediate self-protection may be. And to me it seems that your
+ complete and perfect imperialism, ruled by Germans for Germans, is
+ in its scope and outlook a more antiquated and smaller and less
+ noble thing than these sprawling emergent giant democracies of the
+ West that struggle so confusedly against it...._
+
+ _But that we do struggle confusedly, with pitiful leaders and
+ infinite waste and endless delay; that it is to our indisciplines
+ and to the dishonesties and tricks our incompleteness provokes, that
+ the prolongation of this war is to be ascribed, I readily admit. At
+ the outbreak of this war I had hoped to see militarism felled within
+ a year...._
+
+
+Section 6
+
+From this point onward Mr. Britling's notes became more fragmentary.
+They had a consecutiveness, but they were discontinuous. His thought had
+leapt across gaps that his pen had had no time to fill. And he had
+begun to realise that his letter to the old people in Pomerania was
+becoming impossible. It had broken away into dissertation.
+
+"Yet there must be dissertations," he said. "Unless such men as we are
+take these things in hand, always we shall be misgoverned, always the
+sons will die...."
+
+
+Section 7
+
+ _I do not think you Germans realise how steadily you were conquering
+ the world before this war began. Had you given half the energy and
+ intelligence you have spent upon this war to the peaceful conquest
+ of men's minds and spirits, I believe that you would have taken the
+ leadership of the world tranquilly--no man disputing. Your science
+ was five years, your social and economic organisation was a quarter
+ of a century in front of ours.... Never has it so lain in the power
+ of a great people to lead and direct mankind towards the world
+ republic and universal peace. It needed but a certain generosity of
+ the imagination...._
+
+ _But your Junkers, your Imperial court, your foolish vicious
+ Princes; what were such dreams to them?... With an envious
+ satisfaction they hurled all the accomplishment of Germany into the
+ fires of war...._
+
+
+Section 8
+
+ _Your boy, as no doubt you know, dreamt constantly of such a world
+ peace as this that I foreshadow; he was more generous than his
+ country. He could envisage war and hostility only as
+ misunderstanding. He thought that a world that could explain itself
+ clearly would surely be at peace. He was scheming always therefore
+ for the perfection and propagation of Esperanto or Ido, or some such
+ universal link. My youngster too was full of a kindred and yet
+ larger dream, the dream of human science, which knows neither king
+ nor country nor race_....
+
+ _These boys, these hopes, this war has killed_....
+
+That fragment ended so. Mr. Britling ceased to read for a time. "But has
+it killed them?" he whispered....
+
+"If you had lived, my dear, you and your England would have talked with
+a younger Germany--better than I can ever do...."
+
+He turned the pages back, and read here and there with an accumulating
+discontent.
+
+
+Section 9
+
+"Dissertations," said Mr. Britling.
+
+Never had it been so plain to Mr. Britling that he was a weak, silly,
+ill-informed and hasty-minded writer, and never had he felt so
+invincible a conviction that the Spirit of God was in him, and that it
+fell to him to take some part in the establishment of a new order of
+living upon the earth; it might be the most trivial part by the scale of
+the task, but for him it was to be now his supreme concern. And it was
+an almost intolerable grief to him that his services should be, for all
+his desire, so poor in quality, so weak in conception. Always he seemed
+to be on the verge of some illuminating and beautiful statement of his
+cause; always he was finding his writing inadequate, a thin treachery to
+the impulse of his heart, always he was finding his effort weak and
+ineffective. In this instance, at the outset he seemed to see with a
+golden clearness the message of brotherhood, or forgiveness, of a common
+call. To whom could such a message be better addressed than to those
+sorrowing parents; from whom could it come with a better effect than
+from himself? And now he read what he had made of this message. It
+seemed to his jaded mind a pitifully jaded effort. It had no light, it
+had no depth. It was like the disquisition of a debating society.
+
+He was distressed by a fancy of an old German couple, spectacled and
+peering, puzzled by his letter. Perhaps they would be obscurely hurt by
+his perplexing generalisations. Why, they would ask, should this
+Englishman preach to them?
+
+He sat back in his chair wearily, with his chin sunk upon his chest. For
+a time he did not think, and then, he read again the sentence in front
+of his eyes.
+
+ _"These boys, these hopes, this war has killed."_
+
+The words hung for a time in his mind.
+
+"No!" said Mr. Britling stoutly. "They live!"
+
+And suddenly it was borne in upon his mind that he was not alone. There
+were thousands and tens of thousands of men and women like himself,
+desiring with all their hearts to say, as he desired to say, the
+reconciling word. It was not only his hand that thrust against the
+obstacles.... Frenchmen and Russians sat in the same stillness, facing
+the same perplexities; there were Germans seeking a way through to him.
+Even as he sat and wrote. And for the first time clearly he felt a
+Presence of which he had thought very many times in the last few weeks,
+a Presence so close to him that it was behind his eyes and in his brain
+and hands. It was no trick of his vision; it was a feeling of immediate
+reality. And it was Hugh, Hugh that he had thought was dead, it was
+young Heinrich living also, it was himself, it was those others that
+sought, it was all these and it was more, it was the Master, the Captain
+of Mankind, it was God, there present with him, and he knew that it was
+God. It was as if he had been groping all this time in the darkness,
+thinking himself alone amidst rocks and pitfalls and pitiless things,
+and suddenly a hand, a firm strong hand, had touched his own. And a
+voice within him bade him be of good courage. There was no magic
+trickery in that moment; he was still weak and weary, a discouraged
+rhetorician, a good intention ill-equipped; but he was no longer lonely
+and wretched, no longer in the same world with despair. God was beside
+him and within him and about him.... It was the crucial moment of Mr.
+Britling's life. It was a thing as light as the passing of a cloud on an
+April morning; it was a thing as great as the first day of creation. For
+some moments he still sat back with his chin upon his chest and his
+hands dropping from the arms of his chair. Then he sat up and drew a
+deep breath....
+
+This had come almost as a matter of course.
+
+For weeks his mind had been playing about this idea. He had talked to
+Letty of this Finite God, who is the king of man's adventure in space
+and time. But hitherto God had been for him a thing of the intelligence,
+a theory, a report, something told about but not realised.... Mr.
+Britling's thinking about God hitherto had been like some one who has
+found an empty house, very beautiful and pleasant, full of the promise
+of a fine personality. And then as the discoverer makes his lonely,
+curious explorations, he hears downstairs, dear and friendly, the voice
+of the Master coming in....
+
+There was no need to despair because he himself was one of the feeble
+folk. God was with him indeed, and he was with God. The King was coming
+to his own. Amidst the darknesses and confusions, the nightmare
+cruelties and the hideous stupidities of the great war, God, the Captain
+of the World Republic, fought his way to empire. So long as one did
+one's best and utmost in a cause so mighty, did it matter though the
+thing one did was little and poor?
+
+"I have thought too much of myself," said Mr. Britling, "and of what I
+would do by myself. I have forgotten _that which was with me_...."
+
+
+Section 10
+
+He turned over the rest of the night's writing presently, and read it
+now as though it was the work of another man.
+
+These later notes were fragmentary, and written in a sprawling hand.
+
+ _"Let us make ourselves watchers and guardians of the order of the
+ world...._
+
+ _"If only for love of our dead...._
+
+ _"Let us pledge ourselves to service. Let us set ourselves with all
+ our minds and all our hearts to the perfecting and working out of
+ the methods of democracy and the ending for ever of the kings and
+ emperors and priestcrafts and the bands of adventurers, the traders
+ and owners and forestallers who have betrayed mankind into this
+ morass of hate and blood--in which our sons are lost--in which we
+ flounder still...."_
+
+How feeble was this squeak of exhortation! It broke into a scolding
+note.
+
+"Who have betrayed," read Mr. Britling, and judged the phrase.
+
+"Who have fallen with us," he amended....
+
+"One gets so angry and bitter--because one feels alone, I suppose.
+Because one feels that for them one's reason is no reason. One is
+enraged by the sense of their silent and regardless contradiction, and
+one forgets the Power of which one is a part...."
+
+The sheet that bore the sentence he criticised was otherwise blank
+except that written across it obliquely in a very careful hand were the
+words "Hugh," and "Hugh Philip Britling."...
+
+On the next sheet he had written: "Let us set up the peace of the World
+Republic amidst these ruins. Let it be our religion, our calling."
+
+There he had stopped.
+
+The last sheet of Mr. Britling's manuscript may be more conveniently
+given in fac-simile than described.
+
+[Handwritten:
+
+ Hugh
+ Hugh
+ My dear Hugh
+
+ Lawyers Princes
+ Dealers in Contention
+
+ _Honesty_
+
+ 'Blood Blood ...
+
+ [Transcriber's Note: illegible] an End to them
+
+]
+
+
+Section 11
+
+He sighed.
+
+He looked at the scattered papers, and thought of the letter they were
+to have made.
+
+His fatigue spoke first.
+
+"Perhaps after all I'd better just send the fiddle...."
+
+He rested his cheeks between his hands, and remained so for a long time.
+His eyes stared unseeingly. His thoughts wandered and spread and faded.
+At length he recalled his mind to that last idea. "Just send the
+fiddle--without a word."
+
+"No. I must write to them plainly.
+
+"About God as I have found Him.
+
+"As He has found me...."
+
+He forgot the Pomeranians for a time. He murmured to himself. He turned
+over the conviction that had suddenly become clear and absolute in his
+mind.
+
+"Religion is the first thing and the last thing, and until a man has
+found God and been found by God, he begins at no beginning, he works to
+no end. He may have his friendships, his partial loyalties, his scraps
+of honour. But all these things fall into place and life falls into
+place only with God. Only with God. God, who fights through men against
+Blind Force and Night and Non-Existence; who is the end, who is the
+meaning. He is the only King.... Of course I must write about Him. I
+must tell all my world of Him. And before the coming of the true King,
+the inevitable King, the King who is present whenever just men
+foregather, this blood-stained rubbish of the ancient world, these puny
+kings and tawdry emperors, these wily politicians and artful lawyers,
+these men who claim and grab and trick and compel, these war makers and
+oppressors, will presently shrivel and pass--like paper thrust into a
+flame...."
+
+Then after a time he said:
+
+"Our sons who have shown us God...."
+
+
+Section 12
+
+He rubbed his open hands over his eyes and forehead.
+
+The night of effort had tired his brain, and he was no longer thinking
+actively. He had a little interval of blankness, sitting at his desk
+with his hands pressed over his eyes....
+
+He got up presently, and stood quite motionless at the window, looking
+out.
+
+His lamp was still burning, but for some time he had not been writing by
+the light of his lamp. Insensibly the day had come and abolished his
+need for that individual circle of yellow light. Colour had returned to
+the world, clean pearly colour, clear and definite like the glance of a
+child or the voice of a girl, and a golden wisp of cloud hung in the sky
+over the tower of the church. There was a mist upon the pond, a soft
+grey mist not a yard high. A covey of partridges ran and halted and ran
+again in the dewy grass outside his garden railings. The partridges were
+very numerous this year because there had been so little shooting.
+Beyond in the meadow a hare sat up as still as a stone. A horse
+neighed.... Wave after wave of warmth and light came sweeping before the
+sunrise across the world of Matching's Easy. It was as if there was
+nothing but morning and sunrise in the world.
+
+From away towards the church came the sound of some early worker
+whetting a scythe.
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Mr. Britling Sees It Through, by H. G. Wells
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH ***
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