summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:50:10 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:50:10 -0700
commit3a3f0430706104999a77a8b63445c4bc629a7d53 (patch)
tree019ee600add50ad7324e3f2330d38f1dfc9409b0
initial commit of ebook 17018HEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--17018-8.txt15701
-rw-r--r--17018-8.zipbin0 -> 314435 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h.zipbin0 -> 1327899 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/17018-h.htm18954
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2001.jpgbin0 -> 34574 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2002.pngbin0 -> 8269 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2098.jpgbin0 -> 36040 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2099.jpgbin0 -> 87429 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2116.jpgbin0 -> 41940 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2117.jpgbin0 -> 137354 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2230.jpgbin0 -> 93241 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2231.jpgbin0 -> 133530 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2248.jpgbin0 -> 47548 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2249.jpgbin0 -> 67191 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2362.jpgbin0 -> 68703 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2363.jpgbin0 -> 78585 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2380.jpgbin0 -> 95941 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018-h/images/2381.jpgbin0 -> 67970 bytes
-rw-r--r--17018.txt15701
-rw-r--r--17018.zipbin0 -> 314337 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
23 files changed, 50372 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/17018-8.txt b/17018-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..30e98cc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,15701 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page,
+Volume II, by Burton J. Hendrick
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume II
+
+Author: Burton J. Hendrick
+
+Release Date: November 6, 2005 [EBook #17018]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Sir Edward Grey (now Viscount Grey of Fallodon),
+Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1905-1916]
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ LIFE AND LETTERS OF
+ WALTER H. PAGE
+
+ BY
+
+ BURTON J. HENDRICK
+
+ VOLUME
+ II
+
+ GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ 1924
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES
+ AT
+ THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N.Y.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+VOLUME II
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ XIV. THE "LUSITANIA" AND AFTER 1
+ XV. THE AMBASSADOR AND THE LAWYERS 53
+ XVI. DARK DAYS FOR THE ALLIES 81
+ XVII. CHRISTMAS IN ENGLAND, 1915 103
+ XVIII. A PERPLEXED AMBASSADOR 128
+ XIX. WASHINGTON IN THE SUMMER OF 1916 148
+ XX. "PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY" 189
+ XXI. THE UNITED STATES AT WAR 215
+ XXII. THE BALFOUR MISSION TO THE UNITED STATES 248
+ XXIII. PAGE--THE MAN 295
+ XXIV. A RESPITE AT ST. IVES 321
+ XXV. GETTING THE AMERICAN TROOPS TO FRANCE 349
+ XXVI. LAST DAYS IN ENGLAND 374
+ XXVII. THE END 404
+ APPENDIX 407
+ INDEX 425
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ Sir Edward Grey _Frontispiece_
+
+ FACING PAGE
+
+ Col. Edward M. House. From a painting by P.A.
+ Laszlo 88
+
+ The Rt. Hon. Herbert Henry Asquith, Prime Minister
+ of Great Britain, 1908-1916 89
+
+ Herbert C. Hoover, in 1914 104
+
+ A facsimile page from the Ambassador's letter of
+ November 24, 1916, resigning his Ambassadorship 105
+
+ Walter H. Page, at the time of America's entry into
+ the war, April, 1917 216
+
+ Resolution passed by the two Houses of Parliament,
+ April 18, 1917, on America's entry into the war 217
+
+ The Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George, Prime Minister
+ of Great Britain, 1916-- 232
+
+ The Rt. Hon. Arthur James Balfour (now the Earl of
+ Balfour), Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,
+ 1916-1919 233
+
+ Lord Robert Cecil, Minister of Blockade, 1916-1918,
+ Assistant Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,
+ 1918 344
+
+ General John J. Pershing, Commander-in-Chief of
+ the American Expeditionary Force in the Great
+ War 345
+
+ Admiral William Sowden Sims, Commander of
+ American Naval Forces operating in European
+ waters during the Great War 360
+
+ A silver model of the _Mayflower_, the farewell gift
+ of the Plymouth Council to Mr. Page 361
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+LIFE AND LETTERS
+
+OF
+
+WALTER H. PAGE
+
+
+
+
+THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF
+
+WALTER H. PAGE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE "LUSITANIA"--AND AFTER
+
+
+I
+
+The news of the _Lusitania_ was received at the American Embassy at four
+o'clock on the afternoon of May 7, 1915. At that time preparations were
+under way for a dinner in honour of Colonel and Mrs. House; the first
+_Lusitania_ announcement declared that only the ship itself had been
+destroyed and that all the passengers and members of the crew had been
+saved; there was, therefore, no good reason for abandoning this dinner.
+
+At about seven o'clock, the Ambassador came home; his manner showed that
+something extraordinary had taken place; there were no outward signs of
+emotion, but he was very serious. The first news, he now informed Mrs.
+Page, had been a mistake; more than one thousand men, women, and
+children had lost their lives, and more than one hundred of these were
+American citizens. It was too late to postpone the dinner but that
+affair was one of the most tragic in the social history of London. The
+Ambassador was constantly receiving bulletins from his Chancery, and
+these, as quickly as they were received, he read to his guests. His
+voice was quiet and subdued; there were no indications of excitement in
+his manner or in that of his friends, and hardly of suppressed emotion.
+The atmosphere was rather that of dumb stupefaction. The news seemed to
+have dulled everyone's capacity for thought and even for feeling. If any
+one spoke, it was in whispers. Afterward, in the drawing room, this same
+mental state was the prevailing one; there was little denunciation of
+Germany and practically no discussion as to the consequences of the
+crime; everyone's thought was engrossed by the harrowing and
+unbelievable facts which the Ambassador was reading from the little
+yellow slips that were periodically brought in. An irresistible
+fascination evidently kept everybody in the room; the guests stayed
+late, eager for every new item. When they finally left, one after
+another, their manner was still abstracted and they said their
+good-nights in low voices. There were two reasons for this behaviour.
+The first was that the Ambassador and his guests had received the
+details of the greatest infamy which any supposedly civilized state had
+perpetrated since the massacre of Saint Bartholomew. The second was the
+conviction that the United States would at once declare war on Germany.
+
+On this latter point several of the guests expressed their ideas and one
+of the most shocked and outspoken was Colonel House. For a month the
+President's personal representative had been discussing with British
+statesmen possible openings for mediation, but all his hopes in this
+direction now vanished. That President Wilson would act with the utmost
+energy Colonel House took for granted. This act, he evidently believed,
+left the United States no option. "We shall be at war with Germany
+within a month," he declared.
+
+The feeling that prevailed in the Embassy this evening was the one that
+existed everywhere in London for several days. Emotionally the event
+acted like an anęsthetic. This was certainly the condition of all
+Americans associated with the American Embassy, especially Page
+himself. A day or two after the sinking the Ambassador went to Euston
+Station, at an early hour in the morning, to receive the American
+survivors. The hundred or more men and women who shambled from the train
+made a listless and bedraggled gathering. Their grotesque clothes, torn
+and unkempt--for practically none had had the opportunity of obtaining a
+change of dress--their expressionless faces, their lustreless eyes,
+their uncertain and bewildered walk, faintly reflected an experience
+such as comes to few people in this world. The most noticeable thing
+about these unfortunates was their lack of interest in their
+surroundings; everything had apparently been reduced to a blank; the
+fact that practically none made any reference to their ordeal, or could
+be induced to discuss it, was a matter of common talk in London. And
+something of this disposition now became noticeable in Page himself. He
+wrote his dispatches to Washington in an abstracted mood; he went
+through his duties almost with the detachment of a sleep-walker; like
+the _Lusitania_ survivors, he could not talk much at that time about the
+scenes that had taken place off the coast of Ireland. Yet there were
+many indications that he was thinking about them, and his thoughts, as
+his letters reveal, were concerned with more things than the tragedy
+itself. He believed that his country was now face to face with its
+destiny. What would Washington do?
+
+Page had a characteristic way of thinking out his problems. He performed
+his routine work at the Chancery in the daytime, but his really serious
+thinking he did in his own room at night. The picture is still a vivid
+one in the recollection of his family and his other intimates. Even at
+this time Page's health was not good, yet he frequently spent the
+evening at his office in Grosvenor Gardens, and when the long day's
+labours were finished, he would walk rather wearily to his home at No. 6
+Grosvenor Square. He would enter the house slowly--and his walk became
+slower and more tired as the months went by--go up to his room and cross
+to the fireplace, so apparently wrapped up in his own thoughts that he
+hardly greeted members of his own family. A wood fire was kept burning
+for him, winter and summer alike; Page would put on his dressing gown,
+drop into a friendly chair, and sit there, doing nothing, reading
+nothing, saying nothing--only thinking. Sometimes he would stay for an
+hour; not infrequently he would remain till two, three, or four o'clock
+in the morning; occasions were not unknown when his almost motionless
+figure would be in this same place at daybreak. He never slept through
+these nights, and he never even dozed; he was wide awake, and his mind
+was silently working upon the particular problem that was uppermost in
+his thoughts. He never rose until he had solved it or at least until he
+had decided upon a course of action. He would then get up abruptly, go
+to bed, and sleep like a child. The one thing that made it possible for
+a man of his delicate frame, racked as it was by anxiety and over work,
+to keep steadily at his task, was the wonderful gift which he possessed
+of sleeping.
+
+Page had thought out many problems in this way. The tension caused by
+the sailing of the _Dacia_, in January, 1915, and the deftness with
+which the issue had been avoided by substituting a French for a British
+cruiser, has already been described. Page discovered this solution on
+one of these all-night self-communings. It was almost two o'clock in the
+morning that he rose, said to himself, "I've got it!" and then went
+contentedly to bed. And during the anxious months that followed the
+_Lusitania_, the _Arabic_, and those other outrages which have now
+taken their place in history, he spent night after night turning the
+matter over in his mind. But he found no way out of the humiliations
+presented by the policy of Washington.
+
+"Here we are swung loose in time," he wrote to his son Arthur, a few
+days after the first _Lusitania_ note had been sent to Germany, "nobody
+knows the day or the week or the month or the year--and we are caught on
+this island, with no chance of escape, while the vast slaughter goes on
+and seems just beginning, and the degradation of war goes on week by
+week; and we live in hope that the United States will come in, as the
+only chance to give us standing and influence when the reorganization of
+the world must begin. (Beware of betraying the word 'hope'!) It has all
+passed far beyond anybody's power to describe. I simply go on day by day
+into unknown experiences and emotions, seeing nothing before me very
+clearly and remembering only dimly what lies behind. I can see only one
+proper thing: that all the world should fall to and hunt this wild beast
+down.
+
+"Two photographs of little Mollie[1] on my mantelpiece recall persons
+and scenes and hopes unconnected with the war: few other things can.
+Bless the baby, she couldn't guess what a sweet purpose she serves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sensations of most Americans in London during this crisis are almost
+indescribable. Washington's failure promptly to meet the situation
+affected them with astonishment and humiliation. Colonel House was
+confident that war was impending, and for this reason he hurried his
+preparations to leave England; he wished to be in the United States, at
+the President's side, when the declaration was made. With this feeling
+about Mr. Wilson, Colonel House received a fearful shock a day or two
+after the _Lusitania_ had gone down: while walking in Piccadilly, he
+caught a glimpse of one of the famous sandwich men, bearing a poster of
+an afternoon newspaper. This glaring broadside bore the following
+legend: "We are too proud to fight--Woodrow Wilson." The sight of that
+placard was Colonel House's first intimation that the President might
+not act vigorously. He made no attempt to conceal from Page and other
+important men at the American Embassy the shock which it had given him.
+Soon the whole of England was ringing with these six words; the
+newspapers were filled with stinging editorials and cartoons, and the
+music halls found in the Wilsonian phrase materials for their choicest
+jibes. Even in more serious quarters America was the subject of the most
+severe denunciation. No one felt these strictures more poignantly than
+President Wilson's closest confidant. A day or two before sailing home
+he came into the Embassy greatly depressed at the prevailing revulsion
+against the United States. "I feel," Colonel House said to Page, "as
+though I had been given a kick at every lamp post coming down
+Constitution Hill." A day or two afterward Colonel House sailed for
+America.
+
+
+II
+
+And now came the period of distress and of disillusionment. Three
+_Lusitania_ notes were sent and were evasively answered, and Washington
+still seemed to be marking time. The one event in this exciting period
+which gave Page satisfaction was Mr. Bryan's resignation as Secretary of
+State. For Mr. Bryan personally Page had a certain fondness, but as head
+of the State Department the Nebraska orator had been a cause of endless
+vexation. Many of Page's letters, already printed, bear evidence of the
+utter demoralization which existed in this branch of the Administration
+and this demoralization became especially glaring during the _Lusitania_
+crisis. No attempt was made even at this momentous period to keep the
+London Embassy informed as to what was taking place in Washington;
+Page's letters and cablegrams were, for the most part, unacknowledged
+and unanswered, and the American Ambassador was frequently obliged to
+obtain his information about the state of feeling in Washington from Sir
+Edward Grey. It must be said, in justice to Mr. Bryan, that this
+carelessness was nothing particularly new, for it had worried many
+ambassadors before Page. Readers of Charles Francis Adams's
+correspondence meet with the same complaints during the Civil War; even
+at the time of the _Trent_ crisis, when for a fortnight Great Britain
+and the United States were living on the brink of war, Adams was kept
+entirely in the dark about the plans of Washington[2]. The letters of
+John Hay show a similar condition during his brief ambassadorship to
+Great Britain in 1897-1898[3].
+
+But Mr. Bryan's incumbency was guilty of diplomatic vices which were
+peculiarly its own. The "leaks" in the State Department, to which Page
+has already referred, were constantly taking place; the Ambassador would
+send the most confidential cipher dispatches to his superior, cautioning
+the Department that they must be held inviolably secret, and then he
+would pick up the London newspapers the next morning and find that
+everything had been cabled from Washington. To most readers, the
+informal method of conducting foreign business, as it is disclosed in
+these letters, probably comes as something of a shock. Page is here
+discovered discussing state matters, not in correspondence with the
+Secretary of State, but in private unofficial communications to the
+President, and especially to Colonel House--the latter at that time not
+an official person at all. All this, of course, was extremely irregular
+and, in any properly organized State Department, it would have been even
+reprehensible. But the point is that there was no properly organized
+State Department at that time, and the impossibility of conducting
+business through the regular channels compelled Page to adopt other
+means. "There is only one way to reform the State Department," he
+informed Colonel House at this time. "That is to raze the whole
+building, with its archives and papers, to the ground, and begin all
+over again."
+
+This state of affairs in Washington explains the curious fact that the
+real diplomatic history of the United States and Great Britain during
+this great crisis is not to be found in the archives of the State
+Department, for the official documents on file there consist of the most
+routine telegrams, which are not particularly informing, but in the
+Ambassador's personal correspondence with the President, Colonel House,
+and a few other intimates. The State Department did not have the first
+requisite of a properly organized foreign office, for it could not be
+trusted with confidential information. The Department did not tell Page
+what it was doing, but it apparently told the whole world what Page was
+doing. It is an astonishing fact that Page could not write and cable the
+most important details, for he was afraid that they would promptly be
+given to the reporters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I shall not send another confidential message to the State Department,"
+Page wrote to Colonel House, September 15, 1914; "it's too dangerous.
+Time and time again now the Department has leaked. Last week, I sent a
+dispatch and I said in the body of it, '_this is confidential and under
+no condition to be given out or made public, but to be regarded as
+inviolably secret_.' The very next morning it was telegraphed from
+Washington to the London newspapers. Bryan telegraphed me that he was
+sure it didn't get out from the Department and that he now had so fixed
+it that there could be no leak. He's said that at least four times
+before. The Department swarms with newspaper men, I hear. But whether it
+does or not the leak continues. I have to go with my tail between my
+legs and apologize to Sir Edward Grey and to do myself that shame and to
+do my very best to keep his confidence--against these unnecessary odds.
+The only way to be safe is to do the job perfunctorily, to answer the
+questions the Department sends and to do nothing on your own account.
+That's the reason so many of our men do their jobs in that way--or _one_
+reason and a strong one. We can never have an alert and energetic and
+powerful service until men can trust the Department and until they can
+get necessary information from it. I wrote the President that of course
+I'd go on till the war ended and all the questions growing out of it
+were settled, and that then he must excuse me, if I must continue to be
+exposed to this danger and humiliation. In the meantime, I shall send
+all my confidential matter in private letters to him."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Page did not regard Mr. Bryan's opinions and attitudes as a joke: to him
+they were a serious matter and, in his eyes, Bryan was most interesting
+as a national menace. He regarded the Secretary as the extreme
+expression of an irrational sentimentalism that was in danger of
+undermining the American character, especially as the kind of thought
+he represented was manifest in many phases of American life. In a moment
+of exasperation, Page gave expression to this feeling in a letter to his
+son:
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ London, June 6, 1915.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... We're in danger of being feminized and fad-ridden--grape juice
+ (God knows water's good enough: why grape juice?); pensions;
+ Christian Science; peace cranks; efficiency-correspondence schools;
+ aid-your-memory; women's clubs; co-this and co-t'other and coddling
+ in general; Billy Sunday; petticoats where breeches ought to be and
+ breeches where petticoats ought to be; white livers and soft heads
+ and milk-and-water;--I don't want war: nobody knows its horrors or
+ its degradations or its cost. But to get rid of hyphenated
+ degenerates perhaps it's worth while, and to free us from 'isms and
+ soft folk. That's the domestic view of it. As for being kicked by a
+ sauerkraut caste--O Lord, give us backbone!
+
+ Heartily yours,
+ W.H.P.
+
+In the bottom of this note, Page has cut a notch in the paper and
+against it he has written: "This notch is the place to apply a match to
+this letter."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Again and ever I am reminded," Page also wrote in reference to Bryan's
+resignation, "of the danger of having to do with cranks. A certain
+orderliness of mind and conduct seems essential for safety in this short
+life. Spiritualists, bone-rubbers, anti-vivisectionists, all sort of
+anti's in fact, those who have fads about education or fads against it,
+Perfectionists, Daughters of the Dove of Peace, Sons of the Roaring
+Torrent, itinerant peace-mongers--all these may have a real genius
+among them once in forty years; but to look for an exception to the
+common run of yellow dogs and damfools among them is like opening
+oysters with the hope of finding pearls. It's the common man we want and
+the uncommon common man when we can find him--never the crank. This is
+the lesson of Bryan."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At one time, however, Mr. Bryan's departure seemed likely to have
+important consequences for Page. Colonel House and others strongly urged
+the President to call him home from London and make him Secretary of
+State. This was the third position in President Wilson's Cabinet for
+which Page had been considered. The early plans to make him Secretary of
+the Interior or Secretary of Agriculture have already been described. Of
+all cabinet posts, however, the one that would have especially attracted
+him would have been the Department of State. But President Wilson
+believed that the appointment of an Ambassador at one of the belligerent
+capitals, especially of an Ambassador whose sympathies for the Allies
+were so pronounced as were Page's, would have been an "un-neutral" act,
+and, therefore, Colonel House's recommendation was not approved.
+
+ _From Edward M. House_
+
+ Roslyn, Long Island,
+ June 25th, 1915.
+
+ DEAR PAGE:
+
+ The President finally decided to appoint Lansing to succeed Mr.
+ Bryan. In my opinion, he did wisely, though I would have preferred
+ his appointing you.
+
+ The argument against your appointment was the fact that you are an
+ Ambassador at one of the belligerent capitals. The President did
+ not think it would do, and from what I read, when your name was
+ suggested I take it there would have been much criticism. I am
+ sorry--sorrier than I can tell you, for it would have worked
+ admirably in the general scheme of things.
+
+ However, I feel sure that Lansing will do the job, and that you
+ will find your relations with him in every way satisfactory.
+
+ The President spent yesterday with me and we talked much of you. He
+ is looking well and feeling so. I read the President your letter
+ and he enjoyed it as much as I did.
+
+ I am writing hastily, for I am leaving for Manchester,
+ Massachusetts, where I shall be during July and August.
+
+ Your sincere friend,
+ E.M. HOUSE.
+
+
+III
+
+But, in addition to the _Lusitania_ crisis, a new terror now loomed on
+the horizon. Page's correspondence reveals that Bryan had more reasons
+than one for his resignation; he was now planning to undertake a
+self-appointed mission to Europe for the purpose of opening peace
+negotiations entirely on his own account.
+
+ _From Edward M. House_
+
+ Manchester, Massachusetts,
+ August 12th, 1915.
+
+ DEAR PAGE:
+
+ The Bryans have been stopping with the X's. X writes me that Bryan
+ told him that he intended to go to Europe soon and try peace
+ negotiations. He has Lloyd George in mind in England, and it is
+ then his purpose to go to Germany.
+
+ I take it he will want credentials from the President which, of
+ course, he will not want to give, but just what he will feel
+ obliged to give is another story. I anticipated this when he
+ resigned. I knew it was merely a matter of time when he would take
+ this step.
+
+ He may find encouragement in Germany, for he is in high favour now
+ in that quarter. It is his purpose to oppose the President upon the
+ matter of "preparedness," and, from what we can learn, it will not
+ be long before there will be open antagonism between the
+ Administration and himself.
+
+ It might be a good thing to encourage his going to Europe. He would
+ probably come back a sadder and wiser man. I take it that no one in
+ authority in England would discuss the matter seriously with him,
+ and, in France, I do not believe he could even get a hearing.
+
+ Please let me have your impressions upon this subject.
+
+ I wish I could be near you to-day for there are so many things I
+ could tell that I cannot write.
+
+ Your friend,
+ E.M. House.
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ American Embassy, London [Undated].
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ Never mind about Bryan. Send him over here if you wish to get rid
+ of him. He'll cut no more figure than a tar-baby at a Negro
+ camp-meeting. If he had come while he was Secretary, I should have
+ jumped off London Bridge and the country would have had one
+ ambassador less. But I shall enjoy him now. You see some peace
+ crank from the United States comes along every week--some crank or
+ some gang of cranks. There've been two this week. Ever since the
+ Daughters of the Dove of Peace met at The Hague, the game has
+ become popular in America; and I haven't yet heard that a single
+ one has been shot--so far. I think that some of them are likely
+ soon to be hanged, however, because there are signs that they may
+ come also from Germany. The same crowd that supplies money to buy
+ labour-leaders and the press and to blow up factories in the United
+ States keeps a good supply of peace-liars on tap. It'll be fun to
+ watch Bryan perform and never suspect that anybody is lying to him
+ or laughing at him; and he'll go home convinced that he's done the
+ job and he'll let loose doves all over the land till they are as
+ thick as English sparrows. Not even the President could teach him
+ anything permanently. He can do no harm on this side the world.
+ It's only your side that's in any possible danger; and, if I read
+ the signs right, there's a diminishing danger there.
+
+ No, there's never yet come a moment when there was the slightest
+ chance of peace. Did the Emperor not say last year that peace would
+ come in October, and again this year in October? Since he said it,
+ how can it come?
+
+ The ambitions and the actions of men, my friend, are determined by
+ their antecedents, their surroundings, and their opportunities--the
+ great deeds of men before them whom consciously or unconsciously
+ they take for models, the codes they are reared by, and the chances
+ that they think they see. These influences shaped Alexander and
+ Cęsar, and they shaped you and me. Now every monarch on the
+ Continent has behind him the Napoleonic example. "Can I do that?"
+ crosses the mind of every one. Of course every one thinks of
+ himself as doing it beneficently--for the good of the world.
+ Napoleon, himself, persuaded himself of his benevolent intentions,
+ and the devil of it was he persuaded other people also. Now the
+ only monarch in Europe in our time who thought he had a chance is
+ your friend in Berlin. When he told you last year (1914) that of
+ course he didn't want war, but that he was "ready," that's what he
+ meant. A similar ambition, of course, comes into the mind of every
+ professional soldier of the continent who rises to eminence. In
+ Berlin you have both--the absolute monarch and the military class
+ of ambitious soldiers and their fighting machine. Behind these men
+ walks the Napoleonic ambition all the time, just as in the United
+ States we lie down every night in George Washington's feather-bed
+ of no entangling alliances.
+
+ Then remember, too, that the German monarchy is a cross between the
+ Napoleonic ambition and its inheritance from Frederick the Great
+ and Bismarck. I suppose the three damnedest liars that were ever
+ born are these three--old Frederick, Napoleon, and Bismarck--not, I
+ take it, because they naturally loved lying, but because the game
+ they played constantly called for lying. There was no other way to
+ play it: they _had_ to fool people all the time. You have abundant
+ leisure--do this: Read the whole career of Napoleon and write down
+ the startling and exact parallels that you will find there to what
+ is happening to-day. The French were united and patriotic, just as
+ the Germans now are. When they invaded other people's territory,
+ they said they were attacked and that the other people had brought
+ on war. They had their lying diplomats, their corruption funds;
+ they levied money on cities and states; they took booty; and they
+ were God's elect. It's a wonderful parallel--not strangely, because
+ the game is the same and the moral methods are the same. Only the
+ tools are somewhat different--the submarine, for example. Hence the
+ _Lusitania_ disaster (not disavowed, you will observe), the
+ _Arabic_ disaster, the propaganda, underground and above, in the
+ United States. And there'll be more. The Napoleonic Wars were
+ about eleven years long. I fancy that we shall have war and wars
+ from this attempt to dominate Europe, for perhaps as long a period.
+ The Balkans can't be quieted by this war only, nor Russia and Italy
+ perhaps. And Germany may have a series of earthquakes
+ herself--internal explosions. Then Poland and perhaps some of the
+ Scandinavian States. Nobody can tell.
+
+ I cannot express my admiration of the President's management, so
+ far at least, of his colossal task of leading us right. He has
+ shown his supreme wisdom up to this point and I have the
+ profoundest confidence in his judgment. But I hope he doesn't fool
+ himself about the future; I'm sure he doesn't. I see no possible
+ way for us to keep out, because I know the ignorance and falseness
+ of the German leaders. They'll drown or kill more Americans--on the
+ sea and in America. They _may_ at last even attack one of our own
+ passenger ships, or do something that will dramatically reveal them
+ to the whole American people. Then, of course, the tune will be
+ called. It's only a question of time; and I am afraid the war will
+ last long enough to give them time. An early peace is all that can
+ prevent them from driving us at last into war; and I can see no
+ chance of an early peace. You had as well prepare as fast as the
+ condition of public opinion will permit.
+
+ There could be no better measure of the immeasurable moral advance
+ that the United States has made over Europe than the incredulity of
+ our people. They simply can't comprehend what the Napoleonic legend
+ can do, nor the low political morality of the Continent--of Berlin
+ in particular. Hence they don't believe it. We have gone on for 100
+ years working might and main to better our condition and the
+ condition of people about us--the greatest effort made by the
+ largest number of people since the world began to further the mood
+ and the arts of peace. There is no other such chapter in human
+ history as our work for a hundred years. Yet just a hundred years
+ ago the Capitol at Washington was burned by--a political oligarchy
+ in the freest country of Europe--as damnable an atrocity as you
+ will find in history. The Germans are a hundred years behind the
+ English in political development and political morality.
+
+ So, let Willum J. come. He can't hurt Europe--nor help it; and you
+ can spare him. Let all the Peace-gang come. You can spare _them_,
+ too; and they can do no harm here. Let somebody induce Hoke Smith
+ to come, too. You have hit on a great scheme--friendly deportation.
+
+ And Bryan won't be alone. Daughters of the Dove of Peace and Sons
+ of the Olive Branch come every week. The latest Son came to see me
+ to-day. He said that the German Chancellor told him that he wanted
+ peace--wants it now and wants it bad, and that only one thing stood
+ in the way--if England would agree not to take Belgium, Germany
+ would at once make peace! This otherwise sensible American wanted
+ me to take him to see Sir Edward to tell him this, and to suggest
+ to him to go over to Holland next week to meet the German
+ Chancellor and fix it up. A few days ago a pious preacher chap
+ (American) who had come over to "fix it all up," came back from
+ France and called on me. He had seen something in France--he was
+ excited and he didn't quite make it clear what he had seen; but he
+ said that if they'd only let him go home safely and quickly he'd
+ promise not to mention peace any more--did I think the American
+ boats _entirely_ safe?--So, you see, I do have some fun even in
+ these dark days.
+
+ Yours heartily,
+ W.H. PAGE.
+
+
+IV
+
+This letter discloses that Page was pinning his faith in President
+Wilson, and that he still had confidence in the President's
+determination to uphold the national honour. Page was not one of those
+who thought that the United States should declare war immediately after
+the _Lusitania_. The President's course, in giving Germany a chance to
+make amends, and to disavow the act, met with his approval, and he
+found, also, much to admire in Mr. Wilson's first _Lusitania_ note. His
+judgment in this matter was based first of all upon the merits of the
+case; besides this, his admiration for Mr. Wilson as a public man was
+strong. To think otherwise of the President would have been a great
+grief to the Ambassador and to differ with his chief on the tremendous
+issue of the war would have meant for Page the severance of one of the
+most cherished associations of his life. The interest which he had shown
+in advocating Wilson's presidential candidacy has already been set
+forth; and many phases of the Wilson administration had aroused his
+admiration. The President's handling of domestic problems Page regarded
+as a masterpiece in reconciling statesmanship with practical politics,
+and his energetic attitude on the Panama Tolls had introduced new
+standards into American foreign relations. Page could not sympathize
+with all the details of the Wilsonian Mexican policy, yet he saw in it a
+high-minded purpose and a genuine humanitarianism. But the outbreak of
+war presented new aspects of Mr. Wilson's mind. The President's attitude
+toward the European struggle, his conception of "neutrality," and his
+failure to grasp the meaning of the conflict, seemed to Page to show a
+lack of fundamental statesmanship; still his faith in Wilson was
+deep-seated, and he did not abandon hope that the President could be
+brought to see things as they really were. Page even believed that he
+might be instrumental in his conversion.
+
+But in the summer and autumn of 1915 one agony followed another. The
+"too proud to fight" speech was in Page's mind nothing less than a
+tragedy. The president's first _Lusitania_ note for a time restored the
+Ambassador's confidence; it seemed to show that the President intended
+to hold Germany to that "strict accountability" which he had threatened.
+But Mr. Wilson's course now presented new difficulties to his
+Ambassador. Still Page believed that the President, in his own way and
+in his own time, would find a path out of his dilemma that would protect
+the honour and the safety of the United States. If any of the Embassy
+subordinates became impatient over the procedure of Washington, he did
+not find a sympathetic listener in the Ambassador. The whole of London
+and of Europe might be resounding with denunciations of the White House,
+but Page would tolerate no manifestations of hostility in his presence.
+"The problem appears different to Washington than it does to us," he
+would say to his confidants. "We see only one side of it; the President
+sees all sides. If we give him all the facts, he will decide the thing
+wisely." Englishmen with whom the Ambassador came into contact soon
+learned that they could not become flippant or critical about Mr. Wilson
+in his presence; he would resent the slightest hostile remark, and he
+had a way of phrasing his rebukes that usually discouraged a second
+attempt. About this time Page began to keep closely to himself, and to
+decline invitations to dinners and to country houses, even those with
+which he was most friendly. The reason was that he could not meet
+Englishmen and Englishwomen, or even Americans who were resident in
+England, on his old easy familiar terms; he knew the ideas which
+everybody entertained about his country, and he knew also what they were
+saying, when he was not among them; the restraint which his presence
+necessarily put upon his friends produced an uncongenial atmosphere, and
+the Ambassador therefore gave up, for a time, those distractions which
+had ordinarily proved such a delightful relief from his duties. For the
+first time since he had come to England he found himself a solitary man.
+He even refused to attend the American Luncheon Club in London because,
+in speeches and in conversation, the members did not hesitate to assail
+the Wilson policies.
+
+Events, however, eventually proved too strong for the most devoted
+supporter of President Wilson. After the _Arabic_ and the _Hesperian_,
+Page's official intimates saw signs that the Ambassador was losing
+confidence in his old friend. He would discuss Mr. Wilson occasionally,
+with those secretaries, such as Mr. Laughlin, in whom his confidence was
+strongest; his expressions, however, were never flippant or violent.
+That Page could be biting as well as brilliant in his comments on public
+personages his letters abundantly reveal, yet he never exercised his
+talent for sarcasm or invective at the expense of the White House. He
+never forgot that Mr. Wilson was President and that he was Ambassador;
+he would still defend the Administration; and he even now continued to
+find consolation in the reflection that Mr. Wilson was living in a
+different atmosphere and that he had difficulties to confront of which a
+man in London could know nothing. The Ambassador's emotion was rather
+one of disappointment and sorrow, mingled with anxiety as to the plight
+into which his country was being led. As to his duty in this situation,
+however, Page never hesitated. In his relations with his Embassy and
+with the British world he maintained this non-critical attitude; but in
+his letters to President Wilson and Colonel House, he was describing the
+situation, and expressing his convictions, with the utmost freedom and
+frankness. In both these attitudes Page was consistent and absolutely
+loyal. It was his duty to carry out the Wilson instructions and he had
+too high a conception of the Ambassadorial office to show to the world
+any unfavourable opinions he may have held about his country's course.
+His duty to his post made it just as imperative that he set forth to the
+President the facts exactly as they were. And this the Ambassador now
+proceeded to do. For the mere ornamental dignities of an Ambassadorship
+Page cared nothing; he was wasting his health in his duties and
+exhausting his private resources; much as he loved the English and
+congenial as were his surroundings, the fear of being recalled for
+"disloyalty" or insubordination never influenced him. The letters which
+he now wrote to Colonel House and to President Wilson himself are
+probably without parallel in the diplomatic annals of this or of any
+other country. In them he told the President precisely what Englishmen
+thought of him and of the extent to which the United States was
+suffering in European estimation from the Wilson policy. His boldness
+sometimes astounded his associates. One day a friend and adviser of
+President Wilson's came into the Ambassador's office just as Page had
+finished one of his communications to Washington.
+
+"Read that!" the Ambassador said, handing over the manuscript to his
+visitor.
+
+As the caller read, his countenance displayed the progressive stages of
+his amazement. When he had finished, his hands dropped helplessly upon
+his knees.
+
+"Is that the way you write to the President?" he gasped.
+
+"Of course," Page replied, quietly. "Why not? Why shouldn't I tell him
+the truth? That is what I am here for."
+
+"There is no other person in the world who dare talk to him like that!"
+was the reply.
+
+This is unquestionably the fact. That President Wilson did not like
+people about him whose views were opposed to his own is now no secret,
+and during the period when his policy was one of the great issues of the
+world there was probably no one except Page who intruded upon his
+solitude with ideas that so abruptly disagreed with the opinions of the
+White House. The letters which Page wrote Colonel House were intended,
+of course, for the President himself, and practically all of them
+Colonel House read aloud to the head of the nation. The two men would
+closet themselves in the old cabinet room on the second floor of the
+White House--that same room in which Lincoln had met his advisers during
+Civil War days; and here Colonel House would quietly read the letters in
+which Page so mercilessly portrayed the situation as it appeared in
+English and European eyes. The President listened impassively, giving no
+sign of approval or disapproval, and hardly, at times, of much interest.
+In the earlier days, when Page's letters consisted of pictures of
+English life and English men, and colourful descriptions of England
+under the stress of war, the President was vastly entertained; he would
+laugh loudly at Page's wit, express his delight at his graphic and
+pungent style and feel deeply the horrors of war as his Ambassador
+unfolded them. "I always found Page compelling on paper," Mr. Wilson
+remarked to Mr. Laughlin, during one of the latter's visits to
+Washington. "I could never resist him--I get more information from his
+letters than from any other single source. Tell him to keep it up." It
+was during this period that the President used occasionally to read
+Page's letters to the Cabinet, expressing his great appreciation of
+their charm and historical importance. "The President quoted from one of
+the Ambassador's letters to the Cabinet to-day," a member of the Cabinet
+wrote to Mrs. Page in February, 1915. "'Some day,' the President said,
+'I hope that Walter Page's letters will be published. They are the best
+letters I have ever read. They make you feel the atmosphere in England,
+understand the people, and see into the motives of the great actors.'"
+The President repeated this statement many times, and his letters to
+Page show how greatly he enjoyed and profited from this correspondence.
+But after the sinking of the _Lusitania_ and the _Arabic_ his attitude
+toward Page and his letters changed.
+
+He now found little pleasure or satisfaction in the Page communications.
+When Mr. Wilson found that one of his former confidants had turned out
+to be a critic, that man instantaneously passed out of his life. And
+this was now Page's fate; the friendship and associations of forty years
+were as though they had never been. Just why Mr. Wilson did not recall
+his Ambassador is a question that has puzzled Page's friends. He would
+sometimes refer to him as a man who was "more British than the British,"
+as one who had been taken completely captive by British blandishments,
+but he never came to the point of dismissing him. Perhaps he did not
+care to face the public scandal that such an act would have caused; but
+a more plausible reason is that Page, despite the causes which he had
+given for irritation, was indispensable to him. Page's early letters had
+furnished the President ideas which had taken shape in Wilson's
+policies, and, disagreeable as the communications now became, there are
+evidences that they influenced the solitary statesman in the White
+House, and that they had much to do in finally forcing Mr. Wilson into
+the war. The alternative question, as to why Page did not retire when he
+found himself so out of sympathy with the President, will be
+sufficiently answered in subsequent chapters; at present it may be said
+that he did resign and only consented to remain at the urgent request of
+Washington. In fact, all during 1915 and 1916, there seemed to be a fear
+in Washington that Page would definitely abandon the London post. On one
+occasion, when the newspapers published rumours to this effect, Page
+received an urgent despatch from Mr. Lansing. The message came at a
+time--the date was October 26, 1915--when Page was especially
+discouraged over the Washington policy. "Representatives of the press,"
+said Mr. Lansing, "have repeated rumours that you are planning to
+resign. These have been brought to the President's attention, and both
+he and I have denied them. Still these rumours persist, and they cause
+both the President and me great anxiety. We cannot believe that they are
+well founded.
+
+"In view of the fact that they are so persistent, we have thought it
+well to inform you of them and to tell you how earnestly we hope that
+they are baseless. We trust that you will set both our minds at rest."
+
+If Page had ever had any compunction about addressing the President in
+blunt phrases these expressions certainly convinced him that he was a
+free agent.
+
+Yet Page himself at times had his doubts as to the value of this
+correspondence. He would frequently discuss the matter with Mr.
+Laughlin. "That's a pretty harsh letter," he would say. "I don't like to
+talk that way to the President, yet it doesn't express half what I
+feel."
+
+"It's your duty to tell the President the real state of affairs," Mr.
+Laughlin would urge.
+
+"But do you suppose it does any good?" Page would ask.
+
+"Yes, it's bound to, and whether it does or not, it's your business to
+keep him informed."
+
+If in these letters Page seems to lay great stress on the judgment of
+Great Britain and Europe on American policy, it must be remembered that
+that was his particular province. One of an Ambassador's most important
+duties is to transmit to his country the public opinion of the country
+to which he is accredited. It was Page's place to tell Washington what
+Great Britain thought of it; it was Washington's business to formulate
+policy, after giving due consideration to this and other matters.
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ July 21, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I enclose a pamphlet in ridicule of the President. I don't know who
+ wrote it, for my inquiries so far have brought no real information.
+ I don't feel like sending it to him. I send it to you--to do with
+ as you think best. This thing alone is, of course, of no
+ consequence. But it is symptomatic. There is much feeling about the
+ slowness with which he acts. One hundred and twenty people
+ (Americans) were drowned on the _Lusitania_ and we are still
+ writing notes about it--to the damnedest pirates that ever blew up
+ a ship. Anybody who knows the Germans knows, of course, that they
+ are simply playing for time, that they are not going to "come
+ down," that Von Tirpitz is on deck, that they'd just as lief have
+ war with us as not--perhaps had rather--because they don't want any
+ large nation left fresh when the war ends. They'd like to have the
+ whole world bankrupt. There is a fast growing feeling here,
+ therefore, that the American Government is pusillanimous--dallies
+ with 'em, is affected by the German propaganda, etc., etc. Of
+ course, such a judgment is not fair. It is formed without knowing
+ the conditions in the United States. But I think you ought to
+ realize the strength of this sentiment. No doubt before you receive
+ this, the President will send something to Germany that will amount
+ to an ultimatum and there will be at least a momentary change of
+ sentiment here. But looking at the thing in a long-range way, we're
+ bound to get into the war. For the Germans will blow up more
+ American travellers without notice. And by dallying with them we do
+ not change the ultimate result, but we take away from ourselves the
+ spunk and credit of getting in instead of being kicked and cursed
+ in. We've got to get in: they won't play the game in any other way.
+ I have news direct from a high German source in Berlin which
+ strongly confirms this....
+
+ It's a curious thing to say. But the only solution that I see is
+ another _Lusitania_ outrage, which would force war.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. The London papers every day say that the President will send a
+ strong note, etc. And the people here say, "Damn notes: hasn't he
+ written enough?" Writing notes hurts nobody--changes nothing. The
+ Washington correspondents to the London papers say that Burleson,
+ the Attorney-General, and Daniels are Bryan men and are holding the
+ President back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The prophecy contained in this letter was quickly fulfilled. A week or
+two after Colonel House had received it, the _Arabic_ was sunk with loss
+of American life.
+
+Page was taking a brief holiday with his son Frank in Rowsley,
+Derbyshire, when this news came. It was telegraphed from the Embassy.
+
+"That settles it," he said to his son. "They have sunk the _Arabic_.
+That means that we shall break with Germany and I've got to go back to
+London."
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ American Embassy, London, August 23, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ The sinking of the _Arabic_ is the answer to the President and to
+ your letter to me. And there'll be more such answers. You said to
+ me one day after you had got back from your last visit to Berlin:
+ "They are impossible." I think you told the truth, and surely you
+ know your German and you know your Berlin--or you did know them
+ when you were here.
+
+ The question is not what we have done for the Allies, not what any
+ other neutral country has done or has failed to do--such
+ comparisons, I think, are far from the point. The question is when
+ the right moment arrives for us to save our self-respect, our
+ honour, and the esteem and fear (or the contempt) in which the
+ world will hold us.
+
+ Berlin has the Napoleonic disease. If you follow Napoleon's
+ career--his excuses, his evasions, his inventions, the wild French
+ enthusiasm and how he kept it up--you will find an exact parallel.
+ That becomes plainer every day. Europe may not be wholly at peace
+ in five years--may be ten.
+
+ Hastily and heartily,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ I have your note about Willum J.... Crank once, crank always. My
+ son, never tie up with a crank.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, September 2nd, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ You write me about pleasing the Allies, the big Ally in particular.
+ That doesn't particularly appeal to me. We don't owe them
+ anything. There's no obligation. I'd never confess for a moment
+ that we are under any obligation to any of them nor to anybody. I'm
+ not out to "please" anybody, as a primary purpose: that's not my
+ game nor my idea--nor yours either. As for England in particular,
+ the account was squared when she twice sent an army against us--in
+ her folly--especially the last time when she burnt our Capitol.
+ There's been no obligation since. The obligation is on the other
+ foot. We've set her an example of what democracy will do for men,
+ an example of efficiency, an example of freedom of opportunity. The
+ future is ours, and she may follow us and profit by it. Already we
+ have three white English-speaking men to every two in the British
+ Empire: we are sixty per cent. of the Anglo-Saxons in the world. If
+ there be any obligation to please, the obligation is on her to
+ please us. And she feels and sees it now.
+
+ My point is not that, nor is it what we or any other neutral nation
+ has done or may do--Holland or any other. This war is the direct
+ result of the over-polite, diplomatic, standing-aloof,
+ bowing-to-one-another in gold lace, which all European nations are
+ guilty of in times of peace--castes and classes and uniforms and
+ orders and such folderol, instead of the proper business of the
+ day. Every nation in Europe knew that Germany was preparing for
+ war. If they had really got together--not mere Hague Sunday-school
+ talk and resolutions--but had really got together for business and
+ had said to Germany, "The moment you fire a shot, we'll all fight
+ against you; we have so many millions of men, so many men-of-war,
+ so many billions of money; and we'll increase all these if you do
+ not change your system and your building-up of armies"--then there
+ would have been no war.
+
+ My point is not sentimental. It is:
+
+ (1) We must maintain our own self-respect and safety. If we submit
+ to too many insults, _that_ will in time bring Germany against us.
+ We've got to show at some time that we don't believe, either, in
+ the efficacy of Sunday-School resolves for peace--that we are
+ neither Daughters of the Dove of Peace nor Sons of the Olive
+ Branch, and
+
+ (2) About nagging and forever presenting technical legal points as
+ lawyers do to confuse juries--the point is the point of efficiency.
+ If we do that, we can't carry our main points. I find it harder and
+ harder to get answers now to important questions because we ask so
+ many unimportant and nagging ones.
+
+ I've no sentiment--perhaps not enough. My gushing days are gone, if
+ I ever had 'em. The cutting-out of the "100 years of peace"
+ oratory, etc., etc., was one of the blessings of the war. But we
+ must be just and firm and preserve our own self-respect and keep
+ alive the fear that other nations have of us; and we ought to have
+ the courage to make the Department of State more than a bureau of
+ complaints. We must learn to say "No" even to a Gawdamighty
+ independent American citizen when he asks an improper or
+ impracticable question. Public Opinion in the United States
+ consists of something more than the threats of Congressmen and the
+ bleating of newspapers; it consists of the judgment of honourable
+ men on courageous and frank actions--a judgment that cannot be made
+ up till action is taken.
+
+ Heartily yours,
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ American Embassy, London, Sept. 8, 1915.
+
+ (This is not prudent. It is only true--nothing more.)
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I take it for granted that Dumba[4] is going, of course. But I must
+ tell you that the President is being laughed at by our best friends
+ for his slowness in action. I hardly ever pick up a paper without
+ seeing some sarcastic remark. I don't mean they expect us to come
+ into the war. They only hoped we would be as good as our
+ word--would regard another submarine attack on a ship carrying
+ Americans as an unfriendly act and would send Bernstorff home. Yet
+ the _Arabic_ and now the _Hesperian_ have had no effect in action.
+ Bernstorff's personal _note to Lansing[5], even as far as it goes,
+ does not bind his Government_.
+
+ The upshot of all this is that the President is fast losing in the
+ minds of our best friends here all that he gained by his courageous
+ stand on the Panama tolls. They feel that if he takes another
+ insult--keeps taking them--and is satisfied with Bernstorff's
+ personal word, which is proved false in four days--he'll take
+ anything. And the British will pay less attention to what we say.
+ That's inevitable. If the American people and the President accept
+ the _Arabic_ and the _Hesperian_ and do nothing to Dumba till the
+ Government here gave out his letter, which the State Department had
+ (and silently held) for several days--then nobody on this side the
+ world will pay much heed to anything we say hereafter.
+
+ This, as I say, doesn't mean that these (thoughtful) people wish or
+ expect us to go to war. They wish only that we'd prove ourselves as
+ good as the President's word. That's the conservative truth; we're
+ losing influence more rapidly than I supposed it were possible.
+
+ Dumba's tardy dismissal will not touch the main matter, which is
+ the rights of neutrals at sea, and keeping our word in action.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. They say it's Mexico over again--watchful waiting and nothing
+ doing. And the feeling grows that Bryan has really conquered, since
+ his programme seems to prevail.
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, Tuesday night, Sept. 8, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ The Germans seem to think it a good time to try to feel about for
+ peace. They have more to offer now than they may have again. That's
+ all. A man who seriously talks peace now in Paris or in London on
+ any terms that the Germans will consider, would float dead that
+ very night in the Seine or in the Thames. The Germans have for the
+ time being "done-up" the Russians; but the French have shells
+ enough to plough the German trenches day and night (they've been at
+ it for a fortnight now); Joffre has been to see the Italian
+ generalissimo; and the English destroy German submarines now almost
+ as fast as the Germans send them out. I am credibly told that
+ several weeks ago a group of Admiralty men who are in the secret
+ had a little dinner to celebrate the destruction of the 50th
+ submarine.
+
+ While this is going on, you are talking on your side of the water
+ about a change in German policy! The only change is that the number
+ of submarines available becomes smaller and smaller, and that they
+ wish to use Uncle Sam's broad, fat back to crawl down on when they
+ have failed.
+
+ Consequently, they are laughing at Uncle Sam here--it comes near to
+ being ridicule, in fact, for seeming to jump at Bernstorff's
+ unfrank assurances. And, as I have telegraphed the President,
+ English opinion is--well, it is very nearly disrespectful. Men say
+ here (I mean our old friends) that with no disavowal of the
+ _Lusitania_, the _Falaba_, the _Gulflight_, or the _Arabic_ or of
+ the _Hesperian_, the Germans are "stuffing" Uncle Sam, that Uncle
+ Sam is in the clutches of the peace-at-any-price public opinion,
+ that the United States will suffer any insult and do nothing. I
+ hardly pick up a paper that does not have a sarcastic paragraph or
+ cartoon. We are on the brink of convincing the English that we'll
+ not act, whatever the provocation. By the English, I do not mean
+ the lighter, transitory public opinion, but I mean the thoughtful
+ men who do not wish us or expect us to fire a gun. They say that
+ the American democracy, since Cleveland's day, has become a mere
+ agglomeration of different races, without national unity, national
+ aims, and without courage or moral qualities. And (I deeply regret
+ to say) the President is losing here the high esteem he won by his
+ Panama tolls repeal. They ask, why on earth did he raise the issue
+ if under repeated provocation he is unable to recall Gerard or to
+ send Bernstorff home? The _Hesperian_ follows the _Arabic_; other
+ "liners" will follow the _Hesperian_, if the Germans have
+ submarines. And, when Sackville-West[6] was promptly sent home for
+ answering a private citizen's inquiry about the two political
+ parties, Dumba is (yet awhile) retained in spite of a far graver
+ piece of business. There is a tone of sad disappointment here--not
+ because the most thoughtful men want us in the war (they don't),
+ but because for some reason, which nobody here understands, the
+ President, having taken a stand, seems unable to do anything.
+
+ All this is a moderate interpretation of sorrowful public opinion
+ here. And the result will inevitably be that they will pay far less
+ heed to anything we may hereafter say. In fact men now say here
+ every day that the American democracy has no opinion, can form no
+ opinion, has no moral quality, and that the word of its President
+ never gets as far as action even of the mildest form. The
+ atmosphere is very depressing. And this feeling has apparently got
+ beyond anybody's control. I've even heard this said: "The voice of
+ the United States is Mr. Wilson's: its actions are controlled by
+ Mr. Bryan."
+
+ So, you see, the war will go on a long long time. So far as English
+ opinion is concerned, the United States is useful to make
+ ammunition and is now thought of chiefly in this connection. Less
+ and less attention is paid to what we say. Even the American
+ telegrams to the London papers have a languid tone.
+
+ Yet recent revelations have made it clearer than ever that the same
+ qualities that the English accuse us of having are in them and that
+ these qualities are directly to blame for this war. I recall that
+ when I was in Germany a few weeks, six years ago, I became
+ convinced that Germany had prepared to fight England; I didn't
+ know when, but I did know that was what the war-machine had in
+ mind. Of course, I had no opportunities to find out anything in
+ particular. You were told practically that same thing by the
+ Kaiser, before the war began. "We are ready," said he. Of course
+ the English feared it and Sir Edward put his whole life into his
+ effort to prevent it. The day the war began, he told me with tears
+ that it seemed that his life had been wasted--that his life work
+ had gone for naught.--Nobody could keep from wondering why England
+ didn't--
+
+ (Here comes a parenthesis. Word came to me a little while ago that
+ a Zeppelin was on its way to London. Such a remark doesn't arouse
+ much attention. But just as I had finished the fifth line above
+ this, Frank and Mrs. Page came in and challenged me to play a game
+ of cards before we should go to bed. We sat down, the cards were
+ dealt, and bang! bang!--with the deep note of an explosion. A
+ third, a fourth shot. We went into the street. There the Zeppelin
+ was revealed by a searchlight--sailing along. I think it had
+ probably dropped its bombs; but the aircraft guns were cracking
+ away at it. Some of them shot explosive projectiles to find the
+ range. Now and then one such explosive would almost reach the
+ Zeppelin, but it was too high for them and it sailed away, the air
+ guns doing their ineffectual best. I couldn't see whether airplanes
+ were trying to shoot it or not. The searchlight revealed the
+ Zeppelin but nothing else.--While we were watching this battle in
+ the air, the maids came down from the top of the house and went
+ into the cellar. I think they've already gone back. You can't
+ imagine how little excitement it caused. It produces less fright
+ than any other conceivable engine of war.
+
+ We came back as soon as the Zeppelin was out of sight and the
+ firing had ceased; we played our game of cards; and here I am
+ writing you the story-all within about half an hour.--There was a
+ raid over London last night, too, wherein a dozen or two women and
+ children and a few men were killed. I haven't the slightest idea
+ what harm this raid to-night has done. For all I know it may not be
+ all done. But of all imaginable war-experiences this seems the most
+ futile. It interrupted a game of cards for twenty minutes!)
+
+ Now--to go on with my story: I have wondered ever since the war
+ began why the Allies were not better prepared--especially England
+ on land. England has just one _big_ land gun--no more. Now it has
+ turned out, as you have doubtless read, that the British Government
+ were as good as told by the German Government that Germany was
+ going to war pretty soon--this in 1912 when Lord Haldane[7] was
+ sent to make friends with Germany.
+
+ The only answer he brought back was a proposition that England
+ should in any event remain neutral--stand aside while Germany
+ whipped Russia and France. This insulting proposal was kept secret
+ till the other day. Now, why didn't the British Cabinet inform the
+ people and get ready? They were afraid the English people wouldn't
+ believe it and would accuse them of fomenting war. The English
+ people were making money and pursuing their sports. Probably they
+ wouldn't have believed it. So the Liberal Cabinet went on in
+ silence, knowing that war was coming, but not exactly when it was
+ coming, and they didn't make even a second big gun.
+
+ Now here was the same silence in this "democracy" that they now
+ complain of in ours. Rather an interesting and discouraging
+ parallel--isn't it? Public opinion has turned Lord Haldane out of
+ office because he didn't tell the public what he declares they
+ wouldn't have believed. If the English had raised an army in 1912,
+ and made a lot of big guns, Austria would not have trampled Serbia
+ in the earth. There would have been no war now; and the strong
+ European Powers might have made then the same sort of protective
+ peace-insurance combine that they will try to make after this war
+ is ended. Query: A democracy's inability to _act_--how much is this
+ apparently inherent quality of a democracy to blame for this war
+ and for--other things?
+
+ When I am asked every day "Why the United States doesn't _do_
+ something--send Dumba and Bernstorff home?"--Well, it is not the
+ easiest question in the world to answer.
+
+ Yours heartily,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. This is the most comical of all worlds: While I was writing
+ this, it seems the maids went back upstairs and lighted their
+ lights without pulling their shades down--they occupy three rooms,
+ in front. The doorbell rang furiously. Here were more than half a
+ dozen policemen and special constables--must investigate! "One
+ light would be turned on, another would go out; another one
+ on!"--etc., etc. Frank tackled them, told 'em it was only the maids
+ going to bed, forgetting to pull down the shades. Spies and
+ signalling were in the air! So, in the morning, I'll have to send
+ over to the Foreign Office and explain. The Zeppelin did more
+ "frightfulness" than I had supposed, after all. Doesn't this strike
+ you as comical?
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ Friday, September 10, 1915.
+
+ P.S. The news is just come that Dumba is dismissed. That will clear
+ the atmosphere--a little, but only a little. Dumba committed a
+ diplomatic offence. The German Government has caused the death of
+ United States citizens, has defied us, has declared it had changed
+ its policy and yet has gone on with the same old policy. Besides,
+ Bernstorff has done everything that Dumba did except employ
+ Archibald, which was a mere incident of the game. The President
+ took a strong stand: they have disregarded it--no apology nor
+ reparation for a single boat that has been sunk. Now the English
+ opinion of the Germans is hardly a calm, judicial opinion--of
+ course not. There may be facts that have not been made known. There
+ must be good reasons that nobody here can guess, why the President
+ doesn't act in the long succession of German acts against us. _But
+ I tell you with all solemnity that British opinion and the British
+ Government have absolutely lost their respect for us and their
+ former high estimate of the President. And that former respect is
+ gone for good unless he acts now very quickly_[8]. They will pay
+ nothing more than formal and polite attention to anything we may
+ hereafter say. This is not resentful. They don't particularly care
+ for us to get into the war. Their feeling (I mean among our best
+ old friends) is not resentful. It is simply sorrowful. They had the
+ highest respect for our people and our President. The Germans defy
+ us; we sit in silence. They conclude here that we'll submit to
+ anything from anybody. We'll write strong notes--nothing more.
+
+ I can't possibly exaggerate the revulsion of feeling. Members of
+ the Government say (in private, of course) that we'll submit to any
+ insult. The newspapers refuse to publish articles which attempt to
+ make the President's silence reasonable. "It isn't defensible,"
+ they say, "and they would only bring us thousands of insulting
+ letters from our readers." I can't think of a paper nor of a man
+ who has a good word to say for us--except, perhaps, a few Quaker
+ peace-at-any-price people. And our old friends are disappointed and
+ sorrowful. They feel that we have dropped out of a position of
+ influence in the world.
+
+ I needn't and can't write more. Of course there are more important
+ things than English respect. But the English think that every Power
+ has lost respect for us--the Germans most of all. And (unless the
+ President acts very rigorously and very quickly) we'll have to get
+ along a long time without British respect.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. The last Zeppelin raid--which interrupted the game of
+ cards--killed more than twenty persons and destroyed more than
+ seven million dollars' worth of private business property--all
+ non-combatants!
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ 21st of September, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ The insulting cartoon that I enclose (destroy it without showing
+ it) is typical of, I suppose, five hundred that have appeared here
+ within a month. This represents the feeling and opinion of the
+ average man. They say we wrote brave notes and made courageous
+ demands, to none of which a satisfactory reply has come, but only
+ more outrages and no guarantee for the future. Yet we will not even
+ show our displeasure by sending Bernstorff home. We've simply
+ "gone out," like a snuffed candle, in the regard and respect of the
+ vast volume of British opinion. (The last _Punch_ had six
+ ridiculing allusions to our "fall.")
+
+ It's the loneliest time I've had in England. There's a tendency to
+ avoid me.
+
+ They can't understand here the continued declaration in the United
+ States that the British Government is trying to take our trade--to
+ use its blockade and navy with the direct purpose of giving British
+ trade profit out of American detentions. Of course, the Government
+ had no such purpose and has done no such thing--with any such
+ purpose. It isn't thinking about trade but only about war.
+
+ The English think they see in this the effect on our Government and
+ on American opinion of the German propaganda. I have had this
+ trade-accusation investigated half a dozen times--the accusation
+ that this Government is using its military power for its own trade
+ advantage to our detriment: it simply isn't true. They stop our
+ cargoes, not for their advantage, but wholly to keep things from
+ the enemy. Study our own trade reports.
+
+ In a word, our importers are playing (so the English think)
+ directly into the hands of the Germans. So matters go on from bad
+ to worse.
+
+ Bryce[9] is very sad. He confessed to me yesterday the utter
+ hopelessness of the two people's ever understanding one another.
+
+ The military situation is very blue--very blue. The general feeling
+ is that the long war will begin next March and end--nobody dares
+ predict.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. There's not a moral shadow of a doubt (1) that the commander
+ of the submarine that sunk the _Arabic_ is dead--although he makes
+ reports to his government! nor (2) that the _Hesperian_ was
+ torpedoed. The State Department has a piece of the torpedo.
+
+
+V
+
+The letters which Page sent directly to the President were just as
+frank. "Incidents occur nearly every day," he wrote to President Wilson
+in the autumn of 1915, "which reveal the feeling that the Germans have
+taken us in. Last week one of our naval men, Lieutenant McBride, who has
+just been ordered home, asked the Admiralty if he might see the piece of
+metal found on the deck of the _Hesperian_. Contrary to their habit, the
+British officer refused. 'Take my word for it,' he said. 'She was
+torpedoed. Why do you wish to investigate? Your country will do
+nothing--will accept any excuse, any insult and--do nothing.' When
+McBride told me this, I went at once to the Foreign Office and made a
+formal request that this metal should be shown to our naval attaché, who
+(since Symington is with the British fleet and McBride has been ordered
+home) is Lieutenant Towers. Towers was sent for and everything that the
+Admiralty knows was shown to him and I am sending that piece of metal by
+this mail. But to such a pass has the usual courtesy of a British naval
+officer come. There are many such instances of changed conduct. They are
+not hard to endure nor to answer and are of no consequence in themselves
+but only for what they denote. They're a part of war's bitterness. But
+my mind runs ahead and I wonder how Englishmen will look at this subject
+five years hence, and it runs afield and I wonder how the Germans will
+regard it. A sort of pro-German American newspaper correspondent came
+along the other day from the German headquarters; and he told me that
+one of the German generals remarked to him: 'War with America? Ach no!
+Not war. If trouble should come, we'd send over a platoon of our
+policemen to whip your little army.' (He didn't say just how he'd send
+'em.)"
+
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ American Embassy, London, Oct. 5, 1915.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ I have two letters that I have lately written to you but which I
+ have not sent because they utterly lack good cheer. After reading
+ them over, I have not liked to send them. Yet I should fail of my
+ duty if I did not tell you bad news as well as good.
+
+ The high esteem in which our Government was held when the first
+ _Lusitania_ note to Germany was sent seems all changed to
+ indifference or pity--not hatred or hostility, but a sort of
+ hopeless and sad pity. That ship was sunk just five months ago; the
+ German Government (or its Ambassador) is yet holding conversations
+ about the principle involved, making "concessions" and promises for
+ the future, and so far we have done nothing to hold the Germans to
+ accountability[10]. In the meantime their submarine fleet has been
+ so reduced that probably the future will take care of itself and we
+ shall be used as a sort of excuse for their failure. This is what
+ the English think and say; and they explain our failure to act by
+ concluding that the peace-at-any-price sentiment dominates the
+ Government and paralyzes it. They have now, I think, given up hope
+ that we will ever take any action. So deeply rooted (and, I fear,
+ permanent) is this feeling that every occurrence is made to fit
+ into and to strengthen this supposition. When Dumba was dismissed,
+ they said: "Dumba, merely the abject tool of German intrigue. Why
+ not Bernstorff?" When the Anglo-French loan[11] was oversubscribed,
+ they said: "The people's sympathy is most welcome, but their
+ Government is paralyzed." Their respect has gone--at least for the
+ time being.
+
+ It is not that they expect us to go to war: many, in fact, do not
+ wish us to. They expected that we would be as good as our word and
+ hold the Germans to accountability. Now I fear they think little of
+ our word. I shudder to think what our relations might be if Sir
+ Edward Grey were to yield to another as Foreign Minister, as, of
+ course, he must yield at some time.
+
+ The press has less to say than it had a few weeks ago. _Punch_, for
+ instance, which ridiculed and pitied us in six cartoons and
+ articles in each of two succeeding numbers, entirely forgets us
+ this week. But they've all said their say. I am, in a sense,
+ isolated--lonely in a way that I have never before been. I am not
+ exactly avoided, I hope, but I surely am not sought. They have a
+ polite feeling that they do not wish to offend me and that to make
+ sure of this the safest course is to let me alone. There is no
+ mistaking the great change in the attitude of men I know, both in
+ official and private life.
+
+ It comes down and comes back to this--that for five months after
+ the sinking of the _Lusitania_ the Germans are yet playing with us,
+ that we have not sent Bernstorff home, and hence that we will
+ submit to any rebuff or any indignity. It is under these
+ conditions--under this judgment of us--that we now work--the
+ English respect for our Government indefinitely lessened and
+ instead of the old-time respect a sad pity. I cannot write more.
+
+ Heartily yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+
+"I have authoritatively heard," Page writes to President Wilson in early
+September, "of a private conversation between a leading member of the
+Cabinet and a group of important officials all friendly to us in which
+all sorrowfully expressed the opinion that the United States will submit
+to any indignity and that no effect is now to be hoped for from its
+protests against unlawful submarine attacks or against anything else.
+The inactivity of our Government, or its delay, which they assume is the
+same as inactivity, is attributed to domestic politics or to the lack of
+national, consciousness or unity.
+
+"No explanation has appeared in the British press of our Government's
+inactivity or of any regret or promise of reparation by Germany for the
+sinking of the _Lusitania_, the _Falaba_, the _Gulflight_, the
+_Nebraskan_, the _Arabic_, or the _Hesperian_, nor any explanation of a
+week's silence about the Dumba letter; and the conclusion is drawn that,
+in the absence of action by us, all these acts have been practically
+condoned.
+
+"I venture to suggest that such explanations be made public as will
+remove, if possible, the practically unanimous conclusion here that our
+Government will permit these and similar future acts to be explained
+away. I am surprised almost every hour by some new evidence of the loss
+of respect for our Government, which, since the sinking of the _Arabic_,
+has become so great as to warrant calling it a complete revulsion of
+English feeling toward the United States. There is no general wish for
+us to enter the war, but there is genuine sorrow that we are thought to
+submit to any indignity, especially after having taken a firm stand. I
+conceive I should be lacking in duty if I did not report this rapid and
+unfortunate change in public feeling, which seems likely to become
+permanent unless facts are quickly made public which may change it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There are many expressions of such feelings in Page's letters of this
+time. They brought only the most perfunctory acknowledgment from the
+White House. On January 3, 1916, Page sent the President a mass of
+clippings from the British press, all criticizing the Wilson
+Administration in unrestrained terms. In his comment on these, he writes
+the President:
+
+"Public opinion, both official and unofficial, is expressed by these
+newspaper comments, with far greater restraint than it is expressed in
+private conversation. Ridicule of the Administration runs through the
+programmes of the theatres; it inspires hundreds of cartoons; it is a
+staple of conversation at private dinners and in the clubs. The most
+serious class of Englishmen, including the best friends of the United
+States, feel that the Administration's reliance on notes has reduced our
+Government to a third-or fourth-rate power. There is even talk of
+spheres of German influence in the United States as in China. No
+government could fall lower in English opinion than we shall fall if
+more notes are sent to Austria or to Germany. The only way to keep any
+shred of English respect is the immediate dismissal without more
+parleying of every German and Austrian official at Washington. Nobody
+here believes that such an act would provoke war.
+
+"I can do no real service by mincing matters. My previous telegrams and
+letters have been purposely restrained as this one is. We have now come
+to the parting of the ways. If English respect be worth preserving at
+all, it can be preserved only by immediate action. Any other course than
+immediate severing of diplomatic relations with both Germany and Austria
+will deepen the English opinion into a conviction that the
+Administration was insincere when it sent the _Lusitania_ notes and that
+its notes and protests need not be taken seriously on any subject. And
+English opinion is allied opinion. The Italian Ambassador[12] said to
+me, 'What has happened? The United States of to-day is not the United
+States I knew fifteen years ago, when I lived in Washington.' French
+officers and members of the Government who come here express themselves
+even more strongly than do the British. The British newspapers to-day
+publish translations of ridicule of the United States from German
+papers."
+
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London,
+ January 5, 1916.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ I wish--an impossible thing of course--that some sort of guidance
+ could be given to the American correspondents of the English
+ newspapers. Almost every day they telegraph about the visits of the
+ Austrian Chargé or the German Ambassador to the State Department to
+ assure Mr. Lansing that their governments will of course make a
+ satisfactory explanation of the latest torpedo-act in the
+ Mediterranean or to "take one further step in reaching a
+ satisfactory understanding about the _Lusitania_." They usually go
+ on to say also that more notes are in preparation to Germany or to
+ Austria. The impression made upon the European mind is that the
+ German and Austrian officials in Washington are leading the
+ Administration on to endless discussion, endless notes, endless
+ hesitation. Nobody in Europe regards their pledges or promises as
+ worth anything at all: the _Arabic_ follows the _Lusitania_, the
+ _Hesperian_ follows the _Arabic_, the _Persia_ follows the
+ _Ancona_. "Still conferences and notes continue," these people say,
+ "proving that the American Government, which took so proper and
+ high a stand in the _Lusitania_ notes, is paralyzed--in a word is
+ hoodwinked and 'worked' by the Germans." And so long as these
+ diplomatic representatives are permitted to remain in the United
+ States, "to explain," "to parley" and to declare that the
+ destruction of American lives and property is disavowed by their
+ governments, atrocities on sea and land will of course continue;
+ and they feel that our Government, by keeping these German and
+ Austrian representatives in Washington, condones and encourages
+ them and their governments.
+
+ This is a temperate and even restrained statement of the English
+ feeling and (as far as I can make out) of the whole European
+ feeling.
+
+ It has been said here that every important journal published in
+ neutral or allied European countries, daily, weekly, or monthly,
+ which deals with public affairs, has expressed a loss of respect
+ for the United States Government and that most of them make
+ continuous severe criticisms (with surprise and regret) of our
+ failure by action to live up to the level of our _Lusitania_ notes.
+ I had (judiciously) two American journalists, resident here--men of
+ judgment and character--to inquire how true this declaration is.
+ After talking with neutral and allied journalists here and with men
+ whose business it is to read the journals of the Continent, they
+ reported that this declaration is substantially true--that the
+ whole European press (outside Germany and its allies) uses the same
+ tone toward our Government that the English press uses--to-day,
+ disappointment verging on contempt; and many of them explain our
+ keeping diplomatic intercourse with Germany by saying that we are
+ afraid of the German vote, or of civil war, or that the
+ peace-at-any-price people really rule the United States and have
+ paralyzed our power to act--even to cut off diplomatic relations
+ with governments that have insulted and defied us.
+
+ Another (similar) declaration is that practically all men of public
+ influence in England and in the European allied and neutral
+ countries have publicly or privately expressed themselves to the
+ same effect. The report that I have about this is less definite
+ than about the newspapers, for, of course, no one can say just what
+ proportion of men of public influence have so expressed themselves;
+ but the number who have so expressed themselves is overwhelming.
+
+ In this Kingdom, where I can myself form some opinion more or less
+ accurate, and where I can check or verify my opinion by various
+ methods--I am afraid, as I have frequently already reported, that
+ the generation now living will never wholly regain the respect for
+ our Government that it had a year ago. I will give you three little
+ indications of this feeling; it would be easy to write down
+ hundreds of them:
+
+ (One) The governing class: Mr. X [a cabinet member] told Mrs. Page
+ a few nights ago that for sentimental reasons only he would be
+ gratified to see the United States in the war along with the
+ Allies, but that merely sentimental reasons were not a sufficient
+ reason for war--by no means; that he felt most grateful for the
+ sympathetic attitude of the large mass of the American people, that
+ he had no right to expect anything from our Government, whose
+ neutral position was entirely proper. Then he added; "But what I
+ can't for the life of me understand is your Government's failure
+ to express its disapproval of the German utter disregard of its
+ _Lusitania_ notes. After eight months, it has done nothing but
+ write more notes. My love for America, I must confess, is offended
+ at this inaction and--puzzled. I can't understand it. You will
+ pardon me, I am sure."
+
+ (Two) "Middle Class" opinion: A common nickname for Americans in
+ the financial and newspaper districts of London is "Too-prouds."
+
+ (Three) The man in the street: At one of the moving picture shows
+ in a large theatre a little while ago they filled in an interval by
+ throwing on the screen the picture of the monarch, or head of
+ state, and of the flag of each of the principal nations. When the
+ American picture appeared, there was such hissing and groaning as
+ caused the managers hastily to move that picture off the screen.
+
+ Some time ago I wrote House of some such incidents and expressions
+ as these; and he wrote me that they were only part and parcel of
+ the continuous British criticism of their own Government--in other
+ words, a part of the passing hysteria of war. This remark shows how
+ House was living in an atmosphere of illusion.
+
+ As the matter stands to-day our Government has sunk lower, as
+ regards British and European opinion, than it has ever been in our
+ time, not as a part of the hysteria of war but as a result of this
+ process of reasoning, whether it be right or wrong:
+
+ We said that we should hold the Germans to strict accountability on
+ account of the _Lusitania_. We have not settled that yet and we
+ still allow the German Ambassador to discuss it after the
+ _Hesperian_ and other such acts showed that his _Arabic_ pledge was
+ worthless.
+
+ The _Lusitania_ grows larger and larger in European memory and
+ imagination. It looks as if it would become the great type of war
+ atrocities and barbarities. I have seen pictures of the drowned
+ women and children used even on Christmas cards. And there is
+ documentary proof in our hands that the warning, which was really
+ an advance announcement, of that disaster was paid for by the
+ German Ambassador and charged to his Government. It is the
+ _Lusitania_ that has caused European opinion to regard our foreign
+ policy as weak. It is not the wish for us to go to war. No such
+ general wish exists.
+
+ I do not know, Mr. President, who else, if anybody, puts these
+ facts before you with this complete frankness. But I can do no less
+ and do my duty.
+
+ No Englishman--except two who were quite intimate friends--has
+ spoken to me about our Government for months, but I detect all the
+ time a tone of pity and grief in their studied courtesy and in
+ their avoidance of the subject. And they talk with every other
+ American in this Kingdom. It is often made unpleasant for Americans
+ in the clubs and in the pursuit of their regular business and
+ occupations; and it is always our inaction about the _Lusitania_.
+ Our controversy with the British Government causes little feeling
+ and that is a sort of echo of the _Lusitania_. They feel that we
+ have not lived up to our promises and professions.
+
+ That is the whole story.
+
+ Believe me always heartily,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This dismissal of Dumba and of the Attachés has had little more effect
+on opinion here than the dismissal of the Turkish Ambassador[13].
+Sending these was regarded as merely kicking the dogs of the man who
+had stolen our sheep.
+
+
+VI
+
+One of the reasons why Page felt so intensely about American policy at
+this time was his conviction that the severance of diplomatic relations,
+in the latter part of 1915, or the early part of 1916, in itself would
+have brought the European War to an end. This was a conviction from
+which he never departed. Count Bernstorff was industriously creating the
+impression in the United States that his dismissal would immediately
+cause war between Germany and the United States, and there is little
+doubt that the Administration accepted this point of view. But Page
+believed that this was nothing but Prussian bluff. The severance of
+diplomatic relations at that time, in Page's opinion, would have
+convinced the Germans of the hopelessness of their cause. In spite of
+the British blockade, Germany was drawing enormous quantities of food
+supplies from the United States, and without these supplies she could
+not maintain indefinitely her resistance. The severance of diplomatic
+relations would naturally have been accompanied by an embargo suspending
+trade between the United States and the Fatherland. Moreover, the
+consideration that was mainly leading Germany to hope for success was
+the belief that she could embroil the United States and Great Britain
+over the blockade. A break with Germany would of course mean an end to
+that manoeuvre. Page regarded all Mr. Wilson's attempts to make peace in
+1914 and early 1915--before the _Lusitania_--as mistakes, for reasons
+that have already been set forth. Now, however, he believed that the
+President had a real opportunity to end the war and the unparalleled
+suffering which it was causing. The mere dismissal of Bernstorff, in
+the Ambassador's opinion, would accomplish this result.
+
+In a communication sent to the President on February 15, 1916, he made
+this plain.
+
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ February 15, 7 P.M.
+
+ The Cabinet has directed the Censor to suppress, as far as he can
+ with prudence, comment which is unfavourable to the United States.
+ He has taken this action because the public feeling against the
+ Administration is constantly increasing. Because the _Lusitania_
+ controversy has been going on so long, and because the Germans are
+ using it in their renewed U-boat campaign, the opinion of this
+ country has reached a point where only prompt action can bring a
+ turn in the tide. Therefore my loyalty to you would not be complete
+ if I should refrain from sending, in the most respectful terms, the
+ solemn conviction which I hold about our opportunity and our duty.
+
+ If you immediately refuse to have further parley or to yield one
+ jot or tittle of your original _Lusitania_ notes, and if you at
+ once break diplomatic relations with the German Empire, and then
+ declare the most vigorous embargo of the Central Powers, you will
+ quickly end the war. There will be an immediate collapse in German
+ credit. If there are any Allies who are wavering, such action will
+ hold them in line. Certain European neutrals--Sweden, Rumania,
+ Greece, and others--will put up a firm resistance to Germanic
+ influences and certain of them will take part with Great Britain
+ and France. There will be an end at once to the German propaganda,
+ which is now world-wide. The moral weight of our country will be a
+ determining influence and bring an early peace. The credit you
+ will receive for such a decision will make you immortal and even
+ the people of Germany will be forever grateful.
+
+ It is my conviction that we would not be called upon to fire a gun
+ or to lose one human life.
+
+ Above all, such an action will settle the whole question of
+ permanent peace. The absolute and grateful loyalty of the whole
+ British Empire, of the British Fleet, and of all the Allied
+ countries will be ours. The great English-speaking nations will be
+ able to control the details of the peace and this without any
+ formal alliance. There will be an incalculable saving of human life
+ and of treasure. Such an act will make it possible for Germany to
+ give in honourably and with good grace because the whole world will
+ be against her. Her bankrupt and blockaded people will bring such
+ pressure to bear that the decision will be hastened.
+
+ The sympathies of the American people will be brought in line with
+ the Administration.
+
+ If we settle the _Lusitania_ question by compromising in any way
+ your original demands, or if we permit it to drag on longer,
+ America can have no part in bringing the war to an end. The current
+ of allied opinion will run so strongly against the Administration
+ that no censorship and no friendly interference by an allied
+ government can stem the distrust of our Government which is now so
+ strong in Europe.
+
+ We shall gain by any further delay only a dangerous, thankless, and
+ opulent isolation. The _Lusitania_ is the turning point in our
+ history. The time to act is now.
+
+ PAGE.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: The Ambassador's granddaughter.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "A Cycle of Adams Letters, 1861-1865," edited by
+Worthington Chauncey Ford. Vol. I, p. 84.]
+
+[Footnote 3: "The Life and Letters of John Hay," by William Roscoe
+Thayer. Vol. II, p. 166.]
+
+[Footnote 4: On September 6th, certain documents seriously compromising
+Dr. Constantin Dumba, Austro-Hungarian Ambassador to the United States,
+were published in the British press. They disclosed that Dr. Dumba was
+fomenting strikes in the United States and conducting other intrigues.
+The American Government gave Dr. Dumba his passports on September 17th.]
+
+[Footnote 5: August 26th, Count Bernstorff gave a pledge to the United
+States Government, that, in future, German submarines would not attack
+liners without warning. This promise was almost immediately violated.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Sir Lionel Sackville-West was British Minister to the
+United States from 1881 to 1888. In the latter year a letter was
+published which he had written to an American citizen of British origin,
+the gist of which was that the reėlection of President Cleveland would
+be of advantage to British interests. For this gross interference in
+American domestic affairs, President Cleveland immediately handed Sir
+Lionel his passports. The incident ended his diplomatic career.]
+
+[Footnote 7: In this passage the Ambassador touches on one of the
+bitterest controversies of the war. In order completely to understand
+the issues involved and to obtain Lord Haldane's view, the reader should
+consult the very valuable book recently published by Lord Haldane:
+"Before the War." Chapter II tells the story of Lord Haldane's visit to
+the Kaiser, and succeeding chapters give the reasons why the creation of
+a huge British army in preparation for the war was not a simple matter.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The italics are Page's.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Viscount Bryce, author of "The American Commonwealth" and
+British Ambassador to the United States, 1907-1913.]
+
+[Footnote 10: In a communication sent February 10, 1915, President
+Wilson warned the German Government that he would hold it to a "strict
+accountability" for the loss of American lives by illegal submarine
+attack.]
+
+[Footnote 11: A reference to the Anglo-French loan for $500,000,000,
+placed in the United States in the autumn of 1915.]
+
+[Footnote 12: The Marquis Imperiali.]
+
+[Footnote 13: Rustem Bey, the Turkish Ambassador to the United States,
+was sent home early in the war, for publishing indiscreet newspaper and
+magazine articles.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE AMBASSADOR AND THE LAWYERS
+
+
+References in the foregoing letters show that Page was still having his
+troubles over the blockade. In the latter part of 1915, indeed, the
+negotiations with Sir Edward Grey on this subject had reached their
+second stage. The failure of Washington to force upon Great Britain an
+entirely new code of naval warfare--the Declaration of London--has
+already been described. This failure had left both the British Foreign
+Office and the American State Department in an unsatisfactory frame of
+mind. The Foreign Office regarded Washington with suspicion, for the
+American attempt to compel Great Britain to adopt a code of naval
+warfare which was exceedingly unfavourable to that country and
+exceedingly favourable to Germany, was susceptible of a sinister
+interpretation. The British rejection of these overtures, on the other
+hand, had evidently irritated the international lawyers at Washington.
+Mr. Lansing now abandoned his efforts to revolutionize maritime warfare
+and confined himself to specific protests and complaints. His
+communications to the London Embassy dealt chiefly with particular ships
+and cargoes. Yet his persistence in regarding all these problems from a
+strictly legalistic point of view Page regarded as indicating a
+restricted sense of statesmanship.
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, August 4, 1915.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ ... The lawyer-way in which the Department goes on in its dealings
+ with Great Britain is losing us the only great international
+ friendship that we have any chance of keeping or that is worth
+ having. Whatever real principle we have to uphold with Great
+ Britain--that's all right. I refer only to the continuous series of
+ nagging incidents--always criticism, criticism, criticism of small
+ points--points that we have to yield at last, and never anything
+ constructive. I'll illustrate what I mean by a few incidents that I
+ can recall from memory. If I looked up the record, I should find a
+ very, very much larger list.
+
+ (1) We insisted and insisted and insisted, not once but half a
+ dozen times, at the very beginning of the war, on England's
+ adoption of the Declaration of London entire in spite of the fact
+ that Parliament had distinctly declined to adopt it. Of course we
+ had to give in--after we had produced a distinctly unfriendly
+ atmosphere and much feeling.
+
+ (2) We denied the British right to put copper on the contraband
+ list--much to their annoyance. Of course we had at last to
+ acquiesce. They were within their rights.
+
+ (3) We protested against bringing ships into port to examine them.
+ Of course we had to give in--after producing irritation.
+
+ (4) We made a great fuss about stopped telegrams. We have no case
+ at all; but, even after acknowledging that we have no case, every
+ Pouch continues to bring telegrams with the request that I ask an
+ explanation why they were stopped. Such explanations are
+ practically refused. I have 500 telegrams. Periodically I wire the
+ state of the case and ask for more specific instructions. I never
+ get an answer to these requests. But the Department continues to
+ send the telegrams! We confessedly have no case here; and this
+ method can produce nothing but irritation.
+
+ I could extend this list to 100 examples--of mere lawyer-like
+ methods--mere useless technicalities and objections which it is
+ obvious in the beginning cannot be maintained. A similar method is
+ now going on about cotton. Now this is not the way Sir Edward Grey
+ takes up business. It's not the way I've done business all my life,
+ nor that you have, nor other frank men who mean what they say and
+ do not say things they do not mean. The constant continuation of
+ this method is throwing away the real regard and confidence of the
+ British Government and of the British public--very fast, too.
+
+ I sometimes wish there were not a lawyer in the world. I heard the
+ President say once that it took him twenty years to recover from
+ his legal habit of mind. Well, his Administration is suffering from
+ it to a degree that is pathetic and that will leave bad results for
+ 100 years.
+
+ I suspect that in spite of all the fuss we have made we shall at
+ last come to acknowledge the British blockade; for it is pretty
+ nearly parallel to the United States blockade of the South during
+ our Civil War. The only difference is--they can't make the blockade
+ of the Baltic against the traffic from the Scandinavian neutral
+ states effective. That's a good technical objection; but, since
+ practically all the traffic between those States and Germany is in
+ our products, much of the real force of it is lost.
+
+ If a protest is made against cotton being made contraband--it'll
+ amount to nothing and give only irritation. It will only play into
+ Hoke Smith[14]--German hands and accomplish nothing here. We make
+ as much fuss about points which we have silently to yield later as
+ about a real principle. Hence they all say that the State
+ Department is merely captious, and they pay less and less attention
+ to it and care less and less for American opinion--if only they can
+ continue to get munitions. We are reducing English regard to this
+ purely mercenary basis....
+
+ We are--under lawyers' quibbling--drifting apart very rapidly, to
+ our complete isolation from the sympathy of the whole world.
+
+ Yours forever sincerely,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+Page refers in this letter to the "blockade"; this was the term which
+the British Government itself used to describe its restrictive measures
+against German commerce, and it rapidly passed into common speech. Yet
+the truth is that Great Britain never declared an actual blockade
+against Germany. A realization of this fact will clear up much that is
+obscure in the naval warfare of the next two years. At the beginning of
+the Civil War, President Lincoln laid an interdict on all the ports of
+the Confederacy; the ships of all nations were forbidden entering or
+leaving them: any ship which attempted to evade this restriction, and
+was captured doing so, was confiscated, with its cargo. That was a
+blockade, as the term has always been understood. A blockade, it is well
+to keep in mind, is a procedure which aims at completely closing the
+blockaded country from all commercial intercourse with the world. A
+blockading navy, if the blockade is successful, or "effective,"
+converts the whole country into a beleaguered fortress, just as an army,
+surrounding a single town, prevents goods and people from entering or
+leaving it. Precisely as it is the purpose of a besieging army to starve
+a particular city or territory into submission, so it is the aim of a
+blockading fleet to enforce the same treatment on the nation as a whole.
+It is also essential to keep in mind that the question of contraband has
+nothing to do with a blockade, for, under this drastic method of making
+warfare, everything is contraband. Contraband is a term applied to
+cargoes, such as rifles, machine guns, and the like, which are needed in
+the prosecution of war.
+
+That a belligerent nation has the right to intercept such munitions on
+the way to its enemy has been admitted for centuries. Differences of
+opinion have raged only as to the extent to which this right could be
+carried--the particular articles, that is, that constituted contraband,
+and the methods adopted in exercising it. But the important point to be
+kept in mind is that where there is a blockade, there is no contraband
+list--for everything automatically becomes contraband. The seizure of
+contraband on the high seas is a war measure which is availed of only in
+cases in which the blockade has not been established.
+
+Great Britain, when she declared war on Germany, did not follow
+President Lincoln's example and lay the whole of the German coast under
+interdict. Perhaps one reason for this inaction was a desire not unduly
+to offend neutrals, especially the United States; but the more impelling
+motive was geographical. The fact is that a blockade of the German
+seacoast would accomplish little in the way of keeping materials out of
+Germany. A glance at the map of northwestern Europe will make this fact
+clear. In the first place the seacoast of Germany is a small affair. In
+the North Sea the German coast is a little indentation, not more than
+two hundred miles long, wedged in between the longer coastlines of
+Holland and Denmark; in the Baltic it is somewhat more extensive, but
+the entrances to this sea are so circuitous and treacherous that the
+suggestion of a blockade here is not a practicable one. The greatest
+ports of Germany are located on this little North Sea coastline or on
+its rivers--Hamburg and Bremen. It might therefore be assumed that any
+nation which successfully blockaded these North Sea ports would have
+strangled the commerce of Germany. That is far from being the case. The
+point is that the political boundaries of Germany are simply fictions,
+when economic considerations are involved. Holland, on the west, and
+Denmark, on the north, are as much a part of the German transportation
+system as though these two countries were parts of the German Empire.
+Their territories and the territories of Germany are contiguous; the
+railroad and the canal systems of Germany, Holland, and Denmark are
+practically one. Such ports as Rotterdam, Amsterdam, and Copenhagen are
+just as useful to Germany for purposes of commerce as are Hamburg and
+Bremen, and, in fact, a special commercial arrangement with Rotterdam
+has made that city practically a port of Germany since 1868. These
+considerations show how ineffective would be a blockade of the German
+coast which did not also comprehend the coast of Holland and Denmark.
+Germany could still conduct her commerce through these neighbouring
+countries. And at this point the great difficulty arose. A blockade is
+an act of war and can be applied only to a country upon which war has
+been declared. Great Britain had declared war on Germany and could
+therefore legally close her ports; she had not declared war on Holland
+and Denmark, and therefore could not use the same measure against those
+friendly countries. Consequently the blockade was useless to Great
+Britain; and so, in the first six months of the war, the Admiralty fell
+back upon the milder system of declaring certain articles contraband of
+war and seizing ships that were suspected of carrying them to Germany.
+
+A geographical accident had apparently largely destroyed the usefulness
+of the British fleet and had guaranteed Germany an unending supply of
+those foodstuffs without which she could not maintain her resistance for
+any extended period. Was Great Britain called upon to accept this
+situation and to deny herself the use of the blockade in this, the
+greatest struggle in her history? Unless the British fleet could stop
+cargoes which were really destined to Germany but which were bound for
+neutral ports, Great Britain could not win the war; if the British fleet
+could intercept such cargoes, then the chances strongly favoured
+victory. The experts of the Foreign Office searched the history of
+blockades and found something which resembled a precedent in the
+practices of the American Navy during the Civil War. In that conflict
+Nassau, in the Bahamas, and Matamoros, in Mexico, played a part not
+unlike that played by Rotterdam and Copenhagen in the recent struggle.
+These were both neutral ports and therefore outside the jurisdiction of
+the United States, just as Rotterdam and Copenhagen were outside the
+jurisdiction of Great Britain. They were the ports of powers with which
+the United States was at peace, and therefore they could not be
+blockaded, just as Amsterdam and Copenhagen were ports of powers with
+which Great Britain was now at peace.
+
+Trade from Great Britain to the Bahamas and Mexico was ostensibly trade
+from one neutral port to another neutral port in the same sense as was
+trade from the United States to Holland and Denmark. Yet the fact is
+that the "neutrality" of this trade, in the Civil War, from Great
+Britain to the Bahamas and Mexico, was the most transparent subterfuge;
+such trade was not "neutral" in the slightest degree. It consisted
+almost entirely of contraband of war and was intended for the armies of
+the Confederate States, then in arms against the Federal Government.
+What is the reason, our Government asked, that these gentle and
+unwarlike inhabitants of the Bahamas have so suddenly developed such an
+enormous appetite for percussion caps, rifles, cannon, and other
+instruments of warfare? The answer, of course, lay upon the surface; the
+cargoes were intended for reshipment into the Southern States, and they
+were, in fact, immediately so reshipped. The American Government, which
+has always regarded realities as more important than logic, brushed
+aside the consideration that this trade was conducted through neutral
+ports, unhesitatingly seized these ships and condemned both the ships
+and their cargoes. Its action was without legal precedent, but our
+American courts devised a new principle of international law to cover
+the case--that of "continuous voyage" or "ultimate destination." Under
+this new doctrine it was maintained that cargoes of contraband could be
+seized anywhere upon the high seas, even though they were going from one
+neutral port to another, if it could be demonstrated that this
+contraband was really on its way to the enemy. The mere fact that it was
+transshipped at an intermediate neutral port was not important; the
+important point was the "ultimate destination." British shippers
+naturally raged over these decisions, but they met with little sympathy
+from their own government. Great Britain filed no protest against the
+doctrine of "continuous voyage," but recognized its fundamental
+soundness, and since 1865 this doctrine has been a part of international
+law.
+
+Great Britain's good sense in acquiescing in our Civil War practices now
+met its reward; for these decisions of American courts proved a godsend
+in her hour of trial. The one neutral from which trouble was anticipated
+was the United States. What better way to meet this situation than to
+base British maritime warfare upon the decisions of American courts?
+What more ideal solution of the problem than to make Chief Justice
+Chase, of the United States Supreme Court, really the author of the
+British "blockade" against Germany? The policy of the British Foreign
+Office was to use the sea power of Great Britain to crush the enemy, but
+to do it in a way that would not alienate American sympathy and American
+support; clearly the one way in which both these ends could be attained
+was to frame these war measures upon the pronouncements of American
+prize courts. In a broad sense this is precisely what Sir Edward Grey
+now proceeded to do. There was a difference, of course, which Great
+Britain's enemies in the American Senate--such men as Senator Hoke
+Smith, of Georgia, and Senator Thomas Walsh, of Montana--proceeded to
+point out; but it was a difference of degree. Great Britain based her
+blockade measures upon the American principle of "ultimate destination,"
+but it was necessary considerably to extend that doctrine in order to
+meet the necessities of the new situation. President Lincoln had applied
+this principle to absolute contraband, such as powder, shells, rifles,
+and other munitions of war. Great Britain now proceeded to apply it to
+that nebulous class of commodities known as "conditional contraband,"
+the chief of which was foodstuffs. If the United States, while a war was
+pending, could evolve the idea of "ultimate destination" and apply it
+to absolute contraband, could not Great Britain, while another war was
+pending, carry it one degree further and make it include conditional
+contraband? Thus reasoned the British Foreign Office. To this Mr.
+Lansing replied that to stop foodstuffs on the way to Germany through a
+neutral port was simply to blockade a neutral port, and that this was
+something utterly without precedent. Seizing contraband is not an act of
+war against the nation whose ships are seized; blockading a port is an
+act of war; what right therefore had Great Britain to adopt measures
+against Holland, Denmark, and Sweden which virtually amounted to a
+blockade?
+
+This is the reason why Great Britain, in the pronouncement of March 1,
+1915, and the Order in Council of March 11, 1915, did not describe these
+measures as a "blockade." President Wilson described his attack on
+Mexico in 1914 as "measures short of war," and now someone referred to
+the British restrictions on neutral commerce as "measures short of
+blockade." The British sought another escape from their predicament by
+justifying this proceeding, not on the general principles of warfare,
+but on the ground of reprisal. Germany declared her submarine warfare on
+merchant ships on February 4, 1915; Great Britain replied with her
+announcement of March 1st, in which she declared her intention of
+preventing "commodities of any kind from reaching or leaving Germany."
+The British advanced this procedure as a retaliation for the illegal
+warfare which Germany had declared on merchant shipping, both that of
+the enemy and of neutrals. "The British and French governments will
+therefore hold themselves free to detain and take into port ships
+carrying goods of presumed enemy destination, ownership, and origin."
+This sentence accurately describes the purposes of a blockade--to cut
+the enemy off from all commercial relations with the outside world; yet
+the procedure Great Britain now proposed to follow was not that of a
+blockade. When this interdict is classically laid, any ship that
+attempts to run the lines is penalized with confiscation, along with its
+cargo; but such a penalty was not to be exacted in the present instance.
+Great Britain now proposed to purchase cargoes of conditional contraband
+discovered on seized ships and return the ships themselves to their
+owners, and this soon became the established practice. Not only did the
+Foreign Office purchase all cotton which was seized on its way to
+Germany, but it took measures to maintain the price in the markets of
+the world. In the succeeding months Southern statesmen in both Houses of
+Congress railed against the British seizure of their great staple, yet
+the fact was that cotton was all this time steadily advancing in price.
+When Senator Hoke Smith made a long speech advocating an embargo on the
+shipment of munitions as a punishment to Great Britain for stopping
+American cotton on the way to Germany, the acute John Sharp Williams, of
+Mississippi, arose in the Senate and completely annihilated the Georgia
+politician by demonstrating how the Southern planters were growing rich
+out of the war.
+
+That the so-called "blockade" situation was a tortuous one must be
+apparent from this attempt to set forth the salient facts. The basic
+point was that there could be no blockade of Germany unless the neutral
+ports of contiguous countries were also blockaded, and Great Britain
+believed that she had found a precedent for doing this in the operations
+of the American Navy in the Civil War. But it is obvious that the
+situation was one which would provide a great feast for the lawyers.
+That Page sympathized with this British determination to keep foodstuffs
+out of Germany, his correspondence shows. Day after day the "protests"
+from Washington rained upon his desk. The history of our foreign
+relations for 1915 and 1916 is largely made up of an interminable
+correspondence dealing with seized cargoes, and the routine of the
+Embassy was an unending nightmare of "demands," "complaints,"
+"precedents," "cases," "notes," "detentions" of Chicago meats, of
+Southern cotton, and the like. The American Embassy in London contains
+hundreds of volumes of correspondence which took place during Page's
+incumbency; more material has accumulated for those five years than for
+the preceding century and a quarter of the Government's existence. The
+greater part of this mass deals with intercepted cargoes.
+
+The following extract from a letter which Page wrote at this time gives
+a fair idea of the atmosphere that prevailed in London while this
+correspondence was engaging the Ambassador's mind:
+
+ The truth is, in their present depressed mood, the United States is
+ forgotten--everything's forgotten but the one great matter in hand.
+ For the moment at least, the English do not care what we do or what
+ we think or whether we exist--except those critics of
+ things-in-general who use us as a target since they must take a
+ crack at somebody. And I simply cannot describe the curious effect
+ that is produced on men here by the apparent utter lack of
+ understanding in the United States of the phase the war has now
+ entered and of the mood that this phase has brought. I pick up an
+ American paper eight days old and read solemn evidence to show that
+ the British Government is interrupting our trade in order to
+ advance its own at our expense, whereas the truth is that the
+ British Government hasn't given six seconds' thought in six months
+ to anybody's trade--not even its own. When I am asked to inquire
+ why Pfister and Schmidt's telegram from New York to Schimmelpfenig
+ and Johann in Holland was stopped (the reason is reasonably
+ obvious), I try to picture to myself the British Minister in
+ Washington making inquiry of our Government on the day after Bull
+ Run, why the sailing boat loaded with persimmon blocks to make golf
+ clubs is delayed in Hampton Roads.
+
+ I think I have neither heard nor read anything from the United
+ States in three months that didn't seem so remote as to suggest the
+ captain of the sailing ship from Hongkong who turned up at
+ Southampton in February and had not even heard that there was a
+ war. All day long I see and hear women who come to ask if I can
+ make inquiry about their sons and husbands, "dead or missing," with
+ an interval given to a description of a man half of whose body was
+ splashed against a brick wall last night on the Strand when a
+ Zeppelin bomb tore up the street and made projectiles of the
+ pavement; as I walk to and from the Embassy the Park is full of
+ wounded and their nurses; every man I see tells me of a new death;
+ every member of the Government talks about military events or of
+ Balkan venality; the man behind the counter at the cigar store
+ reads me part of a letter just come from his son, telling how he
+ advanced over a pile of dead Germans and one of them grunted and
+ turned under his feet-they (the English alone) are spending
+ $25,000,000 a day to keep this march going over dead Germans; then
+ comes a telegram predicting blue ruin for American importers and a
+ cheerless Christmas for American children if a cargo of German toys
+ be not quickly released at Rotterdam, and I dimly recall the
+ benevolent unction with which American children last Christmas sent
+ a shipload of toys to this side of the world--many of them for
+ German children--to the tune of "God bless us all"--do you wonder
+ we often have to pinch ourselves to find out if we are we; and
+ what year of the Lord is it? What is the vital thing--the killing
+ of fifty people last night by a Zeppelin within sight of St. Paul's
+ on one side and of Westminster Abbey on the other, or is it making
+ representations to Sir Edward Grey, who has hardly slept for a week
+ because his despatches from Sofia, Athens, Belgrade, and Salonika
+ come at all hours, each possibly reporting on which side a new
+ government may throw its army--to decide perhaps the fate of the
+ canal leading to Asia, the vast British Asiatic empire at stake--is
+ it making representations to Sir Edward while his mind is thus
+ occupied, that it is of the greatest importance to the United
+ States Government that a particular German who is somewhere in this
+ Kingdom shall be permitted to go to the United States because he
+ knows how to dye sealskins and our sealskins are yet undyed and the
+ winter is coming? There will be no new sealskins here, for every
+ man and woman must give half his income to keep the cigarman's son
+ marching over dead Germans, some of whom grunt and turn under his
+ feet. Dumba is at Falmouth to-day and gets just two lines in the
+ newspapers. Nothing and nobody gets three lines unless he or it in
+ some way furthers the war. Every morning the Washington despatches
+ say that Mr. Lansing is about to send a long note to England.
+ England won't read it till there comes a lull in the fighting or in
+ the breathless diplomatic struggle with the Balkans. London and the
+ Government are now in much the same mood that Washington and
+ Lincoln's administration were in after Lee had crossed the Potomac
+ on his way to Gettysburg. Northcliffe, the Lord of Yellow Journals,
+ but an uncommonly brilliant fellow, has taken to his bed from sheer
+ nervous worry. "The revelations that are imminent," says he, "will
+ shake the world--the incompetence of the Government, the losses
+ along the Dardanelles, the throwing away of British chances in the
+ Balkans, perhaps the actual defeat of the Allies." I regard Lord
+ Northcliffe less as an entity than as a symptom. But he is always
+ very friendly to us and he knows the United States better than any
+ Englishman that I know except Bryce. He and Bryce are both much
+ concerned about our Note's coming just "at this most distressing
+ time." "If it come when we are calmer, no matter; but now it cannot
+ receive attention and many will feel that the United States has hit
+ on a most unhappy moment--almost a cruel moment--to remind us of
+ our sins."--That's the substance of what they say.
+
+ Overwork, or perhaps mainly the indescribable strain on the nerves
+ and vitality of men, caused by this experience, for which in fact
+ men are not built, puts one of our staff after another in bed. None
+ has been seriously sick: the malady takes some form of "grip." On
+ the whole we've been pretty lucky in spite of this almost regular
+ temporary breakdown of one man after another. I've so far escaped.
+ But I am grieved to hear that Whitlock is abed--"no physical
+ ailment whatever--just worn out," his doctor says. I have tried to
+ induce him and his wife to come here and make me a visit; but one
+ characteristic of this war-malady is the conviction of the victim
+ that he is somehow necessary to hold the world together. About
+ twice a week I get to the golf links and take the risk of the
+ world's falling apart and thus escape both illness and its
+ illusions.
+
+"I cannot begin to express my deep anxiety and even uneasiness about the
+relations of these two great governments and peoples," Page wrote about
+this time. "The friendship of the United States and Great Britain is
+all that now holds the world together. It is the greatest asset of
+civilization left. All the cargoes of copper and oil in the world are
+not worth as much to the world. Yet when a shipper's cargo is held up he
+does not think of civilization and of the future of mankind and of free
+government; he thinks only of his cargo and of the indignity that he
+imagines has been done him; and what is the American Government for if
+not to protect his rights? Of course he's right; but there must be
+somebody somewhere who sees things in their right proportion. The man
+with an injury rushes to the Department of State--quite properly. He is
+in a mood to bring England to book. Now comes the critical stage in the
+journey of his complaint. The State Department hurries it on to me--very
+properly; every man's right must be guarded and defended--a right to get
+his cargo to market, a right to get on a steamer at Queenstown, a right
+to have his censored telegram returned, any kind of a right, if he have
+a right. Then the Department, not wittingly, I know, but humanly, almost
+inevitably, in the great rush of overwork, sends his 'demands' to me,
+catching much of his tone and apparently insisting on the removal of his
+grievance as a right, without knowing all the facts in the case. The
+telegrams that come to me are full of 'protests' and 'demands'--protest
+and demand this, protest and demand that. A man from Mars who should
+read my book of telegrams received during the last two months would find
+it difficult to explain how the two governments have kept at peace. It
+is this serious treatment of trifling grievances which makes us feel
+here that the exactions and dislocations and necessary disturbances of
+this war are not understood at home.
+
+"I assure you (and there are plenty of facts to prove it) that this
+Government (both for unselfish and selfish reasons) puts a higher value
+on our friendship than on any similar thing in the world. They will
+go--they are going--the full length to keep it. But, in proportion to
+our tendency to nag them about little things will the value set on our
+friendship diminish and will their confidence in our sincerity decline."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The note which Lord Bryce and Lord Northcliffe so dreaded reached the
+London Embassy in October, 1915. The State Department had spent nearly
+six months in preparing it; it was the American answer to the so-called
+blockade established by the Order in Council of the preceding March.
+Evidently its contents fulfilled the worst forebodings:
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, November 12, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I have a great respect for the British Navy. Admiral Jellicoe now
+ has under his command 3,000 ships of all sorts-far and away the
+ biggest fleet, I think, that was ever assembled. For the first time
+ since the ocean was poured out, one navy practically commands all
+ the seas: nothing sails except by its grace. It is this fleet of
+ course that will win the war. The beginning of the end--however far
+ off yet the end may be--is already visible by reason of the
+ economic pressure on Germany. But for this fleet, by the way,
+ London would be in ruins, all its treasure looted; every French
+ seacoast city and the Italian peninsula would be as Belgium and
+ Poland are; and thousands of English women would be violated--just
+ as dead French girls are found in many German trenches that have
+ been taken in France. Hence I greatly respect the British fleet.
+
+ We have a good navy, too, for its size, and a naval personnel as
+ good as any afloat. I hear--with much joy--that we are going to
+ make our navy bigger--as much bigger (God save the mark!) as Bryan
+ will permit.
+
+ Now, whatever the future bring, since any fighting enterprise that
+ may ever be thrust on us will be just and justified, we must see to
+ it that we win, as doubtless we shall and as hitherto we always
+ have won. We must be dead sure of winning. Well, whatever fight may
+ be thrust on us by anybody, anywhere, at any time, for any
+ reason--if it only be generally understood beforehand that our
+ fleet and the British fleet shoot the same language, there'll be no
+ fight thrust upon us. The biggest bully in the world wouldn't dare
+ kick the sorriest dog we have. Here, therefore, is a Peace
+ Programme for you--the only basis for a permanent peace in the
+ world. There's no further good in having venerable children build
+ houses of sand at The Hague; there's no further good in peace
+ organizations or protective leagues to enforce peace. We had as
+ well get down to facts. So far as ensuring peace is concerned the
+ biggest fact in the world is the British fleet. The next biggest
+ fact is the American fleet, because of itself and still more
+ because of the vast reserve power of the United States which it
+ implies. If these two fleets perfectly understand one another about
+ the undesirability of wars of aggression, there'll be no more big
+ wars as long as this understanding continues. Such an understanding
+ calls for no treaty--it calls only for courtesy.
+
+ And there is no other peace-basis worth talking about--by men who
+ know how the world is governed.
+
+ Since I have lived here I have spent my days and nights, my poor
+ brain, and my small fortune all most freely and gladly to get some
+ understanding of the men who rule this Kingdom, and of the women
+ and the customs and the traditions that rule these men--to get
+ their trick of thought, the play of their ideals, the working of
+ their imagination, the springs of their instincts. It is impossible
+ for any man to know just how well he himself does such a difficult
+ task--how accurately he is coming to understand the sources and
+ character of a people's actions. Yet, at the worst, I do know
+ something about the British: I know enough to make very sure of the
+ soundness of my conclusion that they are necessary to us and we to
+ them. Else God would have permitted the world to be peopled in some
+ other way. And when we see that the world will be saved by such an
+ artificial combination as England and Russia and France and Japan
+ and Serbia, it calls for no great wisdom to see the natural way
+ whereby it must be saved in the future.
+
+ For this reason every day that I have lived here it has been my
+ conscious aim to do what I could to bring about a condition that
+ shall make sure of this--that, whenever we may have need of the
+ British fleet to protect our shores or to prevent an aggressive war
+ anywhere, it shall he ours by a natural impulse and necessity--even
+ without the asking.
+
+ I have found out that the first step toward that end is courtesy;
+ that the second step is courtesy, and the third step--such a fine
+ and high courtesy (which includes courage) as the President showed
+ in the Panama tolls controversy. We have--we and the
+ British--common aims and character. Only a continuous and sincere
+ courtesy--over periods of strain as well as of calm--is necessary
+ for as complete an understanding as will be required for the
+ automatic guidance of the world in peaceful ways.
+
+ Now, a difference is come between us--the sort of difference that
+ handled as between friends would serve only to bind us together
+ with a sturdier respect. We send a long lawyer's Note, not
+ discourteous but wholly uncourteous, which is far worse. I am
+ writing now only of the manner of the Note, not of its matter.
+ There is not a courteous word, nor a friendly phrase, nor a kindly
+ turn in it, not an allusion even to an old acquaintance, to say
+ nothing of an old friendship, not a word of thanks for courtesies
+ or favours done us, not a hint of sympathy in the difficulties of
+ the time. There is nothing in its tone to show that it came from an
+ American to an Englishman: it might have been from a Hottentot to a
+ Fiji-Islander.
+
+ I am almost sure--I'll say quite sure--that this uncourteous manner
+ is far more important than its endless matter. It has greatly hurt
+ our friends, the real men of the Kingdom. It has made the masses
+ angry--which is of far less importance than the severe sorrow that
+ our discourtesy of manner has brought to our friends--I fear to all
+ considerate and thoughtful Englishmen.
+
+ Let me illustrate: When the Panama tolls controversy arose, Taft
+ ceased to speak the language of the natural man and lapsed into
+ lawyer's courthouse zigzagging mutterings. Knox wrote a letter to
+ the British Government that would have made an enemy of the most
+ affectionate twin brother--all mere legal twists and turns, as
+ agreeable as a pocketful of screws. Then various bovine
+ "international lawyers" wrote books about it. I read them and
+ became more and more confused the further I went: you always do. It
+ took me some time to recover from this word-drunk debauch and to
+ find my own natural intelligence again, the common sense that I was
+ born with. Then I saw that the whole thing went wrong from the
+ place where that Knox legal note came in. Congressmen in the
+ backwoods quoted cryptic passages from it, thought they were saying
+ something, and proceeded to make their audiences believe that
+ somehow England had hit us with a club--or would have hit us but
+ for Knox. That pure discourtesy kept us apart from English sympathy
+ for something like two years.
+
+ Then the President took it up. He threw the legal twaddle into the
+ gutter. He put the whole question in a ten-minutes' speech to
+ Congress, full of clearness and fairness and high courtesy. It won
+ even the rural Congressmen. It was read in every capital and the
+ men who conduct every government looked up and said, "This is a
+ real man, a brave man, a just man." You will recall what Sir Edward
+ Grey said to me: "The President has taught us all a lesson and set
+ us all a high example in the noblest courtesy."
+
+ This one act brought these two nations closer together than they
+ had ever been since we became an independent nation. It was an act
+ of courtesy....
+
+ My dear House, suppose the postman some morning were to leave at
+ your door a thing of thirty-five heads and three appendices, and
+ you discovered that it came from an old friend whom you had long
+ known and greatly valued--this vast mass of legal stuff, without a
+ word or a turn of courtesy in it--what would you do? He had a
+ grievance, your old friend had. Friends often have. But instead of
+ explaining it to you, he had gone and had his lawyers send this
+ many-headed, much-appendiced ton of stuff. It wasn't by that method
+ that you found your way from Austin, Texas, to your present
+ eminence and wisdom. Nor was that the way our friend found his way
+ from a little law-office in Atlanta, where I first saw him, to the
+ White House.
+
+ More and more I am struck with this--that governments are human.
+ They are not remote abstractions, nor impersonal institutions. Men
+ conduct them; and they do not cease to be men. A man is made up of
+ six parts of human nature and four parts of facts and other
+ things--a little reason, some prejudice, much provincialism, and of
+ the particular fur or skin that suits his habitat. When you wish to
+ win a man to do what _you_ want him to do, you take along a few
+ well-established facts, some reasoning and such-like, but you take
+ along also three or four or five parts of human nature--kindliness,
+ courtesy, and such things--sympathy and a human touch.
+
+ If a man be six parts human and four parts of other things, a
+ government, especially a democracy, is seven, or eight, or nine
+ parts human nature. It's the most human thing I know. The best way
+ to manage governments and nations--so long as they are disposed to
+ be friendly--is the way we manage one another. I have a
+ confirmation of this in the following comment which came to me
+ to-day. It was made by a friendly member of Parliament.
+
+ "The President himself dealt with Germany. Even in his severity he
+ paid the Germans the compliment of a most courteous tone in his
+ Note. But in dealing with us he seems to have called in the lawyers
+ of German importers and Chicago pork-packers. I miss the high
+ Presidential courtesy that we had come to expect from Mr. Wilson."
+
+ An American banker here has told me of the experience of an
+ American financial salesman in the city the day after our Note was
+ published. His business is to make calls on bankers and other
+ financial men, to sell them securities. He is a man of good address
+ who is popular with his clients. The first man he called on, on
+ that day, said: "I don't wish to be offensive to you. But I have
+ only one way to show my feeling of indignation toward the United
+ States, and that is, to have nothing more to do with Americans."
+
+ The next man said: "No, nothing to-day, I thank you. No--nor
+ to-morrow either; nor the next day. Good morning."
+
+ After four or five such greetings, the fellow gave it up and is now
+ doing nothing.
+
+ I don't attach much importance to such an incident as this, except
+ as it gives a hint of the general feeling. These financial men
+ probably haven't even read our Note. Few people have. But they have
+ all read the short and sharp newspaper summary which preceded it in
+ the English papers. But what such an incident does indicate is the
+ prevalence of a state of public feeling which would prevent the
+ Government from yielding any of our demands even if the Government
+ so wished. It has now been nearly a week since the Note was
+ published. I have seen most of the neutral ministers. Before the
+ Note came they expressed great eagerness to see it: it would
+ champion their cause. Since it came not one of them has mentioned
+ it to me. The Secretary of one of them remarked, after being
+ invited to express himself: "It is too--too--long!" And, although I
+ have seen most of the Cabinet this week, not a man mentioned it to
+ me. People seem studiously to avoid it, lest they give offense.
+
+ I have, however, got one little satisfaction. An American--a
+ half-expatriated loafer who talks "art"--you know the
+ intellectually affected and degenerate type--screwed his courage up
+ and told me that he felt ashamed of his country. I remarked that I
+ felt sure the feeling was mutual. That, I confess, made me feel
+ better.
+
+ As nearly as I can make out, the highwater mark of English
+ good-feeling toward us in all our history was after the President's
+ Panama tolls courtesy. The low-water mark, since the Civil War, I
+ am sure, is now. The Cleveland Venezuela message came at a time of
+ no nervous strain and did, I think, produce no long-lasting
+ effect. A part of the present feeling is due to the English
+ conviction that we have been taken in by the Germans in the
+ submarine controversy, but a large part is due to the lack of
+ courtesy in this last Note--the manner in which it was written even
+ more than its matter. As regards its matter, I have often been over
+ what I conceive to be the main points with Sir Edward Grey--very
+ frankly and without the least offense. He has said: "We may have to
+ arbitrate these things," as he might say, "We had better take a cab
+ because it is raining." It is easily possible--or it was--to
+ discuss anything with this Government without offense. I have, in
+ fact, stood up before Sir Edward's fire and accused him of stealing
+ a large part of the earth's surface, and we were just as good
+ friends afterward as before. But I never drew a lawyer's indictment
+ of him as a land-thief: that's different.
+
+ I suppose no two peoples or governments ever quite understand one
+ another. Perhaps they never will. That is too much to hope for. But
+ when one government writes to another it ought to write (as men do)
+ with some reference to the personality of the other and to their
+ previous relations, since governments are more human than men. Of
+ course I don't know who wrote the Note. Hence I can talk about it
+ freely to you without implying criticism of anybody in particular.
+ But the man who wrote it never saw the British Government and
+ wouldn't know it if he met it in the road. To him it is a mere
+ legal entity, a wicked, impersonal institution against which he has
+ the task of drawing an indictment--not the task of trying to
+ persuade it to confess the propriety of a certain course of
+ conduct. In his view, it is a wicked enemy to start with--like the
+ Louisiana lottery of a previous generation or the Standard Oil
+ Company of our time.
+
+ One would have thought, since we were six months in preparing it,
+ that a draft of the Note would have been sent to the man on the
+ ground whom our Government keeps in London to study the situation
+ at first hand and to make the best judgment he can about the most
+ effective methods of approach on delicate and difficult matters. If
+ that had been done, I should have suggested a courteous short Note
+ saying that we are obliged to set forth such and such views about
+ marine law and the rights of neutrals, to His Majesty's Government;
+ and that the contention of the United States Government was
+ herewith sent--etc., etc.--Then this identical Note (with certain
+ court-house, strong, shirt-sleeve adjectives left out) could have
+ come without arousing any feeling whatsoever. Of course I have no
+ personal vanity in saying this to you. I am sure I outgrew that
+ foible many years ago. But such a use of an ambassador--of any
+ ambassador--is obviously one of the best and most natural uses he
+ could be put to; and all governments but ours do put their
+ ambassadors to such a use: that's what they have 'em for.
+
+ _Per contra_: a telegram has just come in saying that a certain
+ Lichtenstein in New York had a lot of goods stopped by the British
+ Government, which (by an arrangement made with their attorney here)
+ agreed to buy them at a certain price: will I go and find out why
+ the Government hasn't yet paid Lichtenstein and when he may expect
+ his money? Is it an ambassadorial duty to collect a private bill
+ for Lichtenstein, in a bargain with which our Government has had
+ nothing to do? I have telegraphed the Department, quite calmly,
+ that I don't think it is. I venture to say no ambassador ever had
+ such a request as that before from his Government.
+
+ My dear House, I often wonder if my years of work here--the kind of
+ high good work I've tried to do--have not been thrown away. I've
+ tried to take and to busy myself with a long-range view of great
+ subjects. The British Empire and the United States will be here
+ long after we are dead, and their relations will continue to be one
+ of the most important matters--perhaps the most important
+ matter--in the world. Well, now think of Lichtenstein's bill!
+
+ To get back where I started--I fear, therefore, that, when I next
+ meet the Admiral of the Grand Fleet (with whom I used to discuss
+ everything quite freely before he sailed away to the war), he may
+ forget to mention that we may have his 3,000 ships at our need.
+
+ Since this present difference is in danger of losing the healing
+ influence of a kindly touch--has become an uncourteous monster of
+ 35 heads and 3 appendices--I see no early end of it. The British
+ Foreign Office has a lot of lawyers in its great back offices. They
+ and our lawyers will now butt and rebut as long as a goat of them
+ is left alive on either side. The two governments--the two human,
+ kindly groups--have retired: they don't touch, on this matter, now.
+ The lawyers will have the time of their lives, each smelling the
+ blood of the other.
+
+ If more notes must come--as the English papers report over and over
+ again every morning and every afternoon--the President might do
+ much by writing a brief, human document to accompany the
+ Appendices. If it be done courteously, we can accuse them of
+ stealing sheep and of dyeing the skins to conceal the theft-without
+ provoking the slightest bad feeling; and, in the end, they'll pay
+ another _Alabama_ award without complaint and frame the check and
+ show it to future ambassadors as Sir Edward shows the _Alabama_
+ check to me sometimes.
+
+ And it'll be a lasting shame (and may bring other Great Wars) if
+ lawyers are now permitted to tear the garments with which Peace
+ ought to be clothed as soon as she can escape from her present rags
+ and tatters.
+
+ Yours always heartily,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. My dear House: Since I have--in weeks and months past--both
+ telegraphed and written the Department (and I presume the President
+ has seen what I've sent) about the feeling here, I've written this
+ letter to you and not to the President nor Lansing. I will not run
+ the risk of seeming to complain--nor even of seeming to seem to
+ complain. But if you think it wise to send or show this letter to
+ the President, I'm willing you should. This job was botched:
+ there's no doubt about that. We shall not recover for many a long,
+ long year. The identical indictment could have been drawn with
+ admirable temper and the way laid down for arbitration and for
+ keeping our interpretation of the law and precedents intact--all
+ done in a way that would have given no offense.
+
+ The feeling runs higher and higher every day--goes deeper and
+ spreads wider.
+
+ Now on top of it comes the _Ancona_[15]. The English press,
+ practically unanimously, makes sneering remarks about our
+ Government. After six months it has got no results from the
+ _Lusitania_ controversy, which Bernstorff is allowed to prolong in
+ secret session while factories are blown up, ships supplied with
+ bombs, and all manner of outrages go on (by Germans) in the United
+ States. The English simply can't understand why Bernstorff is
+ allowed to stay. They predict that nothing will come of the
+ _Ancona_ case, nor of any other case. Nobody wants us to get into
+ the war--nobody who counts--but they are losing respect for us
+ because we seem to them to submit to anything.
+
+ We've simply dropped out. No English person ever mentions our
+ Government to me. But they talk to one another all the time about
+ the political anęmia of the United States Government. They think
+ that Bernstorff has the State Department afraid of him and that the
+ Pacifists dominate opinion--the Pacifists-at-any-price. I no longer
+ even have a chance to explain any of these things to anybody I
+ know.
+
+ It isn't the old question we used to discuss of our having no
+ friend in the world when the war ends. It's gone far further than
+ that. It is now whether the United States Government need be
+ respected by anybody.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 14: Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, was at this time--and
+afterward--conducting bitter campaign against the British blockade and
+advocating an embargo as a retaliation.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Torpedoed off Sardinia on Nov. 7, 1915, by the Austrians.
+There was a large toss of life, including many Americans.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+DARK DAYS FOR THE ALLIES
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ June 30, 1915.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ There's a distinct wave of depression here--perhaps I'd better say
+ a period of setbacks has come. So far as we can find out only the
+ Germans are doing anything in the war on land. The position in
+ France is essentially the same as it was in November, only the
+ Germans are much more strongly entrenched. Their great plenty of
+ machine guns enables them to use fewer men and to kill more than
+ the Allies. The Russians also lack ammunition and are yielding more
+ and more territory. The Allies--so you hear now--will do well if
+ they get their little army away from the Dardanelles before the
+ German-Turks eat 'em alive, and no Balkan state comes in to help
+ the Allies. Italy makes progress-slowly, of course, over almost
+ impassable mountains--etc., etc. Most of this doleful recital I
+ think is true; and I find more and more men here who have lost hope
+ of seeing an end of the war in less than two or three years, and
+ more and more who fear that the Germans will never be forced out of
+ Belgium. And the era of the giant aeroplane seems about to come--a
+ machine that can carry several tons and several men and go great
+ distances--two engines, two propellers, and the like. It isn't at
+ all impossible, I am told, that these machines may be the things
+ that will at last end the war--possibly, but I doubt it.
+
+ At any rate, it is true that a great wave of discouragement is
+ come. All these events and more seem to prove to my mind the rather
+ dismal failure the Liberal Government made--a failure really to
+ grasp the problem. It was a dead failure. Of course they are waking
+ up now, when they are faced with a certain dread lest many soldiers
+ prefer frankly to die rather than spend another winter in
+ practically the same trenches. You hear rumours, too, of great
+ impending military scandals--God knows whether there be any truth
+ in them or not.
+
+ In a word, while no Englishman gives up or will ever give
+ up--that's all rot--the job he has in hand is not going well. He's
+ got to spit on his hands and buckle up his belt two holes tighter
+ yet. And I haven't seen a man for a month who dares hope for an end
+ of the fight within any time that he can foresee.
+
+ I had a talk to-day with the Russian Ambassador[16]. He wished to
+ know how matters stood between the United States and Great Britain.
+ I said to him: "I'll give you a task if you have leisure. Set to
+ and help me hurry up your distinguished Ally in dealing with our
+ shipping troubles."
+
+ The old man laughed--that seemed a huge joke to him; he threw up
+ his hands and exclaimed--"My God! He is slow about his own
+ business--has always been slow--can't be anything else."
+
+ After more such banter, the nigger in his wood-pile poked his head
+ out: "Is there any danger," he asked, "that munitions may be
+ stopped?"
+
+ The Germans have been preparing northern France for German
+ occupation. No French are left there, of course, except women and
+ children and old men. They must be fed or starved or deported. The
+ Germans put them on trains--a whole village at a time--and run
+ them to the Swiss frontier. Of course the Swiss pass them on into
+ France. The French have their own and--the Germans will have
+ northern France without any French population, if this process goes
+ on long enough.
+
+ The mere bang! bang! frightful era of the war is passed. The
+ Germans are settling down to permanent business with their great
+ organizing machine. Of course they talk about the freedom of the
+ seas and such mush-mush; of course they'd like to have Paris and
+ rob it of enough money to pay what the war has cost them, and
+ London, too. But what they really want for keeps is
+ seacoast--Belgium and as much of the French coast as they can win.
+ That's really what they are out gunning for. Of course, somehow at
+ some time they mean to get Holland, too, and Denmark, if they
+ really need it. Then they'll have a very respectable seacoast--the
+ thing that they chiefly lack now.
+
+ More and more people are getting their nerves knocked out. I went
+ to a big hospital on Sunday, twenty-five miles out of London. They
+ showed me an enormous, muscular Tommy sitting by himself in a chair
+ under the trees. He had had a slight wound which quickly got well.
+ But his speech was gone. That came back, too, later. But then he
+ wouldn't talk and he'd insist on going off by himself. He's just
+ knocked out--you can't find out just how much gumption he has left.
+ That's what the war did for him: it stupefied him. Well, it's
+ stupefied lots of folks who have never seen a trench. That's what's
+ happened. Of all the men who started in with the game, I verily
+ believe that Lloyd George is holding up best. He organized British
+ finance. Now he's organizing British industry.
+
+ It's got hot in London--hotter than I've ever known it. It gets
+ lonelier (more people going away) and sadder--more wounded coming
+ back and more visible sorrow. We seem to be settling down to
+ something that is more or less like Paris--so far less, but it may
+ become more and more like it. And the confident note of an earlier
+ period is accompanied by a dull undertone of much less
+ cheerfulness. The end is--in the lap of the gods.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ American Embassy, London,
+
+ July 25, 1915.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... Many men here are very active in their thought about the future
+ relations of the United States and Great Britain. Will the war
+ bring or leave them closer together? If the German machine be
+ completely smashed (and it may not be completely smashed) the
+ Japanese danger will remain. I do not know how to estimate that
+ danger accurately. But there is such a danger. And, if the German
+ wild beast ever come to life again, there's an eternal chance of
+ trouble with it. For defensive purposes it may become of the very
+ first importance that the whole English-speaking world should stand
+ together--not in entangling alliance, but with a much clearer
+ understanding than we have ever yet had. I'll indicate to you some
+ of my cogitations on this subject by trying to repeat what I told
+ Philip Kerr[17] a fortnight ago--one Sunday in the country. I can
+ write this to you without seeming to parade my own opinions.--Kerr
+ is one of "The Round Table," perhaps the best group of men here for
+ the real study and free discussion of large political subjects.
+ Their quarterly, _The Round Table_, is the best review, I dare
+ say, in the world. Kerr is red hot for a close and perfect
+ understanding between Great Britain and the United States. I told
+ him that, since Great Britain had only about forty per cent. of the
+ white English-speaking people and the United States had about sixty
+ per cent., I hoped in his natural history that the tail didn't wag
+ the dog. I went on:
+
+ "You now have the advantage of us in your aggregation of three
+ centuries of accumulated wealth--the spoil of all the world--and in
+ the talent that you have developed for conserving it and adding to
+ it and in the institutions you have built up to perpetuate it--your
+ merchant ships, your insurance, your world-wide banking, your
+ mortgages on all new lands; but isn't this the only advantage you
+ have? This advantage will pass. You are now shooting away millions
+ and millions, and you will have a debt that is bound to burden
+ industry. On our side, we have a more recently mixed race than
+ yours; you've begun to inbreed. We have also (and therefore) more
+ adaptability, a greater keenness of mind in our masses; we are
+ Old-World men set free--free of classes and traditions and all that
+ they connote. Your so-called democracy is far behind ours. Your
+ aristocracy and your privileges necessarily bring a social and
+ economic burden. Half your people look backward.
+
+ "Your leadership rests on your wealth and on the power that you've
+ built on your wealth."
+
+ When he asked me how we were to come closer together--"closer
+ together, with your old-time distrust of us and with your
+ remoteness?"--I stopped him at "remoteness."
+
+ "That's the reason," I said. "Your idea of our 'remoteness.'
+ 'Remoteness' from what? From you? Are you not betraying the only
+ real difficulty of a closer sympathy by assuming that you are the
+ centre of the world? When you bring yourself to think of the
+ British Empire as a part of the American Union--mind you, I am not
+ saying that you would be formally admitted--but when you are
+ yourselves in close enough sympathy with us to wish to be admitted,
+ the chief difficulty of a real union of thought will be gone. You
+ recall Lord Rosebery's speech in which he pictured the capital of
+ the British Empire being moved to Washington if the American
+ Colonies had been retained under the Crown? Well, it was the Crown
+ that was the trouble, and the capital of English-speaking folk has
+ been so moved and you still remain 'remote.' Drop 'remote' from
+ your vocabulary and your thought and we'll actually be closer
+ together."
+
+ It's an enormous problem--just how to bring these countries closer
+ together. Perhaps nothing can do it but some great common danger or
+ some great common adventure. But this is one of the problems of
+ your lifetime. England can't get itself clean loose from the
+ continent nor from continental medięvalism; and with that we can
+ have nothing to do. Men like Kerr think that somehow a great push
+ toward democracy here will be given by the war. I don't quite see
+ how. So far the aristocracy have made perhaps the best showing in
+ defence of English liberty. They are paying the bills of the war;
+ they have sent their sons; these sons have died like men; and their
+ parents never whimper. It's a fine breed for such great uses as
+ these. There was a fine incident in the House of Lords the other
+ day, which gave the lie to the talk that one used to hear here
+ about "degeneracy." Somebody made a perfectly innocent proposal to
+ complete a list of peers and peers' sons who had fallen in the
+ war--a thing that will, of course, be done, just as a similar list
+ will be compiled of the House of Commons, of Oxford and Cambridge
+ Universities. But one peer after another objected vigorously lest
+ such a list appear immodest. "We are but doing our duty. Let the
+ matter rest there."
+
+ In a time like this the aristocracy proves its worth. In fact, all
+ aristocracies grew chiefly out of wars, and perhaps they are better
+ for wars than a real democracy. Here, you see, you run into one of
+ those contradictions in life and history which make the world so
+ hard to change....
+
+ You know there are some reasons why peace, whenever it may come,
+ will bring problems as bad as the problems of the war itself. I can
+ think of no worse task than the long conferences of the Allies with
+ their conflicting interests and ambitions. Then must come their
+ conferences with the enemy. Then there are sure to be other
+ conferences to try to make peace secure. And, of course, many are
+ going to be dissatisfied and disappointed, and perhaps out of these
+ disappointments other wars may come. The world will not take up its
+ knitting and sit quietly by the fire for many a year to come....
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+One happiness came to Mr. and Mrs. Page in the midst of all these war
+alarums. On August 4, 1915, their only daughter, Katharine, was married
+to Mr. Charles G. Loring, of Boston, Massachusetts. The occasion gave
+the King an opportunity of showing the high regard in which Page and his
+family were held. It had been planned that the wedding should take place
+in Westminster Abbey, but the King very courteously offered Miss Page
+the Royal chapel in St. James's Palace. This was a distinguished
+compliment, as it was the first time that any marriage, in which both
+bride and bridegroom were foreigners, had ever been celebrated in this
+building, which for centuries has been the scene of royal weddings. The
+special place which his daughter had always held in the Ambassador's
+affections is apparent in the many letters that now followed her to her
+new home in the United States. The unique use Page made of the initials
+of his daughter's name was characteristic.
+
+
+ _To Mrs. Charles G. Loring_
+
+ London, September 1, 1915.
+
+ MY DEAR K.A. P-TAIN:
+
+ Here's a joke on your mother and Frank: We three (and Smith) went
+ up to Broadway in the car, to stay there a little while and then to
+ go on into Wales, etc. The hotel is an old curiosity shop; you sit
+ on Elizabethan chairs by a Queen Anne table, on a drunken floor,
+ and look at the pewter platters on the wall or do your best to look
+ at them, for the ancient windows admit hardly any light. "Oh!
+ lovely," cries Frank; and then he and your mother make out in the
+ half-darkness a perfectly wonderful copper mug on the mantelpiece;
+ and you go out and come in the ramshackle door (stooping every
+ time) after you've felt all about for the rusty old iron latch, and
+ then you step down two steps (or fall), presently to step up two
+ more. Well, for dinner we had six kinds of meat and two meat pies
+ and potatoes and currants! My dinner was a potato. I'm old and
+ infirm and I have many ailments, but I'm not so bad off as to be
+ able to live on a potato a day. And since we were having a
+ vacation, I didn't see the point. So I came home where I have seven
+ courses for dinner, all good; and Mrs. Leggett took my place in the
+ car. That carnivorous company went on. They've got to eat six
+ kinds of meat and two meat pies and--currants! I haven't. Your
+ mother calls me up on the phone every morning--me, who am living
+ here in luxury, seven courses at every dinner--and asks anxiously,
+ "And how _are_ you, dear?" I answer: "Prime, and how are _you_?" We
+ are all enjoying ourselves, you see, and I don't have to eat six
+ kinds of meat and two meat pies and--currants! They do; and may
+ Heaven save 'em and get 'em home safe!
+
+ [Illustration: Col. Edward M. House. From a painting by P.A.
+ Laszlo]
+
+ [Illustration: The Rt. Hon. Herbert Henry Asquith, Prime Minister
+ of Great Britain, 1908-1916]
+
+ It's lovely in London now--fine, shining days and showers at night
+ and Ranelagh beautiful, and few people here; but I don't deny its
+ loneliness--somewhat. Yet sleep is good, and easy and long. I have
+ neither an ocean voyage nor six kinds of meat and two meat pies and
+ currants. I congratulate myself and write to you and mother.
+
+ You'll land to-morrow or next day--good; I congratulate you. Salute
+ the good land for me and present my respectful compliments to
+ vegetables that have taste and fruit that is not sour--to the
+ sunshine, in fact, and to everything that ripens and sweetens in
+ its glow.
+
+ And you're now (when this reaches you) fixing up your home--your
+ _own_ home, dear Kitty. Bless your dear life, you left a home
+ here--wasn't it a good and nice one?--left it very lonely for the
+ man who has loved you twenty-four years and been made happy by your
+ presence. But he'll love you twenty-five more and on and
+ on--always. So you haven't lost that--nor can you. And it's very
+ fit and right that you should build your own nest; that adds
+ another happy home, you see. And I'm very sure it will be very
+ happy always. Whatever I can do to make it so, now or ever, you
+ have only to say. But--your mother took your photograph with her
+ and got it out of the bag and put it on the bureau as soon as she
+ went to her room--a photograph taken when you were a little girl.
+
+ Hodson[18] came up to see me to-day and with tears of gratitude in
+ his voice told me of the present that you and Chud had made him. He
+ is very genuinely pleased. As for the rest, life goes on as usual.
+
+ I laugh as I think of all your new aunts and cousins looking you
+ over and wondering if you'll fit, and then saying to one another as
+ they go to bed: "She is lovely--isn't she?" I could tell 'em a
+ thing or two if I had a whack at 'em.
+
+ And you'll soon have all your pretty things in place in your pretty
+ home, and a lot more that I haven't seen. I'll see 'em all before
+ many years--and you, too! Tell me, did Chud get you a dinner book?
+ Keep your record of things: you'll enjoy it in later years. And
+ you'll have a nice time this autumn--your new kinsfolk, your new
+ friends and old and Boston and Cambridge. If you run across Mr.
+ Muffin, William Roscoe Thayer, James Ford Rhodes, President
+ Eliot--these are my particular old friends whose names occur at the
+ moment.
+
+ My love to you and Chud too,
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+The task of being "German Ambassador to Great Britain" was evidently not
+without its irritations.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ September 15, 1915.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ Yesterday was my German day. When the boy came up to my room, I
+ told him I had some official calls to make. "Therefore get out my
+ oldest and worst suit." He looked much confused; and when I got up
+ both my worst and best suits were laid out. Evidently he thought he
+ must have misunderstood me. I asked your mother if she was ready to
+ go down to breakfast. "Yes."--"Well, then I'll leave you." She
+ grunted something and when we both got down she asked: "What _did_
+ you say to me upstairs?" I replied: "I regard the incident as
+ closed." She looked a sort of pitying look at me and a minute or
+ two later asked: "What on earth is the matter with you? Can't you
+ hear at all?" I replied: "No. Therefore let's talk." She gave it
+ up, but looked at me again to make sure I was all there.
+
+ I stopped at the barber shop, badly needing a shave. The barber got
+ his brush and razor ready. I said: "Cut my hair." He didn't talk
+ for a few minutes, evidently engaged in deep thought.
+
+ When I got to my office, a case was brought to me of a runaway
+ American who was caught trying to send news to Germany. "Very
+ good," said I, "now let it be made evident that it shall appear
+ therefore that his innocence having been duly established he shall
+ be shot."
+
+ "What, sir?"
+
+ "That since it must be evident that his guilt is genuine therefore
+ see that he be acquitted and then shot."
+
+ Laughlin and Bell and Stabler were seen in an earnest conference in
+ the next room for nearly half an hour.
+
+ Shoecraft brought me a letter. "This is the most courteous
+ complaint about the French passport bureau we have yet had. I
+ thought you'd like to see this lady's letter. She says she knows
+ you."
+
+ "Do not answer it, then."
+
+ He went off and conferred with the others.
+
+ Hodson spoke of the dog he sold to Frank. "Yes," said I, "since he
+ was a very nice dog, therefore he was worthless."
+
+ "Sir?"
+
+ And he went off after looking back at me in a queer way.
+
+ The day went on in that fashion. When I came out to go to lunch,
+ the stairs down led upward and I found myself, therefore, stepping
+ out of the roof on to the sidewalk--the house upside down. Smith
+ looked puzzled. "Home, Sir?"
+
+ "No. Go the other way." After he had driven two or three blocks, I
+ told him to turn again and go the other way--home!
+
+ Your mother said almost as soon as I got into the door--"What was
+ the matter with you this morning?"
+
+ "Oh, nothing. You forget that I am the German Ambassador."
+
+ Now this whole narrative is a lie. Nothing in it occurred. If it
+ were otherwise it wouldn't be German.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Mrs. Charles G. Loring_
+
+ London, 6 Grosvenor Square.
+ Sunday, September 19, 1915.
+
+ DEAR KITTY:
+
+ You never had a finer autumnal day in the land of the free than
+ this day has been in this old kingdom--fresh and fair; and so your
+ mother said to herself and me: "Let's go out to the Laughlins' to
+ lunch," and we went. There never was a prettier drive. We found out
+ among other things that you pleased Mrs. Laughlin very much by your
+ letter. Her garden changes every week or so, and it never was
+ lovelier than it is now.--Then we came back home and dined alone.
+ Well, since we can't have you and Chud and Frank, I don't care if
+ we do dine alone sometimes for some time to come. Your mother's
+ monstrous good company, and sometimes three is a crowd. And now is
+ a good time to be alone. London never was so dull or deserted since
+ I've known it, nor ever so depressed. The military (land)
+ operations are not cheerful; the hospitals are all full; I see more
+ wounded soldiers by far than at any previous time; the Zeppelins
+ came somewhere to this island every night for a week--one of them,
+ on the night of the big raid, was visible from our square for
+ fifteen or twenty minutes--in general it is a dull and depressing
+ time. I have thought that since you were determined to run off with
+ a young fellow, you chose a pretty good time to go away. I'm afraid
+ there'll be no more of what we call "fun" in this town as long as
+ we stay here.
+
+ Worse yet: in spite of the Coalition Government and everybody's
+ wish to get on smoothly and to do nothing but to push the war,
+ since Parliament convened there's been a great row, which doesn't
+ get less. The labour men give trouble; people blame the
+ politicians: Lloyd George is saving the country, say some; Lloyd
+ George ought to be hanged, say others. Down with Northcliffe! They
+ seem likely to burn him at the stake--except those who contend that
+ he has saved the nation. Some maintain that the cabinet is too
+ big--twenty-two. More say that it has no leadership. If you favour
+ conscription, you are a traitor: if you don't favour it, you are
+ pro-German. It's the same sort of old quarrel they had before the
+ war, only it is about more subjects. In fact, nobody seems very
+ clearly to know what it's about. Meantime the Government is
+ spending money at a rate that nobody ever dreamed of before. Three
+ million pounds a day--some days five million. The Germans,
+ meantime are taking Russia; the Allies are not taking the
+ Dardanelles; in France the old deadlock continues. Boston at its
+ worst must be far more cheerful than this.
+
+ Affectionately and with my love to Chud,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, September 26, 1915.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ The suppression of facts about the military situation is more
+ rigorous than ever since the military facts have become so
+ discouraging. The volume of pretty well authenticated news that I
+ used to hear privately has become sensibly diminished. Rumours that
+ reach me by the back door, in all sorts of indirect ways, are not
+ fewer, but fewer of them are credible. There is great confusion,
+ great fear, very great depression--far greater, I think, than
+ England has felt, certainly since the Napoleonic scare and probably
+ since the threat of the Armada. Nobody, I think, supposes that
+ England herself will be conquered: confidence in the navy is
+ supreme. But the fear of a practical defeat of the Allies on the
+ continent is become general. Russia may have to pay a huge
+ indemnity, going far to reimburse Germany for the cost of the war;
+ Belgium may be permanently held unless Germany receive an indemnity
+ to evacuate, and her seaports may be held anyhow; the Germans may
+ reach Constantinople before the Allies, and Germany may thus hold,
+ when the war ends, an open way to the East; and France may have to
+ pay a large sum to regain her northern territory now held by the
+ Germans. These are not the convictions of men here, but they have
+ distinctly become the fears; and many men's mind are beginning to
+ adjust themselves to the possible end of the war, as a draw, with
+ these results. Of course such an end would be a real German
+ victory and--another war as soon as enough men grow up to fight it.
+
+ When the more cheerful part of public opinion, especially when any
+ member of the Government, affects to laugh at these fears, the
+ people say: "Well, make known the facts that you base your hope on.
+ Precisely how many men have volunteered? Is the voluntary system a
+ success or has it reached its limit? Precisely what is the
+ situation in the Dardanelles? Are the allied armies strong enough
+ to make a big drive to break through the German line in France?
+ Have they big guns and ammunition enough? What are the facts about
+ the chance in the Dardanelles? What have we done with reference to
+ the Balkan States?" Thus an angry and ominous political situation
+ is arising. The censorship on war news apparently becomes severer,
+ and the general fear spreads and deepens. The air, of course,
+ becomes heavily charged with such rumours as these: that if the
+ Government continue its policy of secrecy, Lloyd George will
+ resign, seeing no hope of a real victory: that, if he do resign,
+ his resignation will disrupt the Government--cause a sort of
+ earthquake; that the Government will probably fall and Lloyd George
+ will be asked to form another one, since he is, as the public sees
+ it, the most active and efficient man in political life; that, if
+ all the Balkan States fail the Allies, Sir Edward Grey will be
+ reckoned a failure and must resign; and you even now hear talk of
+ Mr. Balfour's succeeding him.
+
+ It is impossible to say what basis there is for these and other
+ such rumours, but they show the general very serious depression and
+ dissatisfaction. Of that there is no doubt. Nor is there any doubt
+ about grave differences in the Cabinet about conscription nor of
+ grave fear in the public mind about the action of labour unions in
+ hindering the utmost production of ammunition, nor of the
+ increasing feeling that the Prime Minister doesn't lead the nation.
+ Except Lloyd George and the Chancellor of the Exchequer[19] the
+ Cabinet seems to suffer a sort of paralysis. Lord Kitchener's
+ speech in the House of Lords, explaining the military situation,
+ reads like a series of month-old bulletins and was a great
+ disappointment. Mr. Asquith's corresponding speech in the House
+ seemed to lack complete frankness. The nation feels that it is
+ being kept in the dark, and all the military information that it
+ gets is discouraging. Sir Edward Grey, as philosophic and enduring
+ a man as I know, seems much more depressed than I have ever known
+ him to be; Bryce is very very far from cheerful; Plunkett[20], whom
+ also you know, is in the dumps--it's hard to find a cheerful or a
+ hopeful man.
+
+ The secrecy of official life has become so great and successful
+ that prophecy of political changes must be mere guess work. But,
+ unless good news come from the Dardanelles in particular, I have a
+ feeling that Asquith may resign--be forced out by the gradual
+ pressure of public opinion; that Lloyd George will become Prime
+ Minister, and that (probably) Sir Edward Grey may resign. Yet I
+ cannot take the prevailing military discouragement at its face
+ value. The last half million men and the last million pounds will
+ decide the contest, and the Allies will have these. This very
+ depression strengthens the nation's resolution to a degree that
+ they for the moment forget. The blockade and the armies in the
+ field will wear Germany down--not absolutely conquer her, but wear
+ her down--probably in another year.
+
+ In the meantime our prestige (if that be the right word), in
+ British judgment, is gone. As they regard it, we have permitted
+ the Germans to kill our citizens, to carry on a world-wide underhand
+ propaganda from our country (as well as in it), for which they have
+ made no apology and no reparation but only vague assurances for the
+ future now that their submarine fleet has been almost destroyed.
+ They think that we are credulous to the point of simplicity to
+ accept any assurances that Bernstorff may give--in a word, that the
+ peace-at-any-price sentiment so dominates American opinion and the
+ American Government that we will submit to any indignity or
+ insult--that we will learn the Germans' real character when it is
+ too late to save our honour or dignity. There is no doubt of the
+ definiteness or depth of this opinion.
+
+ And I am afraid that this feeling will show itself in our future
+ dealings with this government. The public opinion of the nation as
+ well as the Government accepts their blockade as justified as well
+ as necessary. They will not yield on that point, and they will
+ regard our protests as really inspired by German influence--thus
+ far at least: that the German propaganda has organized and
+ encouraged the commercial objection in the United States, and that
+ this propaganda and the peace-at-any-price sentiment demand a stiff
+ controversy with England to offset the stiff controversy with
+ Germany; and, after all, they ask, what does a stiff controversy
+ with the United States amount to? I had no idea that English
+ opinion could so quickly become practically indifferent as to what
+ the United States thinks or does. And as nearly as I can make it
+ out, there is not a general wish that we should go to war. The
+ prevalent feeling is not a selfish wish for military help. In fact
+ they think that, by the making of munitions, by the taking of
+ loans, and by the sale of food we can help them more than by
+ military and naval action. Their feeling is based on their
+ disappointment at our submitting to what they regard as German
+ dallying with us and to German insults. They believe that, if we
+ had sent Bernstorff home when his government made its
+ unsatisfactory reply to our first _Lusitania_ note, Germany would
+ at once have "come down"; opportunist Balkan States would have come
+ to the help of the Allies; Holland and perhaps the Scandinavian
+ States would have got some consideration at Berlin for their losses
+ by torpedoes; that more attention would have been paid by Turkey to
+ our protest against the wholesale massacre of the Armenians; and
+ that a better settlement with Japan about Pacific islands and
+ Pacific influence would have been possible for the English at the
+ end of the war. Since, they argue, nobody is now afraid of the
+ United States, her moral influence is impaired at every capital;
+ and I now frequently hear the opinion that, if the war lasts
+ another year and the Germans get less and less use of the United
+ States as a base of general propaganda in all neutral countries,
+ especially all American countries, they are likely themselves to
+ declare war on us as a mere defiance of the whole world and with
+ the hope of stirring up internal trouble for our government by the
+ activity of the Germans and the Irish in the United States, which
+ may hinder munitions and food and loans to the Allies.
+
+ I need not remark that the English judgment of the Germans is
+ hardly judicial. But they reply to this that every nation has to
+ learn the real, incredible character of the Prussian by its own
+ unhappy experience. France had so to learn it, and England, Russia,
+ and Belgium; and we (the United States), they say, fail to profit
+ in time by the experience of these. After the Germans have used us
+ to the utmost in peace, they will force us into war--or even flatly
+ declare war on us when they think they can thus cause more
+ embarrassment to the Allies, and when they conclude that the time
+ is come to make sure that no great nation shall emerge from the war
+ with a clear commercial advantage over the others; and in the
+ meantime they will prove to the world by playing with us that a
+ democracy is necessarily pacific and hence (in their view)
+ contemptible. I felt warranted the other day to remark to Lord
+ Bryce on the unfairness of much of the English judgment of us (he
+ is very sad and a good deal depressed). "Yes," he said, "I have
+ despaired of one people's ever really understanding another even
+ when the two are as closely related and as friendly as the
+ Americans and the English."
+
+ You were kind enough to inquire about my health in your last note.
+ If I could live up to the popular conception here of my labours and
+ responsibilities and delicate duties (which is most flattering and
+ greatly exaggerated), I should be only a walking shadow of a man.
+ But I am most inappreciately well. I imagine that in some year to
+ come, I may enjoy a vacation, but I could not enjoy it now. Besides
+ since civilization has gone backward several centuries, I suppose
+ I've gone back with it to a time when men knew no such thing as a
+ vacation. (Let's forgive House for his kindly, mistaken
+ solicitude.) The truth is, I often feel that I do not know
+ myself--body or soul, boots or breeches. This experience is making
+ us all here different from the men we were--but in just what
+ respects it is hard to tell. We are not within hearing of the guns
+ (except the guns that shoot at Zeppelins when they come); but the
+ war crowds itself in on us sensibly more and more. There are more
+ wounded soldiers on the streets and in the parks. More and more
+ families one knows lose their sons, more and more women their
+ husbands. Death is so common that it seems a little thing. Four
+ persons have come to my house to-day (Sunday) in the hope that I
+ may find their missing kinsmen, and two more have appealed to me on
+ the telephone and two more still have sent me notes. Since I began
+ this letter, Mrs. Page insisted on my going out on the edge of the
+ city to see an old friend of many years who has just lost both his
+ sons and whose prospective son-in-law is at home wounded. The first
+ thing he said was: "Tell me, what is America going to do?" As we
+ drove back, we made a call on a household whose nephew is
+ "missing."--"Can't you possibly help us hear definitely about him?"
+
+ This sort of thing all day every day must have some effect on any
+ man. Then--yesterday morning gave promise of a calm, clear day. I
+ never know what sensational experience awaits me around the next
+ corner. Then there was put on my desk the first page of a reputable
+ weekly paper which was filled with an open letter to me written by
+ the editor and signed. After the usual description of my
+ multitudinous and delicate duties, I was called on to insist that
+ my government should protest against Zeppelin raids on London
+ because a bomb might kill me! Humour doesn't bubble much now on
+ this side the world, for the censor had forbidden the publication
+ of this open letter lest it should possibly cause American-German
+ trouble! Then the American correspondents came in to verify a
+ report that a news agency is said to have had that I was deluged
+ with threatening letters!--More widows, more mothers looking for
+ lost sons!... Once in a while--far less often than if I lived in a
+ sane and normal world--I get a few hours off and go to a lonely
+ golf club. Alas! there is seldom anybody there but now and then a
+ pair of girls and now and then a pair of old fellows who have
+ played golf for a century. Yet back in London in the War Office I
+ hear they indulge in disrespectful hilarity at the poor game I
+ play. Now how do they know? (You'd better look to your score with
+ Grayson: the English have spies in America. A major-general in
+ their spy-service department told Mrs. Page that they knew all
+ about Archibaldi[21] before he got on the ship in New York.)
+
+ All this I send you not because it is of the slightest permanent
+ importance (except the English judgment of us) but because it will
+ prove, if you need proof, that the world is gone mad. Everything
+ depends on fighting power and on nothing else. A victory will save
+ the Government. Even distinctly hopeful military news will. And
+ English depression will vanish with a turn of the military tide. If
+ it had been Bernstorff instead of Dumba--_that_ would have affected
+ even the English judgment of us. Tyrrell[22] remarked to me--did I
+ write you? "Think of the freaks of sheer, blind Luck; a man of
+ considerable ability like Dumba caught for taking a risk that an
+ idiot would have avoided, and a fool like Bernstorff escaping!"
+ Then he added: "I hope Bernstorff will be left. No other human
+ being could serve the English as well as he is serving them." So,
+ you see, even in his depression the Englishman has some humour
+ left--e.g., when that old sea dog Lord Fisher heard that Mr.
+ Balfour was to become First Lord of the Admiralty, he cried out:
+ "Damn it! he won't do: Arthur Balfour is too much of a gentleman."
+ So John Bull is now, after all, rather pathetic--depressed as he
+ has not been depressed for at least a hundred years. The nobility
+ and the common man are doing their whole duty, dying on the
+ Bosphorus or in France without a murmur, or facing an insurrection
+ in India; but the labour union man and the commercial class are
+ holding hack and hindering a victory. And there is no great
+ national leader.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 16: Count Beckendorff.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Afterward private secretary to Premier Lloyd George.]
+
+[Footnote 18: A messenger in the American Embassy.]
+
+[Footnote 19: The Rt. Hon. Reginald McKenna.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Sir Horace Plunkett.]
+
+[Footnote 21: It was Archibald's intercepted baggage that furnished the
+documents which caused Dumba's dismissal.]
+
+[Footnote 22: Sir William Tyrrell, private secretary to Sir Edward
+Grey.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+CHRISTMAS IN ENGLAND, 1915
+
+
+ To Edward M. House
+ London, December 7, 1915.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I hear you are stroking down the Tammany tiger--an easier job than
+ I have with the British lion. You can find out exactly who your
+ tiger is, you know the house he lives in, the liquor he drinks, the
+ company he goes with. The British lion isn't so easy to find. At
+ times in English history he has dwelt in Downing Street--not so
+ now. So far as our struggle with him is concerned, he's all over
+ the Kingdom; for he is public opinion. The governing crowd in usual
+ times and on usual subjects can here overrun public opinion--can
+ make it, turn it, down it, dodge it. But it isn't so now--as it
+ affects us. Every mother's son of 'em has made up his mind that
+ Germany must and shall be starved out, and even Sir Edward's scalp
+ isn't safe when they suspect that he wishes to be lenient in that
+ matter. They keep trying to drive him out, on two counts: (1) he
+ lets goods out of Germany for the United States "and thereby
+ handicaps the fleet"; and (2) he failed in the Balkans. Sir Edward
+ is too much of a gentleman for this business of rough-riding over
+ all neutral rights and for bribing those Balkan bandits.
+
+ I went to see him to-day about the _Hocking_, etc. He asked me: "Do
+ _you know_ that the ships of this line are really owned, in good
+ faith, by Americans?"
+
+ "I'll answer your question," said I, "if I may then ask you one.
+ No, I don't know of my own knowledge. Now, _do you know_ that they
+ are _not_ owned by Americans?"
+
+ He had to confess that he, of his own knowledge, didn't know.
+
+ "Then," I said, "for the relief of us both, I pray you hurry up
+ your prize court."
+
+ When we'd got done quarrelling about ships and I started to go, he
+ asked me how I liked Wordsworth's war poems. "The best of all war
+ poems," said he, "because they don't glorify war but have to do
+ with its philosophy." Then he told me that some friend of his had
+ just got out a little volume of these war poems selected from
+ Wordsworth; "and I'm going to send you a copy."
+
+ "Just in time," said I, "for I have a copy of 'The Life and Letters
+ of John Hay'[23] that I'm sending to you."
+
+ He's coming to dine with me in a night or two: he'll do anything
+ but discuss our Note with me. And he's the only member of the
+ Government who, I think, would like to meet our views; and he
+ can't. To use the language of Lowell about the campaign of Governor
+ Kent--these British are hell-bent on starving the Germans out, and
+ neutrals have mighty few rights till that job's done.
+
+ The worst of it is that the job won't be done for a very long time.
+ I've been making a sort of systematic round of the Cabinet to see
+ what these fellows think about things in general at this stage of
+ the game. Bonar Law (the Colonies) tells me that the news from the
+ Balkans is worse than the public or the newspapers know, and that
+ still worse news will come. Germany will have it all her own way in
+ that quarter.
+
+ "And take Egypt and the canal?"
+
+ "I didn't say _that_," he replied. But he showed that he fears even
+ that.
+
+ [Illustration: Herbert C. Hoover, in 1914]
+
+ [Illustration: A facsimile page from the Ambassador's letter of
+ November 24. 1916, resigning his Ambassadorship]
+
+ I could go on with a dozen of 'em; but I sat down to write you a
+ Christmas letter, and nothing else. The best news I have for you is
+ not news at all, but I conceive it to be one of the best hopes of
+ the future. In spite of Irishmen past, present, and to come; in
+ spite of Germans, whose fuss will soon be over; in spite of
+ lawyers, who (if left alone) would bankrupt empires as their
+ clients and think they'd won a victory; I'm going to leave things
+ here in a year and a half so that, if wise men wish to lay a plan
+ for keeping the peace of the world, all they need to do will be to
+ say first to Uncle Sam: "This fellow or that must understand that
+ he can't break loose like a wild beast." If Uncle Sam agrees (and
+ has a real navy himself), he'll wink at John Bull, and John will
+ follow after. You see our blackleg tail-twisters have the whole
+ thing backward. They say we truckle to the British. My plan is to
+ lead the British--not for us to go to them but to have them come to
+ us. We have three white men to every two white men in their whole
+ Empire; and, when peace comes, we'll be fairly started on the road
+ to become as rich as the war will leave them. There are four clubs
+ in London which have no other purpose than this; and the best
+ review[24] in the world exists chiefly for this purpose. All we
+ need to do is to be courteous (we can do what we like if we do it
+ courteously). Our manners, our politicians, and our newspapers are
+ all that keep the English-speaking white man, under our lead, from
+ ruling the world, without any treaty or entangling alliance
+ whatsoever. If, when you went to Berlin to talk to your gentle and
+ timid friend, the Emperor, about disarmament before the war--if
+ about 200 American dreadnaughts and cruisers, with real grog on
+ 'em, had come over to make a friendly call, in the North Sea, on
+ the 300 English dreadnaughts and cruisers--just a friendly call,
+ admirals on admirals--the "Star-Spangled Banner" and "God Save the
+ King"--and if General Bell, from the Philippines, had happened in
+ London just when Kitchener happened to be home from Egypt--_then,
+ there wouldn't have been this war now_. Nothing need have been
+ said--no treaty, no alliance, nothing. For then 100 or more British
+ naval ships would have joined the Panama naval procession and any
+ possible enemy would have seen that combined fleet clean across the
+ Pacific.
+
+ Now this may all be a mere Christmas fancy--a mere yarn about what
+ might have been--because we wouldn't have sent ships here in our
+ old mood; the crew would have missed one Sunday School. But it's
+ _this kind_ of thing that does the trick. But this means the
+ practice of courtesy, and we haven't acquired the habit. Two years
+ or more ago the training ships from Annapolis with the cadets
+ aboard anchored down the Thames and stayed several weeks and let
+ the boys loose in England. They go on such a voyage every two years
+ to some country, you know. The English didn't know that fact and
+ they took the visit as a special compliment. Their old admirals
+ were all greatly pleased, and I hear talk about that yet. We ought
+ to have two or three of our rear-admirals here on their fleet now.
+ Symington, of course, is a good fellow; but he's a mere commander
+ and attaché--not an admiral--in other words, not any particular
+ compliment or courtesy to the British Navy. (As soon as the war
+ began, a Japanese admiral turned up here and he is here now.) We
+ sent over two army captains as military observers. The Russians
+ sent a brigadier-general. We ought to have sent General Wood. You
+ see the difference? There was no courtesy in our method. It would
+ be the easiest and prettiest job in the world to swallow the whole
+ British organization, lock, stock, and barrel--King, Primate,
+ Cabinet, Lords, and Commons, feathers and all, and to make 'em
+ follow our _courteous_ lead anywhere. The President had them in
+ this mood when the war started and for a long time after--till the
+ _Lusitania_ seemed to be forgotten and till the lawyers began to
+ write his Notes. He can get 'em back, after the war ends, by
+ several acts of courtesy--if we could get into the habit of doing
+ such things as sending generals and admirals as compliments to
+ them. The British Empire is ruled by a wily use of courtesies and
+ decorations. If I had the President himself to do the
+ correspondence, if I had three or four fine generals and admirals
+ and a good bishop or two, a thoroughbred senator or two and now and
+ then a Supreme Court Justice to come on proper errands and be
+ engineered here in the right way--we could do or say anything we
+ liked and they'd do whatever we'd say. I'd undertake to underwrite
+ the whole English-speaking world to keep peace, under our
+ leadership. Instead whereof, every move we now make is to _follow_
+ them or to _drive_ them. The latter is impossible, and the former
+ is unbecoming to us.
+
+ But to return to Christmas.--I could go on writing for a week in
+ this off-hand, slap-dash way, saying wise things flippantly. But
+ Christmas--that's the thing now. Christmas! What bloody irony it is
+ on this side the world! Still there will be many pleasant and
+ touching things done. An Englishman came in to see me the other day
+ and asked if I'd send $1,000 to Gerard[25] to use in making the
+ English prisoners in Germany as happy as possible on Christmas
+ Day--only I must never tell anybody who did it. A lady came on the
+ same errand--for the British prisoners in Turkey, and with a less
+ but still a generous sum. The heroism, the generosity, the
+ endurance and self-restraint and courtesy of these people would
+ melt a pyramid to tears. Of course there are yellow dogs among 'em,
+ here and there; but the genuine, thoroughbred English man or woman
+ is the real thing--one of the realest things in this world. So
+ polite are they that not a single English person has yet mentioned
+ our Note to me--not one.
+
+ But every one I've met for two days has mentioned the sending of
+ Von Papen and Boy-Ed[26] home--not that they expect us to get into
+ the war, but because they regard this action as maintaining our
+ self-respect.
+
+ Nor do they neglect other things because of the war. I went to the
+ annual dinner of the Scottish Corporation the other night-an
+ organization which for 251 years has looked after Scotchmen
+ stranded in London; and they collected $20,000 then and there.
+ There's a good deal of Christmas in 'em yet. One fellow in a little
+ patriotic speech said that the Government is spending twenty-five
+ million dollars a day to whip the Germans.--"Cheap work, very cheap
+ work. We can spend twice that if necessary. Why, gentlemen, we
+ haven't exhausted our pocket-change yet."
+
+ Somehow I keep getting away from Christmas. It doesn't stay put.
+ It'll be a memorable one here for its sorrows and for its grim
+ determination--an empty chair at every English table. But nowhere
+ in the world will it be different except in the small neutral
+ states here and in the lands on your side the world.
+
+ How many Christmases the war may last, nobody's wise enough to
+ know. That depends absolutely on Germany. The Allies announced
+ their terms ten months ago, and nothing has yet happened to make
+ them change them. That would leave the Germans with Germany and a
+ secure peace--no obliteration or any other wild nonsense, but only
+ a secure peace. Let 'em go back home, pay for the damage they've
+ done, and then stay there. I do hope that the actual fighting will
+ be ended by Christmas of next year. Of course it _may_ end with
+ dramatic suddenness at any time, this being the only way, perhaps,
+ for the Kaiser to save his throne. Or it may go on for two or three
+ years. My guess is that it'll end next year--a guess subject to
+ revision, of course, by events that can't be foreseen.
+
+ But as I said before--to come back to Christmas. Mrs. Page and I
+ send you and Mrs. House our affectionate good wishes and the hope
+ that you keep very well and very happy in your happy, prosperous
+ hemisphere. We do, I thank you. We haven't been better for
+ years--never before so busy, never, I think, so free from care. We
+ get plenty to eat (such as it is in this tasteless wet zone), at a
+ high cost, of course; we have comfortable beds and shoes (we spend
+ all our time in these two things, you know); we have good company,
+ enough to do (!!), no grievances nor ailments, no ill-will, no
+ disappointments, a keen interest in some big things--all the chips
+ are blue, you know; we don't feel ready for halos, nor for other
+ uncomfortable honours; we deserve less than we get and are content
+ with what the gods send. This, I take it, is all that Martin[27]
+ would call a comfortable mood for Christmas; and we are old enough
+ and tough enough to have thick armour against trouble. When Worry
+ knocks at the door, the butler tells him we're not at home.
+
+ And I see the most interesting work in the world cut out for me
+ for the next twenty-five or thirty years--to get such courtesy into
+ our dealings with these our kinsmen here, public and private--as
+ will cause them to follow us in all the developments of democracy
+ and-in keeping the peace of the world secure. I can't impress it on
+ you strongly enough that the English-speaking folk have got to set
+ the pace and keep this world in order. Nobody else is equal to the
+ job. In all our dealings with the British, public and private, we
+ allow it to be assumed that _they_ lead: they don't. _We_ lead.
+ They'll follow, if we do really lead and are courteous to them. If
+ we hold back, the Irishman rears up and says we are surrendering to
+ the English! Suppose we go ahead and the English surrender to us,
+ what can your Irishmen do then? Or your German? The British Navy is
+ a pretty good sort of dog to have to trot under your wagon. If we
+ are willing to have ten years of thoughtful good manners, I tell
+ you Jellicoe will eat out of your hand.
+
+ Therefore, cheer up! It's not at all improbable that Ford[28] and
+ his cargo of cranks, if they get across the ocean, may strike a
+ German mine in the North Sea. Then they'll die happy, as martyrs;
+ and the rest of us will live happy, and it'll be a Merry Christmas
+ for everybody.
+
+ Our love to Mrs. House.
+
+ Always heartily yours,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday and Others_
+
+ London, Christmas, 1915.
+
+ DEAR D.P. & Co.
+
+ ... Now, since we're talking about the war, let me deliver my
+ opinion and leave the subject. They're killing one another all
+ right; you needn't have any doubt about that--so many thousand
+ every day, whether there's any battle or not. When there's "nothing
+ to report" from France, that means the regular 5,000 casualties
+ that happen every day. There isn't any way of getting rid of men
+ that has been forgotten or neglected. Women and children, too, of
+ course, starve in Serbia and Poland and are massacred in Turkey.
+ England, though she has by very much the largest army she ever had,
+ has the smallest of all the big armies and yet I don't know a
+ family that had men of fighting age which hasn't lost one or more
+ members. And the worst is to come. But you never hear a complaint.
+ Poor Mr. Dent[29], for instance (two sons dead), says: "It's all
+ right. England must be saved."
+
+ And this Kingdom alone, as you know, is spending twenty-five
+ million dollars a day. The big loan placed in the United States[30]
+ would last but twenty days! if this pace of slaughter and of
+ spending go on long enough, there won't be any men or any money
+ left on this side the world. Yet there will be both left, of
+ course; for somehow things never quite go to the ultimate smash
+ that seems to come. Read the history of the French Revolution. How
+ did the French nation survive?
+
+ It will go on, unless some unexpected dramatic military event end
+ it, for something like another year at least--many say for two
+ years more, and some, three years more. It'll stop, of course,
+ whenever Germany will propose terms that the Allies can
+ consider--or something near such terms; and it won't stop before.
+ By blockade pressure and by fighting, the Allies are gradually
+ wearing the Germans out. We can see here the gradual pressure of
+ events in that direction. My guess is that they won't go into a
+ third winter.
+
+ Well, dear gentlemen, however you may feel about it, that's enough
+ for me. My day--every day--is divided into these parts: (1) two to
+ three hours listening to Americans or their agents here whose
+ cargoes are stopped, to sorrowing American parents whose boys have
+ run away and gone into the English Army, to nurses and doctors and
+ shell makers who wish to go to France, to bereaved English men and
+ women whose sons are "missing": can I have them found in Germany?
+ (2) to answering letters about these same cheerful subjects; (3) to
+ going over cases and documents prepared about all these sorts of
+ troubles and forty other sorts, by the eight or ten secretaries of
+ the Embassy, and a conference with every one of them; (4) the
+ reading of two books of telegrams, one incoming, the other
+ outgoing, and the preparation of a lot of answers; (5) going to the
+ Foreign Office, not every day but often, to discuss more troubles
+ there; (6) home to dinner at 8 o'clock--at home or somewhere else,
+ and there is more talk about the war or about the political
+ troubles. That for a regular daily routine for pretty nearly a year
+ and a half! As I say, if anybody is keeping the war up for my
+ entertainment, he now has my permission to stop. No time to read,
+ no time to write, little time to think, little or no time to see
+ the people you most wish to see, I often don't know the day of the
+ week or of the month: it's a sort of life in the trenches, without
+ the immediate physical danger. Then I have my cabinet meetings, my
+ financial reports (money we spend for four governments: I had till
+ recently about a million dollars subject to my check); then the
+ commission for the relief of Belgium; then the Ambassadors and
+ Ministers of the other neutral states--our task is worse than war!
+
+ Well, praise God for sleep. I get from seven to nine hours a night,
+ unbroken; and I don't take Armageddon to bed with me.
+
+ I don't mind telling _you_ (nobody else) that the more I see just
+ how great statesmen work and manage great governments--the more I
+ see of them at close range--whether in Washington or London or
+ Berlin or Vienna or Constantinople (for these are _my_ Capitals),
+ the more I admire the methods of the Long Island farmers. Boys, I
+ swear I could take our crowd and do a better job than many of these
+ great men do. I have to spend a lot of time to correct their moves
+ before the other fellow finds out the mistake. For instance I know
+ I spent $2,000 in telegrams before I could make the German
+ Government understand the British military age, and the British
+ Government understand the German military age, for exchanging
+ prisoners who had lost two legs or arms or both eyes; and I've had
+ to send a man to Berlin to get a financial report from one man on
+ one floor of a building there and to take it to another man on the
+ floor above. Just yesterday I was reminded that I had made eighteen
+ requests for the same information of the British Government, when
+ the nineteenth request for it came from Washington; and I have now
+ telegraphed that same thing nineteen times since the war began. Of
+ course everybody's worked to death. But something else ails a lot
+ of 'em all the way from Constantinople to London. Leaving out
+ common gutter lying (and there's much of it) the sheer stupidity of
+ governments is amazing. They are all so human, so mighty human! I
+ wouldn't be a government for any earthly consideration. I'd rather
+ be a brindled dog and trot under the wagon.
+
+ But it has been an inexpressibly interesting experience to find all
+ this out for myself. There's a sort of weary satisfaction in
+ feeling that you've seen too much of them to be fooled by 'em any
+ more. And, although most men now engaged in this game of government
+ are mere common mortals with most of the common mortal weaknesses,
+ now and then a really big man does stumble into the business. I
+ have my doubts whether a really big man ever deliberately goes into
+ it. And most of the men who the crowd for the moment thinks are big
+ men don't really turn out so. It's a game like bull fighting. The
+ bull is likely to kill you--pretty sure to do so if you keep at the
+ business long enough; but in the meantime you have some exciting
+ experiences and the applause of the audience. When you get killed,
+ they forget you--immediately. There are two rather big men in this
+ Government, and you wouldn't guess in three rounds who they are.
+ But in general the war hasn't so far developed very big men in any
+ country. Else we are yet too close to them to recognize their
+ greatness. Joffre seems to have great stuff in him; and (I assure
+ you) you needn't ever laugh at a Frenchman again. They are a great
+ people. As for the British, there was never such a race. It's
+ odd--I hear that it happens just now to be the fashion in the
+ United States to say that the British are not doing their share.
+ There never was a greater slander. They absolutely hold the Seven
+ Seas. They have caught about seventy submarines and some of them
+ are now destroying German ships in the Baltic Sea. They've sent to
+ France by several times the largest army that any people ever sent
+ over the sea. They are financing most of their allies and they have
+ turned this whole island into gun and shell factories. They made a
+ great mistake at the Dardanelles and they are slower than death to
+ change their set methods. But no family in the land, from charcoal
+ burners to dukes, hesitates one moment to send its sons into the
+ army. When the news comes of their death, they never whimper. When
+ you come right down to hard facts, the courage and the endurance of
+ the British and the French excel anything ever before seen on this
+ planet. All the old stories of bravery from Homer down are outdone
+ every day by these people. I see these British at close range,
+ full-dress and undress; and I've got to know a lot of 'em as well
+ as we can ever come to know anybody after we get grown. There is
+ simply no end to the silly sides of their character. But, when the
+ real trial comes, they don't flinch; and (except the thoroughbred
+ American) there are no such men in the world.
+
+ A seven-foot Kansas lawyer (Kansas all over him) came to see me
+ yesterday. He came here a month ago on some legal business. He told
+ me yesterday that he had always despised Englishmen. He's seen a
+ few with stud-horse clothes and white spats and monocles on who had
+ gone through Kansas to shoot in the Rocky Mountains. He couldn't
+ understand 'em and he didn't like 'em. "So infernally uppish," said
+ he.
+
+ "Well, what do you think of 'em now?"
+
+ "The very best people in the world," said he. I think he has a
+ notion of enlisting!
+
+ You're still publishing books, I hear. That's a good occupation.
+ I'd like to be doing it myself. But I can't even get time to read
+ 'em now.
+
+ But, as you know, nobody's writing anything but war books--from
+ Kipling to Hall Caine. Poor Kipling!--his boy's dead. I have no
+ doubt of it. I've had all the German hospitals and prison camps
+ searched for him in vain. These writing men and women, by the way,
+ are as true blue and as thoroughbred as any other class. I can
+ never forget Maurice Hewlett's brave behaviour when he thought that
+ his flying corps son had been killed by the Germans or drowned at
+ sea. He's no prig, but a real man. And the women are as fine as the
+ men....
+
+ To go back to books: Of course nobody can tell what effect the war
+ will have on the writing of them, nor what sort of new writers may
+ come up. You may be sure that everything is stirred to its
+ profoundest depths and will be stirred still more. Some old stagers
+ will be laid on the shelf; that's certain. What sort of new ones
+ will come? I asked H.G. Wells this question. He has promised to
+ think it out and tell me. He has the power to guess some things
+ very well. I'll put that question to Conrad when I next see him.
+
+ Does anybody in the United States take the Prime Minister, Mr.
+ Asquith, to be a great man? His wife is a brilliant woman; and she
+ has kept a diary ever since he became Prime Minister; and he now
+ has passed the longest single term in English history. Mr. Dent
+ thinks he's the biggest man alive, and Dent has some mighty good
+ instincts.
+
+ Talk about troubles! Think of poor Northcliffe. He thinks he's
+ saved the nation from its miserable government, and the government
+ now openly abuses him in the House of Commons. Northcliffe puts on
+ his brass knuckles and turns the _Times_ building upside down and
+ sets all the _Daily Mail_ machine guns going, and has to go to bed
+ to rest his nerves, while the row spreads and deepens. The
+ Government keeps hell in the prayer-book because without it they
+ wouldn't know what to do with Northcliffe; and Northcliffe is just
+ as sure that he has saved England as he is sure the Duke of
+ Wellington did.
+
+ To come back to the war. (We always do.) Since I wrote the first
+ part of this letter, I spent an evening with a member of the
+ Cabinet and he told me so much bad military news, which they
+ prevent the papers from publishing or even hearing, that to-night I
+ almost share this man's opinion that the war will last till 1918.
+ That isn't impossible. If that happens the offer that I heard a
+ noble old buck make to a group of ladies the other night may be
+ accepted. This old codger is about seventy-five, ruddy and saucy
+ yet. "My dear ladies," said he, "if the war goes on and on we shall
+ have no young men left. A double duty will fall on the old fellows.
+ I shall be ready, when the need comes, to take four extra wives,
+ and I daresay there are others of my generation who are as
+ patriotic as I am."
+
+ All of which is only my long-winded, round-about diplomatic way of
+ wishing you every one and every one of yours and all the folk in
+ the office, their assigns, superiors, dependents, companions in
+ labour--all, everyone and sundry, the happiest of Christmases; and
+ when you take stock of your manifold blessings, don't forget to be
+ thankful for the Atlantic Ocean. That's the best asset of safety
+ that we have.
+
+ Affectionately yours,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Mrs. Charles G. Loring_
+
+ 6 Grosvenor Square,
+
+ London, December 7, 1915.
+
+ DEAR KITTY:
+
+ This is my Christmas letter to you and Chud--a poor thing, but the
+ best I have to give you. At least it carries my love, dear, and my
+ wishes that every Christmas under your own roof will be happier
+ than the preceding one. Since your starting point is on the high
+ level of your first Christmas in your own home--that's a good wish:
+ isn't it?
+
+ I'm beginning to think a good deal of your mother and me. Here we
+ are left alone by every one of you--in a foreign land; and,
+ contrary to all predictions that any of you would have made about
+ us four or five years ago, we're faring pretty well, thank you, and
+ not on the edge of dying of loneliness at all. I tell you, I think
+ we're pretty brave and hardy.
+
+ We're even capable of becoming cocky and saucy to every one of you.
+ Be careful, then.
+
+ You see if you have a war to live with you don't necessarily need
+ children: you'll have strife enough without 'em. We'll console
+ ourselves with such reflections as these.
+
+ And the truth is--at least about me--that there isn't time to think
+ of what you haven't got. Of course, I'm working, as always, to
+ soften the relations between these two governments. So far, in
+ spite of the pretty deep latent feeling on both sides--far worse
+ than it ought to be and far worse than I wish it were--I'm working
+ all the time to keep things as smooth as possible. Happily, nobody
+ can prove it, but I believe it, that there is now and there has
+ been all along more danger of a serious misunderstanding than
+ anybody has known. The Germans have, of course, worked in 1000 ways
+ to cause misunderstanding between England and the United States.
+ Then, of course, there has been constant danger in the English
+ bull-headed insularity which sees nothing but the Englishman's
+ immediate need, and in the English slowness. Add to these causes
+ the American ignorance of war and of European conditions. It has
+ been a God's mercy for us that we have so far had a man like Sir
+ Edward Grey in his post. And in my post, while there might well
+ have been a better man, this much at least has been lucky--that I
+ do have a consciousness of English history and of our common
+ origin and some sense of the inevitable destiny of the great
+ English-speaking race--so that, when we have come to sharp corners
+ in the road, I have known that whatever happen we must travel in
+ the right general direction--have known that no temporary
+ difference must be allowed to assume a permanent quality. I have
+ thought several times that we had passed the worst possible place,
+ and then a still worse one would appear. It does look now as if we
+ had faced most of the worst difficulties that can come, but I am
+ not sure what Congress may do or provoke. If we outlast Congress,
+ we shall be safe. Now to come through this enormous war even with
+ no worse feeling than already exists between the two
+ countries--that'll be a big thing to have done. But it's work like
+ the work of the English fleet. Nobody can prove that Jellicoe has
+ been a great admiral. Yet the fleet has done the whole job more
+ successfully than if it had had sea-fights and lost a part of their
+ ships.
+
+ Our Note has left a great deal of bad feeling--suppressed, but
+ existent. A part of it was inevitable and (I'd say) even necessary.
+ But we put in a lot of things that seem to me to be merely
+ disputatious, and we didn't write it in the best form. It
+ corresponds to what you once called _suburban_: do you remember?
+ Not thoroughbred. But we'll get over even that, especially if the
+ Administration and the courts continue to bring the Germans to book
+ who are insulting our dignity and destroying our property and
+ killing Americans. If we can satisfactorily settle the _Lusitania_
+ trouble, the whole outlook will be very good.
+
+ Your mother and I are hearing much interesting political talk. We
+ dined last night with Mr. Bonar Law. Sir Edward Carson was there.
+ To-day we lunched with Lady P.--the other side, you see. There are
+ fundamental differences continually arising. They thought a few
+ weeks ago that they had the Prime Minister's scalp. He proved too
+ nimble for them. Now one person after another says to you:
+ "Kitchener doesn't deserve the reverence the people give him." More
+ and more folks say he's hard to work with--is domineering and
+ selfish. Nobody seems really to know him; and there are some signs
+ that there may be a row about him.
+
+ We've heard nothing from Harold in quite a little while. We have,
+ you know, three of our footmen in the war. Allen was wounded at
+ Loos--a flesh, bullet-wound. He's about well now and is soon going
+ back. Leslie is in the trenches and a postal card came from him the
+ other day. The third one, Philip, is a prisoner in Germany. Your
+ mother sent him a lot of things, but we've never heard whether he
+ received them or not. The general strain--military, political,
+ financial--gets greater. The streets are darker than ever. The
+ number of wounded increases rapidly. More houses are turned into
+ hospitals. The Manchesters', next door, is a hospital now. And
+ everybody fears worse days are to come. But they have no nerves,
+ these English. They grit their teeth, but they go on bravely,
+ enduring everything. We run into experiences every day that melt
+ you, and the heroic things we hear outnumber and outdo all the
+ stories in all the books.
+
+ I keep forgetting Xmas, Kitty, and this is my Xmas letter. You
+ needn't put it in your stocking, but you'd really better burn it
+ up. It would be the ruination of the world if my frank comments got
+ loose. It's for you and Chud only. You may fill your stocking full
+ of the best wishes you ever received--enough to fill the polar bear
+ skin. And I send you both my love.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Ralph W., Arthur 147., and Frank C. Page_[31]
+
+ London, Christmas, 1915.
+
+ DEAR Boys: R.W.P., A.W.P., F.C.P.
+
+ A Merry Christmas to you! Good cheer, good company, good food, good
+ fires, good golf. I suppose (though the Lord only knows) that I'll
+ have to be here another Christmas; but another after that? Not on
+ your life!
+
+ I think I'm as cheerful and hopeful as I ever was, but this
+ experience here and the war have caused my general confidence in
+ the orderly progress of civilization somewhat to readjust itself. I
+ think that any man who looks over the world and who knows something
+ of the history of human society--I mean any American who really
+ believes in democracy and in human progress--is somewhat saddened
+ to see the exceeding slowness of that progress. In the early days
+ of our Republic hopeful Americans held the opinion that the other
+ countries of the world would follow our example; that is to say,
+ would educate the people, would give the masses a chance to become
+ real men, would make their governments and institutions serve the
+ people, would dispense with kings and gross privileges and become
+ free. Well, they haven't done it. France is nominally a republic,
+ but the masses of its people are far, far backward. Switzerland
+ _is_ a republic, but a very small one. Denmark is a very free
+ state, in spite of its monarchical form of government. In South
+ America they think they have republics, but they haven't the
+ slightest idea of the real education and freedom of the people.
+ Practically, therefore, the United States and the self-governing
+ British colonies are the only really free countries of much
+ importance in the whole world--these and this Kingdom. Our example
+ hasn't been followed. In Europe, Germany and Russia in particular
+ have monarchs who are in absolute command. Thus on both sides the
+ world, so far as government and the danger of war are concerned,
+ there hasn't been very much real progress in five hundred years.
+
+ This is a little disappointing. And it means, of course, that we
+ are likely to have periodical earthquakes like this present one
+ till some radical change come. Republics have their faults, no
+ doubt. But they have at least this virtue: that no country where
+ the people really have the control of their government is likely to
+ start out deliberately on any war of conquest--is not likely to run
+ amuck--and will not regard its population as mere food for shell
+ and powder.
+
+ Nor do I believe that our example of our government has, relatively
+ to our strength and wealth and population, as much influence in the
+ world as we had one hundred years ago. Our people have no foreign
+ consciousness and I know that our government knows almost nothing
+ about European affairs; nor do our people know. As regards foreign
+ affairs our government lacks proper machinery. Take this as an
+ illustration: The President wrote vigorous and proper notes about
+ the _Lusitania_ and took a firm stand with Germany. Germany has
+ paid no attention to the _Lusitania_ outrage. Yet (as I understand
+ it) the people will not run the risk of war--or the Administration
+ thinks they will not--and hence the President can do nothing to
+ make his threat good. Therefore we stand in a ridiculous situation;
+ and nobody cares how many notes we write. I don't know that the
+ President could have done differently--unless, before he sent the
+ _Lusitania_ notes, he had called Congress together and submitted
+ his notes to Congress. But, as the matter stands, the Germans are
+ merely encouraged to blow up factories and practically to carry on
+ war in the United States, because they know we can (or will) do
+ nothing. Mere notes break nobody's skin.
+
+ We don't seem to have any machinery to bring any influence to bear
+ on foreign governments or on foreign opinion; and, this being so,
+ it is little wonder that the rest of the world does not follow our
+ republican example.
+
+ And this sort of impotence in influence has curious effects at
+ home. For example, the ship-purchase bill, as it was at the last
+ session of Congress, was an economic crime. See what has happened:
+ We have waked up to the fact that we must have a big navy. Well, a
+ navy is of no far-fighting value unless we have auxiliary ships and
+ a lot of 'em. Admiral Jellicoe has 3,000 ships under his command;
+ and he couldn't keep his fleet on the job if he didn't have them.
+ Most of them are commandeered merchant, passenger, and fishing
+ ships. Now we haven't merchant, passenger, and fishing ships to
+ commandeer. We've got to build and buy auxiliary ships to our navy.
+ This, to my mind, makes the new ship-purchase bill, or something
+ like it, necessary. Else our navy, when it comes to the scratch,
+ will be of no fighting value, however big it be. It's the price
+ we've got to pay for not having built up a merchant marine. And we
+ haven't built up a merchant marine because we've had no foreign
+ consciousness. While our Irishmen have been leading us to twist the
+ Lion's tail, we've been depending almost wholly on English
+ ships--and, in late years, on German ships. You can't cross the
+ ocean yet in a decent American ship. You see, we've declared our
+ independence; and, so far as individual development goes, we've
+ worked it out. But the governmental machinery for maintaining it
+ and for making it visible to the world--we've simply neglected to
+ build it or to shape it. Hence the President's notes hurt nobody
+ and accomplish nothing; nor could our navy put up a real fight, for
+ lack of colliers and supply ships. It's the same way all around the
+ horizon. And these are the reasons we haven't made our democracy
+ impress the world more.
+
+ A democracy is not a quick-trigger war-engine and can't be made
+ into one. When the quick-trigger engines get to work, they forget
+ that a democracy does not consider fighting the first duty of man.
+ You can bend your energies to peaceful pursuits or you can bend
+ them to war. It's hard to do both at the same time. The Germans are
+ the only people who have done both at the same time; and even they
+ didn't get their navy big enough for their needs.
+
+ When the infernal thing's over--that'll be a glad day; and the
+ European world won't really know what it has cost in men and money
+ and loss of standards till it is over....
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Walter H. Page, Jr._[32].
+
+ London, Christmas, 1915.
+
+ SIR:
+
+ For your first Christmas, I have the honour to send you my most
+ affectionate greetings; and in wishing you all good health, I take
+ the liberty humbly to indicate some of the favours of fortune that
+ I am pleased to think I enjoy in common with you.
+
+ _First_--I hear with pleasure that you are quite well content with
+ yourself--not because of a reasoned conviction of your own worth,
+ which would be mere vanity and unworthy of you, but by reason of a
+ philosophical disposition. It is too early for you to bother over
+ problems of self-improvement--as for me it is too late; wherefore
+ we are alike in the calm of our self-content. What others may think
+ or say about us is a subject of the smallest concern to us.
+ Therefore they generally speak well of us; for there is little
+ satisfaction in speaking ill of men who care nothing for your
+ opinion of them. Then, too, we are content to be where we happen to
+ be--a fact that we did not order in the beginning and need not now
+ concern ourselves about. Consider the eternal coming and going of
+ folk. On every road many are travelling one way and an equal number
+ are travelling the other way. It is obvious that, if they were all
+ content to remain at the places whence they set forth, the
+ distribution of the population would be the same. Why therefore
+ move hither and yon at the cost of much time and labour and money,
+ since nothing is accomplished thereby? We spare ourselves by being
+ content to remain where we are. We thereby have the more time for
+ reflection. Nor can we help observing with a smile that all persons
+ who have good reasons to see us themselves make the necessary
+ journey after they discover that we remain fixed.
+
+ Again, people about us are continually doing this service and that
+ for some other people--running errands, mending fences, bearing
+ messages, building, and tearing down; and they all demand equal
+ service in return. Thus a large part of mankind keeps itself in
+ constant motion like bubbles of water racing around a pool at the
+ foot of a water-fall--or like rabbits hurrying into their warrens
+ and immediately hurrying out again. Whereas, while these antics
+ amuse and sadden us, we for the most part remain where we are.
+ Hence our wants are few; they are generally most courteously
+ supplied without our asking; or, if we happen to be momentarily
+ forgotten, we can quickly secure anything in the neighbourhood by a
+ little judicious squalling. Why, then, should we whirl as bubbles
+ or scurry as rabbits? Our conquering self-possession gives a
+ masterful charm to life that the victims of perpetual locomotion
+ never seem to attain.
+
+ You have discovered, and my experience confirms yours, that a
+ perpetual self-consciousness brings most of the misery of the
+ world. Men see others who are richer than they; or more famous, or
+ more fortunate--so they think; and they become envious. You have
+ not reached the period of such empty vanity, and I have long passed
+ it. Let us, therefore, make our mutual vows not to be disturbed by
+ the good luck or the good graces of others, but to continue,
+ instead, to contemplate the contented cat on the rug and the
+ unenvious sky that hangs over all alike.
+
+ This mood will continue to keep our lives simple. Consider our
+ diet. Could anything be simpler or better? We are not even tempted
+ by the poisonous victuals wherewith mankind destroys itself. The
+ very first sound law of life is to look to the belly; for it is
+ what goes into a man that ruins him. By avoiding murderous food, we
+ may hope to become centenarians. And why not? The golden streets
+ will not be torn up and we need be in no indecent haste to travel
+ even on them. The satisfactions of this life are just beginning for
+ us; and we shall be wise to endure this world for as long a period
+ as possible.
+
+ And sleep is good--long sleep and often; and your age and mine
+ permit us to indulge in it without the sneers of the lark or the
+ cock or the dawn.
+
+ I pray you, sir, therefore, accept my homage as the philosopher
+ that you are and my assurance of that high esteem indicated by my
+ faithful imitation of your virtues. I am,
+
+ With the most distinguished consideration,
+ With the sincerest esteem, and
+ With the most affectionate good wishes,
+ Sir,
+ Your proud,
+ Humble,
+ Obedient
+ GRANDDADDY.
+
+To Master Walter Hines Page,
+
+On Christmas, 1915.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 23: By William Roscoe Thayer, published in 1915.]
+
+[Footnote 24: The Ambassador had in mind _The Round Table_.]
+
+[Footnote 25: James W. Gerard, American Ambassador to Germany, and, as
+such, in charge of British interests in Germany.]
+
+[Footnote 26: The German military and naval attachés, whose persistent
+and outrageous violation of American laws led to their dismissal by
+President Wilson.]
+
+[Footnote 27: E.S. Martin, Editor of _Life_.]
+
+[Footnote 28: Mr. Henry Ford at this time was getting together his
+famous peace ship, which was to sail to Europe "to get the boys out of
+the trenches by Christmas."]
+
+[Footnote 29: J.M. Dent, the London publisher.]
+
+[Footnote 30: $500,000,000.]
+
+[Footnote 31: The Ambassador's Sons.]
+
+[Footnote 32: The Ambassador's infant grandson, son of Arthur W. Page.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+A PERPLEXED AMBASSADOR
+
+
+The beginning of the new year saw no improvement in German-American
+relations. Germany and Austria continued to violate the pledge given by
+Bernstorff after the sinking of the _Arabic_--if that shifty statement
+could be regarded as a "pledge." On November 7, 1915, the Austrians sank
+the _Ancona_, in the Mediterranean, drowning American citizens under
+conditions of particular atrocity, and submarine attacks on merchant
+ships, without the "warning" or attempt to save passengers and crew
+which Bernstorff had promised, took place nearly every day. On April 18,
+1916, the _Sussex_ was torpedoed in the English Channel, without warning
+and with loss of American life. This caused what seemed to be a real
+crisis; President Wilson sent what was practically an ultimatum to
+Germany, demanding that it "immediately declare and effect an
+abandonment of its present methods of warfare against passenger and
+freight carrying vessels," declaring that, unless it did so, the United
+States would sever diplomatic relations with the German Empire. In
+reply, Germany apparently backed down and gave the promise the President
+had demanded. However, it coupled this concession with an expression of
+its expectation that the United States would compel Great Britain to
+observe international law in the blockade. As this latter statement
+might be interpreted as a qualification of its surrender, the incident
+hardly ended satisfactorily.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Bournemouth
+
+ May 22, 1916.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ I stick on the back of this sheet a letter that Sydney Brooks wrote
+ from New York (May 1st) to the _Daily Mail_. He formulates a
+ question that we have many times asked ourselves and that, in one
+ way or other, comes into everybody's mind here. Of course the
+ common fellow in Jonesville who has given most of his time and
+ energy to earning a living for his wife and children has no foreign
+ consciousness, whether his Jonesville be in the United States or in
+ England or in France or in Zanzibar. The real question is, _Do_
+ these fellows in Jonesville make up the United States? or has there
+ been such a lack of prompt leadership as to make all the Jonesville
+ people confused? It's hard for me to judge at this distance just
+ how far the President has led and just how far he has waited and
+ been pushed along. Suppose he had stood on the front steps every
+ morning before breakfast for a month after the _Lusitania_ went
+ down and had called to the people in the same tone that he used in
+ his note to Germany--had sounded a bugle call--would we have felt
+ as we now feel? What would the men in Jonesville have done then?
+ Would they have got their old guns down from over the doors? Or do
+ they so want peace and so think that they can have peace always
+ that they've lost their spine? Have they really been Bryanized,
+ Fordized, Janeaddamsized, Sundayschooled, and Chautauquaed into
+ supine creatures to whom the United States and the ideals of the
+ Fathers mean nothing? Who think a German is as good as an
+ Englishman? Who have no particular aims or aspirations for our
+ country and for democracy? When T.R. was in the White House he
+ surely was an active fellow. He called us to exercise ourselves
+ every morning. He bawled "Patriotism" loudly. We surely thought we
+ were awake during those strenuous years. Were we really awake or
+ did we only look upon him and his antics as a sort of good show?
+ All that time Bryan was peace-a-footing and prince-of-peacing. Now
+ did he really have the minds of the people or did T.R.?
+
+ If we've really gone to sleep and if the United States stands for
+ nothing but personal comfort and commercialism to our own people,
+ what a job you and the patriotic men of your generation have cut
+ out for you!
+
+ My own conviction (which I don't set great store by) is that our
+ isolation and prosperity have not gone so far in softening us as it
+ seems. They've gone a good way, no doubt; but I think that even the
+ Jonesville people yet feel their Americanism. What they need
+ is--leadership. Their Congressmen are poor, timid, pork-barrel
+ creatures. Their governors are in training for the Senate. The
+ Vice-President reads no official literature of the war, "because
+ then I might have a conviction about it and that wouldn't be
+ neutral." And so on. If the people had a _real_ leadership, I
+ believe they'd wake up even in Jonesville.
+
+ Well, let's let these things go for the moment. How's the
+ Ambassador[33]? And the Ambassador's mother and sister? They're
+ nice folks of whom and from whom I hear far too little. Give 'em my
+ love. I don't want you to rear a fighting family. But these kids
+ won't and mustn't grow up peace-cranks--not that anybody objects to
+ peace, but I do despise and distrust a crank, a crank about
+ anything. That's the lesson we've got to learn from these troubled
+ times. First, let cranks alone--the other side of the street is
+ good enough for them. Then, if they persist, I see nothing to do
+ but to kill 'em, and that's troublesome and inconvenient.
+
+ But, as I was saying, bless the babies. I can't begin to tell you
+ how very much I long to see them, to make their acquaintance, to
+ chuckle 'em and punch 'em and see 'em laugh, and to see just what
+ sort of kids they be.
+
+ I've written you how in my opinion there's no country in the world
+ fit for a modern gentleman and man-of-character to live in except
+ (1) the United States and (2) this island. And this island is
+ chiefly valuable for the breed of men--the right stock. They become
+ more valuable to the world after they go away from home. But the
+ right blood's here. This island's breed is the best there is. An
+ Englishman or a Scotchman is the best ancestor in this world, many
+ as his shortcomings are. Some Englishman asked me one night in
+ what, I thought, the Englishman appeared at his best. I said, "As
+ an ancestor to Americans!" And this is the fundamental reason why
+ we (two peoples) belong close together. Reasons that flow from
+ these are such as follows: (1) The race is the sea-mastering race
+ and the navy-managing race and the ocean-carrying race; (2) the
+ race is the literary race, (3) the exploring and settling and
+ colonizing race, (4) the race to whom fair play appeals, and (5)
+ that insists on individual development.
+
+ Your mother having read these two days 1,734 pages of memoirs of
+ the Coke family, one of whose members wrote the great law
+ commentaries, another carried pro-American votes in Parliament in
+ our Revolutionary times, refused peerages, defied kings and--begad!
+ here they are now, living in the same great house and saying and
+ doing what they darn please--we know this generation of 'em!--well,
+ your mother having read these two big volumes about the old ones
+ and told me 175 good stories out of these books, bless her soul!
+ she's gone to sleep in a big chair on the other side of the table.
+ Well she may, she walked for two hours this morning over hills and
+ cliffs and through pine woods and along the beach. I guess I'd
+ better wake her up and get her to go to bed--as the properer thing
+ to do at this time o'night, viz. 11. My golf this afternoon was too
+ bad to confess. But I must say that a 650 and a 730 yard hole
+ argues the audacity of some fellow and the despair of many more.
+ Nature made a lot of obstructions there and Man made more. It must
+ be seven or eight miles around that course! It's almost a three
+ hour task to follow my slow ball around it. I suggested we play
+ with howitzers instead of clubs. Good night!
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday and Others_
+
+ Royal Bath and East Cliff Hotel,
+ Bournemouth, May 29, 1916.
+
+ DEAR D.P. & Co.:
+
+ I always have it in mind to write you letters; but there's no
+ chance in my trenches in London; and, since I have not been out of
+ London for nearly two years--since the war began--only an
+ occasional half day and a night--till now--naturally I've concocted
+ no letter. I've been down here a week--a week of sunshine, praise
+ God--and people are not after me every ten minutes, or Governments
+ either; and my most admirable and efficient staff (now grown to one
+ hundred people) permit few letters and telegrams to reach me. There
+ never was a little rest more grateful. The quiet sea out my window
+ shows no sign of crawling submarines; and, in general, it's as
+ quiet and peaceful here as in Garden City itself.
+
+ I'm on the home-stretch now in all my thoughts and plans. Three of
+ my four years are gone, and the fourth will quickly pass. That's
+ not only the limit of my leave, but it's quite enough for me. I
+ shouldn't care to live through another such experience, if the
+ chance should ever come to me. It has changed my whole life and my
+ whole outlook on life; and, perhaps, you'd like to hear some
+ impressions that it has made upon me.
+
+ The first impression--perhaps the strongest--is a loss of permanent
+ interest in Europe, especially all Europe outside of this Kingdom.
+ I have never had the illusion that Europe had many things that we
+ needed to learn. The chief lesson that it has had, in my judgment,
+ is the lesson of the art of living--the comforts and the courtesies
+ of life, the refinements and the pleasures of conversation and of
+ courteous conduct. The upper classes have this to teach us; and we
+ need and can learn much from them. But this seems to me all--or
+ practically all. What we care most for are individual character,
+ individual development, and a fair chance for every human being.
+ Character, of course, the English have--immense character, colossal
+ character. But even they have not the dimmest conception of what we
+ mean by a fair chance for every human being--not the slightest. In
+ one thousand years they _may_ learn it from us. Now on the
+ continent, the only important Nation that has any character worth
+ mentioning is the French. Of course the little nations--some of
+ them--have character, such as Holland, Switzerland, Sweden, etc.
+ But these are all. The others are simply rotten. In giving a free
+ chance to every human creature, we've nothing to learn from
+ anybody. In character, I bow down to the English and Scotch; I
+ respect the Frenchman highly and admire his good taste. But, for
+ our needs and from our point of view, the English can teach us only
+ two great lessons--character and the art of living (if you are
+ rich).
+
+ The idea that we were brought up on, therefore, that Europe is the
+ home of civilization in general--nonsense! It's a periodical
+ slaughter-pen, with all the vices that this implies. I'd as lief
+ live in the Chicago stock-yards. There they kill beeves and pigs.
+ Here they kill men and (incidentally) women and children. I should
+ no more think of encouraging or being happy over a child of mine
+ becoming a European of any Nation than I should be happy over his
+ fall from Grace in any other way.
+
+ Our form of government and our scheme of society--God knows they
+ need improving--are yet so immeasurably superior, as systems, to
+ anything on this side the world that no comparison need be made.
+
+ My first strong impression, then, is not that Europe is
+ "effete"--that isn't it. It is medięval--far back toward the Dark
+ Ages, much of it yet uncivilized, held back by _inertia_ when not
+ held back by worse things. The caste system is a constant burden
+ almost as heavy as war itself and often quite as cruel.
+
+ The next impression I have is, that, during the thousand years that
+ will be required for Europe to attain real (modern) civilization,
+ wars will come as wars have always come in the past. The different
+ countries and peoples and governments will not and cannot learn the
+ lesson of federation and coöperation so long as a large mass of
+ their people have no voice and no knowledge except of their
+ particular business. Compare the miles of railway in proportion to
+ population with the same proportion in the United States--or the
+ telephones, or the use of the mails, or of bank checks; or make any
+ other practical measure you like. Every time, you'll come back to
+ the discouraging fact that the masses in Europe are driven as
+ cattle. So long as this is true, of course, they'll be driven
+ periodically into wars. So many countries, so many races, so many
+ languages all within so small an area as Europe positively invite
+ deadly differences. If railroads had been invented before each
+ people had developed its own separate language, Europe could
+ somehow have been coordinated, linked up, federated, made to look
+ at life somewhat in the same way. As it is, wars will be bred here
+ periodically for about another thousand years. The devil of this
+ state of things is that they may not always be able to keep their
+ wars at home.
+
+ For me, then, except England and the smaller exceptions that I have
+ mentioned, Europe will cut no big figure in my life. In all the
+ humanities, we are a thousand years ahead of any people here. So
+ also in the adaptabilities and the conveniences of life, in its
+ versatilities and in its enjoyments. Most folk are stolid and sad
+ or dull on this side of the world. Else how could they take their
+ kings and silly ceremonies seriously?
+
+ Now to more immediate and definite impressions. I have for a year
+ had the conviction that we ought to get into the war--into the
+ economic war--for the following among many reasons.
+
+ 1. That's the only way to shorten it. We could cause Germany's
+ credit (such as she has) instantly to collapse, and we could hasten
+ her hard times at home which would induce a surrender.
+
+ 2. That's the only way we can have any real or important influence
+ in adjusting whatever arrangements can be made to secure peace.
+
+ 3. That's the best way we can inspire complete respect for us in
+ the minds of other nations and thereby, perhaps, save ourselves
+ from some wars in the future.
+
+ 4. That's the best way we can assert our own character--our
+ Americanism, and forever get rid of all kinds of hyphens.
+
+ 5. That's the only way we shall ever get a real and sensible
+ preparedness, which will be of enormous educational value even if
+ no military use should ever be made of our preparation.
+
+ 6. That's the only way American consciousness will ever get back to
+ the self-sacrificing and patriotic point of view of the Fathers of
+ the Republic.
+
+ 7. That's the best way to emancipate ourselves from cranks.
+
+ 8. That's the only way we'll ever awaken in our whole people a
+ foreign consciousness that will enable us to assert our natural
+ influence in the world--political, financial, social,
+ commercial--the best way to make the rest of the world our
+ customers and friends and followers.
+
+ All the foregoing I have fired at the Great White Chief for a year
+ by telegraph and by mail; and I have never fired it anywhere else
+ till now. Be very quiet, then. No man with whom I have talked or
+ whose writings I have read seems to me to have an adequate
+ conception of the colossal changes that the war is bringing and
+ will bring. Of course, I do not mean to imply that I have any
+ adequate conception. Nobody can yet grasp it. The loss of (say) ten
+ million men from production of work or wares or children; what a
+ changed world that fact alone will make! The presence in all Europe
+ of (perhaps) fifteen or twenty million more women than men will
+ upset the whole balance of society as regards the sexes. The loss
+ of most of the accumulated capital of Europe and the vast burdens
+ of debt for the future to pay will change the financial relations
+ of the whole world. From these two great losses--men and money--God
+ knows the many kinds of changes that will come. Women are doing and
+ will continue to do many kinds of work hitherto done by men.
+
+ Of course there are some great gains. Many a flabby or abject
+ fellow will come out of the war a real man: he'll be nobody's slave
+ thereafter. The criminal luxury of the rich will not assert itself
+ again for a time. The unparalleled addition to the world's heroic
+ deeds will be to the good of mankind, as the unparalleled suffering
+ has eclipsed all records. The survivors will be in an heroic mood
+ for the rest of their lives. In general, life will start on a new
+ plane and a lot of old stupid habits and old party quarrels and
+ class prejudices will disappear. To get Europe going again will
+ call for new resolution and a new sort of effort. Nobody can yet
+ see what far-reaching effects it will have on government.
+
+ If I could make the English and Scotch over, I could greatly
+ improve them. I'd cut out the Englishman's arrogance and key him up
+ to a quicker gait. Lord! he's a slow beast. But he's worked out the
+ germ and the beginning of all real freedom, and he has character.
+ He knows how to conserve and to use wealth. He's a great John Bull,
+ after all. And as for commanding the sea, for war or trade, you may
+ properly bow down to him and pay him homage. The war will, I think,
+ quicken him up. It will lessen his arrogance--to _us_, at least. I
+ think it will make him stronger and humbler. And, whatever his
+ virtues and his faults, he's the only Great Power we can go hand in
+ hand with....
+
+ These kinds of things have been going on now nearly two years, and
+ not till these ten days down here have I had time or chance or a
+ free mind to think them over; and now there's nothing in particular
+ to think--nothing but just to go on, doing these 40,000 things (and
+ they take a new turn every day) the best I can, without the
+ slightest regard to consequences. I've long ago passed the place
+ where, having acted squarely according to my best judgment, I can
+ afford to pay the slightest attention to what anybody thinks. I see
+ men thrown on the scrap heap every day. Many of them deserve it,
+ but a good many do not. In the abnormal state of mind that
+ everybody has, there are inevitable innocent misunderstandings,
+ which are as fatal as criminal mistakes. The diplomatic service is
+ peculiarly exposed to misunderstandings: and, take the whole
+ diplomatic service of all nations as shown up by this great strain,
+ it hasn't stood the test very well. I haven't the respect for it
+ that I had when I started. Yet, God knows, I have a keen sympathy
+ for it. I've seen some of 'em displaced; some of 'em lie down; some
+ of 'em die.
+
+ As I've got closer and closer to big men, as a rule they shrink up.
+ They are very much like the rest of us--many of 'em more so. Human
+ nature is stripped in these times of most of its disguises, and men
+ have to stand and be judged as a rule by their real qualities.
+ Among all the men in high place here, Sir Edward Grey stands out in
+ my mind bigger, not smaller, than he stood in the beginning. He's a
+ square, honourable gentleman, if there is one in this world. And it
+ is he, of course, with whom I have had all my troubles. It's been a
+ truly great experience to work and to quarrel with such a man.
+ We've kept the best friendship--a constantly ripening one. There
+ are others like him--only smaller.
+
+ Yet they are all in turn set upon by the press or public opinion
+ and hounded like criminals. They try (somebody tries) to drive 'em
+ out of office every once in a while. If there's anything I'm afraid
+ of, it's the newspapers. The correspondents are as thick as flies
+ in summer--all hunting sensations--especially the yellow American
+ press. I play the game with these fellows always squarely,
+ sometimes I fear indiscreetly. But what is discretion? That's the
+ hardest question of all. We have regular meetings. I tell 'em
+ everything I can--always on the condition that I'm kept out of the
+ papers. If they'll never mention me, I'll do everything possible
+ for them. Absolute silence of the newspapers (as far as I can
+ affect it) is the first rule of safety. So far as I know, we've
+ done fairly well; but always in proportion to silence. I don't want
+ any publicity. I don't want any glory. I don't want any office. I
+ don't want nothin'--but to do this job squarely, to get out of this
+ scrape, to go off somewhere in the sunshine and to see if I can
+ slip back into my old self and see the world sane again. Yet I'm
+ immensely proud that I have had the chance to do some good--to keep
+ our record straight--as far as I can, and to be of what service I
+ can to these heroic people.
+
+ Out of it all, one conviction and one purpose grows and becomes
+ clearer. The world isn't yet half-organized. In the United States
+ we've lived in a good deal of a fool's paradise. The world isn't
+ half so safe a place as we supposed. Until steamships and
+ telegraphs brought the nations all close together, of course we
+ could enjoy our isolation. We can't do so any longer. One mad fool
+ in Berlin has turned the whole earth topsy-turvy. We'd forgotten
+ what our forefathers learned--the deadly dangers of real monarchs
+ and of castes and classes. There are a lot of 'em left in the world
+ yet. We've grown rich and-weak; we've let cranks and old women
+ shape our ideas. We've let our politicians remain provincial and
+ ignorant.
+
+ And believe me, dear D.P. & Co. with affectionate greeting to every
+ one of you and to every one of yours, collectively and singly,
+
+ Yours heartily,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _Memorandum written after attending the service at St. Paul's in
+ memory of Lord Kitchener_[34].
+
+ American Embassy, London.
+
+ There were two Kitcheners, as every informed person knows--(1) the
+ popular hero and (2) the Cabinet Minister with whom it was
+ impossible for his associates to get along. He made his
+ administrative career as an autocrat dealing with dependent and
+ inferior peoples. This experience fixed his habits and made it
+ impossible for him to do team work or to delegate work or even to
+ inform his associates of what he had done or was doing. While,
+ therefore, his name raised a great army, he was in many ways a
+ hindrance in the Cabinet. First one thing and then another was
+ taken out of his hands--ordnance, munitions, war plans. When he
+ went to Gallipoli, some persons predicted that he would never come
+ back. There was a hot meeting of the Cabinet at which he was asked
+ to go to Russia, to make a sort of return visit for the visit that
+ important Russians had made here, and to link up Russia's military
+ plans with the plans of the Western Allies. He is said to have
+ remarked that he was going only because he had been ordered to go.
+ There was a hope and a feeling again that he might not come back
+ till after the war.
+
+ Now just how much truth there is in all this, one has to guess; but
+ undoubtedly a good deal. He did much in raising the army, but his
+ name did more. What an extraordinary situation! The great hero of
+ the Nation an impossible man to work with. The Cabinet could not
+ tell the truth about him: the people would not believe it and would
+ make the Cabinet suffer. Moreover, such a row would have given
+ comfort to the enemy. Kitchener, on his part, could not afford to
+ have an open quarrel. The only solution was to induce him to go
+ away for a long time. Both sides saw that. Such thoughts were in
+ everybody's mind while the impressive funeral service was said and
+ sung in St. Paul's. The Great Hero, who had failed, was celebrated
+ of course as a Great Hero--quite truly and yet far from true. For
+ him his death came at a lucky time: his work was done.
+
+ There is even a rumour, which I don't for a moment believe, that he
+ is alive on the Orkney Islands and prefers to disappear there till
+ the war ends. This is fantastic, and it was doubtless suggested by
+ the story that he did disappear for several years while he was a
+ young officer.
+
+ I could not help noticing, when I saw all the Cabinet together at
+ the Cathedral, how much older many of them look than they looked
+ two years ago. Sir Edward Grey, Mr. Asquith, Mr. Balfour, who is
+ really an old man, Lloyd George--each of these seems ten years
+ older. And so does the King. The men in responsible places who are
+ not broken by the war will be bent. General French, since his
+ retirement to command of the forces in England, seems much older.
+ So common is this quick aging that Lady Jellicoe, who went to
+ Scotland to see her husband after the big naval battle, wrote to
+ Mrs. Page in a sort of rhapsody and with evident surprise that the
+ Admiral really did not seem older! The weight of this thing is so
+ prodigious that it is changing all men who have to do with it. Men
+ and women (who do not wear mourning) mention the death of their
+ sons in a way that a stranger might mistake for indifference. And
+ it has a curious effect on marriages. Apparently every young fellow
+ who gets a week's leave from the trenches comes home and marries
+ and, of course, goes straight back--especially the young officers.
+ You see weddings all day as you pass the favourite churches; and
+ already the land is full of young widows.
+
+ _To Edwin A. Alderman_[35]
+
+ Embassy of the U.S.A., London,
+
+ June 22, 1916.
+
+ MY DEAR ED ALDERMAN:
+
+ I shall not forget how good you were to take time to write me a
+ word about the meeting of the Board--_the_ Board: there's no other
+ one in that class--at Hampton[36], and I did most heartily
+ appreciate the knowledge that you all remembered me. Alas! it's a
+ long, long time ago when we all met--so long ago that to me it
+ seems a part of a former incarnation. These three years--especially
+ these two years of the war--have changed my whole outlook on life
+ and foreshortened all that came before. I know I shall never link
+ back to many things (and alas! too, to many people) that once
+ seemed important and surely were interesting. Life in these
+ trenches (five warring or quarrelling governments mining and
+ sapping under me and shooting over me)--two years of universal
+ ambassadorship in this hell are enough--enough I say, even for a
+ man who doesn't run away from responsibilities or weary of toil.
+ And God knows how it has changed me and is changing me: I sometimes
+ wonder, as a merely intellectual and quite impersonal curiosity.
+
+ Strangely enough I keep pretty well--very well, in fact. Perhaps
+ I've learned how to live more wisely than I knew in the old days;
+ perhaps again, I owe it to my old grandfather who lived (and
+ enjoyed) ninety-four years. I have walked ten miles to-day and I
+ sit down as the clock strikes eleven (P.M.) to write this letter.
+
+ You will recall more clearly than I certain horrible, catastrophic,
+ universal-ruin passages in Revelation--monsters swallowing the
+ universe, blood and fire and clouds and an eternal crash, rolling
+ ruin enveloping all things--well, all that's come. There are,
+ perhaps, ten million men dead of this war and, perhaps, one hundred
+ million persons to whom death would be a blessing. Add to these as
+ many millions more whose views of life are so distorted that blank
+ idiocy would be a better mental outlook, and you'll get a hint (and
+ only a hint) of what the continent has already become--a bankrupt
+ slaughter-house inhabited by unmated women. We have talked of
+ "problems" in our day. We never had a problem; for the worst task
+ we ever saw was a mere blithe pastime compared with what these
+ women and the few men that will remain here must face. The hills
+ about Verdun are not blown to pieces worse than the whole social
+ structure and intellectual and spiritual life of Europe. I wonder
+ that anybody is sane.
+
+ Now we have swung into a period and a state of mind wherein all
+ this seems normal. A lady said to me at a dinner party (think of a
+ dinner party at all!), "Oh, how I shall miss the war when it ends!
+ Life without it will surely be dull and tame. What can we talk
+ about? Will the old subjects ever interest us again?" I said,
+ "Let's you and me try and see." So we talked about books--not war
+ books--old country houses that we both knew, gardens and gold and
+ what not; and in fifteen minutes we swung back to the war before we
+ were aware.
+
+ I get out of it, as the days rush by, certain fundamental
+ convictions, which seem to me not only true--true beyond any
+ possible cavil--truer than any other political things are true--and
+ far more important than any other contemporary facts whatsoever in
+ any branch of endeavour, but better worth while than anything else
+ that men now living may try to further:
+
+ 1. The cure for democracy is more democracy. The danger to the
+ world lies in autocrats and autocracies and privileged classes; and
+ these things have everywhere been dangerous and always will be.
+ There's no security in any part of the world where people cannot
+ think of a government without a king, and there never will be. You
+ cannot conceive of a democracy that will unprovoked set out on a
+ career of conquest. If all our religious missionary zeal and cash
+ could be turned into convincing Europe of this simple and obvious
+ fact, the longest step would be taken for human advancement that
+ has been taken since 1776. If Carnegie, or, after he is gone, his
+ Peace People could see this, his Trust might possibly do some good.
+
+ 2. As the world stands, the United States and Great Britain must
+ work together and stand together to keep the predatory nations in
+ order. A League to Enforce Peace and the President's idea of
+ disentangling alliances are all in the right direction, but vague
+ and general and cumbersome, a sort of bastard children of
+ Neutrality. _The_ thing, the _only_ thing is--a perfect
+ understanding between the English-speaking peoples. That's
+ necessary, and that's all that's necessary. We must boldly take the
+ lead in that. I frankly tell my friends here that the English have
+ got to throw away their damned arrogance and their insularity and
+ that we Americans have got to throw away our provincial ignorance
+ ("What is abroad to us?"), hang our Irish agitators and shoot our
+ hyphenates and bring up our children with reverence for English
+ history and in the awe of English literature. This is the only job
+ now in the world worth the whole zeal and energy of all
+ first-class, thoroughbred English-speaking men. _We_ must lead. We
+ are natural leaders. The English must be driven to lead. Item: We
+ must get their lads into our universities, ours into theirs. They
+ don't know how to do it, except the little driblet of Rhodes men.
+ Think this out, remembering what fools we've been about exchange
+ professors with Germany! How much good could Fons Smith[37] do in a
+ thousand years, on such an errand as he went on to Berlin? And the
+ English don't know _how_ to do it. They are childish (in some
+ things) beyond belief. An Oxford or Cambridge man never thinks of
+ going back to his university except about twice a lifetime when his
+ college formally asks him to come and dine. Then he dines as
+ docilely as a scared Freshman. I am a D.C.L. of Oxford. I know a
+ lot of their faculty. They are hospitality itself. But I've never
+ yet found out one important fact about the university. They never
+ tell me. I've been down at Cambridge time and again and stayed with
+ the Master of one of the colleges. I can no more get at what they
+ do and how they do it than I could get at the real meaning of a
+ service in a Buddhist Temple. I have spent a good deal of time with
+ Lord Rayleigh, who is the Chancellor of Cambridge University. He
+ never goes there. If he were to enter the town, all the men in the
+ university would have to stop their work, get on their parade-day
+ gowns, line-up by precedent and rank and go to meet him and go
+ through days of ceremony and incantations. I think the old man has
+ been there once in five years. Now this medięvalism must go--or be
+ modified. You fellers who have universities must work a real
+ alliance--a big job here. But to go on.
+
+ The best informed English opinion is ripe for a complete working
+ understanding with us. We've got to work up our end--get rid of our
+ ignorance of foreign affairs, our shirt-sleeve, complaining kind of
+ diplomacy, our sport of twisting the lion's tail and such things
+ and fall to and bring the English out. It's the _one_ race in this
+ world that's got the guts.
+
+ Hear this in confirmation: I suppose 1,000 English women have been
+ to see me--as a last hope--to ask me to have inquiries made in
+ Germany about their "missing" sons or husbands, generally sons.
+ They are of every class and rank and kind, from marchioness to
+ scrubwoman. Every one tells her story with the same dignity of
+ grief, the same marvellous self-restraint, the same courtesy and
+ deference and sorrowful pride. Not one has whimpered--but one. And
+ it turned out that she was a Belgian. It's the breed. Spartan
+ mothers were theatrical and pinchbeck compared to these women.
+
+ I know a lady of title, very well to do, who for a year got up at
+ 5:30 and drove herself in her own automobile from her home in
+ London to Woolwich where she worked all day long in a shell factory
+ as a volunteer and got home at 8 o'clock at night. At the end of a
+ year they wanted her to work in a London place where they keep the
+ records of the Woolwich work. "Think of it," said she, as she shook
+ her enormous diamond ear-rings as I sat next to her at dinner one
+ Sunday night not long ago, "think of it--what an easy time I now
+ have. I don't have to start till half-past seven and I get home at
+ half-past six!"
+
+ I could fill forty pages with stories like these. This very Sunday
+ I went to see a bedridden old lady who sent me word that she had
+ something to tell me. Here it was: An English flying man's machine
+ got out of order and he had to descend in German territory. The
+ Germans captured him and his machine. They ordered him to take two
+ of their flying men in his machine to show them a particular place
+ in the English lines. He declined. "Very well, we'll shoot you,
+ then." At last he consented. The three started. The Englishman
+ quietly strapped himself in. There were no straps for the two
+ Germans. The Englishman looped-the-loop. The Germans fell out. The
+ Englishman flew back home. "My son has been to see me from France.
+ He told me that. He knows the man"--thus said the old lady and
+ thanked me for coming to hear it! She didn't know that the story
+ has been printed.
+
+ But the real question is, "How are you?" Do you keep strong? Able,
+ without weariness, to keep up your good work? I heartily hope so,
+ old man. Take good care of yourself--very.
+
+ My love to Mrs. Alderman. Please don't quote me--yet. I have to be
+ very silent publicly about everything. After March 4th, I shall
+ again be free.
+
+ Yours always faithfully,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 33: A playful reference to the Ambassador's infant grandson,
+Walter H. Page, Jr.]
+
+[Footnote 34: Drowned on the Hampshire, June 5, 1916, off the coast of
+Scotland.]
+
+[Footnote 35: President of the University of Virginia.]
+
+[Footnote 36: Hampton Institute, at Hampton, Va.]
+
+[Footnote 37: C. Alphonso Smith, Professor of English, U.S. Naval
+Academy; Roosevelt Professor at Berlin, 1910-11.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+WASHINGTON IN THE SUMMER OF 1916
+
+
+I
+
+In July Page received a cablegram summoning him to Washington. This
+message did not explain why his presence was desired, nor on this point
+was Page ever definitely enlightened, though there were more or less
+vague statements that a "change of atmosphere" might better enable the
+Ambassador to understand the problems which were then engrossing the
+State Department.
+
+The President had now only a single aim in view. From the date of the
+so-called _Sussex_ "pledge," May 4, 1916, until the resumption of
+submarine warfare on February 1, 1917, Mr. Wilson devoted all his
+energies to bringing the warring powers together and establishing peace.
+More than one motive was inspiring the president in this determination.
+That this policy accorded with his own idealistic tendencies is true,
+and that he aspired to a position in history as the great "peace maker"
+is probably the fact, but he had also more immediate and practical
+purposes in mind. Above all, Mr. Wilson was bent on keeping the United
+States out of the war; he knew that there was only one certain way of
+preserving peace in this country, and that was by bringing the war
+itself to an end. "An early peace is all that can prevent the Germans
+from driving us at last into the war," Page wrote at about this time;
+and this single sentence gives the key to the President's activities for
+the succeeding nine months. The negotiations over the _Sussex_ had
+taught Mr. Wilson this truth. He understood that the pledge which the
+German Government had made was only a conditional one; that the
+submarine campaign had been suspended only for the purpose of giving the
+United States a breathing spell during which it could persuade Great
+Britain and France to make peace.
+
+"I repeat my proposal," Bernstorff cabled his government on April
+26,[38] "to suspend the submarine war at least for the period of
+negotiations. This would remove all danger of a breach [with the United
+States] and also enable Wilson to continue his labours in his great plan
+of bringing about a peace based upon the freedom of the seas--i.e., that
+for the future trade shall be free from all interference in time of war.
+According to the assurances which Wilson, through House, has given me,
+he would in that case take in hand measures directly against England. He
+is, however, of the opinion that it would be easier to bring about peace
+than to cause England to abandon the blockade. This last could only be
+brought about by war and it is well known that the means of war are
+lacking here. A prohibition of exports as a weapon against the blockade
+is not possible as the prevailing prosperity would suffer by it.
+
+"The inquiries made by House have led Wilson to believe that our enemies
+would not be unwilling to consider peace. In view of the present
+condition of affairs, I repeat that there is only one possible course,
+namely, that Your Excellency [Von Jagow] empower me to declare that we
+will enter into negotiations with the United States touching the conduct
+of the submarine war while the negotiations are proceeding. This would
+give us the advantage that the submarine war, being over Mr. Wilson's
+head, like the sword of Damocles, would compel him at once to take in
+hand the task of mediation."
+
+This dispatch seems sufficiently to explain all the happenings of the
+summer and winter of 1916-1917. It was sent to Berlin on April 26th; the
+German Government gave the _Sussex_ "pledge" on May 4th, eight days
+afterward. In this reply Germany declared that she would now expect Mr.
+Wilson to bring pressure upon Great Britain to secure a mitigation or
+suspension of the British blockade, and to this Mr. Wilson promptly and
+energetically replied that he regarded the German promise as an
+unconditional one and that the Government of the United States "cannot
+for a moment entertain, much less discuss, a suggestion that respect by
+German naval authorities for the rights of citizens of the United States
+upon the high seas should in any way or in the slightest degree be made
+contingent upon the conduct of any other government affecting the rights
+of neutrals and non-combatants. Responsibility in such matters is single
+not joint; absolute not relative."
+
+This reply gave satisfaction to both the United States and the countries
+of the Allies, and Page himself regarded it as a master stroke. "The
+more I think of it," he wrote on May 17th, "the better the strategy of
+the President appears, in his latest (and last) note to Germany. They
+laid a trap for him and he caught them in their own trap. The Germans
+had tried to 'put it up' to the President to commit the first unfriendly
+act. He now 'puts it up' to them. And this is at last bound to end the
+controversy if they sink another ship unlawfully. The French see this
+clearly and so do the best English, and it has produced a most
+favourable impression. The future? The German angling for peace will
+prove futile. They'll have another fit of fury. Whether they will again
+become reckless or commit 'mistakes' with their submarines will depend
+partly on their fury, partly on their fear to make a breach with the
+United States, but mainly on the state of their submarine fleet. How
+many have the English caught and destroyed? That's the main question,
+after all. The English view may not be fair to them. But nobody here
+believes that they will long abstain from the luxury of crime."
+
+It is thus apparent that when the Germans practically demanded, as a
+price of their abstention from indiscriminate submarine warfare, that
+Mr. Wilson should move against Great Britain in the matter of the
+blockade, they realized the futility of any such step, and that what
+they really expected to obtain was the presidential mediation for peace.
+President Wilson at once began to move in this direction. On May 27th,
+three weeks after the Sussex "pledge," he made an address in Washington
+before the League to Enforce Peace, which was intended to lay the basis
+for his approaching negotiations. It was in this speech that he made the
+statement that the United States was "not concerned with the causes and
+the objects" of the war. "The obscure fountains from which its
+stupendous flood has burst forth we are not interested to search for or
+to explain." This was another of those unfortunate sentences which made
+the President such an unsympathetic figure in the estimation of the
+Allies and seemed to indicate to them that he had no appreciation of the
+nature of the struggle. Though this attitude of non-partisanship, of
+equal balance between the accusations of the Allies and Germany, was
+intended to make the President acceptable as a mediator, the practical
+result was exactly the reverse, for Allied statesmen turned from Wilson
+as soon as those sentences appeared in print. The fact that this same
+oration specified the "freedom of the seas" as one of the foundation
+rocks of the proposed new settlement only accentuated this unfavourable
+attitude.
+
+This then was clearly the "atmosphere" which prevailed in Washington at
+the time that Page was summoned home. But Page's letters of this period
+indicate how little sympathy he entertained for such negotiations. "It
+is quite apparent," he had recently written to Colonel House, "that
+nobody in Washington understands the war. Come over and find out."
+Extracts from a letter which he wrote to his brother, Mr. Henry A. Page,
+of Aberdeen, North Carolina, are especially interesting when placed side
+by side with the President's statements of this particular time. These
+passages show that a two years' close observation of the Prussians in
+action had not changed Page's opinion of their motives or of their
+methods; in 1916, as in 1914, Page could see in this struggle nothing
+but a colossal buccaneering expedition on the part of Germany. "As I
+look at it," he wrote, "our dilly-dallying is likely to get us into war.
+The Germans want somebody to rob--to pay their great military bills.
+They've robbed Belgium and are still robbing it of every penny they can
+lay their hands on. They robbed Poland and Serbia--two very poor
+countries which didn't have much. They set out to rob France and have so
+far been stopped from getting to Paris. If they got to Paris there
+wouldn't be thirty cents' worth of movable property there in a week, and
+they'd levy fines of millions of francs a day. Their military scheme and
+teaching and open purpose is to make somebody pay for their vast
+military outlay of the last forty years. They must do that or go
+bankrupt. Now it looks as if they would go bankrupt. But in a little
+while they may be able to bombard New York and demand billions of
+dollars to refrain from destroying the city. That's the richest place
+left to spoil.
+
+"Now they say that--quite openly and quite frankly. Now if we keep
+'neutral' to a highwayman--what do we get for our pains? That's the
+mistake we are making. If we had sent Bernstorff home the day after the
+_Lusitania_ was sunk and recalled Gerard and begun to train an army we'd
+have had no more trouble with them. But since they have found out that
+they can keep us discussing things forever and a day, they will keep us
+discussing things till they are ready. We are very simple; and we'll get
+shot for it yet....
+
+"The prestige and fear of the United States has gone down, down,
+down-disappeared; and we are regarded as 'discussors,' incapable of
+action, scared to death of war. That's all the invitation that robbers,
+whose chief business is war, want--all the invitation they need. These
+devils are out for robbery--and you don't seem to believe it in the
+United States: that's the queer thing. This neutrality business makes us
+an easy mark. As soon as they took a town in Belgium, they asked for all
+the money in the town, all the food, all the movable property; and
+they've levied a tax every month since on every town and made the town
+government borrow the money to pay it. If a child in a town makes a
+disrespectful remark, they fine the town an extra $1,000. They haven't
+got enough so far to keep them going flush; and they won't unless they
+get Paris--which they can't do now. If they got London, they'd be rich;
+they wouldn't leave a shilling and they'd make all the rich English get
+all the money they own abroad. This is the reason that Frenchmen and
+Englishmen prefer to be killed by the 100,000. In the country over which
+their army has passed a crow would die of starvation and no human being
+has ten cents of real money. The Belgian Commission is spending more
+than 100 million dollars a year to keep the Belgians alive--only because
+they are robbed every day. They have a rich country and could support
+themselves but for these robbers. That's the meaning of the whole thing.
+And yet we treat them as if they were honourable people. It's only a
+question of time and of power when they will attack us, or the Canal, or
+South America. Everybody on this side the world knows that. And they are
+'yielding' to keep us out of this war so that England will not help us
+when they (the Germans) get ready to attack America.
+
+"There is the strangest infatuation in the United States with Peace--the
+strangest illusion about our safety without preparation."
+
+Several letters to Colonel House show the state of the British mind on
+the subject of the President's peace proposals:
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ Royal Bath and East Cliff Hotel,
+ Bournemouth,
+ 23 May, 1916.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ The motor trip that the Houses, the Wallaces, and the Pages took
+ about a year ago was the last trip (three days) that I had had out
+ of London; and I'd got pretty tired. The _China_ case having been
+ settled (and settled as we wanted it), I thought it a good time to
+ try to get away for a week. So here Mrs. Page and I are--very much
+ to my benefit. I've spent a beautiful week out of doors, on this
+ seashore; and I have only about ten per cent. of the fatal diseases
+ that I had a week ago. That is to say, I'm as sound as a dollar and
+ feel like a fighting cock.
+
+ Sir Edward was fine about the China[39] case. He never disputed the
+ principle of the inviolability of American ships on the high seas;
+ but the Admiralty maintained that some of these men are officers in
+ the German Army and are now receiving officers' pay. I think that
+ that is probably true. Nevertheless, the Admiralty had bungled the
+ case badly and Sir Edward simply rode over them. They have a fine
+ quarrel among themselves and we got all we wanted and asked for.
+
+ Of course, I can't make out the Germans but I am afraid some huge
+ deviltry is yet coming. When the English say that the Germans must
+ give up their militarism, I doubt if the Germans yet know what they
+ mean. They talk about conquered territory--Belgium, Poland, and the
+ rest. It hasn't entered their heads that they've got to give up
+ their armies and their military system. When this does get into
+ their heads, if it ever do, I think they may so swell with rage at
+ this "insult" that they may break loose in one last desperate
+ effort, ignoring the United States, defying the universe, running
+ amuck. Of course it would be foolhardy to predict this, but the
+ fear of it keeps coming into my mind. The fear is the more
+ persistent because, if the worst comes to them, the military caste
+ and perhaps the dynasty itself will prefer to die in one last
+ terrific onslaught rather than to make a peace on terms which will
+ require the practical extinction of their supreme power. This, I
+ conceive, is the really great danger that yet awaits the world--if
+ the Allies hold together till defeat and famine drive the Germans
+ to the utmost desperation.
+
+ In the meantime, the Allies still holding together as they are,
+ there's no peace yet in the British and French minds. They're after
+ the militarism of Prussia--not territory or other gains; and they
+ seem likely to get it, as much by the blockade as by victories on
+ land. Do you remember how in the Franco-Prussian War, Bismarck
+ refused to deal with the French Emperor? He demanded that
+ representatives of the French people should deal with him. He got
+ what he asked for and that was the last of the French Emperor.
+ Neither the French nor the English have forgotten that. You will
+ recall that the Germans starved Paris into submission. Neither the
+ French nor the English have forgotten that. These two leaves out of
+ the Germans' own book of forty-five years ago--these two and no
+ more--_may_ be forced on the Germans themselves. They are both
+ quite legitimate, too. You can read a recollection of both these
+ events between the lines of the interviews that Sir Edward and Mr.
+ Balfour recently gave to American newspapers.
+
+ There is nothing but admiration here for the strategy of the
+ President's last note to Germany. That was the cleverest play made
+ by anybody since the war began--clever beyond praise. Now he's "got
+ 'em." But nobody here doubts that they will say, sooner or later,
+ that the United States, not having forced the breaking of the
+ British blockade, has not kept its bargain--that's what they'll
+ say--and it is in order again to run amuck. This is what the
+ English think--provided the Germans have enough submarines left to
+ keep up real damage. By that time, too, it will be clear to the
+ Germans that the President can't bring peace so long as only one
+ side wishes peace. The Germans seem to have counted much on the
+ Irish uprising, which came to pass at all only because of the
+ customary English stupid bungling; and the net result has been only
+ to put the mass of the Irish on their mettle to show that they are
+ not Sinn Feiners. The final upshot will be to strengthen the
+ British Army. God surely is good to this bungling British
+ Government. Wind and wave and the will of High Heaven seem to work
+ for them. I begin to understand their stupidity and their
+ arrogance. If your enemies are such fools in psychological tactics
+ and Heaven is with you, why take the trouble to be alert? And why
+ be modest? Whatever the reason, these English are now more cocky
+ and confident than they've been before since the war began. They
+ are beginning to see results. The only question seems to be to hold
+ the Allies together, and they seem to be doing that. In fact, the
+ battle of Verdun has cemented them. They now have visible proof
+ that the German Army is on the wane. And they have trustworthy
+ evidence that the blockade is telling severely on the Germans.
+ Nobody, I think, expects to thrash 'em to a frazzle; but the almost
+ universal opinion here is that the hold of militarism will be
+ shaken loose. And the German High Canal Navy--what's to become of
+ that? Von Tirpitz is down and out, but there are thousands of
+ Germans, I hear, who complain of their naval inactivity. But God
+ only knows the future--I don't. I think that I do well if I keep
+ track of the present....
+
+ My kindest regards to Mrs. House,
+
+ Yours very heartily,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, 25 May, 1916.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ No utterance by anybody has so stirred the people of this kingdom
+ for many months as Sir Edward Grey's impromptu speech last night in
+ the House of Commons about Peace, when he called the German
+ Chancellor a first-class liar. I sent you to-day a clipping from
+ one of the morning papers. Every paper I pick up compliments Sir
+ Edward. Everyone says, "We must fight to a finish." The more
+ sensational press intimates that any Englishman who uses the word
+ "peace" ought to be shot. You have never seen such a rally as that
+ which has taken place in response to Sir Edward's cry. In the first
+ place, as you know, he is the most gentle of all the Cabinet, the
+ last man to get on a "war-rampage," the least belligerent and
+ rambunctious of the whole lot. When he felt moved to say that there
+ can be no peace till the German military despotism is broken,
+ everybody from one end of the Kingdom to the other seems to have
+ thrown up his hat and applauded. Except the half-dozen peace-cranks
+ in the House (Bryan sort of men) you can't find a man, woman,
+ child, or dog that isn't fired with the determination to see the
+ war through. The continued talk about peace which is reported
+ directly and indirectly from Germany--coming from Switzerland, from
+ Rome, from Washington--has made the English and the French very
+ angry: no, "angry" isn't quite the right word. It has made them
+ very determined. They feel insulted by the impudence of the
+ Germans, who, since they know they are bound to lose, seem to be
+ turning heaven and earth to induce neutrals to take their view of
+ peace. People are asking here, "If they are victorious, why doesn't
+ their fleet come out of the canal and take the seas, and again open
+ their commerce? Why do they whimper about the blockade when they
+ will not even risk a warship to break it?" You'll recall how the
+ talk here used to be that the English wouldn't wake up. You
+ wouldn't know 'em now. Your bulldog has got his grip and even
+ thunder doesn't disturb him.
+
+ Incidentally, all the old criticism of Sir Edward Grey seems to
+ have been forgotten. You hear nothing but praise of him now. I am
+ told that he spoke his impromptu speech last night with great fire
+ and at once left the House. His speech has caused a greater stir
+ than the Irish rebellion, showing that every Englishman feels that
+ Sir Edward said precisely what every man feels.
+
+ The Germans have apparently overdone and overworked their premature
+ peace efforts and have made things worse for them. They've
+ overplayed their hand.
+
+ In fact, I see no end of the war. The Allies are not going to quit
+ prematurely. They won't even discuss the subject yet with one
+ another, and the Germans, by their peace-talk of the sort that they
+ inspire, simply postpone the day when the Allies will take the
+ subject up.
+
+ All the while, too, the Allies work closer and closer together.
+ They'll soon be doing even their diplomatic work with neutrals, as
+ a unit--England and France as one nation, and (on great subjects)
+ Russia and Italy also with them.
+
+ I've talked lately not only with Sir Edward but with nearly half
+ the other members of the Cabinet, and they are all keyed up to the
+ same tune. The press of both parties, too, are (for once) wholly
+ agreed: Liberal and Conservative papers alike hold the same
+ war-creed.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+Before leaving for Washington Page discussed the situation personally
+with Sir Edward Grey and Lord Bryce. He has left memoranda of both
+interviews.
+
+_Notes of a Private and Informal Conversation with Sir Edward Grey, at
+his residence, on July 27, 1916, when I called to say good-bye before
+sailing on leave to the United States_
+
+... Sir Edward Grey went on to say quite frankly that two thoughts
+expressed in a speech by the President some months ago had had a very
+serious influence on British opinion. One thought was that the causes or
+objects of the war were of no concern to him, and the other was his (at
+least implied) endorsement of "the freedom of the seas," which the
+President did not define. Concerning the first thought, he understood of
+course that a neutral President could not say that he favoured one side
+or the other: everybody understood that and nobody expected him to take
+sides. But when the President said that the objects of the war did not
+concern him, that was taken by British public opinion as meaning a
+condemnation of the British cause, and it produced deep feeling.
+
+Concerning the "freedom of the seas," he believed that the first use of
+the phrase was made by Colonel House (on his return from one of his
+visits to Berlin)[40], but the public now regarded it as a German
+invention and it meant to the British mind a policy which would render
+British supremacy at sea of little value in time of war; and public
+opinion resented this. He knew perfectly well that at a convenient time
+new rules must be made governing the conduct of war at sea and on the
+land, too. But the German idea of "the freedom of the seas" ("freedom"
+was needed on land also) is repulsive to the British mind.
+
+He mentioned these things because they had produced in many minds an
+unwillingness, he feared, to use the good offices of the President
+whenever any mediatorial service might be done by a neutral. The
+tendency of these remarks was certainly in that direction. Yet Sir
+Edward carefully abstained from expressing such an unwillingness on his
+own part, and the inference from his tone and manner, as well as from
+his habitual attitude, is that he feels no unwillingness to use the
+President's good office, if occasion should arise.
+
+I asked what he meant by "mediatorial"--the President's offering his
+services or good offices on his own initiative? He said--No, not that.
+But the Germans might express to the President their willingness or even
+their definite wish to have an armistice, on certain terms, to discuss
+conditions of peace coupled with an intimation that he might sound the
+Allies. He did not expect the President to act on his own initiative,
+but at the request or at least at the suggestion of the German
+Government, he might conceivably sound the Allies--especially, he added,
+"since I am informed that the notion is wide-spread in America that the
+war will end inconclusively--as a draw." He smiled and remarked, as an
+aside, that he didn't think that this notion was held by any
+considerable group of people in any other country, certainly not in
+Great Britain.
+
+In further talk on this subject he said that none of the Allies could
+mention peace or discuss peace till France should express such a wish;
+for it is the very vitals of France that have received and are receiving
+the shock of such an assault as was never before launched against any
+nation. Unless France was ready to quit, none of France's Allies could
+mention peace, and France showed no mood to quit. Least of all could the
+English make or receive any such suggestion at least till her new great
+army had done its best; for until lately the severest fighting had not
+been done by the British, whose army had practically been held in
+reserve. There had for a long time been a perfect understanding between
+Joffre and Haig--that the English would wait to begin their offensive
+till the moment arrived when it best suited the French.
+
+The impression that I got from this part of the conversation was that
+Sir Edward hoped that I might convey to the President (as, of course, he
+could not) Sir Edward's idea of the effect of these parts of the
+President's speech on feeling in England toward him. Nowhere in the
+conversation did he make any request of me. Any one, overhearing it,
+might have supposed it to be a conversation between two men, with no
+object beyond expressing their views. But, of course, he hoped and meant
+that I should, in my own way, make known to the President what he said.
+He did not say that the President's good offices, when the time should
+come, would be unwelcome to him or to his government; and he meant, I am
+sure, to convey only the fear that by these assertions the President had
+planted an objection to his good offices in a large section of British
+opinion.
+
+Among the conditions of peace that Sir Edward himself personally would
+like to see imposed (he had not yet discussed the subject with any of
+his colleagues in the Government) was this: that the German Government
+should agree to submit to an impartial (neutral) commission or court the
+question, Who began the war and who is responsible for it? The German
+Chancellor and other high German officials have put it about and
+continue to put it about that England is responsible, and doubtless the
+German people at least believe it. All the governments concerned must
+(this is his idea) submit to the tribunal all its documents and other
+evidence bearing on the subject; and of course the finding of the
+tribunal must be published.
+
+Then he talked a good deal about the idea that lies behind the League
+for Enforcing Peace--in a sympathetic mood. He went on to point out how
+such a league--with force behind it--would at any one of three stages
+have prevented this war--(1) When England proposed a conference to
+France, Germany, Italy, and Russia, all agreed to it but Germany.
+Germany alone prevented a discussion. If the League to Enforce Peace had
+included England, France, Italy, and Russia--there would have been no
+war; for Germany would have seen at once that they would all be against
+her. (2) Later, when the Czar sent the Kaiser a personal telegram
+proposing to submit their differences to some tribunal, a League to
+Enforce Peace would have prevented war. And (3) when the question of the
+invasion of Belgium came up, every signatory to the treaty guaranteeing
+Belgium's integrity gave assurance of keeping the treaty--but Germany,
+and Germany gave an evasive answer. A league would again have prevented
+a war--or put all the military force of all its members against Germany.
+
+Throughout the conversation, which lasted about an hour, Sir Edward said
+more than once, as he has often said to me, that he hoped we should be
+able to keep the friction between our governments at the minimum. He
+would regard it as the greatest calamity if the ill-feeling that various
+events have stirred up in sections of public opinion on each side should
+increase or should become permanent. His constant wish and effort were
+to lessen and if possible to remove all misunderstandings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lord Bryce was one of the Englishmen with whom Page was especially
+inclined to discuss pending problems.
+
+ _Notes on a conversation with Lord Bryce, July 31, 1916_
+
+Lord Bryce spoke of the President's declaration that we were not
+concerned with the causes or objects of the war and he said that that
+remark had caused much talk--all, as he thought, on a misunderstanding
+of Mr. Wilson's meaning. "He meant, I take it, only that he did not
+propose at that time to discuss the causes or the objects of the war;
+and it is a pity that his sentence was capable of being interpreted to
+mean something else; and the sentence was published and discussed here
+apart from its context--a most unfair proceeding. I can imagine that the
+President and his friends may be much annoyed by this improper
+interpretation."
+
+I remarked that the body of the speech in which this remark occurred
+might have been written in Downing Street, so friendly was it to the
+Allies.
+
+"Quite, quite," said he.
+
+This was at dinner, Lady Bryce and Mrs. Page and he and I only being
+present.
+
+When he and I went into the library he talked more than an hour.
+
+"And what about this blacklist?" he asked. I told him. He had been in
+France for a week and did not know just what had been done. He said that
+that seemed to him a mistake. "The Government doesn't know
+America--neither does the British public. Neither does the American
+Government (no American government) know the British. Hence your
+government writes too many notes--all governments are likely to write
+too many notes. Everybody gets tired of seeing them and they lose their
+effect."
+
+He mentioned the blockade and said that it had become quite
+effective--wonderfully effective, in fact; and he implied that he did
+not see why we now failed to recognize it. Our refusal to recognize it
+had caused and doubtless is now causing such ill-feeling as exists in
+England.
+
+Then he talked long about peace and how it would probably be arranged.
+He judged, from letters that he receives from the United States as well
+as from Americans who come over here, that there was an expectation in
+America that the President would be called in at the peace settlement
+and that some persons even expected him to offer mediation. He did not
+see how that could be. He knew no precedent for such a proceeding. The
+President might, of course, on the definite request of either side, make
+a definite inquiry of the other side; but such a course would be, in
+effect, merely the transmission of an inquiry.
+
+But after peace was made and the time came to set up a League for
+Enforcing Peace, or some such machinery, of course the United States
+would be and would have to be a party to that if it were to succeed. He
+reminded me that a little group of men here, of whom he was one, early
+in the war sketched substantially the same plan that the American League
+to Enforce Peace has worked out. It had not seemed advisable to have any
+general public discussion of it in England till the war should end:
+nobody had time now to give to it.
+
+As he knew no precedent for belligerents to call in a third party when
+they met to end a war, so he knew no precedent for any outside
+government to protest against the invasion of a country by a Power that
+had signed a treaty to guarantee the integrity of the invaded
+country--no precedent, that is to say, for the United States to protest
+against the invasion of Belgium. "That precedent," I said, "was found in
+Hysteria."
+
+Lord Bryce, who had just returned from a visit to the British
+headquarters in France, hardly dared hope for the end of the war till
+next year; and the intervening time between now and the end would be a
+time, he feared, of renewed atrocities and increasing hatred. He cited
+the killing of Captain Fryatt of the _Brussels_ and the forcible
+deportation of young women from Lille and other towns in the provinces
+of France occupied by the Germans.
+
+The most definite idea that he had touching American-British relations
+was the fear that the anti-British feeling in the United States would
+become stronger and would outlast the war. "It is organized," he said.
+"The disaffected Germans and the disaffected Irish are interested in
+keeping it up." He asked what effect I thought the Presidential campaign
+would have on this feeling. He seemed to have a fear that somehow the
+campaign would give an occasion for stirring it up even more.
+
+"Good-bye. Give my regards to all my American friends; and I'm proud to
+say there are a good many of them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One episode that was greatly stirring both Great Britain and the United
+States at this time was the trial of Sir Roger Casement, the Irish
+leader who had left Wilhelmshaven for Ireland in a German submarine and
+who had been captured at Tralee in the act of landing arms and munitions
+for an Irish insurrection. Casement's subsequent trial and conviction on
+a charge of high treason had inspired a movement in his favour from
+Irish-Americans, the final outcome of which was that the Senate, in
+early August, passed a resolution asking the British Government for
+clemency and stipulating that this resolution should be presented to the
+Foreign Office. Page was then on the ocean bound for the United States
+and the delicate task of presenting this document to Sir Edward Grey
+fell upon Mr. Laughlin, who was now Chargé d'affaires. Mr. Laughlin is a
+diplomat of great experience, but this responsibility at first seemed to
+be something of a poser even for him. He had received explicit
+instructions from Washington to present this resolution, and the one
+thing above all which a diplomatic officer must do is to carry out the
+orders of his government, but Mr. Laughlin well knew that, should he
+present this paper in the usual manner, the Foreign Secretary might
+decline to receive it; he might regard it as an interference with
+matters that exclusively concerned the sovereign state. Mr. Laughlin,
+however, has a technique all his own, and, in accordance with this, he
+asked for an interview with Sir Edward Grey to discuss a matter of
+routine business. However, the Chargé d'affaires carried the Casement
+resolution tucked away in an inside pocket when he made his call.
+
+Like Mr. Page, Mr. Laughlin was on the friendliest terms with Sir Edward
+Grey, and, after the particular piece of business had been transacted,
+the two men, as usual, fell into casual conversation. Casement then
+loomed large in the daily press, and the activities of the American
+Senate had likewise caused some commotion in London. In round-about
+fashion Mr. Laughlin was able to lead Sir Edward to make some reference
+to the Casement case.
+
+"I see the Senate has passed a resolution asking clemency," said the
+Foreign Secretary--exactly the remark which the American wished to
+elicit.
+
+"Yes," was the reply. "By the way, I happen to have a copy of the
+resolution with me. May I give it to you?"
+
+"Yes, I should like to have it."
+
+The Foreign Secretary read it over with deliberation.
+
+"This is a very interesting document," he said, when he had finished.
+"Would you have any objection if I showed it to the Prime Minister?"
+
+Of course that was precisely what Mr. Laughlin did wish, and he replied
+that this was the desire of his government. The purpose of his visit had
+been accomplished, and he was able to cable Washington that its
+instructions had been carried out and that the Casement resolution had
+been presented to the British Government. Simultaneously with his
+communication, however, he reported also that the execution of Roger
+Casement had taken place. In fact, it was being carried out at the time
+of the interview. This incident lends point to Page's memorandum of the
+last interview which he had before leaving England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+August 1st. I lunched with Mr. Asquith. One does not usually bring away
+much from his conversations, and he did not say much to-day worth
+recording. But he showed a very eager interest in the Presidential
+campaign, and he confessed that he felt some anxiety about the
+anti-British feeling in the United States. This led him to tell me that
+he could not in good conscience interfere with Casement's execution, in
+spite of the shoals of telegrams that he was receiving from the United
+States. This man, said he, visited Irish prisoners in German camps and
+tried to seduce them to take up arms against Great Britain--their own
+country. When they refused, the Germans removed them to the worst places
+in their Empire and, as a result, some of them died. Then Casement came
+to Ireland in a German man-of-war (a submarine) accompanied by a ship
+loaded with guns. "In all good conscience to my country and to my
+responsibilities I cannot interfere." He hoped that thoughtful opinion
+in the United States would see this whole matter in a fair and just way.
+
+I asked him about anti-American feeling in Great Britain. He said: "Do
+not let that unduly disturb you. At bottom we understand you. At bottom
+the two people surely understand one another and have unbreakable bonds
+of sympathy. No serious breach is conceivable." He went on quite
+earnestly: "Mr. Page, after any policy or plan is thought out on its
+merits my next thought always is how it may affect our relations with
+the United States. That is always a fundamental consideration."
+
+I ventured to say that if he would keep our relations smooth on the
+surface, I'd guarantee their stability at the bottom. It's the surface
+that rolls high at times, and the danger is there. Keep the surface
+smooth and the bottom will take care of itself.
+
+Then he asked about Mexico, as he usually has when I have talked with
+him. I gave him as good a report as I could, reminding him of the great
+change in the attitude of all Latin-America caused by the President's
+patient policy with Mexico. When he said, "Mexico is a bad problem," I
+couldn't resist the impulse to reply: "When Mexico troubles you, think
+of--Ireland. As there are persons in England who concern themselves with
+Mexico, so there are persons in the United States who concern themselves
+about Ireland. Ireland and Mexico have each given trouble for two
+centuries. Yet these people talk about them as if they could remove all
+trouble in a month."
+
+"Quite true," he said, and smiled himself into silence. Then he talked
+about more or less frivolous subjects; and, as always, he asked about
+Mr. Bryan and Mr. Roosevelt, "alike now, I suppose, in their present
+obscure plight." I told him I was going from his house to the House of
+Lords to see Sir Edward Grey metamorphosed into Viscount Grey of
+Fallodon.
+
+"The very stupidest of the many stupid ceremonies that we have," said
+he--very truly.
+
+He spoke of my "onerous duties" and so on and so on--tut, tut! talk that
+gets nowhere. But he did say, quite sincerely, I think, that my
+frankness called forth frankness and avoided misunderstanding; for he
+has said that to other people about me.
+
+Such is the Prime Minister of Great Britain in this supreme crisis in
+English history, a remarkable man, of an abnormally quick mind, pretty
+nearly a great man, but now a spent force, at once nimble and weary.
+History may call him Great. If it do, he will owe this judgment to the
+war, with the conduct of which his name will be forever associated.
+
+
+II
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Page's homecoming was a tragedy. They sailed from Liverpool
+on August 3rd, and reached New York on the evening of August 11th. But
+sad news awaited them upon the dock. About two months previously their
+youngest son, Frank, had been married to Miss Katherine Sefton, of
+Auburn, N.Y., and the young couple had settled down in Garden City, Long
+Island. That was the summer when the epidemic of infantile paralysis
+swept over the larger part of the United States. The young bride was
+stricken; the case was unusually rapid and unusually severe; at the
+moment of the Pages' arrival, they were informed that there was
+practically no hope; and Mrs. Frank Page died at two o'clock on the
+afternoon of the following day. The Pages had always been a particularly
+united and happy family; this was the first time that they had suffered
+from any domestic sorrow of this kind, and the Ambassador was so
+affected that it was with difficulty that he could summon himself for
+the task that lay ahead.
+
+In a few days, however, he left for Washington. He has himself
+described his experience at the Capital in words that must inevitably
+take their place in history. To appreciate properly the picture which
+Page gives, it must be remembered that the city and the officialdom
+which he portrays are the same city and the same men who six months
+afterward declared war on Germany. When Page reached Washington, the
+Presidential campaign was in full swing, with Mr. Wilson as the
+Democratic candidate and Mr. Charles E. Hughes as the Republican. But
+another crisis was absorbing the nation's attention: the railway unions,
+comprising practically all the 2,000,000 railway employees in the United
+States, were threatening to strike--ostensibly for an eight-hour day, in
+reality for higher wages.
+
+ _Mr. Page's memorandum of his visit to Washington in August, 1916_
+
+The President was very courteous to me, in his way. He invited me to
+luncheon the day after I arrived. Present: the President, Mrs. Wilson,
+Miss Bones, Tom Bolling, his brother-in-law, and I. The conversation was
+general and in the main jocular. Not a word about England, not a word
+about a foreign policy or foreign relations.
+
+He explained that the threatened railway strike engaged his whole mind.
+I asked to have a talk with him when his mind should be free. Would I
+not go off and rest and come back?--I preferred to do my minor errands
+with the Department, but I should hold myself at his convenience and at
+his command.
+
+Two weeks passed. Another invitation to lunch. Sharp, the Ambassador to
+France, had arrived. He, too, was invited. Present: the President, Mrs.
+Wilson, Mrs. Wallace, the Misses Smith of New Orleans, Miss Bones,
+Sharp, and I. Not one word about foreign affairs.
+
+After luncheon, the whole party drove to the Capitol, where the
+President addressed Congress on the strike, proposing legislation to
+prevent it and to forestall similar strikes. It is a simple ceremony and
+somewhat impressive. The Senators occupy the front seats in the House,
+the Speaker presides and the President of the Senate sits on his right.
+An escorting committee is sent out to bring the President in. He walks
+to the clerk's or reader's desk below the presiding officer's, turns and
+shakes hands with them both and then proceeds to read his speech, very
+clearly and audibly. Some passages were applauded. When he had done, he
+again shook hands with the presiding officer and went out, preceded and
+followed by the White House escort. I sat in the Presidential (or
+diplomatic?) gallery with the White House party, higgledy-piggledy.
+
+The speech ended, the President drove to the White House with his escort
+in his car. The crowds in the corridors and about the doors waited and
+crowded to see Mrs. Wilson, quite respectful but without order or
+discipline. We had to push our way through them. Now and then a
+policeman at a distance would yell loudly, "Make way there!"
+
+When we reached the White House, I asked the doorman if the President
+had arrived.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Does he expect me to go in and say good-bye?"
+
+"No."
+
+Thus he had no idea of talking with me now, if ever. Not at lunch nor
+after did he suggest a conversation about American-British affairs or
+say anything about my seeing him again.
+
+This threatened strike does hold his whole mind--bothers him greatly.
+It seems doubtful if he can avert a general strike. The Republicans are
+trying "to put him in a political hole," and they say he, too, is
+playing politics. Whoever be to blame for it, it is true that politics
+is in the game. Nobody seems to foresee who will make capital out of it.
+Surely I can't.
+
+There's no social sense at the White House. The President has at his
+table family connections only--and they say few or no distinguished men
+and women are invited, except the regular notables at the set
+dinners--the diplomatic, the judiciary, and the like. His table is his
+private family affair--nothing more. It is very hard to understand why
+so intellectual a man doesn't have notable men about him. It's the
+college professor's village habit, I dare say. But it's a great
+misfortune. This is one way in which Mr. Wilson shuts out the world and
+lives too much alone, feeding only on knowledge and subjects that he has
+already acquired and not getting new views or fresh suggestions from men
+and women.
+
+He sees almost nobody except members of Congress for whom he sends for
+special conferences, and he usually sees these in his office. The
+railroad presidents and men he met in formal conference--no social
+touch.
+
+A member of his Cabinet told me that Mr. Wilson had shown confidence in
+him, given him a wide range of action in his own Department and that he
+relies on his judgment. This Cabinet member of course attends the
+routine state dinners and receptions, as a matter of required duty. But
+as for any social recognition of his existence--he had never received a
+hint or nod. Nor does any member of the Cabinet (except, no doubt, Mr.
+McAdoo, his son-in-law). There is no social sense nor reason in this. In
+fact, it works to a very decided disadvantage to the President and to
+the Nation.
+
+By the way, that a notable man in our educational life could form such a
+habit does not speak well for our educational life.
+
+What an unspeakably lamentable loss of opportunity! This is the more
+remarkable and lamentable because the President is a charming
+personality, an uncommonly good talker, a man who could easily make
+personal friends of all the world. He does his own thinking, untouched
+by other men's ideas. He receives nothing from the outside. His domestic
+life is spent with his own, nobody else, except House occasionally. His
+contact with his own Cabinet is a business man's contact with his
+business associates and kind--at his office.
+
+He declined to see Cameron Forbes[41] on his return from the
+Philippines.
+
+The sadness of this mistake!
+
+Another result is--the President doesn't hear the frank truth about the
+men about him. He gives nobody a chance to tell him. Hence he has
+several heavy encumbrances in his official family.
+
+The influence of this lone-hand way of playing the game extends very
+far. The members of the Cabinet do not seem to have the habit of
+frankness with one another. Each lives and works in a water-tight
+compartment. I sat at luncheon (at a hotel) with Lansing, Secretary of
+State; Lane, Secretary of the Interior; Gregory, Attorney-General;
+Baker, Secretary of War; Daniels, Secretary of the Navy; and Sharp,
+Ambassador to France; and all the talk was jocular or semi-jocular, and
+personal--mere cheap chaff. Not a question was asked either of the
+Ambassador to France or of the Ambassador to Great Britain about the war
+or about our foreign relations. The war wasn't mentioned. Sharp and I
+might have come from Bungtown and Jonesville and not from France and
+England. We were not encouraged to talk--the local personal joke held
+the time and conversation. This astounding fact must be the result of
+this lone-hand, water-tight compartment method and--of the neutrality
+suppression of men. The Vice-President confessed to his neighbour at a
+Gridiron dinner that he had read none of the White Papers, or Orange
+Papers, etc., of the belligerent governments--confessed this with
+pride--lest he should form an opinion and cease to be neutral! Miss X, a
+member of the President's household, said to Mrs. Y, the day we lunched
+there, that she had made a remark privately to Sharp showing her
+admiration of the French.
+
+"Was that a violation of neutrality?" she asked in all seriousness.
+
+I can see it in no other way but this: the President suppressed free
+thought and free speech when he insisted upon personal neutrality. He
+held back the deliberate and spontaneous thought and speech of the
+people except the pro-Germans, who saw their chance and improved it! The
+mass of the American people found themselves forbidden to think or talk,
+and this forbidding had a sufficient effect to make them take refuge in
+indifference. It's the President's job. He's our leader. He'll attend to
+this matter. We must not embarrass him. On this easy cushion of
+non-responsibility the great masses fell back at their intellectual and
+moral ease--softened, isolated, lulled.
+
+That wasn't leadership in a democracy. Right here is the President's
+vast failure. From it there is now no escape unless the Germans commit
+more submarine crimes. They have kept the United States for their own
+exploiting after the war. They have thus had a real triumph of us.
+
+I have talked in Washington with few men who showed any clear conception
+of the difference between the Germans and the British. To the minds of
+these people and high Government officials, German and English are alike
+foreign nations who are now foolishly engaged in war. Two of the men who
+look upon the thing differently are Houston[42] and Logan Waller
+Page[43]. In fact, there is no realization of the war in Washington.
+Secretary Houston has a proper perspective of the situation. He would
+have done precisely what I recommended--paved the way for claims and let
+the English take their course. "International law" is no strict code and
+it's all shot to pieces anyhow.
+
+The Secretary [of State] betrayed not the slightest curiosity about our
+relations with Great Britain. I saw him several times--(1) in his
+office; (2) at his house; (3) at the French Ambassador's; (4) at
+Wallace's; (5) at his office; (6) at Crozier's[44]--this during my first
+stay in Washington. The only remark he made was that I'd find a
+different atmosphere in Washington from the atmosphere in London. Truly.
+All the rest of his talk was about "cases." Would I see Senator Owen?
+Would I see Congressman Sherley? Would I take up this "case" and that?
+His mind ran on "cases."
+
+Well, at Y's, when I was almost in despair, I rammed down him a sort of
+general statement of the situation as I saw it; at least, I made a
+start. But soon he stopped me and ran off at a tangent on some
+historical statement I had made, showing that his mind was not at all on
+the real subject, the large subject. When I returned to Washington, and
+he had read my interviews with Grey, Asquith, and Bryce[45], and my own
+statement, he still said nothing, but he ceased to talk of "cases." At
+my final interview he said that he had had difficulty in preventing
+Congress from making the retaliatory resolution mandatory. He had tried
+to keep it back till the very end of the session, etc.
+
+This does not quite correspond with what the President told me--that the
+State Department asked for this retaliatory resolution.
+
+I made specific suggestions in my statement to the President and to
+Lansing. They have (yet) said nothing about them. I fancy they will not.
+I have found nowhere any policy--only "cases."
+
+I proposed to Baker and Daniels that they send a General and an Admiral
+as attachés to London. They both agreed. Daniels later told me that
+Baker mentioned it to the President and he "stepped on the suggestion
+with both feet." I did not bring it up. In the Franco-Prussian War of
+1870, both General McClellan (or Sheridan[46]?) and General Forsythe
+were sent to the German Army. Our military ideas have shrunk since then!
+
+I find at this date (a month before the Presidential election), the
+greatest tangle and uncertainty of political opinion that I have ever
+observed in our country. The President, in spite of his unparalleled
+leadership and authority in domestic policy, is by no means certain of
+election. He has the open hostility of the Germans--all very well, if he
+had got the fruits of a real hostility to them; but they have, in many
+ways, directed his foreign policy. He has lost the silent confidence of
+many men upon whose conscience this great question weighs heavily. If he
+be defeated he will owe his defeat to the loss of confidence in his
+leadership on this great subject. His opponent has put forth no
+clear-cut opinion. He plays a silent game on the German "issue." Yet he
+will command the support of many patriotic men merely as a lack of
+confidence in the President.
+
+Nor do I see any end of the results of this fundamental error. In the
+economic and political readjustment of the world we shall be "out of the
+game," in any event--unless we are yet forced into the war by Hughes's
+election or by the renewal of the indiscriminate use of submarines by
+the Germans.
+
+There is a great lesson in this lamentable failure of the President
+really to lead the Nation. The United States stands for democracy and
+free opinion as it stands for nothing else and as no other nation stands
+for it. Now when democracy and free opinion are at stake as they have
+not before been, we take a "neutral" stand--we throw away our very
+birthright. We may talk of "humanity" all we like: we have missed the
+largest chance that ever came to help the large cause that brought us
+into being as a Nation....
+
+And the people, sitting on the comfortable seats of neutrality upon
+which the President has pushed them back, are grateful for Peace, not
+having taken the trouble to think out what Peace has cost us and cost
+the world--except so many as have felt the uncomfortable stirrings of
+the national conscience.
+
+There is not a man in our State Department or in our Government who has
+ever met any prominent statesmen in any European Government--except the
+third Assistant Secretary of State, who has no authority in forming
+policies; there is not a man who knows the atmosphere of Europe. Yet
+when I proposed that one of the under Secretaries should go to England
+on a visit of a few weeks for observation, the objection arose that
+such a visit would not be "neutral."
+
+
+III
+
+The extraordinary feature of this experience was that Page had been
+officially summoned home, presumably to discuss the European situation,
+and that neither the President nor the State Department apparently had
+the slightest interest in his visit.
+
+"The President," Page wrote to Mr. Laughlin, "dominates the whole show
+in a most extraordinary way. The men about him (and he sees them only on
+'business') are very nearly all very, very small fry, or worse--the
+narrowest twopenny lot I've ever come across. He has no real companions.
+Nobody talks to him freely and frankly. I've never known quite such a
+condition in American life." Perhaps the President had no desire to
+discuss inconvenient matters with his Ambassador to Great Britain, but
+Page was certainly determined to have an interview with the President.
+"I'm not going back to London," he wrote Mr. Laughlin, "till the
+President has said something to me or at least till I have said
+something to him. I am now going down to Garden City and New York till
+the President send for me; or, if he do not send for me, I'm going to
+his house and sit on his front steps till he come out!" Page had brought
+from England one of the medals which the Germans had struck in honour of
+the _Lusitania_ sinking, and one reason why he particularly wished to
+see the President alone was to show him this memento.
+
+Another reason was that in early September Page had received important
+news from London concerning the move which Germany was making for peace
+and the attitude of Great Britain in this matter. The several plans
+which Germany had had under consideration had now taken the form of a
+definite determination to ask for an armistice before winter set in. A
+letter from Mr. Laughlin, Chargé d'affaires in Page's absence, tells the
+story.
+
+ _From Irwin Laughlin_
+
+ Embassy of the United States of America.
+ London, August 30, 1916.
+
+ DEAR MR. PAGE:
+
+ For some little time past I have heard persistent rumours, which
+ indeed are more than rumours, since they have come from important
+ sources, of an approaching movement by Germany toward an early
+ armistice. They have been so circumstantial and so closely
+ connected--in prospect--with the President, that I have examined
+ them with particular attention and I shall try to give you the
+ results, and my conclusions, with the recommendation that you take
+ the matter up directly with the President and the Secretary of
+ State. I have been a little at a loss to decide how to communicate
+ what I have learned to the Government in Washington, for the
+ present conditions make it impossible to set down what I want to
+ say in an official despatch, but the fortunate accident of your
+ being in the United States gives me the safe opportunity I want,
+ and so I send my information to you, and by the pouch, as time is
+ of less importance than secrecy.
+
+ There seems to be no doubt that Germany is casting about for an
+ opportunity to effect an armistice, if possible before the winter
+ closes in. She hopes it may result in peace--a peace more or less
+ favourable to her, of course--but even if such a result should fail
+ of accomplishment she would have gained a breathing space; have
+ secured an opportunity to improve her strategic position in a
+ military sense, perhaps by shortening her line in Flanders: have
+ stiffened the resistance of her people; and probably have
+ influenced a certain body of neutral opinion not only in her favour
+ but against her antagonists.
+
+ I shall not try to mention the various sources from which the
+ threads that compose this fabric have been drawn, but I finally
+ fastened on X of the Admiralty as a man with whom I could talk
+ profitably and confidentially, and he told me positively that his
+ information showed that Germany was looking in the direction I have
+ indicated, and that she would soon approach the President on the
+ subject--even if she had not already taken the first steps toward
+ preparing her advance to him.
+
+ I asked X if he thought it well for me to broach the subject to
+ Lord Grey and he suggested that I first consult Y, which I did. The
+ latter seemed very wary at the outset, but he warmed up at last and
+ in the course of the conversation told me he had reliable
+ information that when Bethmann-Hollweg went to Munich just before
+ the beginning of the allied offensive in the west in June he told
+ the King of Bavaria that he was confident the Allies would be
+ obliged to begin overtures for peace next October; adding that if
+ they didn't Germany would have to do so. The King, it appears,
+ asked him how Germany could approach the Allies if it proved to be
+ advisable and he replied: "Through our good friend Wilson."
+
+ I asked Y if the King of Spain's good offices would not be enlisted
+ jointly with those of the President in attempting to arrange an
+ armistice, but he thought not, and said that the King of Spain was
+ very well aware that the Allies would not consider anything short
+ of definite peace proposals from Germany and that His Majesty knew
+ the moment for them had not arrived. I then finally asked him point
+ blank if he thought the Germans would approach the President for an
+ armistice, and, if so, when. He said he was inclined to think they
+ might do so perhaps about October. On my asking him if he was
+ disposed to let me communicate his opinion privately to the
+ Government in Washington he replied after some hesitation that he
+ had no objection, but he quickly added that I must make it clear at
+ the same time that the British Government would not listen to any
+ such proposals.
+
+ These conversations took place during the course of last week, and
+ on Sunday--the 27th--I invited the Spanish Ambassador to luncheon
+ at Tangley when I was able to get him to confirm what Y had said of
+ his Sovereign's attitude and opinions.
+
+ I may mention for what it is worth that on Hoover's last trip to
+ Germany he was told by Bullock, of the Philadelphia _Ledger_, that
+ Zimmermann of the Berlin Foreign Office had told him that the
+ Germans had intended in June to take steps for an armistice which
+ were prevented by the preparations for the allied offensive in the
+ west.
+
+ Y was very emphatic in what he said of the attitude of his
+ government and the British people toward continuing the war to an
+ absolutely conclusive end, and I was much impressed. He said among
+ other things that the execution of Captain Fryatt had had a
+ markedly perceptible effect in hardening British public opinion
+ against Germany and fixing the determination to fight to a
+ relentless finish. This corresponds exactly with my own
+ observations.
+
+ I leave this letter entirely in your hands. You will know what use
+ to make of it. It is meant as an official communication in
+ everything but the usual form from which I have departed for
+ reasons I need not explain further.
+
+ I look forward eagerly to your return,
+
+ Very sincerely yours,
+
+ IRWIN LAUGHLIN.
+
+Page waited five weeks before he succeeded in obtaining his interview
+with Mr. Wilson.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ The New Willard, Washington, D.C.
+
+ Thursday, September 21, 1916.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ While I am waiting for a convenient time to come when you will see
+ me for a conference and report, I send you notes on conversations
+ with Lord Grey and Lord Bryce[47]. They are, in effect, though of
+ course not in form, messages to you.
+
+ The situation between our government and Great Britain seems to me
+ most alarming; and (let me add) easily removable, if I can get the
+ ear of anybody in authority. But I find here only an atmosphere of
+ suspicion--unwarranted by facts and easily dissipated by straight
+ and simple friendly methods. I am sure of this.
+
+ I have, besides, a most important and confidential message for you
+ from the British Government which they prefer should be orally
+ delivered.
+
+ And I have written out a statement of my own study of the situation
+ and of certain proposals which, I think, if they commend themselves
+ to you, will go far to remove this dangerous tension. I hope to go
+ over them with you at your convenience.
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+The situation was alarming for more reasons than the determination of
+Germany to force the peace issue. The State Department was especially
+irritated at this time over the blockade. Among the "trade advisers"
+there was a conviction, which all Page's explanations had not destroyed,
+that Great Britain was using the blockade as a means of destroying
+American commerce and securing America's customers for herself. Great
+Britain's regulations on the blacklist and "bunker coal" had intensified
+this feeling. In both these latter questions Page regarded the British
+actions as tactless and unjust; he had had many sharp discussions at the
+Foreign Office concerning them, but had not made much headway in his
+efforts to obtain their abandonment. The purpose of the "blacklist" was
+to strike at neutral firms with German affiliations which were trading
+with Germany. The Trading with the Enemy Act provided that such firms
+could not trade with Great Britain; that British vessels must refuse to
+accept their cargoes, and that any neutral ship which accepted such
+cargoes would be denied bunker coal at British ports. Under this law the
+Ministry of Blockade issued a "blacklist" of more than 1,000 proscribed
+exporting houses in the United States. So great was the indignation
+against this boycott in the United States that Congress, in early
+September, had passed a retaliatory act; this gave the President the
+authority at any time to place an embargo upon the exports to the United
+States of countries which discriminated against American firms and also
+to deny clearance to ships which refused to accept American cargoes. The
+two countries indeed seemed to be hastening toward a crisis.
+
+Page's urgent letter to Mr. Wilson brought a telegram from Mr. Tumulty
+inviting the Ambassador to spend the next evening and night with the
+President at Shadow Lawn, the seaside house on the New Jersey coast in
+which Mr. Wilson was spending the summer. Mr. Wilson received his old
+friend with great courtesy and listened quietly and with apparent
+interest to all that he had to say. The written statement to which Page
+refers in his letter told the story of Anglo-American relations from the
+time of the Panama tolls repeal up to the time of Page's visit to Shadow
+Lawn. Quotations have already been made from it in preceding chapters,
+and the ideas which it contains have abundantly appeared in letters
+already printed. The document was an eloquent plea for American
+coöperation with the Allies--for the dismissal of Bernstorff, for the
+adoption of a manly attitude toward Germany, and for the vindication of
+a high type of Americanism.
+
+Page showed the President the _Lusitania_ medal, but that did not
+especially impress him. "The President said to me," wrote Page in
+reference to this visit, "that when the war began he and all the men he
+met were in hearty sympathy with the Allies; but that now the sentiment
+toward England had greatly changed. He saw no one who was not vexed and
+irritated by the arbitrary English course. That is, I fear, true--that
+he sees no one but has a complaint. So does the Secretary of State, and
+the Trade Bureau and all the rest in Washington. But in Boston, in New
+York, and in the South and in Auburn, N.Y., I saw no one whose sympathy
+with the Allies had undergone any fundamental change. I saw men who felt
+vexed at such an act as the blacklist, but that was merely vexation, not
+a fundamental change of feeling. Of course, there came to see me men who
+had 'cases.' Now these are the only kind of men, I fear, whom the
+Government at Washington sees--these and the members of Congress whom
+the Germans have scared or have 'put up' to scare the Government--who
+are 'twisting the lion's tail,' in a word."
+
+"The President said," wrote Page immediately after coming from Shadow
+Lawn, "Tell those gentlemen for me'--and then followed a homily to the
+effect that a damage done to any American citizen is a damage to him,
+etc. He described the war as a result of many causes, some of long
+origin. He spoke of England's having the earth and of Germany wanting
+it. Of course, he said, the German system is directly opposed to
+everything American. But I do not gather that he thought that this
+carried any very great moral reprehensibility.
+
+"He said that he wouldn't do anything with the retaliatory act till
+after election lest it might seem that he was playing politics. But he
+hinted that if there were continued provocation afterward (in case he
+were elected) he would. He added that one of the worst provocations was
+the long English delay in answering our Notes. Was this delay due to
+fear or shame? He evidently felt that such a delay showed contempt. He
+spoke of the Bryan treaty[48]. But on no question had the British
+'locked horns' with us--on no question had they come to a clear issue so
+that the matter might be referred to the Commission."
+
+Page delivered his oral message about the German determination to obtain
+an armistice. This was to the effect that Great Britain would not grant
+it. Page intimated that Britain would be offended if the President
+proposed it.
+
+"If an armistice, no," answered Mr. Wilson. "That's a military matter
+and is none of my business. But if they propose an armistice looking
+toward peace--yes, I shall be glad."
+
+The experience was an exceedingly trying one for both men. The
+discussion showed how far apart were the President and his Ambassador on
+practically every issue connected with the crisis. Naturally the
+President's reference to the causes of the war--that there were many
+causes, some of them of long persistence, and that Great Britain's
+domination of the "earth" was one of them--conflicted with the judgment
+of a man who attributed the origin of the struggle to German aggression.
+The President's statement that American sympathy for the Allies had now
+changed to irritation, and the tolerant attitude toward Germany which
+Mr. Wilson displayed, affected Page with the profoundest discouragement.
+The President's intimation that he would advance Germany's request for
+an armistice, if it looked toward peace--this in reply to Page's message
+that Great Britain would not receive such a proposal in a kindly
+spirit--seemed to lay the basis of further misunderstandings. The
+interview was a disheartening one for Page. Many people whom the
+Ambassador met in the course of this visit still retain memories of his
+fervour in what had now become with him a sacred cause. With many
+friends and officials he discussed the European situation almost like a
+man inspired. The present writer recalls two long conversations with
+Page at this time: the recollection of his brilliant verbal portraiture,
+his description of the determination of Englishmen, his admiration for
+the heroic sacrifice of Englishwomen, remain as about the most vivid
+memories of a life-time. And now the Ambassador had brought this same
+eloquence to the President's ear at Shadow Lawn. It was in this
+interview that Page had hoped to show Mr. Wilson the real merits of the
+situation, and persuade him to adopt the course to which the national
+honour and safety pointed; he talked long and eloquently, painting the
+whole European tragedy with that intensity and readiness of utterance
+and that moral conviction which had so moved all others with whom he had
+come into contact during this memorable visit to the United States; but
+Mr. Wilson was utterly cold, utterly unresponsive, interested only in
+ending the war. The talk lasted for a whole morning; its nature may be
+assumed from the many letters already printed; but Page's voice, when it
+attempted to fire the conscience of the President, proved as ineffective
+as his pen. However, there was nothing rasping or contentious about the
+interview. The two men discussed everything with the utmost calmness and
+without the slightest indications of ill-nature. Both men had in mind
+their long association, both inevitably recalled the hopes with which
+they had begun their official relationship three years before, at that
+time neither having the faintest intimation of the tremendous problems
+that were to draw them asunder. Mr. Wilson at this meeting did not
+impress his Ambassador as a perverse character, but as an extremely
+pathetic one. Page came away with no vexation or anger, but with a real
+feeling for a much suffering and a much perplexed statesman. The fact
+that the President's life was so solitary, and that he seemed to be so
+completely out of touch with men and with the living thoughts of the
+world, appealed strongly to Page's sympathies. "I think he is the
+loneliest man I have ever known," Page remarked to his son Frank after
+coming away from this visit.
+
+Page felt this at the time, for, as he rose to say good-bye to the
+President, he put his hand upon his shoulder. At this Mr. Wilson's eyes
+filled with tears and he gave Page an affectionate good-bye. The two men
+never met again.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 38: This is quoted from a hitherto unpublished despatch of
+Bernstorff's to Berlin which is found among Page's papers.]
+
+[Footnote 39: The _China_ case was a kind of _Trent_ case reversed. In
+1861 the American ship _San Jacinto_ stopped the British vessel _Trent_
+and took off Mason and Slidell, Confederate commissioners to Great
+Britain. Similarly a British ship, in 1916, stopped an American ship,
+the _China_, and removed several German subjects. As the British quickly
+saw the analogy, and made suitable amends, the old excitement over the
+_Trent_ was not duplicated in the recent war.]
+
+[Footnote 40: See Chapter XIII, page 434.]
+
+[Footnote 41: Mr. Forbes had been Governor-General of the Philippines
+from 1909 to 1913. His work had been extraordinarily successful.]
+
+[Footnote 42: Secretary of Agriculture.]
+
+[Footnote 43: In charge of government road building, a distant relative
+of the Ambassador.]
+
+[Footnote 44: Major General William Crozier, U.S.A., Chief of Ordnance.]
+
+[Footnote 45: See Chapter XIX, pages 160-164.]
+
+[Footnote 46: It was General Sheridan.]
+
+[Footnote 47: See Chapter XIX, pages 160 and 164.]
+
+[Footnote 48: The treaty between the United States and Great Britain,
+adopted through the urgency of Mr. Bryan, providing for the arbitration
+of disputes between the two countries.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY"
+
+
+"Of one thing I am sure," Page wrote to his wife from Washington, while
+waiting to see President Wilson. "We wish to come home March 4th at
+midnight and to go about our proper business. There's nothing here that
+I would for the world be mixed up with. As soon as I can escape with
+dignity I shall make my bow and exit.... But I am not unhappy or
+hopeless for the long run. They'll find out the truth some day, paying,
+I fear, a heavy penalty for delay. But the visit here has confirmed me
+in our previous conclusions--that if we can carry the load until March
+4th, midnight, we shall be grateful that we have pulled through."
+
+Soon after President Wilson's reėlection, therefore, Page sent his
+resignation to Washington. The above quotation shows that he intended
+this to be more than a "courtesy resignation," a term traditionally
+applied to the kind of leave-takings which Ambassadors usually send on
+the formation of a new administration, or at the beginning of a new
+Presidential term, for the purpose of giving the President the
+opportunity of reorganizing his official family. Page believed that his
+work in London had been finished, that he had done everything in his
+power to make Mr. Wilson see the situation in its true light and that he
+had not succeeded. He therefore wished to give up his post and come
+home. This explains the fact that his resignation did not consist of the
+half dozen perfunctory lines which most diplomatic officers find
+sufficient on such an occasion, but took the form of a review of the
+reasons why the United States should align itself on the side of the
+Allies.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, November 24, 1916.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ We have all known for many years that the rich and populous and
+ organized states in which the big cities are do not constitute the
+ political United States. But, I confess, I hardly expected so soon
+ to see this fact proclaimed at the ballot-box. To me that's the
+ surprise of the election. And your popular majority as well as your
+ clear majority in the Electoral College is a great personal triumph
+ for you. And you have remade the ancient and demoralized Democratic
+ party. Four years ago it consisted of a protest and of the wreck
+ wrought by Mr. Bryan's long captaincy. This rebirth, with a popular
+ majority, is an historical achievement--of your own.
+
+ You have relaid the foundation and reset the pillars of a party
+ that may enjoy a long supremacy for domestic reasons. Now, if you
+ will permit me to say so, from my somewhat distant view (four years
+ make a long period of absence) the big party task is to build up a
+ clearer and more positive foreign policy. We are in the world and
+ we've got to choose what active part we shall play in it--I fear
+ rather quickly. I have the conviction, as you know, that this whole
+ round globe now hangs as a ripe apple for our plucking, if we use
+ the right ladder while the chance lasts. I do not mean that we want
+ or could get the apple for ourselves, but that we can see to it
+ that it is put to proper uses. What we have to do, in my judgment,
+ is to go back to our political fathers for our clue. If my longtime
+ memory be good, they were sure that their establishment of a great
+ free Republic would soon be imitated by European peoples--that
+ democracies would take the place of autocracies in all so-called
+ civilized countries; for that was the form that the fight took in
+ their day against organized Privilege. But for one reason or
+ another--in our life-time partly because we chose so completely to
+ isolate ourselves--the democratic idea took root in Europe with
+ disappointing slowness. It is, for instance, now perhaps for the
+ first time, in a thoroughgoing way, within sight in this Kingdom.
+ The dream of the American Fathers, therefore, is not yet come true.
+ They fought against organized Privilege exerted from over the sea.
+ In principle it is the same fight that we have made, in our
+ domestic field, during recent decades. Now the same fight has come
+ on a far larger scale than men ever dreamed of before.
+
+ It isn't, therefore, for merely doctrinal reasons that we are
+ concerned for the spread of democracy nor merely because a
+ democracy is the only scheme of organization yet wrought out that
+ keeps the door of opportunity open and invites all men to their
+ fullest development. But we are interested in it because under no
+ other system can the world be made an even reasonably safe place to
+ live in. For only autocracies wage aggressive wars. Aggressive
+ autocracies, especially military autocracies, must be softened down
+ by peace (and they have never been so softened) or destroyed by
+ war. The All-Highest doctrine of Germany to-day is the same as the
+ Taxation-without-Representation of George III--only more virulent,
+ stronger, and farther-reaching. Only by its end can the German
+ people recover and build up their character and take the permanent
+ place in the world that they--thus changed--will be entitled to.
+ They will either reduce Europe to the vassalage of a military
+ autocracy, which may then overrun the whole world or drench it in
+ blood, or they must through stages of Liberalism work their way
+ toward some approach to a democracy; and there is no doubt which
+ event is impending. The Liberal idea will win this struggle, and
+ Europe will be out of danger of a general assault on free
+ institutions till some other autocracy which has a military caste
+ try the same Napoleonic game. The defeat of Germany, therefore,
+ will make for the spread of the doctrine of our Fathers and our
+ doctrine yet.
+
+ An interesting book might be made of concrete evidences of the
+ natural antipathy that the present German autocracy has for
+ successful democracy and hence for us. A new instance has just come
+ to me. My son, Arthur, who succeeded to most of my activities at
+ home, has been over here for a month and he has just come from a
+ visit to France. In Paris he had a long conversation with Delcassé,
+ who told him that the Kaiser himself once made a proposal to him to
+ join in producing "the complete isolation" of the United States.
+ What the Kaiser meant was that if the great Powers of Europe would
+ hold off, he would put the Monroe Doctrine to the test and smash
+ it.
+
+ The great tide of the world will, by reason of the war, now flow
+ toward democracy--at present, alas! a tide of blood. For a century
+ democracies and Liberal governments have kept themselves too much
+ isolated, trusting prematurely and too simply to international law
+ and treaties and Hague conventions. These things have never been
+ respected, except as springs to catch woodcock, where the Divine
+ Right held sway. The outgrowing or the overthrow of the Divine
+ Right is a condition precedent to the effectiveness of
+ international law and treaties.
+
+ It has seemed to me, looking at the subject only with reference to
+ our country's duty and safety, that somehow and at some early time
+ our championship of democracy must lead us to redeclare our faith
+ and to show that we believe in our historic creed. Then we may
+ escape falling away from the Liberal forces of the Old World and
+ escape the suspicion of indifference to the great scheme of
+ government which was set up by our fathers' giving their blood for
+ it. I see no other way for us to take the best and biggest
+ opportunity that has ever come to prove true to our faith as well
+ as to secure our own safety and the safety of the world. Only some
+ sort of active and open identification with the Allies can put us
+ in effective protest against the assassins of the Armenians and the
+ assassins of Belgium, Poland, and Serbia, and in a friendly
+ attitude to the German people themselves, as distinguished from
+ their military rulers. This is the attitude surely that our fathers
+ would have wished us to take--and would have expected us to
+ take--and that our children will be proud of us for taking; for it
+ is our proper historic attitude, whether looked at from the past or
+ looked back at from the future. There can be no historic approval
+ of neutrality for years, while the world is bleeding to death.
+
+ The complete severance of relations, diplomatic at first and later
+ possibly economic as well, with the Turks and the Germans, would
+ probably not cost us a man in battle nor any considerable treasure;
+ for the moral effect of withdrawing even our formal approval of
+ their conduct--at least our passive acquiescence--would be--that
+ the Germans would see that practically all the Liberal world stands
+ against their system, and the war would end before we should need
+ to or could put an army in the field. The Liberal Germans are
+ themselves beginning to see that it is not they, but the German
+ system, that is the object of attack because it is _the_ dangerous
+ thing in the world. Maximilian Harden presents this view in his
+ Berlin paper. He says in effect that Germany must get rid of its
+ predatory feudalism. That was all that was the matter with George
+ III.
+
+ Among the practical results of such action by us would, I believe,
+ be the following:
+
+ 1. The early ending of the war and the saving of, perhaps, millions
+ of lives and of incalculable treasure;
+
+ 2. The establishment in Germany of some form of more liberal
+ government;
+
+ 3. A league to enforce peace, ready-made, under our guidance--i.e.,
+ the Allies and ourselves;
+
+ 4. The sympathetic coöperation and the moral force of every Allied
+ Government in dealing with Mexico:
+
+ 5. The acceptance--and even documentary approval--of every Allied
+ Government of the Monroe Doctrine;
+
+ 6. The warding off and no doubt the final prevention of danger from
+ Japan, and, most of all, the impressive and memorable spectacle of
+ our Great Democracy thus putting an end to this colossal crime,
+ merely from the impulse and necessity to keep our own ideals and to
+ lead the world right on. We should do for Europe on a large scale
+ essentially what we did for Cuba on a small scale and thereby usher
+ in a new era in human history.
+
+ I write thus freely, Mr. President, because at no time can I write
+ in any other way and because I am sure that all these things can
+ quickly be brought to pass under your strong leadership. The United
+ States would stand, as no other nation has ever stood in the
+ world--predominant and unselfish--on the highest ideals ever
+ reached in human government. It is a vision as splendid as the Holy
+ Grael. Nor have I a shadow of doubt of the eager and faithful
+ following of our people, who would thereby reėstablish once for all
+ our weakened nationality. We are made of the stuff that our Fathers
+ were made of.
+
+ And I write this now for the additional reason that I am within
+ sight of the early end of my service here. When you called me I
+ answered, not only because you did me great honour and laid a
+ definite patriotic duty on me, but because also of my personal
+ loyalty to you and my pride in helping forward the great principles
+ in which we both believe. But I understood then (and I am sure the
+ subject lay in your mind in the same way) that my service would be
+ for four years at the most. I made all my arrangements,
+ professional and domestic, on this supposition. I shall, therefore,
+ be ready to lay down my work here on March 4th or as soon
+ thereafter as meets your pleasure.
+
+ I am more than proud of the confidence that you have shown in me.
+ To it I am indebted for the opportunity I have had to give such
+ public service to my country as I could, as well as for the most
+ profitable experience of my life. A proper and sympathetic
+ understanding between the two English-speaking worlds seems to me
+ the most important duty of far-seeing men in either country. It has
+ taken such a profound hold on me that I shall, in whatever way I
+ can, work for its complete realization as long as I can work for
+ anything.
+
+ I am, Mr. President, most faithfully and gratefully yours,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+This letter was written at a time when President Wilson was exerting his
+best energies to bring about peace. The Presidential campaign had caused
+him to postpone these efforts, for he believed that neither Germany nor
+Great Britain could take seriously the activities of a President whose
+own political position was insecure. At the time Page's letter was
+received, the President was thinking only of a peace based upon a
+stalemate; it was then his apparent conviction that both sides to the
+struggle were about equally in the wrong and that a decisive victory of
+either would not be a good thing for the world. Yet it is interesting to
+compare this letter with the famous speech which the President made six
+months afterward when he asked Congress to declare the existence of a
+state of war with Germany. Practically all the important reasons which
+Mr. Wilson then advanced for this declaration are found in Page's letter
+of the preceding November. That autocracies are a constant menace to
+world peace, that the United States owes it to its democratic tradition
+to take up arms against the enemy of free government, that in doing
+this, it was not making war upon the German people, but upon its
+imperialistic masters--these were the arguments which Page laid before
+the President in his letter of resignation, and these were the leading
+ideas in Mr. Wilson's address of April 2nd. There are even sentences in
+Page's communication which seem to foreshadow Mr. Wilson's assertion
+that "The world must be made safe for democracy." This letter in itself
+sufficiently makes it clear that Page's correspondence, irritating in
+its later phases as it may have been, strongly influenced Mr. Wilson in
+his final determination on war.
+
+On one point, indeed, Colonel House afterward called the Ambassador to
+account. When America was preparing to raise armies by the millions and
+to spend its treasure by the billions, he reminded Page of his statement
+that the severance of diplomatic relations "would probably not cost us a
+man in battle nor any considerable treasure." Page's statement in this
+November letter merely reiterated a conviction which for more than a
+year he had been forcing upon the President and Colonel House--that the
+dismissal of Bernstorff would not necessarily imply war with Germany,
+but that it would in itself be enough to bring the war to an end. On
+this point Page never changed his mind, as is evident from the letter
+which he wrote to Colonel House when this matter was called to his
+attention:
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, June 29, 1917.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I never put any particular value on my own prophecies nor on
+ anybody else's. I have therefore no pride as a prophet. Yet I do
+ think that I hit it off accurately a year or a year and a half ago
+ when I said that we could then have ended the war without any
+ appreciable cost. And these are my reasons:
+
+ If we had then come in and absolutely prevented supplies from
+ reaching Germany, as we are now about to do, the war would then
+ have been much sooner ended than it can now be ended:
+
+ (1) Our supplies enabled her to go on.
+
+ (2) She got time in this way to build her great submarine fleet.
+ She went at it the day she promised the President to reform.
+
+ (3) She got time and strength to overrun Rumania whence she got
+ food and oil; and continues to get it.
+
+ (4) During this time Russia fell down as a military force and gave
+ her more time, more armies for France and more supplies. Russian
+ guns have been sold to the Germans.
+
+ If a year and a half ago we had starved her out, it would have been
+ over before any of these things happened. This delay is what will
+ cost us billions and billions and men and men.
+
+ And it cost us one thing more. During the neutrality period we
+ were as eager to get goods to the little neutral states which were
+ in large measure undoubtedly bound to Germany as we are now eager
+ to keep them out. Grey, who was and is our best friend, and who was
+ unwilling to quarrel with us more than he was obliged to, was
+ thrown out of office and his career ended because the blockade,
+ owing to his consideration for us, was not tight enough. Our delay
+ caused his fall.
+
+ But most of all, it gave the Germans time (and to some extent
+ material) to build their present fleet of submarines. They were at
+ work on them all the while and according to the best opinion here
+ they continue to build them faster than the British destroy them;
+ and the submarines are destroying more merchant ships than all the
+ shipbuilding docks of all the world are now turning out. This is
+ the most serious aspect of the war--by far the most serious. I am
+ trying to get our Government to send over hundreds of improvised
+ destroyers--armed tugs, yachts, etc., etc. Admiral Sims and the
+ British Admiralty have fears that unless such help come the full
+ fruits of the war may never be gathered by the Allies--that some
+ sort of a compromise peace may have to be made.
+
+ It is, therefore, true that the year and a half we waited after the
+ _Lusitania_ will prove to be the most costly year and a half in our
+ history; and for once at least my old prophecy was quite a good
+ guess. But that water has flowed over the dam and it is worth
+ mentioning now only because you challenged me....
+
+That part of Page's letter which refers to his retirement had a curious
+history. It was practically a resignation and therefore called for an
+immediate reply, but Mr. Wilson did not even acknowledge its receipt.
+For two months the Ambassador was left in the dark as to the attitude
+of Washington. Finally, in the latter part of January, 1917, Page wrote
+urgently to Mr. Lansing, asking him to bring the matter to the
+President's attention. On February 5, 1917, Mr. Lansing's reply was
+received. "The President," he said, "under extreme pressure of the
+present situation, has been unable to consider your communication in
+regard to your resignation. He desires me to inform you that he hopes
+that, at the present time, you will not press to be relieved from
+service; that he realizes that he is asking you to make a personal
+sacrifice, but he believes that you will appreciate the importance, in
+the crisis which has developed, that no change should be made. I hardly
+need to add my personal hope that you will put aside any thought of
+resigning your post for the present."
+
+At this time, of course, any idea of retiring was out of the question.
+The President had dismissed Bernstorff and there was every likelihood
+that the country would soon be at war. Page would have regarded his
+retirement at this crisis as little less than the desertion of his post.
+Moreover, since Mr. Wilson had adopted the policy which the Ambassador
+had been urging for nearly two years, and had sent Bernstorff home, any
+logical excuse that may have existed for his resignation existed no
+longer. Mr. Wilson had now adopted a course which Page could
+enthusiastically support.
+
+"I am happy to serve here at any sacrifice"--such was his reply to Mr.
+Lansing--"until after the end of the war, and I am making my
+arrangements to stay for this period."
+
+The months that intervened between the Presidential election and the
+declaration of war were especially difficult for the American Embassy in
+London. Page had informed the President, in the course of his interview
+of September 22nd, how unfavourably Great Britain regarded his efforts
+in the direction of peace; he had in fact delivered a message from the
+Foreign Office that any Presidential attempt to "mediate" would be
+rejected by the Allies. Yet his earnest representation on this point had
+produced no effect upon Mr. Wilson. The pressure which Germany was
+bringing to bear upon Washington was apparently irresistible. Count
+Bernstorff's memoirs, with their accompanying documents, have revealed
+the intensity of the German efforts during this period; the most
+startling fact revealed by the German Ambassador is that the Kaiser, on
+October 9th, notified the President, almost in so many words, that,
+unless he promptly moved in the direction of peace, the German
+Government "would be forced to regain the freedom of action which it has
+reserved to itself in the note of May 4th last[49]." It is unlikely that
+the annals of diplomacy contain many documents so cool and insolent as
+this one. It was a notification from the Kaiser to the President that
+the so-called "Sussex pledge" was not regarded as an unconditional one
+by the Imperial Government; that it was given merely to furnish Mr.
+Wilson an opportunity to bring the war to an end; and that unless the
+Presidential attempt to accomplish this were successful, there would be
+a resumption of the indiscriminate submarine campaign. The curious
+developments of the next two months are now a familiar story. Possibly
+because the British Government had notified him, through Page, that his
+proffer of mediation would be unacceptable, Mr. Wilson moved cautiously
+and slowly, and Germany became impatient. The successful campaign
+against Rumania, resulting in the capture of Bucharest on December 6th,
+and the new vista which it opened to Germany of large food supplies,
+strengthened the Teutonic purpose. Perhaps Germany, with her
+characteristic lack of finesse, imagined that her own open efforts would
+lend emphasis to Mr. Wilson's pacific exertions. At any rate, on
+December 12th, just as Mr. Wilson was preparing to launch his own
+campaign for mediation, Germany herself approached her enemies with a
+proposal for a peace conference. A few days afterward Page, as the
+representative of Germany, called at the Foreign Office to deliver the
+large white envelope which contained the Kaiser's "peace proposal." In
+delivering this to Lord Robert Cecil, who was acting as Foreign
+Secretary in the temporary absence of Mr. Balfour, Page emphasized the
+fact that the American Government entirely disassociated itself from its
+contents and that he was acting merely in his capacity of "German
+Ambassador." Two communications from Lord Robert to Sir Cecil Spring
+Rice, British Ambassador at Washington, tell the story and also reveal
+that it was almost impossible for Page, even when engaged in an official
+proceeding, to conceal his contempt for the whole enterprise:
+
+ _Lord R. Cecil to Sir C. Spring Rice_
+
+ Foreign Office,
+
+ December 18, 1916.
+
+ SIR:
+
+ The American Ambassador came to see me this morning and presented
+ to me the German note containing what is called in it the "offer of
+ peace." He explained that he did so on instructions of his
+ Government as representing the German Government, and not in any
+ way as representing their own opinions. He also explained that the
+ note must be regarded as coming from the four Central Powers, and
+ as being addressed to all the Entente Powers who were represented
+ by the United States.
+
+ He then read to me a telegram from his Government, but declined to
+ leave me a copy of it. The first part of the telegram explained
+ that the Government of the United States would deeply appreciate a
+ confidential intimation of the response to be made to the German
+ note and that they would themselves have certain representations to
+ make to the Entente Powers, to which they urgently begged the
+ closest consideration. The telegram went on to explain that the
+ Government of the United States had had it in mind for some time
+ past to make such representations on behalf of neutral nations and
+ humanity, and that it must not be thought that they were prompted
+ by the Governments of the Central Powers. They wished us to
+ understand that the note of the Central Powers created a good
+ opportunity for making the American representations, but was not
+ the cause of such representations being made.
+
+ I replied that I could of course say nothing to him on such an
+ important matter without consulting my colleagues.
+
+ I am, etc.,
+
+ ROBERT CECIL.
+
+ _Lord R. Cecil to Sir C. Spring Rice_
+
+ Foreign Office,
+
+ 19 December, 1916.
+
+ SIR:
+
+ The American Ambassador came to see me this afternoon.
+
+ I asked him whether he could tell me why his government were
+ anxious to have confidential information as to the nature of our
+ response to the German peace note. He replied that he did not know,
+ but he imagined it was to enable them to frame the representations
+ of which he had spoken to me.
+
+ I then told him that we had asked the French to draft a reply, and
+ that it would then be considered by the Allies, and in all
+ probability an identic note would be presented in answer to the
+ German note. I thought it probable that we should express our view
+ that it was impossible to deal with the German offer, since it
+ contained no specific proposals.
+
+ He said that he quite understood this, and that we should in fact
+ reply that it was an offer "to buy a pig in a poke" which we were
+ not prepared to accept. He added that he thought his Government
+ would fully anticipate a reply in this sense, and he himself
+ obviously approved it.
+
+ Then, speaking quite seriously, he said that he had heard people in
+ London treating the German offer with derision, but that no doubt
+ the belligerent governments would treat it seriously.
+
+ I said that it was certainly a serious thing, and no doubt would be
+ treated seriously.
+
+ I asked him if he knew what would be contained in the proposed
+ representations from his government.
+
+ He said that he did not; but as he understood that they were to be
+ made to all the belligerents, he did not think that they could be
+ much more than a pious aspiration for peace; since that was the
+ only thing that was equally applicable to the Germans and to us.
+
+ As he was leaving he suggested that the German note might be
+ published in our press.
+
+ I am, etc.,
+
+ ROBERT CECIL.
+
+This so-called German "peace proposal" began with the statement that the
+war "had been forced" upon Germany, contained the usual reference to the
+military might of the Central Powers, and declared that the Fatherland
+was fighting for "the honour and liberty of national evolution." It is
+therefore not surprising that Lord Robert received it somewhat
+sardonically, especially as the communication contained no specific
+proposals, but merely a vague suggestion of "negotiations." But another
+spectacular performance now drove the German manoeuvre out of
+everybody's mind. That President Wilson resented this German
+interference with his own plans is well known; he did not drop them,
+however, but on December 18th, he sent his long-contemplated peace
+communication to all the warring Powers. His appeal took the form of
+asking that they state the objects for which they were fighting, the
+Presidential belief evidently being that, if they did this, a common
+meeting ground might possibly be found. The suggestion that the Allied
+war aims were not public property, despite the fact that British
+statesmen had been broadly proclaiming them for three years, caused a
+momentary irritation in England, but this was not a serious matter,
+especially as the British Cabinet quickly saw that this request gave
+them a position of advantage over Germany, which had always refused to
+make public the terms on which it would end the war. The main substance
+in this Presidential approach, therefore, would have produced no
+ill-feeling; as usual, it was a few parenthetical phrases--phrases which
+were not essential to the main argument--which set the allied countries
+seething with indignation. The President, this section of his note ran,
+"takes the liberty of calling attention to the fact that the objects
+which the statesmen of the belligerents on both sides have in mind in
+this war, are virtually the same, as stated in general terms to their
+own people and to the world. Each side desires to make the rights and
+privileges of weak peoples and small states as secure against aggression
+and denial in the future as the rights and privileges of the great and
+powerful states now at war." This idea was elaborated in several
+sentences of a similar strain, the general purport of the whole passage
+being that there was little to choose between the combatants, inasmuch
+as both were apparently fighting for about the same things. Mr. Wilson's
+purpose in this paragraph is not obscure; he was making his long
+expected appearance as a mediator, and he evidently believed that it was
+essential to this rōle that he should not seem to be prejudiced in
+favour of either side, but should hold the balance impartially between
+them.
+
+It is true that a minute reading indicates that Mr. Wilson was merely
+quoting, or attempting to paraphrase, the statements of the leaders of
+both sides, but there is such a thing as quoting with approval, and no
+explanation could convince the British public that the ruler of the
+greatest neutral nation had not declared that the Allies and the Central
+Powers stood morally upon the same level. The popular indignation which
+this caused in Great Britain was so intense that it alarmed the British
+authorities. The publication of this note in the British press was
+withheld for several hours, in order to give the Government an
+opportunity to control the expression of editorial opinion; otherwise it
+was feared that this would be so unrestrained in its bitterness that
+relations with the United States might be imperilled. The messages which
+the London correspondents were permitted to send to the United States
+were carefully censored for the same reason. The dispatch sent by the
+Associated Press was the product of a long struggle between the Foreign
+Office and its London correspondent. The representatives spent half an
+hour considering whether the American correspondents could cable their
+country that the note had been received in England with "surprise and
+irritation." After much discussion it was decided that "irritation"
+could not be used, and the message of the Associated Press, after
+undergoing this careful editing by the Foreign Office, was a weak and
+ridiculous description of the high state of excitement which prevailed
+in Great Britain. The fact that the British Foreign Office should have
+given all this trouble over the expressions sent to American newspapers
+and should even have spent half an hour debating whether a particular
+word should be used, almost pathetically illustrates the great care
+taken by the British Government not to influence American opinion
+against the Allies.
+
+The Government took the same precautions with its own press in England.
+When the note was finally released the Foreign Office explicitly
+directed the London newspapers to comment with the utmost caution and in
+no case to question the President's sincerity. Most of them acquiesced
+in these instructions by maintaining silence. There was only one London
+newspaper, the _Westminster Gazette_, which made even a faint-hearted
+attempt to explain away the President's statement. From the first day of
+the war the British people had declared that President Wilson did not
+understand the issues at stake; and they now declared that this note
+confirmed their worst forebodings. The comments of the man-in-the-street
+were unprintable, but more serious than these was the impression which
+Mr. Wilson's dubious remarks made upon those Englishmen who had always
+been especially friendly to the United States and who had even defended
+the President in previous crises. Lord Bryce, who had accepted
+philosophically the Presidential statement that the United States was
+not "concerned with the causes" of the war, could not regard so
+indulgently this latest judgment of Great Britain and Germany. "Bryce
+came to see me in a state of great depression," wrote Page. "He has sent
+Mr. Wilson a personal letter on this matter." Northcliffe commanded his
+newspapers, the _Times_ and the _Daily Mail_, to discuss the note in a
+judicial spirit, but he himself told Mr. Page that "everybody is as
+angry as hell." When someone attempted to discuss the Wilson note with
+Mr. Asquith, he brushed the subject away with a despairing gesture.
+"Don't talk to me about it," he said. "It is most disheartening." But
+the one man in England who was perhaps the most affected was King
+George. A man who had attended luncheon at Buckingham Palace on December
+21st gave Page a description of the royal distress. The King, expressing
+his surprise and dismay that Mr. Wilson should think that Englishmen
+were fighting for the same things in this war as the Germans, broke
+down.
+
+The world only now understands the dreadful prospect which was opening
+before Europe at the moment when this Presidential note added a new
+cause for general despondency. Rumania had collapsed, the first inkling
+of the Russian revolution had been obtained, the British well knew that
+the submarine warfare was to be resumed, and British finances were also
+in a desperate plight. More and more it was becoming evident to the
+British statesmen that they needed the intervention of the United
+States. This is the reason why they could not destroy the chances of
+American help by taking official offense even at what Page, in a
+communication to the Secretary of State, did not hesitate to call
+President Wilson's "insulting words"; and hence their determination to
+silence the press and to give no outward expression of what they felt.
+Page's interview with Lord Robert Cecil on December 26th, while the
+Presidential communication was lying on his desk, discloses the real
+emotions of Englishmen. Apparently Page's frank cables concerning the
+reception of this paragraph had caused a certain interest in the State
+Department; at least the Ambassador was instructed to call at the
+Foreign Office and explain that the interpretation which had been
+commonly put upon the President's words was not the one which he had
+intended. At the same time Page was instructed to request the British
+Foreign Office, in case its reply were "favourable," not to publish it,
+but to communicate it secretly to the American Government. The purpose
+of this request is a little obscure; possibly it was the President's
+plan to use such a favourable reply to force Germany likewise to display
+an acquiescent mood. The object of Page's call was to present this
+disclaimer.
+
+Lord Robert Cecil, the son of the late Lord Salisbury,--that same Lord
+Salisbury whose combats with Secretary Blaine and Secretary Olney form
+piquant chapters in British-American history--is one of the most able
+and respected of British statesmen. In his earlier life Lord Salisbury
+had been somewhat overbearing in his attitude toward the United States;
+in his later years, however, perhaps owing to the influence of his
+nephew, Mr. Balfour, his manner had changed. In his attitude toward the
+United States Lord Robert Cecil reflected only the later phases of his
+father's career. To this country and to its peaceful ideals he had
+always been extremely sympathetic, and to Page especially he had never
+manifested anything but cordiality. Yet it was evident, as Page came
+into his office this morning, that to Lord Robert, as to every member of
+the Government, the President's note, with its equivocal phrases, had
+been a terrible shock. His manner was extremely courteous, as always,
+but he made no attempt to conceal his feelings. Ordinarily Lord Robert
+did not wear his emotions on the surface; but he took occasion on this
+visit to tell Page how greatly the President's communication had grieved
+him.
+
+"The President," he said, "has seemed to pass judgment on the allied
+cause by putting it on the same level as the German. I am deeply hurt."
+
+Page conveyed Mr. Lansing's message that no such inference was
+justified. But this was not reassuring.
+
+"Moreover," Lord Robert added, "there is one sentence in the note--that
+in which the President says that the position of neutrals is becoming
+intolerable--that seems almost a veiled threat."
+
+Page hastened to assure Lord Robert that no threat was intended.
+
+Lord Robert's manner became increasingly serious.
+
+"There is nothing that the American Government or any other human power
+can do," he remarked slowly and solemnly, "which will bring this war to
+a close before the Allies have spent their utmost force to secure a
+victory. A failure to secure such a victory will leave the world at the
+mercy of the most arrogant and the bloodiest tyranny that has ever been
+organized. It is far better to die in an effort to defeat that tyranny
+than to perish under its success."
+
+On any occasion Lord Robert is an impressive or at least a striking and
+unusual figure; he is tall, lank, and ungainly, almost Lincolnesque in
+the carelessness of his apparel and the exceeding awkwardness of his
+postures and manners. His angular features, sharp nose, pale face, and
+dark hair suggest the strain of ascetism, almost of fanaticism, which
+runs in the present generation of his family. And the deep sincerity and
+power of his words on this occasion made an impression which Page never
+forgot; they transformed the British statesman into an eloquent, almost
+an heroic figure. If we are to understand the full tragedy of this
+moment we must remember that, incredible as it now seems, there was a
+fear in British officialdom that the United States might not only not
+pursue a course favourable to the Allies, but that it might even throw
+its support to Germany. The fear, of course, was baseless; any
+suggestion of such a policy in the United States would have destroyed
+any official who had brought it forward; but Lord Robert knew and Page
+knew that there were insidious influences at work at that time, both in
+the United States and in Great Britain, which looked in this direction.
+A group of Americans, whom Page used to refer to as "peace spies," were
+associated with English pacifists, for the purpose of bringing about
+peace on almost any terms. These "peace spies" had worked out a
+programme all their own. The purpose was to compel Great Britain to
+accept the German terms for ending the war. Unless she did accept them,
+then it was intended that the American Government should place an
+embargo on the shipment of foodstuffs and munitions to the Allies. There
+is little question that the United States, by taking such action, could
+have ended the war almost instantaneously. Should the food of her people
+and the great quantities of munitions which were coming from this
+country be suddenly cut off, there is little likelihood that Great
+Britain could have long survived. The possibility that an embargo might
+shut out these supplies had hung over the heads of British statesmen
+ever since the war began; they knew that the possession of this mighty
+power made the United States the potential dictator of events; and the
+fear that it might be used had never ceased to influence their thoughts
+or their actions. Even while this interview was taking place, certain
+anti-British forces in the United States, such as Senator Hoke Smith of
+Georgia, were urging action of this kind.
+
+"I have always been almost a Pacifist," Lord Robert continued. "No man
+has ever hated war worse than I. No man has ever had a more earnest
+faith that war can be abolished. But European civilization has been
+murderously assaulted and there is nothing now to do but to defeat this
+desperate enemy or to perish in the effort. I had hoped that the United
+States understood what is at stake."
+
+Lord Robert went on:
+
+"I will go so far as to say that if the United States will come into the
+war it will decide which will win, freedom or organized tyranny. If the
+United States shall help the Germans, civilization will perish and it
+will be necessary to build it up slowly again--if indeed it will ever
+appear again. If the United States will help the Allies, civilization
+will triumph[50]."
+
+As to the proposal that the British terms should be conveyed
+confidentially to Mr. Wilson, Lord Robert said that that would be a
+difficult thing to do. The President's note had been published, and it
+therefore seemed necessary that the reply should also be given to the
+press. This was the procedure that was ultimately adopted.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Startling as was the sensation caused by the President's December note,
+it was mild compared with that which was now to come. Page naturally
+sent prompt reports of all these conversations to the President and
+likewise kept him completely informed as to the state of public feeling,
+but his best exertions apparently did not immediately affect the Wilson
+policy. The overwhelming fact is that the President's mind was fixed on
+a determination to compel the warring powers to make peace and in this
+way to keep the United States out of the conflict. Even the disturbance
+caused by his note of December 18th did not make him pause in this peace
+campaign. To that note the British sent a manly and definite reply,
+drafted by Mr. Balfour, giving in detail precisely the terms upon which
+the Allies would compose their differences with the Central Powers. The
+Germans sent a reply consisting of ten or a dozen lines, which did not
+give their terms, but merely asked again for a conference. Events were
+now moving with the utmost rapidity. On January 9th, a council of German
+military chieftains was held at Pless; in this it was decided to resume
+unrestricted submarine warfare. On January 16th the Zimmermann-Mexico
+telegram was intercepted; this informed Bernstorff, among other things,
+that this decision had been made. On January 16th, at nine o'clock in
+the morning, the American Embassy in London began receiving a long
+cipher despatch from Washington. The preamble announced that the
+despatch contained a copy of an address which the President proposed to
+deliver before the Senate "in a few days." Page was directed to have
+copies of the address "secretly prepared" and to hand them to the
+British Foreign Office and to newspapers of the type of the Nation, the
+Daily News, and the Manchester Guardian--all three newspapers well known
+for their Pacifist tendencies. As the speech approached its end, this
+sentence appeared: "It must be a peace without victory." The words
+greatly puzzled the secretary in charge, for they seemed almost
+meaningless. Suspecting that an error had been made in transmission, the
+secretary directed the code room to cable Washington for a verification
+of the cipher groups. Very soon the answer was received; there had been
+no mistake; the Presidential words were precisely those which had been
+first received: "Peace without victory." The slips were then taken to
+Page, who read the document, especially these fateful syllables, with a
+consternation which he made no effort to conceal. He immediately wrote a
+cable to President Wilson, telling him of the deplorable effect this
+sentence would produce and imploring him to cut it out of his
+speech--with what success the world now knows.
+
+An astonishing feature of this episode is that Page had recently
+explained to the Foreign Office, in obedience to instructions from
+Washington, that Mr. Wilson's December note should not be interpreted as
+placing the Allies and the Central Powers on the same moral level. Now
+Mr. Wilson, in this "peace without victory" phrase, had repeated
+practically the same idea in another form. On the day the speech was
+received at the Embassy, about a week before it was delivered in the
+Senate, Page made the following memorandum:
+
+ The President's address to the Senate, which was received to-day
+ (January 16th)[51], shows that he thinks he can play peace-maker.
+ He does not at all understand, (or, if he do, so much the worse for
+ him) that the Entente Powers, especially Great Britain and France,
+ cannot make "peace without victory." If they do, they will become
+ vassals of Germany. In a word, the President does not know the
+ Germans; and he is, unconsciously, under their influence in his
+ thought. His speech plays into their hands.
+
+ This address will give great offense in England, since it puts each
+ side in the war on the same moral level.
+
+ I immediately saw the grave danger to our relations with Great
+ Britain by the Peace-without-Victory plan; and I telegraphed the
+ President, venturing to advise him to omit that phrase--with no
+ result.
+
+Afterward Page added this to the above:
+
+ Compare this Senate speech with his speech in April calling for
+ war: Just when and how did the President come to see the true
+ nature of the German? What made him change from Peace-Maker to
+ War-Maker? The Zimmermann telegram, or the February U-boat renewal
+ of warfare? Had he been so credulous as to believe the German
+ promise? This promise had been continuously and repeatedly broken.
+
+ Or was it the pressure of public opinion, the growing impatience of
+ the people that pushed him in?
+
+ This distressing peace-move--utterly out of touch with the facts of
+ the origin of the war or of its conduct or of the mood and
+ necessities of Great Britain--a remote, academic deliverance, while
+ Great Britain and France were fighting for their very lives--made a
+ profoundly dejected feeling; and it made my place and work more
+ uncomfortable than ever. "Peace without victory" brought us to the
+ very depths of European disfavour.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 49: "My Three Years in America," by Count Bernstorff, p. 294.]
+
+[Footnote 50: This narrative is based upon memoranda made by Page.]
+
+[Footnote 51: It was delivered and published on January 22nd.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE UNITED STATES AT WAR
+
+
+I
+
+The United States broke off diplomatic relations with Germany on
+February 3, 1917. The occasion was a memorable one in the American
+Embassy in London, not unrelieved by a touch of the ridiculous. All day
+long a nervous and rather weary company had waited in the Ambassador's
+room for the decisive word from Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Page, Mr. and
+Mrs. Laughlin, Mr. Shoecraft, the Ambassador's secretary, sat there hour
+after hour, hardly speaking to one another in their tense excitement,
+waiting for the news that would inform them that Bernstorff's course had
+been run and that their country had taken its decision on the side of
+the Allies. Finally, at nine o'clock in the evening, the front door bell
+rang. Mr. Shoecraft excitedly left the room; half way downstairs he met
+Admiral William Reginald Hall, the head of the British Naval
+Intelligence, who was hurrying up to the Ambassador. Admiral Hall, as he
+spied Mr. Shoecraft, stopped abruptly and uttered just two words:
+
+"Thank God!"
+
+He then went into the Ambassador's room and read a secret code message
+which he had just received from Captain Gaunt, the British naval attaché
+at Washington. It was as follows:
+
+"Bernstorff has just been given his passports. I shall probably get
+drunk to-night!"
+
+It was in this way that Page first learned that the long tension had
+passed.
+
+Page well understood that the dismissal of Bernstorff at that time meant
+war with the Central Empires. Had this dismissal taken place in 1915,
+after the sinking of the _Lusitania_, or in 1916, after the sinking of
+the _Sussex_, Page believed that a simple break in relations would in
+itself have brought the war to an early end. But by February, 1917,
+things had gone too far. For Germany had now decided to stake everything
+upon the chance of winning a quick victory with the submarine. Our
+policy had persuaded the Kaiser's advisers that America would not
+intervene; and the likelihood of rapidly starving Great Britain was so
+great--indeed the Germans had reduced the situation to a mathematical
+calculation of success--that an American declaration of war seemed to
+Berlin to be a matter of no particular importance. The American
+Ambassador in London regarded Bernstorff's dismissal much more
+seriously. It justified the interpretations of events which he had been
+sending to Mr. Wilson, Colonel House, and others for nearly three years.
+If Page had been inclined to take satisfaction in the fulfilment of his
+own prophecies, Germany's disregard of her promises and the American
+declaration of war would have seemed an ample justification of his
+course as ambassador.
+
+[Illustration: Walter H. Page, at the time of America's entry into the
+war, April, 1917]
+
+[Illustration: Resolution passed by the two Houses of Parliament, April
+18, 1917, on America's entry into the war]
+
+But Page had little time for such vain communings. "All that water," as
+he now wrote, "has flowed over the dam." Occasionally his mind would
+revert to the dreadful period of "neutrality," but in the main his
+activities, mental and physical, were devoted to the future. A letter
+addressed to his son Arthur shows how quickly and how sympathetically he
+was adjusting himself to the new prospect. His mind was now occupied
+with ships, food, armies, warfare on submarines, and the approaching
+resettlement of the world. How completely he foresaw the part that
+the United States must play in the actual waging of hostilities, and to
+what an extent he himself was responsible for the policies that
+ultimately prevailed, appears in this letter:
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ 25 March, 1917, London.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ It's very hard, not to say impossible, to write in these swiftly
+ moving days. Anything written to-day is out of date to-morrow--even
+ if it be not wrong to start with. The impression becomes stronger
+ here every day that we shall go into the war "with both feet"--that
+ the people have pushed the President over in spite of his vision of
+ the Great Peacemaker, and that, being pushed over, his idea now
+ will be to show how he led them into a glorious war in defense of
+ democracy. That's my reading of the situation, and I hope I am not
+ wrong. At any rate, ever since the call of Congress for April 2nd,
+ I have been telegraphing tons of information and plans that can be
+ of use only if we go to war. Habitually they never acknowledge the
+ receipt of anything at Washington. I don't know, therefore, whether
+ they like these pieces of information or not. I have my staff of
+ twenty-five good men getting all sorts of warlike information; and
+ I have just organized twenty-five or thirty more--the best business
+ Americans in London--who are also at work. I am trying to get the
+ Government at Washington to send over a committee of conference--a
+ General, an Admiral, a Reserve Board man, etc., etc. If they do
+ half the things that I recommend we'll be in at the final lickin'
+ big, and will save our souls yet.
+
+ There's lots of human nature in this world. A note is now
+ sometimes heard here in undertone (Northcliffe strikes it)--that
+ they don't want the Americans in the war. This means that if we
+ come in just as the Allies finish the job we'll get credit, in
+ part, for the victory, which we did little to win! But that's a
+ minor note. The great mass of people do want us in, quick, hard,
+ and strong--our money and our guns and our ships.
+
+ A gift of a billion dollars[52] to France will fix Franco-American
+ history all right for several centuries. Push it through. Such a
+ gift could come to this Kingdom also but for the British stupidity
+ about the Irish for three hundred years. A big loan to Great
+ Britain at a low rate of interest will do the work here.
+
+ My mind keeps constantly on the effect of the war and especially of
+ our action on our own country. Of course that is the most important
+ end of the thing for us. I hope that--
+
+ 1. It will break up and tear away our isolation;
+
+ 2. It will unhorse our cranks and soft-brains.
+
+ 3. It will make us less promiscuously hospitable to every kind of
+ immigrant;
+
+ 4. It will reėstablish in our minds and conscience and policy our
+ true historic genesis, background, kindred, and destiny--i.e., kill
+ the Irish and the German influence.
+
+ 5. It will revive our real manhood--put the molly-coddles in
+ disgrace, as idiots and dandies are;
+
+ 6. It will make our politics frank and manly by restoring our true
+ nationality;
+
+ 7. It will make us again a great sea-faring people. It is this that
+ has given Great Britain its long lead in the world;
+
+ 8. Break up our feminized education--make a boy a vigorous animal
+ and make our education rest on a wholesome physical basis;
+
+ 9. Bring men of a higher type into our political life.
+
+ We need waking up and shaking up and invigorating as much as the
+ Germans need taking down.
+
+ There is no danger of "militarism" in any harmful sense among any
+ English race or in any democracy.
+
+ By George! all these things open an interesting outlook and series
+ of tasks--don't they?
+
+ My staff and I are asking everybody what the Americans can best do
+ to help the cause along. The views are not startling, but they are
+ interesting.
+
+ _Jellicoe_: More ships, merchant ships, any kind of ships, and take
+ over the patrol of the American side of the Atlantic and release
+ the British cruisers there.
+
+ _Balfour_: American credits in the United States big enough to keep
+ up the rate of exchange.
+
+ _Bonar Law_: Same thing.
+
+ _The military men_: An expeditionary force, no matter how small,
+ for the effect of the American Flag in Europe. If one regiment
+ marched through London and Paris and took the Flag to the front,
+ that would be worth the winning of a battle.
+
+ Think of the vast increase of territory and power Great Britain
+ will have--her colonies drawn closer than ever, the German
+ colonies, or most of them, taken over by her, Bagdad hers--what a
+ way Germany chose to lessen the British Empire! And these gains of
+ territory will be made, as most of her gains have been, not by any
+ prearranged, set plan, but as by-products of action for some other
+ purpose. The only people who have made a deliberate plan to conquer
+ the earth--now living--are the Germans. And from first to last the
+ additions to the British Empire have been made because she has been
+ a first-class maritime power.
+
+ And that's the way she has made her trade and her money, too.
+
+ On top of this the President speculates about the danger of the
+ white man losing his supremacy because a few million men get
+ killed! The truth is every country that is playing a big part in
+ the war was overpopulated. There will be a considerable productive
+ loss because the killed men were, as a rule, the best men; but the
+ white man's control of the world hasn't depended on any few million
+ of males. This speculation is far up in the clouds. If Russia and
+ Germany really be liberated from social and political and
+ industrial autocracy, this liberation will bring into play far more
+ power than all the men killed in the war could have had under the
+ pre-war régime. I observe this with every year of my
+ observation--there's no substitute for common-sense.
+
+ The big results of the war will, after all, be the freedom and the
+ stimulation of men in these weary Old-World lands--in Russia,
+ Germany itself, and in England. In five or ten years (or sooner,
+ alas!) the dead will be forgotten.
+
+ If you wish to make a picture of the world as it will be when the
+ war ends, you must conjure up such scenes as these--human bones
+ along the Russian highways where the great retreat took place and
+ all that such a sight denotes; Poland literally starved; Serbia,
+ blasted and burned and starved; Armenia butchered; the horrible
+ tragedy of Gallipoli, where the best soldiers in the world were
+ sacrificed to politicians' policies; Austria and Germany starved
+ and whipped but liberalized--perhaps no king in either country;
+ Belgium--belgiumized; northern France the same and worse; more
+ productive Frenchmen killed in proportion to the population perhaps
+ than any other country will have lost; Great Britain--most of her
+ best men gone or maimed; colossal debts; several Teutonic countries
+ bankrupt; every atrocity conceivable committed somewhere--a
+ hell-swept great continent having endured more suffering in three
+ years than in the preceding three hundred. Then, ten years later,
+ most of this suffering a mere memory; governments reorganized and
+ liberalized; men made more efficient by this strenuous three years'
+ work; the fields got back their bloom, and life going on much as it
+ did before--with this chief difference--some kings have gone and
+ many privileges have been abolished. The lessons are two--(1) that
+ no government can successfully set out and conquer the world; and
+ (2) that the hold that privilege holders acquire costs more to
+ dislodge than any one could ever have guessed. That's the sum of
+ it. Kings and privilege mongers, of course, have held the parts of
+ the world separate from one another. They fatten on provincialism,
+ which is mistaken for patriotism. As they lose their grip, human
+ sympathy has its natural play between nations, and civilization has
+ a chance. With any Emperor of Germany left the war will have been
+ half in vain.
+
+ If we (the U.S.A.) cultivate the manly qualities and throw off our
+ cranks and read our own history and be true to our traditions and
+ blood and get some political vigour; then if we emancipate
+ ourselves from the isolation theory and from the landlubber
+ theory--get into the world and build ships, ships, ships, ships,
+ and run them to the ends of the seas, we can dominate the world in
+ trade and in political thought.
+
+ You know I have moments when it occurs to me that perhaps I'd
+ better give whatever working years I may have to telling this
+ story--the story of the larger meaning of the war. There's no
+ bigger theme--never was one so big.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+On April 1st, the day before President Wilson made his great address
+before Congress requesting that body to declare the existence of a state
+of war with Germany, Page committed to paper a few paragraphs which
+summed up his final judgment of President Wilson's foreign policy for
+the preceding two and a half years.
+
+ Embassy of the United States of America,
+ April 1, 1917.
+
+ In these last days, before the United States is forced into war--by
+ the people's insistence--the preceding course of events becomes
+ even clearer than it was before; and it has been as clear all the
+ time as the nose on a man's face.
+
+ The President began by refusing to understand the meaning of the
+ war. To him it seemed a quarrel to settle economic rivalries
+ between Germany and England. He said to me last September[53] that
+ there were many causes why Germany went to war. He showed a great
+ degree of toleration for Germany; and he was, during the whole
+ morning that I talked with him, complaining of England. The
+ controversies we had with England were, of course, mere by-products
+ of the conflict. But to him they seemed as important as the
+ controversy we had with Germany. In the beginning he had made--as
+ far as it was possible--neutrality a positive quality of mind. He
+ would not move from that position.
+
+ That was his first error of judgment. And by insisting on this he
+ soothed the people--sat them down in comfortable chairs and said,
+ "Now stay there." He really suppressed speech and thought.
+
+ The second error he made was in thinking that he could play a
+ great part as peacemaker--come and give a blessing to these erring
+ children. This was strong in his hopes and ambitions. There was a
+ condescension in this attitude that was offensive.
+
+ He shut himself up with these two ideas and engaged in what he
+ called "thought." The air currents of the world never ventilated
+ his mind.
+
+ This inactive position he has kept as long as public sentiment
+ permitted. He seems no longer to regard himself nor to speak as a
+ leader--only as the mouthpiece of public opinion after opinion has
+ run over him.
+
+ He has not breathed a spirit into the people: he has encouraged
+ them to supineness. He is _not_ a leader, but rather a stubborn
+ phrasemaker.
+
+ And now events and the aroused people seem to have brought the
+ President to the necessary point of action; and even now he may act
+ timidly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"One thing pleases me," Page wrote to his son Arthur, "I never lost
+faith in the American people. It is now clear that I was right in
+feeling that they would have gladly come in any time after the
+_Lusitania_ crime. Middle West in the front, and that the German hasn't
+made any real impression on the American nation. He was made a bug-a-boo
+and worked for all he was worth by Bernstorff; and that's the whole
+story. We are as Anglo-Saxon as we ever were. If Hughes had had sense
+and courage enough to say: 'I'm for war, war to save our honour and to
+save democracy,' he would now be President. If Wilson had said that,
+Hughes would have carried no important states in the Union. The
+suppressed people would have risen to either of them. That's God's truth
+as I believe it. The real United States is made up of you and Frank and
+the Page boys at Aberdeen and of the 10,000,000 other young fellows who
+are ready to do the job and who instinctively see the whole truth of the
+situation. But of course what the people would not have done under
+certain conditions--that water also has flowed over the dam; and I
+mention it only because I have resolutely kept my faith in the people
+and there has been nothing in recent events that has shaken it."
+
+Two letters which Page wrote on this same April 1st are interesting in
+that they outline almost completely the war policy that was finally
+carried out:
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday_
+
+ Embassy of the United States of America,
+ April 1, 1917.
+
+ DEAR EFFENDI:
+
+ Here's the programme:
+
+ (1) Our navy in immediate action in whatever way a conference with
+ the British shows we can best help.
+
+ (2) A small expeditionary force to France immediately--as large as
+ we can quickly make ready, if only 10,000 men--as proof that we are
+ ready to do some fighting.
+
+ (3) A large expeditionary force as soon as the men can be organized
+ and equipped. They can be trained into an effective army in France
+ in about one fourth of the time that they could be trained anywhere
+ else.
+
+ (4) A large loan to the Allies at a low rate of interest.
+
+ (5) Ships, ships, ships--troop ships, food ships, munition ships,
+ auxiliary ships to the navy, wooden ships, steel ships, little
+ ships, big ships, ships, ships, ships without number or end.
+
+ (6) A clear-cut expression of the moral issue involved in the war.
+ Every social and political ideal that we stand for is at stake. If
+ we value democracy in the world, this is the chance to further it
+ or--to bring it into utter disrepute. After Russia must come
+ Germany and Austria; and then the King-business will pretty nearly
+ be put out of commission.
+
+ (7) We must go to war in dead earnest. We must sign the Allies'
+ agreement not to make a separate peace, and we must stay in to the
+ end. Then the end will be very greatly hastened.
+
+ It's been four years ago to-day since I was first asked to come
+ here. God knows I've done my poor best to save our country and to
+ help. It'll be four years in the middle of May since I sailed. I
+ shall still do my best. I'll not be able to start back by May 15th,
+ but I have a feeling, if we do our whole duty in the United States,
+ that the end may not be very many months off. And how long off it
+ may be may depend to a considerable degree on our action.
+
+ We are faring very well on army rations. None of us will live to
+ see another time when so many big things are at stake nor another
+ time when our country can play so large or important a part in
+ saving the world. Hold up your end. I'm doing my best here.
+
+ I think of you engaged in the peaceful work of instructing the
+ people, and I think of the garden and crocuses and the smell of
+ early spring in the air and the earth and--push on; I'll be with
+ you before we grow much older or get much grayer; and a great and
+ prosperous and peaceful time will lie before us. Pity me and hold
+ up your end for real American participation. Get together? Yes; but
+ the way to get together is to get in!
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To David F. Houston_[54]
+
+ Embassy of the United States of America,
+ April 1, 1917.
+
+ DEAR HOUSTON:
+
+ The Administration can save itself from becoming a black blot on
+ American history only by vigorous action--acts such as these:
+
+ Putting our navy to work--vigorous work--wherever and however is
+ wisest. I have received the Government's promise to send an Admiral
+ here at once for a conference. We must work out with the British
+ Navy a programme whereby we can best help; and we must carry it
+ without hesitancy or delay.
+
+ Sending over an expeditionary military force immediately--a small
+ one, but as large as we can, as an earnest of a larger one to come.
+ This immediate small one will have a good moral effect; and we need
+ all the moral reinstatement that we can get in the estimation of
+ the world; our moral stock is lower than, I fear, any of you at
+ home can possibly realize. As for a larger expeditionary force
+ later--even that ought to be sent quite early. It can and must
+ spend some time in training in France, whatever its training
+ beforehand may have been. All the military men agree that soldiers
+ in France back of the line can be trained in at least half the time
+ that they can be trained anywhere else. The officers at once take
+ their turn in the trenches, and the progress that they and their
+ men make in close proximity to the fighting is one of the
+ remarkable discoveries of the war. The British Army was so trained
+ and all the colonial forces. Two or three or four hundred thousand
+ Americans could be sent over as soon almost as they are organized
+ and equipped-provided transports and a continuous supply of food
+ and munition ships can be got. They can be trained into fighting
+ men--into an effective army--in about one third of the time that
+ would be required at home.
+
+ I suppose, of course, we shall make at once a large loan to the
+ Allies at a low rate of interest. That is most important, but that
+ alone will not save us. We must also _fight_.
+
+ All the ships we can get--build, requisition, or confiscate--are
+ needed immediately.
+
+ Navy, army, money, ships--these are the first things, but by no
+ means all. We must make some expression of a conviction that there
+ is a moral question of right and wrong involved in this war--a
+ question of humanity, a question of democracy. So far we have
+ (officially) spoken only of the wrongs done to our ships and
+ citizens. Deep wrongs have been done to all our moral ideas, to our
+ ideals. We have sunk very low in European opinion because we do not
+ seem to know even yet that a German victory would be less desirable
+ than (say) a Zulu victory of the world.
+
+ We must go in with the Allies, not begin a mere single fight
+ against submarines. We must sign the pact of London--not make a
+ separate peace.
+
+ We mustn't longer spin dreams about peace, nor leagues to enforce
+ peace, nor the Freedom of the Seas. These things are mere
+ intellectual diversions of minds out of contact with realities.
+ Every political and social ideal we have is at stake. If we make
+ them secure, we'll save Europe from destruction and save ourselves,
+ too. I pray for vigour and decision and clear-cut resolute action.
+
+ (1) The Navy--full strength, no "grapejuice" action.
+
+ (2) An immediate expeditionary force.
+
+ (3) A larger expeditionary force very soon.
+
+ (4) A large loan at a low interest.
+
+ (5) Ships, ships, ships.
+
+ (6) A clear-cut expression of the moral issue. Thus (and only thus)
+ can we swing into a new era, with a world born again.
+
+ Yours in strictest confidence,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+A memorandum, written on April 3rd, the day after President Wilson
+advised Congress to declare a state of war with Germany:
+
+ _The Day_
+
+ When I went to see Mr. Balfour to-day he shook my hand warmly and
+ said: "It's a great day for the world." And so has everybody said,
+ in one way or another, that I have met to-day.
+
+ The President's speech did not appear in the morning papers--only a
+ very brief summary in one or two of them; but the meaning of it was
+ clear. The fact that the House of Representatives organized itself
+ in one day and that the President addressed Congress on the evening
+ of that day told the story. The noon papers had the President's
+ speech in full; and everybody applauds.
+
+ My "Cabinet" meeting this morning was unusually interesting; and
+ the whole group has never before been so delighted. I spoke of the
+ suggestive, constructive work we have already done in making
+ reports on various war preparations and activities of this kingdom.
+ "Now we have greater need than ever, every man to do constructive
+ work--to think of plans to serve. We are in this excellent
+ strategical position in the capital of the greatest belligerent--a
+ position which I thank my stars, the President, and all the powers
+ that be for giving us. We can each strive to justify our
+ existence."
+
+ Few visitors called; but enthusiastic letters have begun to come
+ in.
+
+ Nearly the whole afternoon was spent with Mr. Balfour and Lord
+ Robert Cecil. Mr. Balfour had a long list of subjects. Could we
+ help in (1)--(2)--(3)?--Every once in a while he stopped his
+ enumeration of subjects long enough to tell me how the action of
+ the United States had moved him.
+
+ To Lord Robert I said: "I pray you, give the Black List a decent
+ burial: It's dead now, but through no act of yours. It insulted
+ every American because you did not see that it was insulting:
+ that's the discouraging fact to me." He thanked me earnestly. He'll
+ think about that.
+
+
+II
+
+These jottings give only a faint impression of the change which the
+American action wrought in Page. The strain which he had undergone for
+twenty-nine months had been intense; it had had the most unfortunate
+effect upon his health; and the sudden lifting might have produced that
+reaction for the worse which is not unusual after critical experiences
+of this kind. But the gratification which Page felt in the fact that the
+American spirit had justified his confidence gave him almost a certain
+exuberance of contentment. Londoners who saw him at that time describe
+him as acting like a man from whose shoulders a tremendous weight had
+suddenly been removed. For more than two years Page had been compelled,
+officially at least, to assume a "neutrality" with which he had never
+had the slightest sympathy, but the necessity for this mask now no
+longer existed. A well-known Englishman happened to meet Page leaving
+his house in Grosvenor Square the day after the Declaration of War. He
+stopped and shook the Ambassador's hand.
+
+"Thank God," the Englishman said, "that there is one hypocrite less in
+London to-day."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked Page.
+
+"I mean you. Pretending all this time that you were neutral! That isn't
+necessary any longer."
+
+"You are right!" the Ambassador answered as he walked on with a laugh
+and a wave of the hand.
+
+A few days after the Washington Declaration, the American Luncheon Club
+held a feast in honour of the event. This organization had a membership
+of representative American business men in London, but its behaviour
+during the war had not been based upon Mr. Wilson's idea of neutrality.
+Indeed its tables had so constantly rung with denunciations of the
+_Lusitania_ notes that all members of the American Embassy, from Page
+down, had found it necessary to refrain from attending its proceedings.
+When Page arose to address his compatriots on this occasion, therefore,
+he began with the significant words, "I am glad to be back with you
+again," and the mingled laughter and cheers with which this remark was
+received indicated that his hearers had caught the point.
+
+The change took place not only in Page, but in London and the whole of
+Great Britain. An England that had been saying harsh things of the
+United States for nearly two years now suddenly changed its attitude.
+Both houses of Parliament held commemorative sessions in honour of
+America's participation; in the Commons Mr. Lloyd George, Mr. Asquith,
+and other leaders welcomed their new allies, and in the Upper Chamber
+Lord Curzon, Lord Bryce, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and others
+similarly voiced their admiration. The Stars and Stripes almost
+instantaneously broke out on private dwellings, shops, hotels, and
+theatres; street hucksters did a thriving business selling rosettes of
+the American colours, which even the most stodgy Englishmen did not
+disdain to wear in their buttonholes; wherever there was a band or an
+orchestra, the Star Spangled Banner acquired a sudden popularity; and
+the day even came when the American and the British flags flew side by
+side over the Houses of Parliament--the first occasion in history that
+any other than the British standard had received this honour. The
+editorial outgivings of the British press on America's entrance form a
+literature all their own. The theatres and the music halls, which had
+found in "notes" and "nootrality" an endless theme of entertainment for
+their patrons, now sounded Americanism as their most popular refrain.
+Churches and cathedrals gave special services in honour of American
+intervention, and the King and the President began to figure side by the
+side in the prayer book. The estimation in which President Wilson was
+held changed overnight. All the phrases that had so grieved Englishmen
+were instantaneously forgotten. The President's address before Congress
+was praised as one of the most eloquent and statesmanlike utterances in
+history. Special editions of this heartening document had a rapid sale;
+it was read in school houses, churches, and at public gatherings, and it
+became a most influential force in uplifting the hopes of the Allies and
+inspiring them to renewed activities. Americans everywhere, in the
+streets, at dinner tables, and in general social intercourse, could feel
+the new atmosphere of respect and admiration which had suddenly become
+their country's portion. The first American troops that passed through
+London--a company of engineers, an especially fine body of men--aroused
+a popular enthusiasm which was almost unprecedented in a capital not
+celebrated for its emotional displays. Page himself records one
+particularly touching indication of the feeling for Americans which was
+now universal. "The increasing number of Americans who come through
+England," he wrote, "most of them on their way to France, but some of
+them also to serve in England, give much pleasure to the British
+public--nurses, doctors, railway engineers, sawmill units, etc. The
+sight of every American uniform pleases London. The other morning a
+group of American nurses gathered with the usual crowd in front of
+Buckingham Palace while the Guards band played inside the gates. Man
+after man as they passed them and saw their uniforms lifted their hats."
+
+[Illustration: The Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George, Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, 1908-1915, Minister of Munitions, 1915-1916, Prime Minister
+of Great Britain, 1916-1922]
+
+[Illustration: The Rt. Hon. Arthur James Balfour (now the Earl of
+Balfour) Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1916-1919]
+
+The Ambassador's mail likewise underwent a complete transformation. His
+correspondence of the preceding two years, enormous in its extent, had
+contained much that would have disturbed a man who could easily get
+excited over trifles, but this aspect of his work never caused Page the
+slightest unhappiness. Almost every crank in England who disliked the
+American policy had seemed to feel it his duty to express his opinions
+to the American Ambassador. These letters, at times sorrowful, at others
+abusive, even occasionally threatening, varying in their style from
+cultivated English to the grossest illiteracy, now written in red ink to
+emphasize their bitterness, now printed in large block letters to
+preserve their anonymity, aroused in Page only a temporary amusement.
+But the letters that began to pour in upon him after our Declaration,
+many of them from the highest placed men and women in the Kingdom,
+brought out more vividly than anything else the changed position of his
+country. Sonnets and verses rained upon the Embassy, most of them
+pretty bad as poetry, but all of them commendable for their admiring and
+friendly spirit. Of all these letters those that came from the steadfast
+friends of America perhaps gave Page the greatest satisfaction. "You
+will have been pleased at the universal tribute paid to the spirit as
+well as to the lofty and impressive terms of the President's speech,"
+wrote Lord Bryce. "Nothing finer in our time, few things so fine." But
+probably the letter which gave Page the greatest pleasure was that which
+came from the statesman whose courtesy and broad outlook had eased the
+Ambassador's task in the old neutrality days. In 1916, Sir Edward
+Grey--now become Viscount Grey of Fallodon--had resigned office, forced
+out, Page says in one of his letters, mainly because he had refused to
+push the blockade to a point where it might produce a break with the
+United States. He had spent the larger part of the time since that event
+at his country place in Northumberland, along the streams and the
+forests which had always given him his greatest pleasure, attempting to
+recover something of the health that he had lost in the ten years which
+he had spent as head of the British Foreign Office and bearing with
+characteristic cheerfulness and fortitude the tragedy of a gradually
+failing eyesight. The American Declaration of War now came to Lord Grey
+as the complete justification of his policy. The mainspring of that
+policy, as already explained, had been a determination to keep the
+friendship of the United States, and so shape events that the support of
+this country would ultimately be cast on the side of the Allies. And now
+the great occasion for which he had prepared had come, and in Grey's
+mind this signified more than a help to England in soldiers and ships;
+it meant bringing together the two branches of a common race for the
+promotion of common ideals.
+
+ _From Viscount Grey of Fallodon_
+
+ Rosehall Post Office,
+
+ Sutherland,
+
+ April 8, 1917.
+
+ DEAR MR. PAGE:
+
+ This is a line that needs no answer to express my congratulations
+ on President Wilson's address. I can't express adequately all that
+ I feel. Great gratitude and great hope are in my heart. I hope now
+ that some great and abiding good to the world will yet be wrought
+ out of all this welter of evil. Recent events in Russia, too,
+ stimulate this hope: they are a good in themselves, but not the
+ power for good in this war that a great and firmly established free
+ country like the United States can be. The President's address and
+ the way it has been followed up in your country is a splendid
+ instance of great action finely inspired. I glow with admiration.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+
+ GREY OF FALLODON
+
+One Englishman who was especially touched by the action of the United
+States was His Majesty the King. Few men had watched the course of
+America during the war with more intelligent interest than the head of
+the British royal house. Page had had many interviews with King George
+at Buckingham Palace and at Windsor, and his notes contain many
+appreciative remarks on the King's high character and conscientious
+devotion to his duties. That Page in general did not believe in kings
+and emperors as institutions his letters reveal; yet even so profound a
+Republican as he recognized sterling character, whether in a crowned
+head or in a humble citizen, and he had seen enough of King George to
+respect him. Moreover, the peculiar limitations of the British monarchy
+certainly gave it an unusual position and even saved it from much of the
+criticism that was fairly lavished upon such nations as Germany and
+Austria. Page especially admired King George's frankness in recognizing
+these limitations and his readiness to accommodate himself to the
+British Constitution. On most occasions, when these two men met, their
+intercourse was certainly friendly or at least not formidable. After all
+formalities had been exchanged, the King would frequently draw the
+Ambassador aside; the two would retire to the smoking room, and there,
+over their cigars, discuss a variety of matters--submarines,
+international politics, the Irish question and the like. His Majesty was
+not averse even to bringing up the advantages of the democratic and the
+monarchical system. The King and Ambassador would chat, as Page himself
+would say, like "two human beings"; King George is an emphatic and
+vivacious talker, fond of emphasizing his remarks by pounding the table;
+he has the liveliest sense of humour, and enjoys nothing quite so much
+as a good story. Page found that, on the subject of the Germans, the
+King entertained especially robust views. "They are my kinsmen," he
+would say, "but I am ashamed of them."
+
+Probably most Englishmen, in the early days of the war, preferred that
+the United States should not engage in hostilities; even after the
+_Lusitania_, the majority in all likelihood held this view. There are
+indications, however, that King George favoured American participation.
+A few days after the _Lusitania_ sinking, Page had an audience for the
+purpose of presenting a medal sent by certain societies in New Orleans.
+Neither man was thinking much about medals that morning. The thoughts
+uppermost in their minds, as in the minds of most Americans and
+Englishmen, were the _Lusitania_ and the action that the United States
+was likely to take concerning it. After the formalities of presentation,
+the King asked Page to sit down and talked with him for more than half
+an hour. "He said that Germany was evidently trying to force the United
+States into the war; that he had no doubt we would soon be in it and
+that, for his part, he would welcome us heartily. The King also said he
+had reliable information from Germany, that the Emperor had wished to
+return a conciliatory answer to our _Lusitania_ note, but that Admiral
+von Tirpitz had prevented it, even going so far as to 'threaten' the
+Kaiser. It appears that the Admiral insisted that the submarine was the
+only weapon the Germans could use with effect against England and that
+they could not afford to give it up. He was violent and the Kaiser
+finally yielded[55]."
+
+The statement from the King at that crisis, that he would "heartily
+welcome the United States into the war," was interpreted by the
+Ambassador as amounting practically to an invitation--and certainly as
+expressing a wish that such an intervention should take place.
+
+That the American participation would rejoice King George could
+therefore be taken for granted. Soon after this event, the Ambassador
+and Mrs. Page were invited to spend the night at Windsor.
+
+"I arrived during the middle of the afternoon," writes Page, "and he
+sent for me to talk with him in his office.
+
+"'I've a good story on you,' said he. 'You Americans have a queer use of
+the word "some," to express mere bigness or emphasis. We are taking that
+use of the word from you over here. Well, an American and an Englishman
+were riding in the same railway compartment. The American read his
+paper diligently--all the details of a big battle. When he got done, he
+put the paper down and said: "Some fight!" "And some don't!" said the
+Englishman.'
+
+"And the King roared. 'A good one on you!'
+
+"'The trouble with that joke, sir,' I ventured to reply, 'is that it's
+out of date.'
+
+"He was in a very gay mood, surely because of our entry into the war.
+After the dinner--there were no guests except Mrs. Page and me, the
+members of his household, of course, being present--he became even
+familiar in the smoking room. He talked about himself and his position
+as king. 'Knowing the difficulties of a limited monarch, I thank heaven
+I am spared being an absolute one.'
+
+"He went on to enumerate the large number of things he was obliged to
+do, for example, to sign the death warrant of every condemned man--and
+the little real power that he had--not at all in a tone of complaint,
+but as a merely impersonal explanation.
+
+"Just how much power--perhaps 'influence' is a better word--the King
+has, depends on his personality. The influence of the throne--and of him
+on the throne, being a wholly thoughtful, industrious, and conscientious
+man--is very great--greatest of all in keeping the vested interests of
+the aristocratic social structure secure.
+
+"Earlier than this visit to Windsor he sent for me to go to Buckingham
+Palace very soon after we declared war. He went over the whole course of
+events--and asked me many questions. After I had risen and said
+'good-bye' and was about to bow myself out the door, he ran toward me
+and waving his hand cried out, 'Ah--Ah!--we knew where _you_ stood all
+the time.'
+
+"When General Pershing came along on his way to France, the King
+summoned us to luncheon. The luncheon was eaten (here, as everywhere,
+strict war rations are observed) to a flow of general talk, with the
+Queen, Princess Mary, and one of the young Princes. When they had gone
+from the luncheon room, the King, General Pershing, and I stood smoking
+by the window; and the King at once launched into talk about guns,
+rifles, ammunition, and the American place in the battle line. Would our
+place be with the British or with the French or between the two?
+
+"General Pershing made a diplomatic reply. So far as he knew the
+President hadn't yet made a final decision, but there was a feeling
+that, since we were helping the British at sea, perhaps we ought to help
+the French on land.
+
+"Then the King expressed the earnest hope that our guns and ammunition
+would match either the British or the French. Else if we happened to run
+out of ammunition we could not borrow from anybody. He thought it most
+unfortunate that the British and French guns and rifles were of
+different calibres."
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Brighton, England,
+
+ April 28, 1917.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... Well, the British have given us a very good welcome into the
+ war. They are not very skillful at such a task: they do not know
+ how to say "Welcome" very vociferously. But they have said it to
+ the very best of their ability. My speeches (which I send you, with
+ some comment) were very well received indeed. Simple and obvious as
+ they were, they meant a good deal of work.
+
+ I cannot conceal nor can I express my gratification that we are in
+ the war. I shall always wonder but never find out what influence I
+ had in driving the President over. All I know is that my letters
+ and telegrams for nearly two years--especially for the last twelve
+ months--have put before him every reason that anybody has expressed
+ why we should come in--in season and out of season. And there is no
+ new reason--only more reason of the same old sort--why we should
+ have come in now than there was why we should have come in a year
+ ago. I suspect that the pressure of the press and of public opinion
+ really became too strong for him. And, of course, the Peace-Dream
+ blew up--was torpedoed, mined, shot, captured, and killed. I trust,
+ too, much enlightenment will be furnished by the two Commissions
+ now in Washington[56]. Yet it's comical to think of the attitude of
+ the poor old Department last September and its attitude now. But
+ thank God for it! Every day now brings a confession of the blank
+ idiocy of its former course and its long argument! Never mind that,
+ so long as we are now right.
+
+ I have such a sense of relief that I almost feel that my job is now
+ done. Yet, I dare say, my most important work is still to come.
+
+ The more I try to reach some sort of rational judgment about the
+ war, the more I find myself at sea. It does look as if the very
+ crisis is near. And there can be no doubt now--not even, I hope, in
+ the United States--about the necessity of a clear and decisive
+ victory, nor about punishment. All the devastation of Northern
+ France, which outbarbarizes barbarism, all the ships sunk,
+ including hospital ships, must be paid for; that's all. There'll be
+ famine in Europe whenever it end. Not only must these destructions
+ be paid for, but the Hohenzollerns and all they stand for must go.
+ Trust your Frenchman for that, if nobody else!
+
+ If Europe had the food wasted in the United States, it would make
+ the difference between sustenance and famine. By the way, the
+ submarine has made every nation a danger zone except those few that
+ have self-feeding continents, such as ours. It can bring famine to
+ any other kind of a country.
+
+ You are now out in the country again--good. Give Mollie my love and
+ help her with the garden. I envy you the fresh green things to eat.
+ Little Mollie, kiss her for granddaddy. The Ambassador, I suppose,
+ waxes even sturdier, and I'm glad to hear that A.W.P., Jr., is
+ picking up. Get him fed right at all costs. If Frank stays at home
+ and Ralph and his family come up, you'll all have a fine summer.
+ We've the very first hint of summer we've had, and it's cheerful to
+ see the sky and to feel the sunshine.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday_
+
+ American Embassy,
+
+ London, May 3, 1917.
+
+ DEAR EFFENDI:
+
+ I aim this at you. It may hit a German submarine. But we've got to
+ take our chances in these days of risk. Your letter from the
+ tropics--a letter from you from any place is as scarce as
+ peace!--gave me a pleasant thrill and reminder of a previous state
+ of existence, a long way back in the past. I wonder if, on your
+ side the ocean you are living at the rate of a century a year, as
+ we are here? Here in bountiful England we are living on rations. I
+ spent a night with the King a fortnight ago, and he gave us only so
+ much bread, one egg apiece, and--lemonade. We are to begin bread
+ tickets next week. All this is perfectly healthful and wholesome
+ and as much as I ever eat. But the hard part of it is that it's
+ necessary. We haven't more than six weeks' food supply and the
+ submarines sunk eighty-eight ships--237,000 tons--last week. These
+ English do not publish these harrowing facts, and nobody knows them
+ but a few official people. And they are destroying the submarines
+ at a most beggarly slow rate. They work far out at sea--100 to 200
+ miles--and it's as hard to find them as it would be to find whales.
+ The simple truth is we are in a dangerous plight. If they could
+ stop this submarine warfare, the war would pretty quickly be won,
+ for the Germans are in a far worse plight for food and materials
+ and they are getting much the worst of it on land. The war would be
+ won this summer or autumn if the submarine could be put out of
+ business. If it isn't, the Germans may use this success to keep
+ their spirits up and go on till next year.
+
+ We (the United States) have about 40 destroyers. We are sending
+ over 6! I'm doing my best to persuade the Government at Washington
+ to send every one we have. But, since the British conceal the facts
+ from their own press and the people and from all the world, the
+ full pressure of the situation is hard to exert on Washington. Our
+ Admiral (Sims) and I are trying our best, and we are spending
+ enough on cables to build a destroyer. All this, you must, of
+ course, regard as a dark secret; but it's a devilish black secret.
+
+ I don't mean that there's any danger of losing the war. Even if the
+ British armies have to have their food cut down and people here go
+ hungry, they'll win; but the winning may be a long time off.
+ Nothing but their continued success can keep the Germans going.
+ Their people are war-weary and hungry. Austria is knocked out and
+ is starving. Turkey is done up but can go on living on nothing,
+ but not fighting much more. When peace comes, there'll be a general
+ famine, on the continent at least, and no ships to haul food. This
+ side of the world will have to start life all over again--with
+ insufficient men to carry things on and innumerable maimed men
+ who'll have (more or less) to be cared for. The horror of the whole
+ thing nobody realizes. We've all got used to it here; and nobody
+ clearly remembers just what the world was like in peace times;
+ those times were so far away. All this I write not to fill you with
+ horrors but to prove that I speak the literal truth when I say that
+ it seems a hundred years since I had before heard from you.
+
+ Just how all this affects a man, no man can accurately tell. Of how
+ much use I'll be when I can get home, I don't know. Sometimes I
+ think that I shall be of vastly greater use than ever. Plans and
+ publishing ambitions pop up in my mind at times which look good and
+ promising. I see books and series of books. I see most useful
+ magazine stuff. Then, before I can think anything out to a clear
+ plan or conclusion, the ever-increasing official duties and
+ responsibilities here knock everything else out of my head, perhaps
+ for a whole month. It's a literal fact that many a month I do not
+ have an hour to do with as I please nor to think about what I
+ please, from the time I wake up till I go to bed. In spite of
+ twenty-four secretaries (the best fellows that ever were and the
+ best staff that any Embassy ever had in the world) more and more
+ work comes to me. I thank Heaven we no longer have the interests of
+ Germany, Austria, and Turkey to look after; but with our coming
+ into the war, work in general has increased enormously. I have to
+ spend very much more time with the different departments of the
+ British Government on war plans and such like things. They have
+ welcomed us in very handsomely; and one form of their welcome is
+ consulting with me about--navy plans, war plans, loans of billions,
+ ships, censorship, secret service--everything you ever heard of. At
+ first it seemed a little comical for the admirals and generals and
+ the Governor of the Bank of England to come and ask for advice. But
+ when I gave it and it worked out well, I went on and, after all,
+ the thing's easier than it looks. With a little practice you can
+ give these fellows several points in the game and play a pretty
+ good hand. They don't know half as much as you might suppose they'd
+ know. All these years of lecturing the State Department and the
+ President got my hand in! The whole game is far easier than any
+ small business. You always play with blue chips better than you
+ play with white ones.
+
+ This country and these people are not the country and the people
+ they were three years ago. They are very different. They are much
+ more democratic, far less cocksure, far less haughty, far humbler.
+ The man at the head of the army rose from the ranks. The Prime
+ Minister is a poor Welsh schoolteacher's son, without early
+ education. The man who controls all British shipping began life as
+ a shipping "clark," at ten shillings a week. Yet the Lords and
+ Ladies, too, have shown that they were made of the real stuff. This
+ experience is making England over again. There never was a more
+ interesting thing to watch and to be part of.
+
+ There are about twenty American organizations here--big, little,
+ rag-tag, and bobtail. When we declared war, every one of 'em
+ proceeded to prepare for some sort of celebration. There would have
+ been an epidemic of Fourth-of-July oratory all over the
+ town--before we'd done anything--Americans spouting over the edges
+ and killing Kruger with their mouths. I got representatives of 'em
+ all together and proposed that we hold our tongues till we'd won
+ the war--then we can take London. And to give one occasion when we
+ might all assemble and dedicate ourselves to this present grim
+ business, I arranged for an American Dedicatory Service at St.
+ Paul's Cathedral. The royal family came, the Government came, the
+ Allied diplomats came, my Lords and Ladies came, one hundred
+ wounded American (Canadian) soldiers came--the pick of the Kingdom;
+ my Navy and Army staff went in full uniform, the Stars and Stripes
+ hung before the altar, a double brass band played the Star Spangled
+ Banner and the Battle Hymn of the Republic, and an American bishop
+ (Brent) preached a red-hot American sermon, the Archbishop of
+ Canterbury delivered the benediction; and (for the first time in
+ English history) a foreign flag (the Stars and Stripes) flew over
+ the Houses of Parliament. It was the biggest occasion, so they say,
+ that St. Paul's ever had. And there's been no spilling of American
+ oratory since! If you had published a shilling edition of the words
+ and music of the Star Spangled Banner and the Battle Hymn you could
+ have sent a cargo of 'em here and sold them. There isn't paper
+ enough in this Kingdom to get out an edition here.
+
+ Give my love to all the Doubledays and to all the fellows in the
+ shop, and (I wonder if you will) try your hand at another letter.
+ You write very legibly these days!
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+"Curiously enough," Page wrote about this time, "these most exciting
+days of the war are among the most barren of exciting topics for private
+correspondence. The 'atmosphere' here is unchanging--to us--and the
+British are turning their best side to us continuously. They are
+increasingly appreciative, and they see more and more clearly that our
+coming into the war is all that saved them from a virtual defeat--I mean
+the public sees this more and more clearly, for, of course, the
+Government has known it from the beginning. I even find a sort of morbid
+fear lest they do not sufficiently show their appreciation. The
+Archbishop last night asked me in an apprehensive tone whether the
+American Government and public felt that the British did not
+sufficiently show their gratitude. I told him that we did not come into
+the war to win compliments but to whip the enemy, and that we wanted all
+the help the British can give: that's the main thing; and that
+thereafter of course we liked appreciation, but that expressions of
+appreciation had not been lacking. Mr. Balfour and Sir Edward Carson
+also spoke to me yesterday much in the same tone as the Archbishop of
+Canterbury.
+
+"Try to think out any line of action that one will, or any future
+sequence of events or any plan touching the war, one runs into the
+question whether the British are doing the best that could be done or
+are merely plugging away. They are, as a people, slow and unimaginative,
+given to over-much self-criticism; but they eternally hold on to a task
+or to a policy. Yet the question forever arises whether they show
+imagination, to say nothing of genius, and whether the waste of a slow,
+plodding policy is the necessary price of victory.
+
+"Of course such a question is easy to ask and it is easy to give
+dogmatic answers. But it isn't easy to give an answer based on facts.
+Our General Lassiter[57], for instance--a man of sound judgment--has in
+general been less hopeful of the military situation in France than most
+of the British officers. But he is just now returned from the front,
+much cheered and encouraged. 'Lassiter,' I asked, 'have the British in
+France or has any man among them what we call genius, or even wide
+vision; or are they merely plodding along at a mechanical task? His
+answer was, 'We don't see genius till it has done its job. It is a
+mechanical task--yes, that's the nature of the struggle--and they surely
+do it with intelligence and spirit. There is waste. There is waste in
+all wars. But I come back much more encouraged.'
+
+"The same sort of questions and answers are asked and given continuously
+about naval action. Every discussion of the possibility of attacking the
+German naval bases ends without a plan. So also with preventing the
+submarines from coming out. These subjects have been continuously under
+discussion by a long series of men who have studied them; and the total
+effect so far has been to leave them among the impossible tasks. So far
+as I can ascertain all naval men among the Allies agree that these
+things can't be done.
+
+"Here again--Is this a merely routine professional opinion--a merely
+traditional opinion--or is it a lack of imagination? The question will
+not down. Yet it is impossible to get facts to combat it. What are the
+limits of the practicable?
+
+"Mr. Balfour told me yesterday his personal conviction about the German
+colonies, which, he said, he had not discussed with his associates in
+the Cabinet. His firm opinion is that they ought not to be returned to
+the Germans, first for the sake of humanity. 'The natives--the Africans
+especially--have been so barbarously treated and so immorally that it
+would be inhuman to permit the Germans to rule and degrade them further.
+But Heaven forbid that we should still further enlarge the British
+Empire. As a practical matter I do not care to do that. Besides, we
+should incur the criticism of fighting in order to get more territory,
+and that was not and is not our aim. If the United States will help us,
+my wish is that these German Colonies that we have taken, especially in
+Africa, should be "internationalized." There are great difficulties in
+such a plan, but they are not insuperable if the great Powers of the
+Allies will agree upon it.' And much more to the same effect. The parts
+of Asiatic Turkey that the British have taken, he thought, might be
+treated in the same way."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 52: At this time the proposal of such a gift found much
+popular favour. However, the plan was not carried through.]
+
+[Footnote 53: At the meeting of Page and the President at Shadow Lawn,
+September 22, 1916. See Chapter XIX.]
+
+[Footnote 54: Secretary of Agriculture in President Wilson's Cabinet.]
+
+[Footnote 55: The quotation is from a memorandum of the conversation
+made by one of the secretaries of the American Embassy.]
+
+[Footnote 56: The British and French Commissions, headed by Mr. Balfour
+and M. Viviani.]
+
+[Footnote 57: American military attaché in London.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE BALFOUR MISSION TO THE UNITED STATES
+
+
+I
+
+Page now took up a subject which had been near his heart for a long
+time. He believed that one of the most serious causes of Anglo-American
+misunderstanding was the fact that the leading statesmen of the two
+countries had never had any personal contact with one another. At one
+time, as this correspondence shows, the Ambassador had even hoped that
+President Wilson himself might cross the ocean and make the British
+people an official visit. The proposal, however, was made before the
+European war broke out, the occasion which Page had in mind being the
+dedication of Sulgrave Manor, the old English home of the Washington
+family, as a perpetual memorial to the racial bonds and common ideals
+uniting the two countries. The President found it impossible to act upon
+this suggestion and the outbreak of war made the likelihood of such a
+visit still more remote. Page had made one unsuccessful attempt to bring
+the American State Department and the British Foreign Office into
+personal contact. At the moment when American irritation had been most
+keen over the blockade and the blacklist, Page had persuaded the Foreign
+Office to invite to England Mr. Frank L. Polk, at that time Counsellor
+of the Department; the Ambassador believed that a few conversations
+between such an intelligent gentleman as Mr. Polk and the British
+statesmen would smooth out all the points which were then making things
+so difficult. Unfortunately the pressure of work at Washington prevented
+Mr. Polk from accepting Sir Edward Grey's invitation.
+
+But now a greater necessity for close personal association had arisen.
+The United States had entered the war, and this declaration had
+practically made this country an ally of Great Britain and France. The
+British Government wished to send a distinguished commission to the
+United States, for two reasons: first, to show its appreciation of the
+stand which America had taken, and secondly, to discuss plans for
+coöperation in the common task. Great Britain frankly admitted that it
+had made many mistakes in the preceding three years--mistakes naval,
+military, political, and economic; it would welcome an opportunity to
+display these errors to Washington, which might naturally hope to profit
+from them. As soon as his country was in the war, Page took up this
+suggestion with the Foreign Office. There was of course one man who was
+preėminently fitted, by experience, position, and personal qualities, to
+head such a commission; on this point there was no discussion. Mr.
+Balfour was now in his seventieth year; his activities in British
+politics dated back to the times of Disraeli; his position in Great
+Britain had become as near that of an "elder statesman" as is tolerable
+under the Anglo-Saxon system. By this time Page had established the
+friendliest possible relations with this distinguished man. Mr. Balfour
+had become Foreign Secretary in December, 1916, in succession to Lord
+Grey. Greatly as Page regretted the resignation of Grey, he was much
+gratified that Mr. Balfour had been selected to succeed him. Mr.
+Balfour's record for twenty-five years had been one of consistent
+friendliness toward the United States. When President Cleveland's
+Venezuelan message, in 1896, had precipitated a crisis in the relations
+of the two countries, it was Mr. Balfour's influence which was
+especially potent in causing Great Britain to modify its attitude and to
+accept the American demand for arbitration. That action not only
+amicably settled the Venezuelan question; it marked the beginning of a
+better feeling between the English-speaking countries and laid the basis
+for that policy of benevolent neutrality which Great Britain had
+maintained toward the United States in the Spanish War. The excellent
+spirit which Mr. Balfour had shown at this crisis he had manifested on
+many occasions since. In the criticisms of the United States during the
+_Lusitania_ troubles Mr. Balfour had never taken part. The era of
+"neutrality" had not ruffled the confidence which he had always felt in
+the United States. During all this time the most conspicuous dinner
+tables of London had rung with criticisms of American policy; the fact
+was well known, however, that Mr. Balfour had never sympathized with
+these reproaches; even when he was not in office, no unfriendly word
+concerning the United States had ever escaped his lips. His feeling
+toward this country was well shown in a letter which he wrote Page, in
+reply to one congratulating him on his seventieth birthday. "I have now
+lived a long life," said Mr. Balfour, "and most of my energies have been
+expended in political work, but if I have been fortunate enough to
+contribute, even in the smallest degree, to drawing closer the bonds
+that unite our two countries, I shall have done something compared with
+which all else that I may have attempted counts in my eyes as nothing."
+
+Page's letters and notes contain many references to Mr. Balfour's kindly
+spirit. On the day following the dismissal of Bernstorff the American
+Ambassador lunched with the Foreign Secretary at No. 4 Carlton Gardens.
+
+"Mr. Balfour," Page reported to Washington, "gave expression to the
+hearty admiration which he entertained for the President's handling of a
+difficult task. He said that never for a moment had he doubted the
+President's wisdom in the course he was pursuing. He had the profoundest
+admiration for the manner in which he had promptly broken with Germany
+after receiving Germany's latest note. Nor had he ever entertained the
+slightest question of the American people's ready loyalty to their
+Government or to their high ideals. One of his intellectual pleasures,
+he added, had long been contemplation of the United States as it is and,
+even more, as its influence in the world will broaden. 'The world,' said
+Mr. Balfour, 'will more and more turn on the Great Republic as on a
+pivot.'"
+
+Occasionally Mr. Balfour's discussion of the United States would take a
+more pensive turn. A memorandum which Page wrote a few weeks after the
+above touches another point:
+
+ March 27, 1917.
+
+ I had a most interesting conversation with Mr. Balfour this
+ afternoon. "It's sad to me," said he, "that we are so unpopular, so
+ much more unpopular than the French, in your country. Why is it?
+ The old school books?"
+
+ I doubted the school-book influence.
+
+ "Certainly their influence is not the main cause. It is the
+ organized Irish. Then it's the effect of the very fact that the
+ Irish question is not settled. You've had that problem at your very
+ door for 300 years. What's the matter that you don't solve it?"
+
+ "Yes, yes,"--he saw it. But the plaintive tone of such a man asking
+ such a question was significant and interesting and--sad.
+
+ Then I told him the curious fact that a British Government made up
+ of twenty individuals, every one of whom is most friendly to the
+ United States, will, when they act together as a Government, do the
+ most offensive things. I mentioned the blacklist; I mentioned
+ certain complaints that I then held in my hand--of Americans here
+ who are told by the British Government that they must turn over to
+ the British Government's agent in New York their American
+ securities which they hold in America!
+
+ There's a sort of imperious, arrogant, Tory action that comes
+ natural to the English Government, even when not natural to the
+ individual Englishman.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On April 5th, the day before the United States formally declared war,
+Page notified Washington that the British Government wished Mr. Balfour
+to go to the United States as the head of a Commission to confer with
+our Government. "Mr. Balfour is chosen for this mission," Page reported,
+"not only because he is Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, but
+because he is personally the most distinguished member of the
+Government." Page tells the story in more detail in a letter to Mr.
+Polk, at that time Counsellor of the State Department.
+
+ _To Frank L. Polk_
+
+ London, May 3, 1917.
+
+ DEAR MR. POLK:
+
+ ... Mr. Balfour accurately represents British character, British
+ opinion, and the British attitude. Nobody who knows him and knows
+ British character and the British attitude ever doubted that. I
+ know his whole tribe, his home-life, his family connections, his
+ friends; and, of course, since he became Foreign Secretary, I've
+ come to know him intimately. When the question first came up here
+ of his going, of course I welcomed it enthusiastically. About that
+ time during a two-hour conversation he asked me why the British
+ were so unpopular in the United States. Among other reasons I told
+ him that our official people on both sides steadfastly refused to
+ visit one another and to become acquainted. Neither he nor Lord
+ Grey, nor Mr. Asquith, nor Mr. Lloyd George, had ever been to the
+ United States, nor any other important British statesman in recent
+ times, and not a single member of the Administration was personally
+ known to a single member of the British Government. "I'll go," said
+ he, "if you are perfectly sure my going will be agreeable to the
+ President." He himself recalled the fact, during one of our several
+ conversations just before he left, that you had not come when he
+ and Lord Grey had invited you. If you had come, by the way, this
+ era of a better understanding would have begun then, and half our
+ old troubles would then have been removed. Keeping away from one
+ another is the best of all methods of keeping all old
+ misunderstandings alive and of making new ones.
+
+ I have no doubt that Mr. Balfour's visit will cause visits of many
+ first-class British statesmen during the war or soon afterward.
+ That's all we need to bring about a perfect understanding.
+
+ You may remember how I tried to get an official report about the
+ behaviour of the _Benham_[58], and how, in the absence of that,
+ Lord Beresford made a disagreeable speech about our Navy in the
+ House of Lords, and how, when months later you sent me
+ Roosevelt's[59] letter, Lord Beresford expressed regret to me and
+ said that he would explain in another speech. I hadn't seen the old
+ fellow for a long time till a fortnight ago. He greeted me
+ cheerily, and I said, "I don't think I ought to shake hands with
+ you till you retract what you said about our navy." He insisted on
+ my dining with him. He invited Admiral Sims also, and those two
+ sailors had a jolly evening of it. Sims's coming has straightened
+ out all that naval misunderstanding and more. He is of immense help
+ to them and to us. But I'm going to make old Beresford's life a
+ burden till he gets up in the Lords and takes that speech
+ back--publicly. He's really all right; but it's just as well to
+ keep the records right. The proceedings of the House of Lords are
+ handsomely bound and go into every gentleman's library. I have seen
+ two centuries of them in many a house.
+
+ We can now begin a distinctly New Era in the world's history and in
+ its management if we rise to the occasion: there's not a shadow of
+ doubt about that. And the United States can play a part bigger than
+ we have yet dreamed of if we prove big enough to lead the British
+ and the French instead of listening to Irish and Germans. Neither
+ England nor France is a democracy--far from it. We can make them
+ both democracies and develop their whole people instead of about 10
+ per cent. of their people. We have simply to conduct our affairs by
+ a large national policy and not by the complaints of our really
+ non-American people. See how a declaration of war has cleared the
+ atmosphere!
+
+ We're happy yet, on rations. There are no potatoes. We have
+ meatless days. Good wheat meantime is sunk every day. The
+ submarine must be knocked out. Else the earth will be ruled by the
+ German bayonet and natural living will be _verboten_. We'll all
+ have to goose-step as the Crown Prince orders or--be shot. I see
+ they now propose that the United States shall pay the big war
+ indemnity in raw materials to the value of hundreds of billions of
+ dollars! Not just yet, I guess!
+
+ As we get reports of what you are doing, it's most cheerful. I
+ assure you, God has yet made nothing or nobody equal to the
+ American people; and I don't think He ever will or can.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+One of the curious developments of this Balfour Mission was a request
+from President Wilson that Great Britain should take some decisive step
+for the permanent settlement of the Irish question. "The President,"
+this message ran, "wishes that, when you next meet the Prime Minister,
+you would explain to him that only one circumstance now appears to stand
+in the way of perfect coöperation with Great Britain. All Americans who
+are not immediately connected with Germany by blood ties find their one
+difficulty in the failure of Great Britain so far to establish a
+satisfactory form of self-government in Ireland. In the recent debates
+in Congress on the War Resolution, this sentiment was especially
+manifest. It came out in the speeches of those enemies of the
+Declaration who were not Irish themselves nor representatives of
+sections in which Irish voters possessed great influence--notably
+members from the Southern States.
+
+"If the American people were once convinced that there was a likelihood
+that the Irish question would soon be settled, great enthusiasm and
+satisfaction would result and it would also strengthen the coöperation
+which we are now about to organize between the United States and Great
+Britain. Say this in unofficial terms to Mr. Lloyd George, but impress
+upon him its very great significance. If the British Government should
+act successfully on this matter, our American citizens of Irish descent
+and to a great extent the German sympathizers who have made common cause
+with the Irish, would join hands in the great common cause."
+
+ _To the President_
+ London, May 4, 1917.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ ... It is a remarkable commentary on the insularity of the British
+ and on our studied isolation that till Mr. Balfour went over not a
+ member of this Government had ever met a member of our
+ Administration! Quite half our misunderstandings were due to this.
+ If I had the making of the laws of the two governments, I'd have a
+ statutory requirement that at least one visit a year by high
+ official persons should be made either way. We should never have
+ had a blacklist, etc., if that had been done. When I tried the
+ quite humble task of getting Polk to come and the excuse was made
+ that he couldn't be spared from his desk--Mr. President, I fear we
+ haven't half enough responsible official persons in our Government.
+ I should say that no man even of Polk's rank ought to have a desk:
+ just as well give him a mill-stone. Even I try not to have a desk:
+ else I'd never get anything of importance done; for I find that
+ talks and conferences in my office and in the government offices
+ and wherever else I can find out things take all my waking hours.
+ The Foreign Office here has about five high position men to every
+ one in the State Department. God sparing me, I'm going one of
+ these days to prepare a paper for our Foreign Affairs Committee on
+ the Waste of Having too Few High Grade Men in the Department of
+ State; a Plea for Five Assistant Secretaries for Every One Now
+ Existing and for Provision for International Visits by Them.
+
+ Here's an ancient and mouldy precedent that needs shattering--for
+ the coming of our country into its proper station and influence in
+ the world.
+
+ I am sure that Mr. Balfour's visit has turned out as well as I
+ hoped, and my hopes were high. He is one of the most interesting
+ men that I've ever had the honour to know intimately--he and Lord
+ Grey. Mr. Balfour is a Tory, of course; and in general I don't like
+ Tories, yet liberal he surely is--a sort of high-toned Scotch
+ democrat. I have studied him with increasing charm and interest.
+ Not infrequently when I am in his office just before luncheon he
+ says, "Come, walk over and we'll have lunch with the family." He's
+ a bachelor. One sister lives with him. Another (Lady Rayleigh, the
+ wife of the great chemist and Chancellor of Cambridge University)
+ frequently visits him. Either of those ladies could rule this
+ Empire. Then there are nieces and cousins always about--people of
+ rare cultivation, every one of 'em. One of those girls confirmed
+ the story that "Uncle Arthur" one day concluded that the niblick
+ was something more than a humble necessity of a bad golfer--that it
+ had positive virtues of its own and had suffered centuries of
+ neglect. He, therefore, proceeded to play with the niblick only,
+ till he proved his case and showed that it is a club entitled to
+ the highest respect.
+
+ A fierce old Liberal fighter in Parliamentary warfare, who entered
+ politics about the time Mr. Balfour did, told me this story the
+ other day. "I've watched Balfour for about forty years as a cat
+ watches a rat. I hate his party. I hated him till I learned better,
+ for I hated that whole Salisbury crowd. They wanted to Cecil
+ everything. But I'll tell you, Sir, apropos of his visit to your
+ country, that in all those years he has never spoken of the United
+ States except with high respect and often with deep affection. I
+ should have caught him, if he had."
+
+ I went with him to a college in London one afternoon where he
+ delivered a lecture on Dryden, to prove that poetry can carry a
+ certain cargo of argument but that argument can't raise the
+ smallest flight of poetry. Dry as it sounds, it was as good a
+ literary performance as I recall I ever heard.
+
+ At his "family" luncheon, I've found Lord Milner or Lord Lansdowne,
+ or some literary man who had come in to find out from Lady Rayleigh
+ how to conduct the Empire or to write a great book; and the modest
+ old chemical Lord sits silent most of the time and now and then
+ breaks loose to confound them all with a pat joke. This is a
+ vigorous family, these Balfours. There's one of them (a cousin of
+ some sort, I think, of the Foreign Secretary) who is a Lord of much
+ of Scotland, about as tall as Ben Nevis is high--a giant of a man.
+ One of his sons was killed early in the war and one was
+ missing--whether dead or not he did not know. Mrs. Page expressed
+ her hope one day to the old man that he had had news from his
+ missing son. "No, no," said he simply, "and me lady is awearying."
+
+ We've been lucky, Mr. President, in these days of immortal horrors
+ and of difficulties between two governments that did not know one
+ another--uncommonly lucky, in the large chances that politics gives
+ for grave errors, to have had two such men in the Foreign Office
+ here as Lord Grey and Mr. Balfour. There are men who were
+ mentioned for this post that would have driven us mad--or to war
+ with them. I'm afraid I've almost outgrown my living hero worship.
+ There isn't worshipful material enough lying around in the world to
+ keep a vigorous reverence in practice. But these two gentlemen by
+ birth and culture have at least sometimes seemed of heroic size to
+ me. It has meant much to know them well. I shall always be grateful
+ to them, for in their quiet, forceful way they helped me much to
+ establish right relations with these people--which, pray God, I
+ hope to retain through whatever new trials we may yet encounter.
+ For it will fall to us yet to loose and to free the British, and a
+ Briton set free is an American. That's all you can do for a man or
+ for a nation of men.
+
+ These Foreign Secretaries are not only men of much greater
+ cultivation than their Prime Ministers but of greater moral force.
+ But I've come to like Lloyd George very much. He'd never deliver a
+ lecture on Dryden, and he doesn't even play a good game of golf;
+ but he has what both Lord Grey and Mr. Balfour lack--a touch of
+ genius--whatever that is--not the kind that takes infinite pains,
+ but the kind that acts as an electric light flashed in the dark. He
+ said to me the other day that experts have nearly been the death of
+ him. "The Government has experts, experts, experts, everywhere. In
+ any department where things are not going well, I have found boards
+ and committees and boards of experts. But in one department at
+ least I've found a substitute for them. I let twenty experts go and
+ I put in one Man, and things began to move at once. Do you know any
+ real Men? When you hear of any, won't you let me know?"
+
+ A little while ago he dined with me, and, after dinner, I took him
+ to a corner of the drawing room and delivered your message to him
+ about Ireland. "God knows, I'm trying," he replied. "Tell the
+ President that. And tell him to talk to Balfour." Presently he
+ broke out--"Madmen, madmen--I never saw any such task," and he
+ pointed across the room to Sir Edward Carson, his First Lord of the
+ Admiralty--"Madmen." "But the President's right. We've got to
+ settle it and we've got to settle it now." Carson and Jellicoe came
+ across the room and sat down with us. "I've been telling the
+ Ambassador, Carson, that we've got to settle the Irish question
+ now--in spite of you.
+
+ "I'll tell you something else we've got to settle now," said
+ Carson. "Else it'll settle us. That's the submarines. The press and
+ public are working up a calculated and concerted attack on Jellicoe
+ and me, and, if they get us, they'll get you. It's an attack on the
+ Government made on the Admiralty. Prime Minister," said this Ulster
+ pirate whose civil war didn't come off only because the big war was
+ begun--"Prime Minister, it may be a fierce attack. Get ready for
+ it." Well, it has been developing ever since. But I can't for the
+ life of me guess at the possible results of an English
+ Parliamentary attack on a government. It's like a baseball man
+ watching a game of cricket. He can't see when the player is out or
+ why, or what caused it. Of course, the submarine may torpedo Lloyd
+ George and his Government. It looks very like it may overturn the
+ Admiralty, as Gallipoli did. If this public finds out the whole
+ truth, it will demand somebody's head. But I'm only a baseball man;
+ cricket is beyond me.
+
+ But Lloyd George will outlive the war as an active force, whatever
+ happen to him in the meantime. He's too heavily charged with
+ electricity to stop activity. The war has ended a good many careers
+ that seemed to have long promise. It is ending more every day. But
+ there is only one Lloyd George, and, whatever else he lack, he
+ doesn't lack life.
+
+ I heard all the speeches in both Houses on the resolution of
+ appreciation of our coming into the war--Bonar Law's, Asquith's
+ (one of the best), Dillon's, a Labour man's, and, in the Lords,
+ Curzon's, Crewe's, the Archbishop's (who delivered in the course of
+ his remarks a benediction on me) and Bryce's (almost the best of
+ all). It wasn't "oratory," but it was well said and well meant.
+ They know how badly they need help and they do mean to be as good
+ to us as their benignant insularity will permit. They are changing.
+ I can't describe the great difference that the war has made in
+ them. They'll almost become docile in a little more time.
+
+ And we came in in the nick of time for them--in very truth. If we
+ hadn't, their exchange would have gone down soon and they know it.
+ I shall never forget the afternoon I spent with Mr. Balfour and Mr.
+ Bonar Law on that subject. They saw blue ruin without our financial
+ help. And now, if we can save them from submarines, those that know
+ will know how vital our help was. Again, the submarine is the great
+ and grave and perhaps the only danger now. If that can be scotched,
+ I believe the whole Teutonic military structure would soon tumble.
+ If not, the Germans may go on as long as they can feed their army,
+ allowing their people to starve.
+
+ Of course, you know, we're on rations now--yet we suffer no
+ inconvenience on that score. But these queer people (they are the
+ most amusing and confusing and contradictory of all God's
+ creatures, these English, whose possibilities are infinite and
+ whose actualities, in many ways, are pitiful)--these queer people
+ are fiercely pursuing food-economy by discussing in the newspapers
+ whether a hen consumes more food than she produces, and whether
+ what dogs eat contains enough human food to justify the shooting of
+ every one in the Kingdom. That's the way we are coming down to
+ humble fare. But nothing can quite starve a people who all live
+ near the sea which yields fish enough near shore to feed them
+ wastefully.
+
+ All along this South shore, where I am to-day[60], I see the Stars
+ and Stripes; and everywhere there is a demand for the words and
+ music of the Battle Hymn of the Republic and the Star Spangled
+ Banner.
+
+ This our-new-Ally business is bringing me a lot of amusing
+ troubles. Theatres offer me boxes, universities offer me degrees,
+ hospitals solicit visits from me, clubs offer me dinners--I'll have
+ to get a new private secretary or two well-trained to say "No"
+ politely, else I shall not have my work done. But all that will
+ presently wear away as everything wears away (quickly, too) in the
+ grim face of this bloody monster of war which is consuming men as a
+ prairie fire consumes blades of grass. There's a family that lives
+ around the corner from this hotel. One son is in the trenches,
+ another is in a madhouse from shell-shock, a third coming home
+ wounded the other day was barely rescued when a torpedo sunk a
+ hospital ship and may lose his reason. I suppose I saw one hundred
+ men this afternoon on a single mile of beach who had lost both
+ legs. Through the wall from my house in London is a hospital. A
+ young Texan has been there, whose legs are gone at the thighs and
+ one arm at the elbow. God pity us for not having organized the
+ world better than this! We'll do it, yet, Mr. President--_you'll_
+ do it; and thank God for you. If we do not organize Europe and
+ make another such catastrophe impossible, life will not be worth
+ being born into except to the few whose days happen to fall between
+ recurring devastations of the world.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+"I hope that the English people," Colonel House wrote to Page about this
+time, "realize how successful Mr. Balfour's visit to America really was.
+There is no man they could have sent who could have done it better. He
+and the President got along marvellously well. The three of us dined and
+spent the evening together and it was delightful to see how sympathetic
+their minds were."
+
+A letter from Mr. Polk also discloses the impression which Mr. Balfour
+made upon Washington:
+
+ _From Frank L. Polk_
+
+ Washington, May 25, 1917.
+
+ MY DEAR MR. PAGE:
+
+ I just want to get off a line to catch the pouch.
+
+ You probably know what a wonderful success the British Mission has
+ been, but I do not think you can realize what a deep impression
+ they have made on all of us. Mr. Balfour really won the affection
+ of us all, and I do not know when I was more sorry to have a man
+ leave than I was to have him go last night. He expressed himself as
+ having been very much impressed with his reception and the way he
+ was treated. He was most fair in all discussions, and I think has a
+ better understanding of our point of view. I had the good fortune
+ of being present at the financial and the diplomatic conferences,
+ and I think we all felt that we were dealing with a sympathetic
+ friend.
+
+ He and the President got on tremendously. The best evidence of that
+ was the fact that the President went up to Congress and sat in the
+ gallery while Mr. Balfour addressed the House. This is without
+ precedent.
+
+ The difficult problem of course was the blacklist and bunkering
+ agreement, but I think we are by that. The important thing now is
+ for the British to make all the concessions possible in connection
+ with the release of goods in Rotterdam and the release of goods in
+ Prize Court, though the cases have not been begun. Of course I mean
+ cases of merely suspicion rather than where there is evidence of
+ wrongdoing.
+
+ The sending of the destroyers and troops abroad is going to do a
+ great deal toward impressing our people with the fact that we
+ really are in the war. I do not think it is thoroughly borne home
+ on the majority yet what a serious road we have chosen.
+
+ With warm regards,
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+
+ FRANK L. POLK.
+
+Mr. Polk's reference to the blacklist recalls an episode which in itself
+illustrates the changed character of the relations that had now been
+established between the American and the British governments. Mr.
+Balfour discussed shipping problems for the most part with Mr. Polk,
+under whose jurisdiction these matters fell. As one of these conferences
+was approaching its end Mr. Balfour slightly coughed, uttered an "er,"
+and gave other indications that he was about to touch upon a ticklish
+question.
+
+"Before I go," he said, "there--er--is one subject I would--er--like to
+say something about."
+
+Mr. Polk at once grasped what was coming.
+
+"I know what you have in mind," said Mr. Polk in his characteristically
+quick way. "You want us to apply your blacklist to neutrals."
+
+In other words, the British hoped that the United States, now that it
+was in the war, would adopt against South America and other offenders
+those same discriminations which this country had so fiercely objected
+to, when it was itself a neutral.
+
+The British statesman gave Mr. Polk one of his most winning smiles and
+nodded.
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said Mr. Polk, "it took Great Britain three years to
+reach a point where it was prepared to violate all the laws of blockade.
+You will find that it will take us only two months to become as great
+criminals as you are!"
+
+Mr. Balfour is usually not explosive in his manifestations of mirth, but
+his laughter, in reply to this statement, was almost uproarious. And the
+State Department was as good as its word. It immediately forgot all the
+elaborate "notes" and "protests" which it had been addressing to Great
+Britain. It became more inexorable than Great Britain had ever been in
+keeping foodstuffs out of neutral countries that were contiguous to
+Germany. Up to the time the United States entered the war, Germany, in
+spite of the watchful British fleet, had been obtaining large supplies
+from the United States through Holland, Denmark, and the Scandinavian
+peninsula. But the United States now immediately closed these leaks. In
+the main this country adopted a policy of "rationing"; that is, it would
+furnish the little nations adjoining Germany precisely the amount of
+food which they needed for their own consumption. This policy was one of
+the chief influences in undermining the German people and forcing their
+surrender. The American Government extended likewise the blacklist to
+South America and other countries, and, in doing so, it bettered the
+instruction of Great Britain herself.
+
+Though the whole story of the blockade thus seems finally to have ended
+in a joke, the whole proceeding has its serious side. The United States
+had been posing for three years as the champion of neutral rights; the
+point of view of Washington had been that there was a great principle at
+stake. If such a principle were involved, it was certainly present in
+just the same degree after the United States became belligerent as in
+the days when we were neutrals. The lofty ideals by which the
+Administration had professed to be guided should have still controlled
+its actions; the mere fact that we, as a belligerent, could obtain
+certain advantages would hardly have justified a great and high-minded
+nation in abandoning its principles. Yet abandon them we did from the
+day that we declared war. We became just as remorseless in disregarding
+the rights of small states as Great Britain--according to our numerous
+blockade notes--had been. Possibly, therefore, Mr. Balfour's mirth was
+not merely sympathetic or humorous; it perhaps echoed his discovery that
+our position for three years had really been nothing but a sham; that
+the State Department had been forcing points in which it did not really
+believe, or in which it did not believe when American interests were
+involved. At any rate, this ending of our long argument with Great
+Britain was a splendid justification for Page; his contention had always
+been that the preservation of civilization was more important than the
+technicalities of the international lawyers. And now the Wilson
+Administration, by throwing into the waste basket all the finespun
+theories with which it had been embarrassing the Allied cause since
+August 4, 1914, accepted--and accepted joyously--his point of view.
+
+
+II
+
+One of the first things which Mr. Balfour did, on his arrival in
+Washington, was personally to explain to President Wilson about the
+so-called "secret treaties." The "secret treaty" that especially preyed
+upon Mr. Wilson's mind, and which led to a famous episode at the
+Versailles Conference, was that which had been made with Italy in 1915,
+as consideration for Italy's participation in the war. Mr. Balfour, in
+telling the President of these territorial arrangements with Italy,
+naturally did not criticise his ally, but it was evident that he
+regarded the matter as something about which the United States should be
+informed.
+
+"This is the sort of thing you have to do when you are engaged in a
+war," he explained, and then he gave Mr. Wilson the details.
+
+Probably the most important information which Mr. Balfour and the French
+and Italian Commissions brought to Washington was the desperate
+situation of the Allied cause. On that point not one of the visiting
+statesmen or military and naval advisers made the slightest attempt at
+concealment. Mr. Balfour emphasized the seriousness of the crisis in one
+of his earliest talks with Mr. McAdoo, Secretary of the Treasury. The
+British statesman was especially interested in the financial situation
+and he therefore took up this matter at an early date with the Treasury
+Department.
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said Mr. McAdoo, "before we make any plans of financial
+assistance it is absolutely necessary that we know precisely where we
+stand. The all-important thing is the question as to how long the war is
+likely to last. If it is only to last a few months, it is evident that
+we need to make very different arrangements than if it is to last
+several years. Just what must we make provision for? Let us assume that
+the United States goes in with all its men and resources--that we
+dedicate all our money, our manufacturing plants, our army, our navy,
+everything we have got, to bringing the war to an end. How long will it
+take?"
+
+Mr. Balfour replied that it would be necessary to consult his naval and
+military advisers before he answered that question. He said that he
+would return in a day or two and make an explicit statement. He did so
+and his answer was this: Under these circumstances--that the United
+States should make war to the full limit of its power, in men and
+resources--the war could not be ended until the summer or the autumn of
+1919. Mr. McAdoo put the same question in the same form to the French
+and Italian Missions and obtained precisely the same answer.
+
+Page's papers show that Mr. Balfour, in the early stages of American
+participation, regarded the financial situation as the thing which
+chiefly threatened the success of the Allied cause. So much greater
+emphasis has been laid upon the submarine warfare that this may at first
+seem rather a misreading of Great Britain's peril. Yet the fact is that
+the high rate of exchange and the depredatory U-boat represented almost
+identically the same danger. The prospect that so darkened the horizon
+in the spring of 1917 was the possible isolation of Great Britain.
+England's weakness, as always, consisted in the fact that she was an
+island, that she could not feed herself with her own resources and that
+she had only about six weeks' supply of food ahead of her at any one
+time. If Germany could cut the lines of communication and so prevent
+essential supplies from reaching British ports, the population of Great
+Britain could be starved into surrender in a very brief time, France
+would be overwhelmed, and the triumph of the Prussian cause would be
+complete. That the success of the German submarine campaign would
+accomplish this result was a fact that the popular mind readily grasped.
+What it did not so clearly see, however, was that the financial collapse
+of Great Britain would cut these lines of communication quite as
+effectually as the submarine itself. The British were practically
+dependent for their existence upon the food brought from the United
+States, just as the Allied armies were largely dependent upon the steel
+which came from the great industrial plants of this country. If Great
+Britain could not find the money with which to purchase these supplies,
+it is quite apparent that they could not be shipped. The collapse of
+British credit therefore would have produced the isolation of the
+British Isles and led to a British surrender, just as effectively as
+would the success of the German submarine campaign.
+
+As soon as Bernstorff was sent home, therefore, and the participation of
+this country in the war became extremely probable, Mr. Balfour took up
+the financial question with Page.
+
+ _To the President_
+ March 5, 1917.
+
+ The inquiries which I have made here about financial conditions
+ disclose an international situation which is most alarming to the
+ financial and industrial outlook of the United States. England has
+ not only to pay her own war bills, but is obliged to finance her
+ Allies as well. Up to the present time she has done these tasks out
+ of her own capital. But she cannot continue her present extensive
+ purchases in the United States without shipping gold as payment for
+ them, and there are two reasons why she cannot make large
+ shipments of gold. In the first place, both England and France must
+ keep the larger part of the gold they have to maintain issues of
+ their paper at par; and, in the second place, the German U-boat has
+ made the shipping of gold a dangerous procedure even if they had it
+ to ship. There is therefore a pressing danger that the
+ Franco-American and Anglo-American exchange will be greatly
+ disturbed; the inevitable consequence will be that orders by all
+ the Allied Governments will be reduced to the lowest possible
+ amount and that trans-Atlantic trade will practically come to an
+ end. The result of such a stoppage will be a panic in the United
+ States. The world will therefore be divided into two hemispheres,
+ one of them, our own, will have the gold and the commodities; the
+ other, Great Britain and Europe, will need these commodities, but
+ it will have no money with which to pay for them. Moreover, it will
+ have practically no commodities of its own to exchange for them.
+ The financial and commercial result will be almost as bad for the
+ United States as for Europe. We shall soon reach this condition
+ unless we take quick action to prevent it. Great Britain and France
+ must have a credit in the United States which will be large enough
+ to prevent the collapse of world trade and the whole financial
+ structure of Europe.
+
+ If the United States declare war against Germany, the greatest help
+ we could give Great Britain and its Allies would be such a credit.
+ If we should adopt this policy, an excellent plan would be for our
+ Government to make a large investment in a Franco-British loan.
+ Another plan would be to guarantee such a loan. A great advantage
+ would be that all the money would be kept in the United States. We
+ could keep on with our trade and increase it, till the war ends,
+ and after the war Europe would purchase food and an enormous supply
+ of materials with which to reėquip her peace industries. We should
+ thus reap the profit of an uninterrupted and perhaps an enlarging
+ trade over a number of years and we should hold their securities in
+ payment.
+
+ On the other hand, if we keep nearly all the gold and Europe cannot
+ pay for reėstablishing its economic life, there may be a world-wide
+ panic for an indefinite period.
+
+ Of course we cannot extend such a credit unless we go to war with
+ Germany. But is there no way in which our Government might
+ immediately and indirectly help the establishment in the United
+ States of a large Franco-British credit without violating armed
+ neutrality? I do not know enough about our own reserve bank law to
+ form an opinion. But these banks would avert such a danger if they
+ were able to establish such a credit. Danger for us is more real
+ and imminent, I think, than the public on either side the Atlantic
+ understands. If it be not averted before its manifestations become
+ apparent, it will then be too late to save the day.
+
+ The pressure of this approaching crisis, I am certain, has gone
+ beyond the ability of the Morgan financial agency for the British
+ and French governments. The financial necessities of the Allies are
+ too great and urgent for any private agency to handle, for every
+ such agency has to encounter business rivalries and sectional
+ antagonisms.
+
+ It is not improbable that the only way of maintaining our present
+ preėminent trade position and averting a panic is by declaring war
+ on Germany. The submarine has added the last item to the danger of
+ a financial world crash. There is now an uncertainty about our
+ being drawn into the war; no more considerable credits can be
+ privately placed in the United States. In the meantime a collapse
+ may come.
+
+ PAGE.
+
+Urgent as this message was, it really understated the desperate
+condition of British and Allied finances. That the warring powers were
+extremely pressed for money has long been known; but Page's papers
+reveal for the first time the fact that they were facing the prospect of
+bankruptcy itself. "The whole Allied combination on this side the ocean
+are very much nearer the end of their financial resources," he wrote in
+July, "than anybody has guessed or imagined. We only can save them....
+The submarines are steadily winning the war. Pershing and his army have
+bucked up the French for the moment. But for his coming there was more
+or less danger of a revolution in Paris and of serious defection in the
+army. Everybody here fears that the French will fail before another
+winter of the trenches. Yet--the Germans must be still worse off."
+
+The matter that was chiefly pressing at the time of the Balfour visit
+was the fact that the British balances in the New York banks were in a
+serious condition. It should always be remembered, however, that Great
+Britain was financing not only herself, but her Allies, and that the
+difficult condition in which she now found herself was caused by the not
+too considerate demands of the nations with which she was allied in the
+war. Thus by April 6, 1917, Great Britain had overdrawn her account with
+J.P. Morgan to the extent of $400,000,000 and had no cash available with
+which to meet this overdraft. This obligation had been incurred in the
+purchase of supplies, both for Great Britain and the allied governments;
+and securities, largely British owned stocks and bonds, had been
+deposited to protect the bankers. The money was now coming due; if the
+obligations were not met, the credit of Great Britain in this country
+would reach the vanishing point. Though at first there was a slight
+misunderstanding about this matter, the American Government finally
+paid this over-draft out of the proceeds of the first Liberty Loan. This
+act saved the credit of the allied countries; it was, of course, only
+the beginning of the financial support that America brought to the
+allied cause; the advances that were afterward furnished from the
+American Treasury made possible the purchases of food and supplies in
+enormous quantities. The first danger that threatened, the isolation and
+starvation of Great Britain, was therefore overcome. It was the joint
+product of Page's work in London and that of the Balfour Commission in
+the United States.
+
+
+III
+
+Until these financial arrangements had been made there was no certainty
+that the supplies which were so essential to victory would ever leave
+the United States; this obstruction at the source had now been removed.
+But the greater difficulty still remained. The German submarines were
+lying off the waters south and west of Ireland ready to sink the supply
+ships as soon as they entered the prohibited zone. Mr. Balfour and his
+associates were working also on this problem in Washington; and, at the
+same time, Page and Admiral Sims and the British Admiralty were bending
+all their energies in London to obtain immediate coöperation.
+
+A remark which Mr. Balfour afterward made to Admiral Sims shows the
+frightful nature of the problem which was confronting Great Britain at
+that time.
+
+"That was a terrible week we spent at sea in that voyage to the United
+States," Mr. Balfour said. "We knew that the German submarine campaign
+was succeeding. Their submarines were destroying our shipping and we
+had no means of preventing it. I could not help thinking that we were
+facing the defeat of Great Britain."
+
+Page's papers show that as early as February 25th he understood in a
+general way the disheartening proportions of the German success. "It is
+a momentous crisis," he wrote at that time. "The submarines are
+destroying shipping at an appalling rate." Yet it was not until Admiral
+Sims arrived in London, on April 9th, that the Ambassador learned all
+the details. In sending the Admiral to England the Navy Department had
+acted on an earnest recommendation from Page. The fact that the American
+Navy was inadequately represented in the British capital had long been a
+matter of embarrassment to him. The ability and personal qualifications
+of our attachés had been unquestioned; but none of them during the war
+had been men of high rank, and this in itself proved to be a constant
+impediment to their success. While America was represented by
+Commanders, Japan, Italy, and France had all sent Admirals to London.
+Page's repeated requests for an American Admiral had so far met with no
+response, but the probability that this country would become involved in
+the war now gave new point to his representations. In the latter part of
+March, Page renewed his request in still more urgent form, and this time
+the President and the Navy Department responded favourably. The result
+was that, on April 9th, three days after the American declaration of
+war, Admiral Sims and his flag-lieutenant, Commander Babcock, presented
+themselves at the American Embassy. There was little in the appearance
+of these men to suggest a violent naval demonstration against Germany.
+Both wore civilian dress, their instructions having commanded them not
+to bring uniforms; both were travelling under assumed names, and both
+had no more definite orders than to investigate the naval situation and
+cable the results to Washington. In spite of these attempts at secrecy,
+the British had learned that Admiral Sims was on the way; they rejoiced
+not only in this fact, but in the fact that Sims had been chosen, for
+there was no American naval officer whose professional reputation stood
+so high in the British Navy or who was so personally acceptable to
+British officialdom and the British public. The Admiralty therefore met
+Admiral Sims at Liverpool, brought him to London in a special train,
+and, a few hours after his arrival, gave him the innermost secrets on
+the submarine situation--secrets which were so dangerous that not all
+the members of the British Cabinet had been let into them.
+
+Page welcomed Admiral Sims with a cordiality which that experienced sea
+veteran still gratefully remembers. He at once turned over to him two
+rooms in the Embassy. "You can have everything we've got," the
+Ambassador said. "If necessary to give you room, we'll turn the whole
+Embassy force out into the street." The two men had not previously met,
+but in an instant they became close friends. A common sympathy and a
+common enthusiasm were greatly needed at that crisis. As soon as Admiral
+Sims had finished his interview with Admiral Jellicoe, he immediately
+sought out the Ambassador and laid all the facts before him. Germany was
+winning the war. Great Britain had only six weeks' food supply on hand,
+and the submarines were sinking the ships at a rate which, unless the
+depredations should be checked, meant an early and unconditional
+surrender of the British Empire. Only the help of the United States
+could prevent this calamity.
+
+Page, of course, was aghast: the facts and figures Admiral Sims gave him
+disclosed a situation which was even more desperate than he had
+imagined. He advised the Admiral to cable the whole story immediately to
+Washington. Admiral Sims at first had some difficulty in obtaining the
+Admiralty's consent to doing this, and the reason was the one with which
+Page had long been familiar--the fear, altogether too justified, that
+the news would "leak" out of Washington. Of course there was no
+suspicion in British naval circles of the good faith of the Washington
+officials, but important facts had been sent so many times under the
+seal of the strictest secrecy and had then found their way into the
+newspapers that there was a deep distrust of American discretion.
+Certainly no greater damage could have been done the allied cause at
+that time than to have the Germans learn how successfully their
+submarine campaign was progressing. The question was referred to the
+Imperial War Council and its consent obtained. The report, however, was
+sent to the Navy Department in the British naval code, and decoded in
+the British Embassy in Washington.
+
+Admiral Sims's message gave all the facts about the submarine situation,
+and concluded with the recommendation that the United States should
+assemble all floating craft that could be used in the anti-submarine
+warfare, destroyers, tugs, yachts, light cruisers, and similar vessels,
+and send them immediately to Queenstown, where they would do valuable
+service in convoying merchant vessels and destroying the U-boats. At
+that time the American Navy had between fifty and sixty destroyers that
+were patrolling the American coast; these could have been despatched,
+almost immediately, to the scene of operations; but, in response to this
+request, the Department sent six to Queentown.
+
+The next few months were very unhappy ones for Admiral Sims. He was the
+representative in London of one of the world's greatest naval powers,
+participating in the greatest war that had ever enlisted its energies,
+yet his constant appeals for warships elicited the most inadequate
+response, his well-reasoned recommendations for meeting the crisis were
+frequently unanswered and at other times were met with counter-proposals
+so childish that they seemed almost to have originated in the brains of
+newspaper amateurs, and his urgent pictures of a civilization rapidly
+going to wreck were apparently looked upon with suspicion as the
+utterances of a man who had been completely led astray by British guile.
+To give a fair idea of Washington's neglect during this period it is
+only necessary to point out that, for four months, Admiral Sims occupied
+the two rooms in the Embassy directly above Page's, with Commander
+Babcock as his only aid. Sims's repeated requests to Secretary Daniels
+for an additional staff went unheeded. Had it not been for the Admiral's
+constant daily association with Page and the comfort and encouragement
+which the Ambassador gave him, this experience would have been almost
+unbearable. In the latter part of April, the Admiral's appeals to
+Washington having apparently fallen on deaf ears, he asked Page to
+second his efforts. The Admiral and Commander Babcock wrote another
+message, and drove in a motor car to Brighton, where Page was taking a
+little rest. The Admiral did not know just how strong a statement the
+Ambassador would care to sponsor, and so he did not make this
+representation as emphatic as the judgment of both men would have
+preferred.
+
+The Admiral handed Page the paper, saying that he had prepared it with
+the hope that the Ambassador would sign it and send it directly to
+President Wilson.
+
+"It is quite apparent," Admiral Sims said, "that the Department doesn't
+believe what I have been saying. Or they don't believe what the British
+are saying. They think that England is exaggerating the peril for
+reasons of its own. They think I am hopelessly pro-British and that I
+am being used. But if you'll take it up directly with the President,
+then they may be convinced."
+
+Page put on his spectacles, took the paper, and read it through. Then,
+looking over the rim of his glasses in his characteristic way, he leaned
+toward Admiral Sims and said:
+
+"Admiral, it isn't half strong enough! I think I can write a better
+despatch than that, myself! At least let me try."
+
+He immediately took a pen and paper and in a few minutes he had written
+his own version which he gave the Admiral to read. The latter was
+delighted with it and in a brief time it was on its way to Washington.
+
+ From: Ambassador Page.
+ To: Secretary of State.
+ Sent: 27 April, 1917.
+
+ _Very confidential for Secretary and President_
+
+ There is reason for the greatest alarm about the issue of the war
+ caused by the increasing success of the German submarines. I have
+ it from official sources that during the week ending 22nd April, 88
+ ships of 237,000 tons, allied and neutral, were lost. The number of
+ vessels unsuccessfully attacked indicated a great increase in the
+ number of submarines in action.
+
+ This means practically a million tons lost every month till the
+ shorter days of autumn come. By that time the sea will be about
+ clear of shipping. Most of the ships are sunk to the westward and
+ southward of Ireland. The British have in that area every available
+ anti-submarine craft, but their force is so insufficient that they
+ hardly discourage the submarines.
+
+ The British transport of troops and supplies is already strained to
+ the utmost, and the maintenance of the armies in the field is
+ threatened. There is food enough here to last the civil population
+ only not more than six weeks or two months.
+
+ Whatever help the United States may render at any time in the
+ future, or in any theatre of the war, our help is now more
+ seriously needed in this submarine area for the sake of all the
+ Allies than it can ever be needed again, or anywhere else.
+
+ After talking over this critical situation with the Prime Minister
+ and other members of the Government, I can not refrain from most
+ strongly recommending the immediate sending over of every destroyer
+ and all other craft that can be of anti-submarine use. This seems
+ to me the sharpest crisis of the war, and the most dangerous
+ situation for the Allies that has arisen or could arise.
+
+ If enough submarines can be destroyed in the next two or three
+ months, the war will be won, and if we can contribute effective
+ help immediately, it will be won directly by our aid. I cannot
+ exaggerate the pressing and increasing danger of this situation.
+ Thirty or more destroyers and other similar craft sent by us
+ immediately would very likely be decisive.
+
+ There is no time to be lost.
+
+ (Signed) PAGE.
+
+This cablegram had a certain effect. The reply came from Washington that
+"eventually" thirty-six destroyers would be sent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Page's letters of this period are full of the same subject.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, May 4, 1917.
+
+ Dear Mr. President:
+
+ The submarines have become a very grave danger. The loss of British
+ and allied tonnage increases with the longer and brighter days--as
+ I telegraphed you, 237,000 tons last week; and the worst of it is,
+ the British are not destroying them. The Admiralty publishes a
+ weekly report which, though true, is not the whole truth. It is
+ known in official circles here that the Germans are turning out at
+ least two a week--some say three; and the British are not
+ destroying them as fast as new ones are turned out. If merely the
+ present situation continue, the war will pretty soon become a
+ contest of endurance under hunger, with an increasing proportion of
+ starvation. Germany is yet much the worse off, but it will be
+ easily possible for Great Britain to suffer to the danger point
+ next winter or earlier unless some decided change be wrought in
+ this situation.
+
+ The greatest help, I hope, can come from us--our destroyers and
+ similar armed craft--provided we can send enough of them quickly.
+ The area to be watched is so big that many submarine hunters are
+ needed. Early in the war the submarines worked near shore. There
+ are very many more of them now and their range is one hundred
+ miles, or even two hundred, at sea.
+
+ The public is becoming very restive with its half information, and
+ it is more and more loudly demanding all the facts. There are
+ already angry threats to change the personnel of the Admiralty;
+ there is even talk of turning out the Government. "We must have
+ results, we must have results." I hear confidentially that Jellicoe
+ has threatened to resign unless the Salonica expedition is brought
+ back: to feed and equip that force requires too many ships.
+
+ And there are other troubles impending. Norway has lost so many of
+ her ships that she dare not send what are left to sea. Unarmed
+ they'll all perish. If she arms them, Germany will declare war
+ against her. There is a plan on foot for the British to charter
+ these Norwegian ships and to arm them, taking the risk of German
+ war against Norway. If war comes (as it is expected) England must
+ then defend Norway the best she can. And _then England may ask for
+ our big ships to help in these waters_. All this is yet in the
+ future, but possibly not far in the future.
+
+ For the present the only anti-submarine help is the help we may be
+ able to give to patrol the wide area off Ireland. If we had one
+ hundred destroyers to send, the job there could, I am told, be
+ quickly done. A third of that number will help mightily. At the
+ present rate of destruction more than four million tons will be
+ sunk before the summer is gone.
+
+ Such is this dire submarine danger. The English thought that they
+ controlled the sea; the Germans, that they were invincible on land.
+ Each side is losing where it thought itself strongest.
+
+ Admiral Sims is of the greatest help imaginable. Of course, I gave
+ him an office in one of our Embassy buildings, and the Admiralty
+ has given him an office also with them. He spends much of his time
+ there, and they have opened all doors and all desks and drawers to
+ him. He strikes me (and the English so regard him) as a man of
+ admirable judgment--unexcitable and indefatigable. I hope we'll
+ soon send a general over, to whom the War Department will act
+ similarly. Hoover, too, must have a good man here as, I dare say,
+ he has already made known. These will cover the Navy, the Army,
+ Food, and Shipping. Perhaps a Censor and an Intelligence (Secret
+ Service) group ought to come. I mean these for permanent--at least
+ indefinite--service. Exchange visits by a Congressional Committee
+ (such as the French and British make) and by high official persons
+ such as members of your Cabinet (such also as the French and
+ British make)--you will have got ideas about these from Mr.
+ Balfour.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+In the latter part of June Admiral Sims went to Queenstown. Admiral
+Bayly, who directed the operation of the anti-submarine forces there,
+had gone away for a brief rest, and Admiral Sims had taken over the
+command of both the British and American forces at that point. This
+experience gave Admiral Sims a first-hand picture of a really deplorable
+situation. The crisis was so desperate that he made another appeal to
+Page.
+
+ _From Admiral William S. Sims_
+
+ Admiralty House, Queenstown,
+ June 25, 1917.
+
+ My Dear Mr. Page:
+
+ I enclose herewith a letter on the submarine situation[61].
+
+ I think I have made it plain therein that the Allies are losing the
+ war; that it will be already lost when the loss of shipping reaches
+ the point where fully adequate supplies cannot be maintained on the
+ various battle fronts.
+
+ I cannot understand why our Government should hesitate to send the
+ necessary anti-submarine craft to this side.
+
+ There are at least seventeen more destroyers employed on our
+ Atlantic coast, _where there is no war_, not to mention numerous
+ other very useful anti-submarine craft, including sea-going tugs,
+ etc.
+
+ Can you not do something to bring our Government to an
+ understanding of how very serious the situation is? Would it not be
+ well to send another telegram to Mr. Lansing and the President, and
+ also send them the enclosed correspondence?
+
+ I am sending this by mail because I may be somewhat delayed in
+ returning to London.
+
+ Very sincerely yours,
+
+ Wm. S. Sims.
+
+Page immediately acted on this suggestion.
+
+ _Most confidential for the Secretary of State and President only_
+
+ Sims sends me by special messenger from Queenstown the most
+ alarming reports of the submarine situation which are confirmed by
+ the Admiralty here. He says that the war will be won or lost in
+ this submarine zone within a few months. Time is of the essence of
+ the problem, and anti-submarine craft which cannot be assembled in
+ the submarine zone almost immediately may come too late. There is,
+ therefore, a possibility that this war may become a war between
+ Germany and the United States alone. Help is far more urgently and
+ quickly needed in this submarine zone than anywhere else in the
+ whole war area.
+
+ Page.
+
+The United States had now been in the war for three months and only
+twenty-eight of the sixty destroyers which were available had been sent
+into the field. Yet this latest message of Page produced no effect, and,
+when Admiral Sims returned from Queenstown, the two men, almost in
+despair, consulted as to the step which they should take next. What was
+the matter? Was it that Washington did not care to get into the naval
+war with its full strength, or was it that it simply refused to believe
+the representations of its Admiral and its Ambassador? Admiral Sims and
+Page went over the whole situation and came to the conclusion that
+Washington regarded them both as so pro-British that their reports were
+subject to suspicion. Just as Page had found that the State Department,
+and its "trade advisers," had believed that the British were using the
+blockade as a means of destroying American trade for the benefit of
+Britain, so now he believed that Mr. Daniels and Admiral Benson, the
+Chief of Naval Operations, evidently thought that Great Britain was
+attempting to lure American warships into European waters, to undergo
+the risk of protecting British commerce, while British warships were
+kept safely in harbour. Page suggested that there was now only one thing
+left to do, and that was to request the British Government itself to
+make a statement to President Wilson that would substantiate his own
+messages.
+
+"Whatever else they think of the British in Washington," he said, "they
+know one thing--and that is that a British statesman like Mr. Balfour
+will not lie."
+
+Mr. Balfour by this time had returned from America. The fact that he had
+established these splendid personal relations with Mr. Wilson, and that
+he had impressed the American public so deeply with his sincerity and
+fine purpose, made him especially valuable for this particular appeal.
+Page and Admiral Sims therefore went to the Foreign Office and laid all
+the facts before him. Their own statements, Page informed the Foreign
+Secretary, were evidently regarded as hysterical and biased by an
+unreasoning friendliness to Great Britain. If Mr. Balfour would say the
+same things over his own signature, then they would not be disbelieved.
+
+Mr. Balfour gladly consented. He called in Admiral Jellicoe and asked
+him to draft a despatch, so that all the technical facts would be
+completely accurate. He also consulted with Sir Edward Carson, the First
+Lord of the Admiralty. Then Mr. Balfour put the document in its final
+shape and signed it. It was as follows:
+
+ _Mr. Balfour to the President_
+
+ June 30, 1917.
+
+ The forces at present at the disposal of the British Admiralty are
+ not adequate to protect shipping from submarine attack in the
+ danger zone round the British Islands. Consequently shipping is
+ being sunk at a greater rate than it can be replaced by new tonnage
+ of British origin.
+
+ The time will come when, if the present rate of loss continues, the
+ available shipping, apart from American contribution, will be
+ insufficient to bring to this country sufficient foodstuffs and
+ other essentials, including oil fuel. The situation in regard to
+ our Allies, France, and Italy, is much the same.
+
+ Consequently, it is absolutely necessary to add to our forces as a
+ first step, pending the adoption or completion of measures which
+ will, it is hoped, eventually lead to the destruction of enemy
+ submarines at a rate sufficient to ensure safety of our sea
+ communications.
+
+ The United States is the only allied country in a position to help.
+ The pressing need is for armed small craft of every kind available
+ in the area where commerce concentrates near the British and French
+ coasts. Destroyers, submarines, gunboats, yachts, trawlers, and
+ tugs would all give invaluable help, and if sent in sufficient
+ numbers would undoubtedly save a situation which is manifestly
+ critical. But they are required now and in as great numbers as
+ possible. There is no time for delay. The present method of
+ submarine attack is almost entirely by torpedo with the submarine
+ submerged. The gun defense of merchant ships keeps the submarine
+ below the surface but does no more; offensively against a submerged
+ submarine it is useless, and the large majority of the ships
+ torpedoed never see the attacking submarine until the torpedo has
+ hit the ship[62].
+
+ The present remedy is, therefore, to prevent the submarine from
+ using its periscope for fear of attack by bomb or ram from small
+ craft, and this method of defense for the shipping and offense
+ against the submarine requires small craft in very large numbers.
+
+ The introduction of the convoy system, provided there are
+ sufficient destroyers to form an adequate screen to the convoy,
+ will, it is hoped, minimize losses when it is working, and the
+ provision of new offensive measures is progressing; but for the
+ next few months there is only one safeguard, viz., the immediate
+ addition to patrols of every small vessel that can possibly be sent
+ to European waters.
+
+Page, moreover, kept up his own appeal:
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ July 5th.
+
+ _Strictly confidential to the President and the Secretary_
+
+ The British Cabinet is engaging in a threatening controversy about
+ the attitude which they should take toward the submarine peril.
+ There is a faction in the Admiralty which possesses the
+ indisputable facts and which takes a very disheartening view of
+ the situation. This group insists that the Cabinet should make a
+ confession at least to us of the full extent of the danger and that
+ it should give more information to the public. The public does not
+ feel great alarm simply because it has been kept in too great
+ ignorance. But the political faction is so far the stronger. It
+ attempts to minimize the facts, and, probably for political
+ reasons, it refuses to give these discouraging facts wide
+ publicity. The politicians urge that it is necessary to conceal the
+ full facts from the Germans. They also see great danger in throwing
+ the public into a panic.
+
+ Mr. Lloyd George is always optimistic and he is too much inclined
+ to yield his judgment to political motives. In his recent address
+ in Glasgow he gave the public a comforting impression of the
+ situation. But the facts do not warrant the impression which he
+ gave.
+
+ This dispute among the political factions is most unfortunate and
+ it may cause an explosion of public feeling at any time. Changes in
+ the Cabinet may come in consequence. If the British public knew all
+ the facts or if the American people knew them, the present British
+ Government would probably fall. It is therefore not only the
+ submarine situation which is full of danger. The political
+ situation is in a dangerous state also.
+
+ PAGE.
+
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+
+ Wilsford Manor, Salisbury,
+
+ July 8, 1917.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ Since admirals and generals began to come from home, they and the
+ war have taken my time so completely, day and night, that I haven't
+ lately written you many things that I should like to tell you. I'll
+ try here--a house of a friend of ours where the only other guest
+ besides your mother and me is Edward Grey. This is the first time
+ I've seen him since he left office. Let me take certain big
+ subjects in order and come to smaller things later:
+
+ 1. The German submarines are succeeding to a degree that the public
+ knows nothing about. These two things are true: (a) The Germans are
+ building submarines faster than the English sink them. In this way,
+ therefore, they are steadily gaining. (b) The submarines are
+ sinking freight ships faster than freight ships are being built by
+ the whole world. In this way, too, then, the Germans are
+ succeeding. Now if this goes on long enough, the Allies' game is
+ up. For instance, they have lately sunk so many fuel oil ships,
+ that this country may very soon be in a perilous condition--even
+ the Grand Fleet may not have enough fuel. Of course the chance is
+ that oil ships will not continue to fall victims to the U-boats and
+ we shall get enough through to replenish the stock. But this
+ illustrates the danger, and it is a very grave danger.
+
+ The best remedy so far worked out is the destroyer. The submarines
+ avoid destroyers and they sink very, very few ships that are
+ convoyed. If we had destroyers enough to patrol the whole approach
+ (for, say, 250 miles) to England, the safety of the sea would be
+ very greatly increased; and if we had enough to patrol and to
+ convoy every ship going and coming, the damage would be reduced to
+ a minimum. The Admiral and I are trying our best to get our
+ Government to send over 500 improvised destroyers--yachts,
+ ocean-going tugs--any kind of swift craft that can be armed. Five
+ hundred such little boats might end the war in a few months; for
+ the Germans are keeping the spirit of their people and of their
+ army up by their submarine success. If that success were stopped
+ they'd have no other cry half so effective. If they could see this
+ in Washington as we see it, they'd do it and do it not halfway but
+ with a vengeance. If they don't do it, the war may be indefinitely
+ prolonged and a wholly satisfactory peace may never be made. The
+ submarine is the most formidable thing the war has produced--by
+ far--and it gives the German the only earthly chance he has to win.
+ And he _may_ substantially win by it yet. That's what the British
+ conceal. In fact, half of them do not see it or believe it. But
+ nothing is truer, or plainer. One hundred thousand submarine
+ chasers next year may be worth far less than 500 would be worth
+ now, for next year see how few ships may be left! The mere arming
+ of ships is not enough. Nearly all that are sunk are armed. The
+ submarine now carries a little periscope and a big one, each
+ painted the colour of the sea. You can't see a little periscope
+ except in an ocean as smooth as glass. It isn't bigger than a
+ coffee cup. The submarine thus sinks its victims without ever
+ emerging or ever being seen. As things now stand, the Germans are
+ winning the war, and they are winning it on the sea; that's the
+ queer and the most discouraging fact. My own opinion is that all
+ the facts ought to be published to all the world. Let the Germans
+ get all the joy they can out of the confession. No matter, if the
+ Government and the people of the United States knew all the facts,
+ we'd have 1,000 improvised destroyers (yachts, tugs, etc., etc.)
+ armed and over here very quickly. Then the tide would turn.
+
+ Then there'd be nothing to fear in the long run. For the military
+ authorities all agree that the German Army is inferior to the
+ British and French and will be whipped. That may take a long time
+ yet; but of the result nobody who knows seems to have any
+ doubt--unless the French get tired and stop. They have periods of
+ great war weariness and there is real danger that they may quit and
+ make a separate peace. General Pershing's presence has made the
+ situation safe for the moment. But in a little while something else
+ spectacular and hopeful may be required to keep them in line.
+
+ Such is an accurate picture of the war as it is now, and it is a
+ dangerous situation.
+
+ 2. The next grave danger is financial. The European Allies have so
+ bled the English for money that the English would by this time
+ probably have been on a paper money basis (and of course all the
+ Allies as well) if we had not come to their financial aid. And
+ we've got to keep our financial aid going to them to prevent this
+ disastrous result. That wouldn't at once end the war, if they had
+ all abandoned specie payments; but it would be a frightfully severe
+ blow and it might later bring defeat. That is a real danger. And
+ the Government at Washington, I fear, does not know the full extent
+ of the danger. They think that the English are disposed to lie down
+ on them. They don't realize the cost of the war. This Government
+ has bared all this vast skeleton to me; but I fear that Washington
+ imagines that part of it is a deliberate scare. It's a very real
+ danger.
+
+ Now, certain detached items:
+
+ Sims is the idol of the British Admiralty and he is doing his job
+ just as well as any man could with the tools and the chance that he
+ has. He has made the very best of the chance and he has completely
+ won the confidence and admiration of this side of the world.
+
+ Pershing made an admirable impression here, and in France he has
+ simply set them wild with joy. His coming and his little army have
+ been worth what a real army will be worth later. It is well he came
+ to keep the French in line.
+
+ The army of doctors and nurses have had a similar effect.
+
+ Even the New England saw-mill units have caused a furor of
+ enthusiasm. They came with absolute Yankee completeness of
+ organization--with duplicate parts of all their machinery, tents,
+ cooks, pots, and pans, and everything ship-shape. The only question
+ they asked was: "Say, where the hell are them trees you want sawed
+ up?" That's the way to do a job! Yankee stock is made high here by
+ such things as that.
+
+ We're getting a crowd of Yankee lecturers on the United States to
+ go up and down this Kingdom. There's the greatest imaginable
+ curiosity to hear about the United States in all kinds of society
+ from munition workers to universities. I got the British Government
+ to write Buttrick[63] to come as its guest, and the Rockefeller
+ Boards rose to the occasion. He'll probably be along presently. If
+ he hasn't already sailed when you get this, see him and tell him to
+ make arrangements to have pictures sent over to him to illustrate
+ his lectures. Who else could come to do this sort of a job?
+
+ I am myself busier than I have ever been. The kind of work the
+ Embassy now has to do is very different from the work of the days
+ of neutrality. It continues to increase--especially the work that I
+ have to do myself. But it's all pleasant now. We are trying to help
+ and no longer to hinder. To save my life I don't see how the
+ Washington crowd can look at themselves in a mirror and keep their
+ faces straight. Yesterday they were bent on sending everything into
+ European neutral states. The foundations of civilization would give
+ way if neutral trade were interfered with. Now, nothing must go in
+ except on a ration basis. Yesterday it must be a peace without
+ victory. Now it must be a complete victory, every man and every
+ dollar thrown in, else no peace is worth having. I don't complain.
+ I only rejoice. But I'm glad that kind of a rapid change is not a
+ part of my record. The German was the same beast yesterday that he
+ is to-day; and it makes a simple-minded, straight-minded man like
+ me wonder which attitude was the (or is the) attitude of real
+ conviction. But this doesn't bother me now as a real problem--only
+ as a speculation. What we call History will, I presume, in time
+ work this out. But History is often a kind of lie. But never mind
+ that. The only duty of mankind now is to win. Other things can
+ wait.
+
+ I walked over to Stonehenge and back (about six miles) with Lord
+ Grey (Sir Edward, you know) and we, like everybody else, fell to
+ talking about when the war may end. We know as well as anybody and
+ no better than anybody else. I have very different moods about
+ it--no convictions. It seems to me to depend, as things now are,
+ more on the submarines than on anything else. If we could
+ effectually discourage them so that the Germans would have to
+ withdraw them and could no more keep up the spirit of their people
+ by stories of the imminent starvation of England, I have a feeling
+ that the hunger and the war weariness of the German people would
+ lead them to force an end. But, the more they are called on to
+ suffer the more patriotic do they think themselves and they _may_
+ go on till they drop dead in their tracks.
+
+ What I am really afraid of is that the Germans may, before winter,
+ offer all that the Western Allies most want--the restoration of
+ Belgium and France, the return of Alsace-Lorraine, etc., in the
+ West and the surrender of the Colonies--provided Austria is not
+ dismembered. That would virtually leave them the chance to work out
+ their Middle Europe scheme and ultimately there'd probably have to
+ be another war over that question. That's the real eventuality to
+ be feared--a German defeat in the West but a German victory in the
+ Southeast. Everybody in Europe is so war weary that such a plan
+ _may_ succeed.
+
+ On the other hand, what Hoover and Northcliffe fear may come
+ true--that the Germans are going to keep up the struggle for
+ years--till their armies are practically obliterated, as Lee's army
+ was. If the Allies were actually to kill (not merely wound, but
+ actually kill) 5,000 Germans a day for 300 days a year, it would
+ take about four years to obliterate the whole German Army. There is
+ the bare possibility, therefore, of a long struggle yet. But I
+ can't believe it. My dominant mood these days is an end within a
+ very few months after the submarines are knocked out. Send over,
+ therefore, 1,000 improvised destroyers the next two months, and
+ I'll promise peace by Christmas. Otherwise I can make no promises.
+ That's all that Lord Grey and I know, and surely we are two wise
+ men. What, therefore, is the use in writing any more about this?
+
+ The chief necessity that grows upon me is that all the facts must
+ be brought out that show the kinship in blood and ideals of the two
+ great English-speaking nations. We were actually coming to believe
+ ourselves that we were part German and Slovene and Pole and
+ What-not, instead of essentially being Scotch and English. Hence
+ the unspeakable impudence of your German who spoke of eliminating
+ the Anglo-Saxon element from American life! The truth should be
+ forcibly and convincingly told and repeated to the end of the
+ chapter, and our national life should proceed on its natural
+ historic lines, with its proper historic outlook and background. We
+ can do something to bring this about.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+The labour of getting the American Navy into the war was evidently at
+first a difficult one, but the determination of Page and Admiral Sims
+triumphed, and, by August and September, our energies were fully
+engaged. And the American Navy made a record that will stand
+everlastingly to its glory. Without its help the German submarines could
+never have been overcome.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 58: The reference is to the attack made in October, 1916, by
+the German Submarine U-53, off Nantucket on several British ships. An
+erroneous newspaper account said that the _Benham_, an American
+destroyer, had moved in a way that facilitated the operations of the
+German submarine. This caused great bitterness in England, until Page
+showed the Admiralty a report from the Navy Department proving that the
+story was false.]
+
+[Footnote 59: This, of course, is Franklin D. Roosevelt, Assistant
+Secretary of the Navy in 1917.]
+
+[Footnote 60: This letter is dated London and was probably begun there.
+It is evident, however, that the latter part was written at Brighton,
+where the Ambassador was taking a brief holiday.]
+
+[Footnote 61: This was a long document describing conditions in great
+detail.]
+
+[Footnote 62: The Navy Department had taken the position that arming
+merchantmen was the best protection against the submarine. This
+statement was intended to refute this belief.]
+
+[Footnote 63: Dr. Wallace Buttrick, President of the General Education
+Board, who was sent at this time to deliver lectures throughout Great
+Britain on the United States.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+PAGE--THE MAN
+
+
+The entrance of America into the war, followed by the successful
+promotion of the Balfour visit, brought a period of quiet into Page's
+life. These events represented for him a personal triumph; there were
+many things still to be done, it is true, and Page, as always, was
+active in advancing the interests that were nearest his heart; yet the
+mighty relief that followed the American declaration was the kind that
+one experiences after accomplishing the greatest task of a lifetime.
+Page's letters have contained many references to the sense of moral
+isolation which his country's policy had forced upon him; he probably
+exaggerated his feeling that there was a tendency to avoid him; this was
+merely a reflection of his own inclination to keep away from all but the
+official people. He now had more leisure and certainly more interest in
+cultivating the friends that he had made in Great Britain. For the fact
+is that, during all these engrossing years, Page had been more than an
+Ambassador; by the time the United States entered the war he had
+attained an assured personal position in the life of the British
+capital. He had long since demonstrated his qualifications for a post,
+which, in the distinction of the men who have occupied it, has few
+parallels in diplomacy. The scholarly Lowell, the courtly Bayard, the
+companionable Hay, the ever-humorous Choate, had set a standard for
+American Ambassadors which had made the place a difficult one for their
+successors. Though Page had characteristics in common with all these
+men, his personality had its own distinctive tang; and it was something
+new to the political and social life of London. And the British capital,
+which is extremely exacting and even merciless in its demands upon its
+important personages, had found it vastly entertaining. "I didn't know
+there could be anything so American as Page except Mark Twain," a
+British literary man once remarked; and it was probably this strong
+American quality, this directness and even breeziness of speech and of
+method, this absence of affectation, this almost openly expressed
+contempt for finesse and even for tradition, combined with those other
+traits which we like to think of as American--an upright purpose, a
+desire to serve not only his own country but mankind--which made the
+British public look upon Page as one of the most attractive and useful
+figures in a war-torn Europe.
+
+There was a certain ruggedness in Page's exterior which the British
+regarded as distinctly in keeping with this American flavour. The
+Ambassador was not a handsome man. To one who had heard much of the
+liveliness of his conversation and presence a first impression was
+likely to be disappointing. His figure at this time was tall, gaunt, and
+lean--and he steadily lost weight during his service in England; his
+head was finely shaped--it was large, with a high forehead, his thin
+gray hair rather increasing its intellectual aspect; and his big frank
+brown eyes reflected that keen zest for life, that unsleeping interest
+in everything about him, that ever-working intelligence and sympathy
+which were the man's predominant traits. But a very large nose at first
+rather lessened the pleasing effects of his other features, and a rather
+weather-beaten, corrugated face gave a preliminary suggestion of
+roughness. Yet Page had only to begin talking and the impression
+immediately changed. "He puts his mind to yours," Dr. Johnson said,
+describing the sympathetic qualities of a friend, and the same was true
+of Page. Half a dozen sentences, spoken in his quick, soft, and
+ingratiating accents, accompanied by the most genial smile, at once
+converted the listener into a friend. Few men have ever lived who more
+quickly responded to this human relationship. The Ambassador, at the
+simple approach of a human being, became as a man transformed. Tired
+though he might be, low in spirits as he not infrequently was, the press
+of a human hand at once changed him into an animated and radiating
+companion. This responsiveness deceived all his friends in the days of
+his last illness. His intimates who dropped in to see Page invariably
+went away much encouraged and spread optimistic reports about his
+progress. A few minutes' conversation with Page would deceive even his
+physicians. The explanation was a simple one: the human presence had an
+electric effect upon him, and it is a revealing sidelight on Page's
+character that almost any man or woman could produce this result. As an
+editor, the readiness with which he would listen to suggestions from the
+humblest source was a constant astonishment to his associates. The
+office boy had as accessible an approach to Page as had his partners. He
+never treated an idea, even a grotesque one, with contempt; he always
+had time to discuss it, to argue it out, and no one ever left his
+presence thinking that he had made an absurd proposal. Thus Page had a
+profound respect for a human being simply because he was a human being;
+the mere fact that a man, woman, or child lived and breathed, had his
+virtues and his failings, constituted in Page's imagination a tremendous
+fact. He could not wound such a living creature any more than he could
+wound a flower or a tree; consequently he treated every person as an
+important member of the universe. Not infrequently, indeed, he stormed
+at public men, but his thunder, after all, was not very terrifying; his
+remarks about such personages as Mr. Bryan merely reflected his
+indignation at their policies and their influence but did not indicate
+any feeling against the victims themselves. Page said "Good morning" to
+his doorman with the same deference that he showed to Sir Edward Grey,
+and there was not a little stenographer in the building whose joys and
+sorrows did not arouse in him the most friendly interest. Some of the
+most affecting letters written about Page, indeed, have come from these
+daily associates of more humble station. "We so often speak of Mr.
+Page," writes one of the Embassy staff--"Findlater, Short, and
+Frederick"--these were all English servants at the Embassy; "we all
+loved him equally, and hardly a day passes that something does not
+remind us of him, and I often fancy that I hear his laugh, so full of
+kindness and love of life." And the impression left on those in high
+position was the same. "I have seen ladies representing all that is most
+worldly in Mayfair," writes Mr. Ellery Sedgwick, the editor of the
+_Atlantic Monthly_, "start at the sudden thought of Page's illness,
+their eyes glistening with tears."
+
+Perhaps what gave most charm to this human side was the fact that Page
+was fundamentally such a scholarly man. This was the aspect which
+especially delighted his English friends. He preached democracy
+and Americanism with an emphasis that almost suggested the
+back-woodsman--the many ideas on these subjects that appear in his
+letters Page never hesitated to set forth with all due resonance at
+London dinner tables--yet he phrased his creed in language that was
+little less than literary style, and illuminated it with illustrations
+and a philosophy that were the product of the most exhaustive reading.
+"Your Ambassador has taught us something that we did not know before,"
+an English friend remarked to an American. "That is that a man can be a
+democrat and a man of culture at the same time." The Greek and Latin
+authors had been Page's companions from the days when, as the holder of
+the Greek Fellowship at Johns Hopkins, he had been a favourite pupil of
+Basil L. Gildersleeve. British statesmen who had been trained at
+Balliol, in the days when Greek was the indispensable ear-mark of a
+gentleman, could thus meet their American associate on the most
+sympathetic terms. Page likewise spoke a brand of idiomatic English
+which immediately put him in a class by himself. He regarded words as
+sacred things. He used them, in his writing or in his speech, with the
+utmost care and discrimination; yet this did not result in a halting or
+stilted style; he spoke with the utmost ease, going rapidly from thought
+to thought, choosing invariably the one needful word, lighting up the
+whole with whimsicalities all his own, occasionally emphasizing a good
+point by looking downward and glancing over his eyeglasses, perhaps, if
+he knew his companion intimately, now and then giving him a monitory tap
+on the knee. Page, in fact, was a great and incessant talker; hardly
+anything delighted him more than a companionable exchange of ideas and
+impressions; he was seldom so busy that he would not push aside his
+papers for a chat; and he would talk with almost any one, on almost any
+subject--his secretaries, his stenographers, his office boys, and any
+crank who succeeded in getting by the doorman--for, in spite of his
+lively warnings against the breed, Page did really love cranks and took
+a collector's joy in uncovering new types. Page's voice was normally
+quiet; though he had spent all his early life in the South, the
+characteristic Southern accents were ordinarily not observable; yet his
+intonation had a certain gentleness that was probably an inheritance of
+his Southern breeding. Thus, when he first began talking, his words
+would ripple along quietly and rapidly; a characteristic pose was to sit
+calmly, with one knee thrown over the other, his hands folded; as his
+interest increased, however, he would get up, perhaps walk across the
+room, or stand before the fireplace, his hands behind his back; a large
+cigar, sometimes unlighted, at other times emitting huge clouds of
+smoke, would oscillate from one side of his mouth to the other; his talk
+would grow in earnestness, his voice grow louder, his words come faster
+and faster, until finally they would gush forth in a mighty torrent.
+
+All Page's personal traits are explained by that one characteristic
+which tempered all others, his sense of humour. That Page was above all
+a serious-minded man his letters show; yet his spirits were constantly
+alert for the amusing, the grotesque, and the contradictory; like all
+men who are really serious and alive to the pathos of existence, he
+loved a hearty laugh, especially as he found it a relief from the gloom
+that filled his every waking moment in England. Page himself regarded
+this ability to smile as an indispensable attribute to a well-rounded
+life. "No man can be a gentleman," he once declared, "who does not have
+a sense of humour." Only he who possessed this gift, Page believed, had
+an imaginative insight into the failings and the virtues of his
+brothers; only he could have a tolerant attitude toward the stupidities
+of his fellows, to say nothing of his own. And humour with him assumed
+various shades; now it would flash in an epigram, or smile indulgently
+at a passing human weakness; now and then it would break out into genial
+mockery; occasionally it would manifest itself as sheer horse-play; and
+less frequently it would become sardonic or even savage. It was in this
+latter spirit that he once described a trio of Washington statesmen,
+whose influence he abhorred as, "three minds that occupy a single
+vacuum." He once convulsed a Scottish audience by describing the
+national motto of Scotland--and doing so with a broad burr in his voice
+that seemed almost to mark the speaker a native to the heath--as
+"Liber-r-ty, fra-a-ternity and f-r-r-u-gality." The policy of his
+country occasioned many awkward moments which, thanks to his talent for
+amiable raillery, he usually succeeded in rendering harmless. Not
+infrequently Page's fellow guests at the dinner table would think the
+American attitude toward Germany a not inappropriate topic for small
+talk. "Mr. Page," remarked an exaltedly titled lady in a conversational
+pause, "when is your country going to get into the war?" The more
+discreet members of the company gasped, but Page was not disturbed.
+"Please give us at least ninety days," he answered, and an exceedingly
+disagreeable situation was thus relieved by general laughter.
+
+On another occasion his repudiation of this flippant spirit took a more
+solemn and even more effective form. The time was a few days before the
+United States had declared war. Bernstorff had been dismissed; events
+were rapidly rushing toward the great climax; yet the behaviour of the
+Washington Administration was still inspiring much caustic criticism.
+The Pages were present at one of the few dinners which they attended in
+the course of this crisis; certain smart and tactless guests did not
+seem to regard their presence as a bar to many gibes against the
+American policy. Page sat through it all impassive, never betraying the
+slightest resentment.
+
+Presently the ladies withdrew. Page found himself sitting next to Mr.
+Harold Nicolson, an important official in the Foreign Office. It so
+happened that Mr. Nicolson and Page were the only two members of the
+company who were the possessors of a great secret which made ineffably
+silly all the chatter that had taken place during the dinner; this was
+that the United States had decided on war against Germany and would
+issue the declaration in a few days.
+
+"Well, Mr. Nicolson," said Page, "I think that you and I will drink a
+glass of wine together."
+
+The two men quietly lifted their glasses and drank the silent toast.
+Neither made the slightest reference to the forthcoming event. Perhaps
+the other men present were a little mystified, but in a few days they
+understood what it had meant, and also learned how effectively they had
+been rebuked.
+
+"Is it any wonder," says Mr. Nicolson, telling this story, "that I think
+that Mr. Page is perhaps the greatest gentleman I have ever known? He
+has only one possible competitor for this distinction--and that is
+Arthur Balfour."
+
+The English newspapers took delight in printing Page's aphorisms, and
+several anecdotes that came from America afforded them especial joy. One
+went back to the days when the Ambassador was editor of the _Atlantic
+Monthly_. A woman contributor had sent him a story; like most literary
+novices she believed that editors usually rejected the manuscripts of
+unknown writers without reading them. She therefore set a trap for Page
+by pasting together certain sheets. The manuscript came back promptly,
+and, as the prospective contributor had hoped, these sheets had not been
+disturbed. These particular sections had certainly not been read. The
+angry author triumphantly wrote to Page, explaining how she had caught
+him and denouncing the whole editorial tribe as humbugs. "Dear Madam,"
+Page immediately wrote in reply, "when I break an egg at breakfast, I do
+not have to eat the whole of it to find out that it is bad." Page's
+treatment of authors, however, was by no means so acrimonious as this
+little note might imply. Indeed, the urbanity and consideration shown in
+his correspondence with writers had long been a tradition in American
+letters. The remark of O. Henry in this regard promises to become
+immortal: "Page could reject a story with a letter that was so
+complimentary," he said, "and make everybody feel so happy that you
+could take it to a bank and borrow money on it."
+
+Another anecdote reminiscent of his editorial days was his retort to
+S.S. McClure, the editor of _McClure's Magazine_.
+
+"Page," said Mr. McClure, "there are only three great editors in the
+United States."
+
+"Who's the third one, Sam?" asked Page.
+
+Plenty of stories, illustrating Page's quickness and aptness in retort,
+have gathered about his name in England. Many of them indicate a mere
+spirit of boyish fun. Early in his Ambassadorship he was spending a few
+days at Stratford-on-Avon, his hostess being an American woman who had
+beautifully restored an Elizabethan house; the garden contained a
+mulberry tree which she liked to think had been planted by Shakespeare
+himself. The dignitaries of Stratford, learning that the American
+Ambassador had reached town, asked permission to wait upon him; the Lord
+Mayor, who headed the procession, made an excellent speech, to which
+Page appropriately replied, and several hundred people were solemnly
+presented. After the party had left Page turned to his hostess:
+
+"Have they all gone?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"All?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then let's take hands and dance around the mulberry tree!"
+
+Page was as good as his word; he danced as gaily as the youngest member
+of the party, to the singing of the old English song.
+
+The great service in St. Paul's Cathedral, in commemoration of America's
+entry into the war, has already been described. A number of wounded
+Americans, boys whose zeal for the Allies had led them to enlist in the
+Canadian Army, were conspicuous participants in this celebration. After
+the solemn religious ceremonies, the Ambassador and these young men
+betook themselves for lunch to a well-known London restaurant. In an
+interval of the conversation one of the Americans turned to Page.
+
+"Mr. Ambassador, there was just one thing wrong with that service."
+
+"What was that?"
+
+"We wanted to yell, and we couldn't."
+
+"Then why don't you yell now?"
+
+The boy jumped on a chair and began waving his napkin. "The Ambassador
+says we may yell," he cried. "Let's yell!"
+
+"And so," said Page, telling the story, "they yelled for five minutes
+and I yelled with them. We all felt better in consequence."
+
+This geniality, this disposition not to take life too solemnly,
+sometimes lightened up the sombre atmosphere of the Foreign Office
+itself. "Mr. Balfour went on a sort of mild rampage yesterday," Page
+records. "The British and American navies had come to an arrangement
+whereby the Brazilian ships that are coming over to help us fight
+should join the American unit, not the British, as was at first
+proposed. Washington telegraphed me that the British Minister at Rio was
+blocking the game by standing out for the first British idea--that the
+Brazilian ships should join the British. It turned out in the
+conversation that the British Minister had not been informed of the
+British-American naval arrangement. Mr. Balfour sent for Lord Hardinge.
+He called in one of the private secretaries. Was such a thing ever heard
+of?
+
+"Did you ever know,' said the indignant Mr. Balfour, turning to me, 'of
+such a thing as a minister not even being informed of his Government's
+decisions?' 'Yes,' I said, 'if I ransack my memory diligently, I think I
+could find such cases.' The meeting went into laughter!"
+
+Evidently the troubles which Page was having with his own State
+Department were not unfamiliar to British officialdom.
+
+Page's letters sufficiently reveal his fondness for Sir Edward Grey and
+the splendid relations that existed between them. The sympathetic chords
+which the two men struck upon their first meeting only grew stronger
+with time. A single episode brings out the bonds that drew them
+together. It took place at a time when the tension over the blockade was
+especially threatening. One afternoon Page asked for a formal interview;
+he had received another exceedingly disagreeable protest from
+Washington, with instructions to push the matter to a decision; the
+Ambassador left his Embassy with a grave expression upon his face; his
+associates were especially worried over the outcome. So critical did the
+situation seem that the most important secretaries gathered in the
+Ambassador's room, awaiting his return, their nerves strung almost to
+the breaking point. An hour went by and nothing was heard from Page;
+another hour slowly passed and still the Ambassador did not return. The
+faces of the assembled staff lengthened as the minutes went by; what was
+the Ambassador doing at the Foreign Office? So protracted an interview
+could portend only evil; already, in the minds of these nervous young
+men, ultimatums were flying between the United States and Great Britain,
+and even war might be hanging in the balance. Another hour drew out its
+weary length; the room became dark, dinner time was approaching, and
+still Page failed to make his appearance. At last, when his distracted
+subordinates were almost prepared to go in search of their chief, the
+Ambassador walked jauntily in, smiling and apparently carefree. What had
+happened? What was to be done about the detained ships?
+
+"What ships?" asked Page, and then suddenly he remembered. "Oh,
+yes--those." That was all right; Sir Edward had at once promised to
+release them; it had all been settled in a few minutes.
+
+"Then why were you so long?"
+
+The truth came out: Sir Edward and Page had quickly turned from
+intercepted cargoes to the more congenial subject of Wordsworth,
+Tennyson, and other favourite poets, and the rest of the afternoon had
+been consumed in discussing this really important business.
+
+Perhaps Page was not so great a story-teller as many Americans, but he
+excelled in a type of yarn that especially delights Englishmen, for it
+is the kind that is native to the American soil. He possessed an
+inexhaustible stock of Negro anecdotes, and he had the gift of bringing
+them out at precisely the right point. There was one which the
+Archbishop of York never tired of repeating. Soon after America entered
+the war, the Archbishop asked Page how long his country was "in for."
+"I can best answer that by telling you a story," said Page. "There were
+two Negroes who had just been sentenced to prison terms. As they were
+being taken away in the carriage placed at their disposal by the United
+States Government, one said to the other, 'Sam, how long is you in fo'?'
+'I guess dat it's a yeah or two yeahs,' said Sam. 'How long is you in
+fo'?' 'I guess it's from now on,' said the other darky." "From now on,"
+remarked the Archbishop, telling this story. "What could more eloquently
+have described America's attitude toward the war?"
+
+The mention of the Archbishop suggests another of Page's talents--the
+aptness of his letters of introduction. In the spring of 1918 the
+Archbishop, at the earnest recommendation of Page and Mr. Balfour, came
+to the United States. Page prepared the way by letters to several
+distinguished Americans, of which this one, to Theodore Roosevelt, is a
+fair sample:
+
+ _To Theodore Roosevelt_
+
+ London, January 16, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. ROOSEVELT:
+
+ The Archbishop of York goes to the United States to make some
+ observations of us and of our ways and to deliver addresses--on the
+ invitation of some one of our church organizations; a fortunate
+ event for us and, I have ventured to tell him, for him also.
+
+ During his brief stay in our country, I wish him to make your
+ acquaintance, and I have given him a card of introduction to you,
+ and thus I humbly serve you both.
+
+ The Archbishop is a man and a brother, a humble, learned, earnest,
+ companionable fellow, with most charming manners and an attractive
+ personality, a good friend of mine, which argues much for him and
+ (I think) implies also something in my behalf. You will enjoy him.
+
+ I am, dear Mr. Roosevelt,
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+Greatly as Page loved England he never ceased to preach his Americanism.
+That he preferred his own country to any other and that he believed that
+it was its greatest destiny to teach its institutions to the rest of the
+world, Page's letters show; yet this was with him no cheap
+spread-eagleism; it was a definite philosophy which the Ambassador had
+completely thought out. He never hesitated to express his democratic
+opinions in any company, and only once or twice were there any signs
+that these ideas jarred a little in certain strongholds of conservatism.
+Even in the darkest period of American neutrality Page's faith in the
+American people remained complete. After this country had entered the
+war and the apparent slowness of the Washington Administration had
+raised certain questionings, Page never doubted that the people
+themselves, however irresolute and lukewarm their representatives might
+be, would force the issue to its only logical end. Even so friendly a
+man as Mr. Balfour once voiced a popular apprehension that the United
+States might not get into the war with all its strength or might
+withdraw prematurely. This was in the early period of our participation.
+"Who is going to stop the American people and how?" Page quickly
+replied. "I think that was a good answer," he said, as he looked back at
+the episode in the summer of 1918, when hundreds of thousands of
+Americans were landing in France every month. A scrap of his writing
+records a discussion at a dinner party on this question: "If you could
+have a month in any time and any country, what time and what country
+would you choose?" The majority voted for England in the time of
+Elizabeth, but Page's preference was for Athens in the days of Pericles.
+Then came a far more interesting debate: "If you could spend a second
+lifetime when and where would you choose to spend it?" On this Page had
+not a moment's hesitation: "In the future and in the U.S.A.!" and he
+upheld his point with such persuasiveness that he carried the whole
+gathering with him. His love of anything suggesting America came out on
+all occasions. One of his English hostesses once captivated him by
+serving corn bread at a luncheon. "The American Ambassador and corn
+bread!" he exclaimed with all the delight of a schoolboy. Again he was
+invited, with another distinguished American, to serve as godfather at
+the christening of the daughter of an American woman who had married an
+Englishman. When the ceremony was finished he leaned over the font
+toward his fellow godfather. "Born on July 4th," he exclaimed, "of an
+American mother! And we two Yankee godfathers! We'll see that this child
+is taught the Constitution of the United States!"
+
+One day an American duchess came into Page's office.
+
+"I am going home for a little visit and I want a passport," she said.
+
+"But you don't get a passport here," Page replied. "You must go to the
+Foreign Office."
+
+His visitor was indignant.
+
+"Not at all," she answered. "I am an American: you know that I am; you
+knew my father. I want an American passport."
+
+Page patiently explained the citizenship and naturalization laws and
+finally convinced his caller that she was now a British subject and must
+have a British passport. As this American duchess left the room he
+shook at her a menacing forefinger.
+
+"Don't tell me," was the Ambassador's parting shot, "that you thought
+that you could have your Duke and Uncle Sam, too!"
+
+The judgments which Page passed on men and things were quick and they
+were not infrequently wise. One of these judgments had historic
+consequences the end of which cannot even yet be foreseen. On the
+outbreak of hostilities, as already related, an American Relief
+Committee was organized in London to look out for the interests of
+stranded Americans. Page kept a close eye on its operations, and soon
+his attention was attracted by the noiseless efficiency of an American
+engineer of whom he had already caught a few fleeting glimpses in the
+period of peace. After he had finished his work with the American
+Committee, Mr. Herbert C. Hoover began to make his arrangements to leave
+for the United States. His private affairs had been disorganized; he had
+already sent his family home, and his one ambition was to get on the
+first ship sailing for the United States. The idea of Belgian relief, or
+of feeding starving people anywhere, had never occurred to him. At this
+moment an American, Mr. Millard K. Shaler, came from Brussels and gave
+the most harrowing account of conditions in Belgium. Mr. Hoover took Mr.
+Shaler to Page, who immediately became sympathetic. The Ambassador
+arranged an interview between Mr. Hoover and Sir Edward Grey, who
+likewise showed great interest and promised government support. Soon
+afterward three Belgians arrived and described the situation as
+immediately alarming: Brussels had only food enough to feed the people
+for thirty-six hours; after that, unless help were forthcoming, the
+greatest distress would set in. Five men--Page, the three Belgians, and
+Mr. Hoover--at once got together at the American Embassy. Upon the
+result of that meeting hung the fate of millions of people. Who before
+had ever undertaken a scheme for feeding an entire nation for an
+indefinite period? That there were great obstacles in the way all five
+men knew; the British Admiralty in particular were strongly opposed;
+there was a fear that the food, if it could be acquired and sent to
+Belgium, would find its way to the German Army. Unless the British
+Government could be persuaded that this could be prevented, the
+enterprise would fail at the start. How could it be done?
+
+"There is only one way," said Page. "Some government must give its
+guarantee that this food will get to the Belgian people." "And, of
+course," he added, "there is only one government that can do that. It
+must be the American Government."
+
+Mr. Hoover pointed out that any such guarantee involved the management
+of transportation; only by controlling the railroads could the American
+Government make sure that this food would reach its destination.
+
+And that, added Page, involved a director--some one man who could take
+charge of the whole enterprise. Who should it be?
+
+Then Page turned quickly to the young American.
+
+"Hoover, you're It!"
+
+Mr. Hoover made no reply; he neither accepted nor rejected the proposal.
+He merely glanced at the clock, then got up and silently left the room.
+In a few minutes he returned and entered again into the discussion.
+
+"Hoover, why did you get up and leave us so abruptly?" asked Page, a
+little puzzled over this behaviour.
+
+"I saw by the clock," came the answer--and it was a story that Page was
+fond of telling, as illustrating the rapidity with which Mr. Hoover
+worked--"that there was an hour left before the Exchange closed in New
+York. So I went out and cabled, buying several millions of bushels of
+wheat--for the Belgians, of course."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For what is usually known as "society" Page had little inclination. Yet
+for social intercourse on a more genuine plane he had real gifts. Had he
+enjoyed better health, week ends in the country would have afforded him
+welcome entertainment. He also liked dinner parties but indulged in them
+very moderately. He was a member of many London clubs but he seldom
+visited any of them. There were a number of organizations, however,
+which he regularly attended. The Society of Dilettanti, a company of
+distinguished men interested in promoting the arts and improving the
+public taste, which has been continuously in existence since 1736,
+enrolling in each generation the greatest painters and writers of the
+time, elected Page to membership. He greatly enjoyed its dinners in the
+Banquet Hall of the Grafton Gallery. "Last night," he writes, describing
+his initial appearance, "I attended my first Dilettanti dinner and was
+inducted, much as a new Peer is inducted into the House of Lords. Lord
+Mersey in the chair--in a red robe. These gay old dogs have had a fine
+time of it for nearly 200 years--good wine, high food, fine
+satisfaction. The oldest dining society in the Kingdom. The blue blood
+old Briton has the art of enjoying himself reduced to a very fine point
+indeed." Another gathering whose meetings he seldom missed was that of
+the Kinsmen, an informal club of literary men who met occasionally for
+food and converse in the Trocadero Restaurant. Here Page would meet such
+congenial souls as Sir James Barrie and Sir Arthur Pinero, all of whom
+retain lively memories of Page at these gatherings. "He was one of the
+most lovable characters I have ever had the good fortune to encounter,"
+says Sir Arthur Pinero, recalling these occasions. "In what special
+quality or qualities lay the secret of his charm and influence? Surely
+in his simplicity and transparent honesty, and in the possession of a
+disposition which, without the smallest loss of dignity, was responsive
+and affectionate. Distinguished American Ambassadors will come and go,
+and will in their turn win esteem and admiration. But none, I venture to
+say, will efface the recollection of Walter Page from the minds of those
+who were privileged to gain his friendship."
+
+One aspect of Page that remains fixed in the memory of his associates is
+his unwearied industry with the pen. His official communications and his
+ordinary correspondence Page dictated; but his personal letters he wrote
+with his own hand. He himself deplored the stenographer as a deterrent
+to good writing; the habit of dictating, he argued, led to wordiness and
+general looseness of thought. Practically all the letters published in
+these volumes were therefore the painstaking work of Page's own pen. His
+handwriting was so beautiful and clear that, in his editorial days, the
+printers much preferred it as "copy" to typewritten matter. This habit
+is especially surprising in view of the Ambassador's enormous epistolary
+output. It must be remembered that the letters included in the present
+book are only a selection from the vast number that he wrote during his
+five years in England; many of these letters fill twenty and thirty
+pages of script; the labour involved in turning them out; day after day,
+seems fairly astounding. Yet with Page this was a labour of love. All
+through his Ambassadorship he seemed hardly contented unless he had a
+pen in his hand. As his secretaries would glance into his room, there
+they would see the Ambassador bending over his desk-writing, writing,
+eternally writing; sometimes he would call them in, and read what he had
+written, never hesitating to tear up the paper if their unfavourable
+criticisms seemed to him well taken. The Ambassador kept a desk also in
+his bedroom, and here his most important correspondence was attended to.
+Page's all-night self-communings before his wood fire have already been
+described, and he had another nocturnal occupation that was similarly
+absorbing. Many a night, after returning late from his office or from
+dinner, he would put on his dressing gown, sit at his bedroom desk, and
+start pouring forth his inmost thoughts in letters to the President,
+Colonel House, or some other correspondent. His pen flew over the paper
+with the utmost rapidity and the Ambassador would sometimes keep at his
+writing until two or three o'clock in the morning. There is a frequently
+expressed fear that letter writing is an art of the past; that the
+intervention of the stenographer has destroyed its spontaneity; yet it
+is evident that in Page the present generation has a letter writer of
+the old-fashioned kind, for he did all his writing with his own hand and
+under circumstances that would assure the utmost freshness and vividness
+to the result.
+
+An occasional game of golf, which he played badly, a trip now and then
+to rural England--these were Page's only relaxations from his duties.
+Though he was not especially fond of leaving his own house, he was
+always delighted when visitors came to him. And the American Embassy,
+during the five years from 1913 to 1918, extended a hospitality which
+was fittingly democratic in its quality but which gradually drew within
+its doors all that was finest in the intellect and character of
+England. Page himself attributed the popularity of his house to his
+wife. Mrs. Page certainly embodied the traits most desirable in the
+Ambassadress of a great Republic. A woman of cultivation, a tireless
+reader, a close observer of people and events and a shrewd commentator
+upon them, she also had an unobtrusive dignity, a penetrating sympathy,
+and a capacity for human association, which, while more restrained and
+more placid than that of her husband, made her a helpful companion for a
+sorely burdened man. The American Embassy under Mr. and Mrs. Page was
+not one of London's smart houses as that word is commonly understood in
+this great capital. But No. 6 Grosvenor Square, in the spaciousness of
+its rooms, the simple beauty of its furnishings, and especially in its
+complete absence of ostentation, made it the worthy abiding place of an
+American Ambassador. And the people who congregated there were precisely
+the kind that appeal to the educated American. "I didn't know I was
+getting into an assembly of immortals," exclaimed Mr. Hugh Wallace, when
+he dropped in one Thursday afternoon for tea, and found himself
+foregathered with Sir Edward Grey, Henry James, John Sargent, and other
+men of the same type. It was this kind of person who most naturally
+gravitated to the Page establishment, not the ultra-fashionable, the
+merely rich, or the many titled. The formal functions which the position
+demanded the Pages scrupulously gave; but the affairs which Page most
+enjoyed and which have left the most lasting remembrances upon his
+guests were the informal meetings with his chosen favourites, for the
+most part literary men. Here Page's sheer brilliancy of conversation
+showed at its best. Lord Bryce, Sir John Simon, John Morley, the
+inevitable companions, Henry James and John Sargent--"What things have
+I seen done at the Mermaid"; and certainly these gatherings of wits and
+savants furnished as near an approach to its Elizabethan prototype as
+London could then present.
+
+Besides his official activities Page performed great services to the two
+countries by his speeches. The demands of this kind on an American
+Ambassador are always numerous, but Page's position was an exceptional
+one; it was his fortune to represent America at a time when his own
+country and Great Britain were allies in a great war. He could therefore
+have spent practically all his time in speaking had he been so disposed.
+Of the hundreds of invitations received he was able to accept only a
+few, but most of these occasions became memorable ones. In any
+spectacular sense Page was not an orator; he rather despised the grand
+manner, with its flourishes and its tricks; the name of public speaker
+probably best describes his talents on the platform. Here his style was
+earnest and conversational: his speech flowed with the utmost readiness;
+it was invariably quiet and restrained; he was never aiming at big
+effects, but his words always went home. Of the series of speeches that
+stand to his credit in England probably the one that will be longest
+remembered is that delivered at Plymouth on August 4, 1917, the third
+anniversary of the war. This not only reviewed the common history of the
+two nations for three hundred years, and suggested a programme for
+making the bonds tighter yet, but it brought the British public
+practical assurances as to America's intentions in the conflict. Up to
+that time there had been much vagueness and doubt; no official voice had
+spoken the clear word for the United States; the British public did not
+know what to expect from their kinsmen overseas. But after Page's
+Plymouth speech the people of Great Britain looked forward with
+complete confidence to the coöperation of the two countries and to the
+inevitable triumph of this coöperation.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Knebworth House, Knebworth,
+ August 11, 1917.
+
+ Dear Arthur:
+
+ First of all, these three years have made me tired. I suppose
+ there's no doubt about that, if there were any scientific way of
+ measuring it. While of course the strain now is nothing like what
+ it was during the days of neutrality, there's yet some strain.
+
+ I went down to Plymouth to make a speech on the anniversary of the
+ beginning of the war--went to tell them in the west of England
+ something about relations with the United States and something
+ about what the United States is doing in the war. It turned out to
+ be a great success. The Mayor met me at the train; there was a
+ military company, the Star Spangled Banner and real American
+ applause. All the way through the town the streets were lined with
+ all the inhabitants and more--apparently millions of 'em. They made
+ the most of it for five solid days.
+
+ On the morning of August 4th the Mayor gave me an official
+ luncheon. Thence we went to the esplanade facing the sea, where
+ soldiers and sailors were lined up for half a mile. The American
+ Flag was flung loose, the Star Spangled Banner broke forth from the
+ band, and all the people in that part of the world were there
+ gathered to see the show. After all this salute the Mayor took me
+ to the stand and he and I made speeches, and the background was a
+ group of dozens of admirals and generals and many smaller fry. Then
+ I reviewed the troops; then they marched by me and in an hour or
+ two the show was over.
+
+ Then the bowling club--the same club and the same green as when
+ Drake left the game to sail out to meet the Armada.
+
+ Then a solemn service in the big church, where the prayers were
+ written and the hymns selected with reference to our part in the
+ war.
+
+ Then, of course, a dinner party. At eight o'clock at night, the
+ Guildhall, an enormous town hall, was packed with people and I made
+ my speech at 'em. A copy (somewhat less good than the version I
+ gave them) goes to you, along with a leader from the _Times_. They
+ were vociferously grateful for any assuring word about the United
+ States. It's strange how very little the provincial Englander knows
+ about what we have done and mean to do. They took the speech
+ finely, and I have had good letters about it from all sorts of
+ people in every part of the Kingdom.
+
+ Then followed five days of luncheons and dinners and garden
+ parties--and (what I set out to say) I got back to London last
+ night dead tired. To-day your mother and I came here--about
+ twenty-five miles from London--for a fortnight.
+
+ This is Bulwer-Lytton's house--a fine old English place hired this
+ year by Lady Strafford, whom your mother is visiting for a
+ fortnight or more, and they let me come along, too. They have given
+ me the big library, as good a room as I want--with as bad pens as
+ they can find in the Kingdom.
+
+ Your mother is tired, too. Since the American Red Cross was
+ organized here, she has added to her committee and hospitals. But
+ she keeps well and very vigorous. A fortnight here will set her up.
+ She enjoyed Plymouth very much in spite of the continual rush, and
+ it was a rush.
+
+ What the United States is doing looks good and large at this
+ distance. The gratitude here is unbounded; but I detect a feeling
+ here and there of wonder whether we are going to keep up this
+ activity to the end.
+
+ I sometimes feel that the German collapse _may_ come next winter.
+ Their internal troubles and the lack of sufficient food and raw
+ materials do increase. The breaking point may be reached before
+ another summer. I wish I could prove it or even certainly predict
+ it. But it is at least conceivable. Alas, no one can _prove_
+ anything about the war. The conditions have no precedents. The sum
+ of human misery and suffering is simply incalculable, as is the
+ loss of life; and the gradual and general brutalization goes on and
+ on and on far past any preceding horrors.
+
+ With all my love to you and Mollie and the trio,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+And so for five busy and devastating years Page did his work. The
+stupidities of Washington might drive him to desperation, ill-health
+might increase his periods of despondency, the misunderstandings that he
+occasionally had with the British Government might add to his
+discouragements, but a naturally optimistic and humorous temperament
+overcame all obstacles, and did its part in bringing about that united
+effort which ended in victory. And that it was a great part, the story
+of his Ambassadorship abundantly proves. Page was not the soldier
+working in the blood and slime of Flanders, nor the sea fighter spending
+day and night around the foggy coast of Ireland, nor the statesman
+bending parliaments to his will and manipulating nations and peoples in
+the mighty game whose stake was civilization itself. But history will
+indeed be ungrateful if it ever forget the gaunt and pensive figure,
+clad in a dressing gown, sitting long into the morning before the
+smouldering fire at 6 Grosvenor Square, seeking to find some way to
+persuade a reluctant and hesitating President to lead his country in the
+defense of liberty and determined that, so far as he could accomplish
+it, the nation should play a part in the great assize that was in
+keeping with its traditions and its instincts.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+A RESPITE AT ST. IVES
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ Knebworth House
+ Sunday, September,[sic] 1917.
+
+ Dear House:
+
+ ... By far the most important peace plan or utterance is the
+ President's extraordinary answer to the Pope[64]. His flat and
+ convincing refusal to take the word of the present rulers of
+ Germany as of any value has had more effect here than any other
+ utterance and it is, so far, the best contribution we have made to
+ the war. The best evidence that I can get shows also that it has
+ had more effect in Germany than anything else that has been said by
+ anybody. That hit the bull's-eye with perfect accuracy; and it has
+ been accepted here as _the_ war aim and _the_ war condition. So far
+ as I can make out it is working in Germany toward peace with more
+ effect than any other deliverance made by anybody. And it steadied
+ the already unshakable resolution here amazingly.
+
+ I can get any information here of course without danger of the
+ slightest publicity--an important point, because even the mention
+ of peace now is dangerous. All the world, under this long strain,
+ is more or less off the normal, and all my work--even routine
+ work--is done with the profoundest secrecy: it has to be.
+
+ Our energetic war preparations call forth universal admiration and
+ gratitude here on all sides and nerve up the British and hearten
+ them more than I know how to explain. There is an eager and even
+ pathetic curiosity to hear all the details, to hear, in fact,
+ anything about the United States; and what the British do not know
+ about the United States would fill the British Museum. They do
+ know, however, that they would soon have been obliged to make an
+ unsatisfactory peace if we hadn't come in when we did and they
+ freely say so. The little feeling of jealousy that we should come
+ in and win the war at the end has, I think, been forgotten,
+ swallowed up in their genuine gratitude.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ American Embassy,
+ London, Sept. 3, 1917.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... The President has sent Admiral Mayo over to study the naval
+ situation. So far as I can learn the feeling at Washington is that
+ the British Navy has done nothing. Why, it hasn't attacked the
+ German naval bases and destroyed the German navy and ended the war!
+ Why not? I have a feeling that Mayo will supplement and support
+ Sims in his report. Then gradually the naval men at Washington may
+ begin to understand and they may get the important facts into the
+ President's head. Meantime the submarine work of the Germans
+ continues to win the war, although the government and the people
+ here and in the United States appear not to believe it. They are
+ still destroying seventy-five British ships a month besides an
+ additional (smaller) number of allied and neutral ships. And all
+ the world together is not turning out seventy-five ships a month;
+ nor are we all destroying submarines as fast as the Germans are
+ turning _them_ out. Yet all the politicians are putting on a
+ cheerful countenance about it because the Germans are not starving
+ England out and are not just now sinking passenger ships. They may
+ begin this again at any time. They have come within a few feet of
+ torpedoing two of our American liners. The submarine _is_ the war
+ yet, but nobody seems disposed to believe it. They'll probably wake
+ up with a great shock some day--or the war may possibly end before
+ the destruction of ships becomes positively fatal.
+
+ The President's letter to the Pope gives him the moral and actual
+ leadership now. The Hohenzollerns must go. Somehow the subjects and
+ governments of these Old World kingdoms have not hitherto laid
+ emphasis on this. There's still a divinity that doth hedge a king
+ in most European minds. To me this is the very queerest thing in
+ the whole world. What again if Germany, Austria, Spain should
+ follow Russia? Whether they do or not crowns will not henceforth be
+ so popular. There is an unbounded enthusiasm here for the
+ President's letter and for the President in general.
+
+ In spite of certain details which it seems impossible to make
+ understood on the Potomac, the whole American preparation and
+ enthusiasm seem from this distance to be very fine. The _people_
+ seem in earnest. When I read about tax bills, about the food
+ regulation and a thousand other such things, I am greatly
+ gratified. And it proves that we were right when we said that
+ during the days of neutrality the people were held back. It all
+ looks exceedingly good from this distance, and it makes me
+ homesick.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday_
+
+ American Embassy.
+
+ [Undated, but written about October I, 1917]
+
+ DEAR EFFENDI:
+
+ ... The enormous war work and war help that everybody seems to be
+ doing in the United States is heartily appreciated here--most
+ heartily. The English eat out of our hands. You can see American
+ uniforms every day in London. Every ship brings them. Everybody's
+ thrilled to see them. The Americans here have great houses opened
+ as officers' clubs, and scrumptious huts for men where countesses
+ and other high ladies hand out sandwiches and serve ice cream and
+ ginger beer. Our two admirals are most popular with all classes,
+ from royalty down. English soldiers salute our officers in the
+ street and old gentlemen take off their hats when they meet nurses
+ with the American Red Cross uniform. My Embassy now occupies four
+ buildings for offices, more than half of them military and naval.
+ And my own staff, proper, is the biggest in the world and keeps
+ growing. When I go, in a little while, to receive the Freedom of
+ the City of Edinburgh, I shall carry an Admiral or a General as my
+ aide!
+
+ That's the way we keep a stiff upper lip.
+
+ And Good Lord! it's tiresome. Peace? We'd all give our lives for
+ the right sort of peace, and never move an eyelid. But only the
+ wrong sort has yet come within reach. The other sort is coming,
+ however; for these present German contortions are the beginning of
+ the end. But the weariness of it, and the tragedy and the cost. No
+ human creature was ever as tired as I am. Yet I keep well and keep
+ going and keep working all my waking hours. When it ends, I shall
+ collapse and go home and have to rest a while. So at least I feel
+ now. And, if I outlive the work and the danger and the weariness,
+ I'll praise God for that. And it doesn't let up a single day. And
+ I'm no worse off than everybody else.
+
+ So this over-weary world goes, dear Effendi; but the longest day
+ shades at last down to twilight and rest; and so this will be. And
+ poor old Europe will then not be worth while for the rest of our
+ lives--a vast grave and ruin where unmated women will mourn and
+ starvation will remain for years to come.
+
+ God bless us.
+
+ Sincerely yours, with my love to all the boys,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday_
+
+ London, November 9, 1917.
+
+ DEAR EFFENDI:
+
+ ... This infernal thing drags its slow length along so that we
+ cannot see even a day ahead, not to say a week, or a year. If any
+ man here allowed the horrors of it to dwell on his mind he would go
+ mad, so we have to skip over these things somewhat lightly and try
+ to keep the long, definite aim in our thoughts and to work away
+ distracted as little as possible by the butchery and by the
+ starvation that is making this side of the world a shambles and a
+ wilderness. There is hardly a country on the Continent where people
+ are not literally starving to death, and in many of them by
+ hundreds of thousands; and this state of things is going to
+ continue for a good many years after the war. God knows we (I mean
+ the American people) are doing everything we can to alleviate it
+ but there is so much more to be done than any group of forces can
+ possibly do, that I have a feeling that we have hardly touched the
+ borders of the great problem itself. Of course here in London we
+ are away from all that. In spite of the rations we get quite enough
+ to eat and it's as good as it is usually in England, but we have no
+ right to complain. Of course we are subject to air raids, and the
+ wise air people here think that early next spring we are going to
+ be bombarded with thousands of aeroplanes, and with new kinds of
+ bombs and gases in a well-organized effort to try actually to
+ destroy London. Possibly that will come; we must simply take our
+ chance, every man sticking to his job. Already the slate shingles
+ on my roof have been broken, and bricks have been knocked down my
+ chimney; the sky-light was hit and glass fell down all through the
+ halls, and the nose of a shrapnel shell, weighing eight pounds,
+ fell just in front of my doorway and rolled in my area. This is the
+ sort of thing we incidentally get, not of course from the enemy
+ directly, but from the British guns in London which shoot these
+ things at German aeroplanes. What goes up must come down. Between
+ our own defences and the enemy, God knows which will kill us first!
+
+ In spite of all this I put my innocent head on my pillow every
+ night and get a good night's sleep after the bombing is done, and I
+ thank Heaven that nothing interrupts my sleep. This, and a little
+ walking, which is all I get time to do in these foggy days,
+ constitute my life outdoors and precious little of it is outdoors.
+
+ Then on every block that I know of in London there is a hospital or
+ supply place and the ambulances are bringing the poor fellows in
+ all the time. We don't get any gasolene to ride so we have to walk.
+ We don't get any white bread so we have to eat stuff made of flour
+ and corn meal ground so fine that it isn't good. While everybody
+ gets a little thinner, the universal opinion is that they also get
+ a little better, and nobody is going to die here of hunger. We
+ feel a little more cheerful about the submarines than we did some
+ time ago. For some reason they are not getting so many ships. One
+ reason, I am glad to believe, is that they are getting caught
+ themselves. If I could remember all the stories that I hear of good
+ fighting with the submarines I could keep you up two nights when I
+ get home, but in these days one big thing after another crowds so
+ in men's minds that the Lord knows if, when I get home, I shall
+ remember anything.
+
+ Always heartily yours,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, December 3, 1917.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ ... Some of the British military men in London are not hopeful of
+ an early end of the war nor even cheerful about the result. They
+ are afraid of the war-weariness that overcame Russia and gave Italy
+ a setback. They say the military task, though long and slow and
+ hard, can be done if everybody will pull together and keep at the
+ job without weariness--_be done by our help_. But they have fits of
+ fear of France. They are discouraged by the greater part of Lord
+ Lansdowne's letter[65]. I myself do not set great value on this
+ military feeling in London, for the British generals in France do
+ not share it. Lord French once said to me and General Robertson,
+ too, that when they feel despondent in London, they go to the front
+ and get cheered up. But it does seem to be a long job. Evidently
+ the Germans mean to fight to the last man unless they can succeed
+ in inducing the Allies to meet them to talk it over without naming
+ their terms in advance. That is what Lord Lansdowne favours, and no
+ public outgiving by any prominent man in England has called forth
+ such a storm of protest since the war began. I think I see the
+ genesis of his thought, and it is this: there is nothing in his
+ letter and there was nothing in the half dozen or more rather long
+ conversations that I have had with him on other subjects to show
+ that he has the slightest conception of democracy as a social creed
+ or as a political system. He is, I think, the most complete
+ aristocrat that I have ever met. He doesn't see the war at all as a
+ struggle between democracy and its opposite. He sees it merely as a
+ struggle between Germany and the Allies; and inferentially he is
+ perfectly willing the Kaiser should remain in power. He is of
+ course a patriotic man and a man of great cultivation. But he
+ doesn't see the deeper meaning of the conflict. Add to this defect
+ of understanding, a long period of bad health and a lasting
+ depression because of the loss of his son, and his call to the
+ war-weary ceases to be a surprise.
+
+ I am, dear Mr. President,
+ Sincerely yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ American Embassy,
+ London, December 23, 1917.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ I sent you a Christmas cable yesterday for everybody. That's about
+ all I can send in these days of slow mail and restricted shipping
+ and enormously high prices; and you gave all the girls each $100
+ for me, for the babies and themselves? That'll show 'em that at
+ least we haven't forgotten them. Forgotten? Your mother and I are
+ always talking of the glad day when we can go home and live among
+ them. We get as homesick as small boys their first month at a
+ boarding school. Do you remember the day I left you at
+ Lawrenceville, a forlorn and lonely kid?--It's like that.
+
+ A wave of depression hangs over the land like a London fog. And
+ everybody on this tired-out side of the world shows a disposition
+ to lean too heavily on us--to depend on us so completely that the
+ fear arises that they may unconsciously relax their own utmost
+ efforts when we begin to fight. Yet they can't in the least afford
+ to relax, and, when the time comes, I dare say they will not. Yet
+ the plain truth is, the French may give out next year for lack of
+ men. I do not mean that they will quit, but that their fighting
+ strength will have passed its maximum and that they will be able to
+ play only a sort of second part. Except the British and the French,
+ there's no nation in Europe worth a tinker's damn when you come to
+ the real scratch. The whole continent is rotten or tyrannical or
+ yellow-dog. I wouldn't give Long Island or Moore County for the
+ whole of continental Europe, with its kings and itching palms.
+
+ ... Waves of depression and of hope--if not of elation--come and
+ go. I am told, and I think truly, that waves of weariness come in
+ London far oftener and more depressingly than anywhere else in the
+ Kingdom. There is no sign nor fear that the British will give up;
+ they'll hold on till the end. Winston Churchill said to me last
+ night: "We can hold on till next year. But after 1918, it'll be
+ your fight. We'll have to depend on you." I told him that such a
+ remark might well be accepted in some quarters as a British
+ surrender. Then he came up to the scratch: "Surrender? Never." But
+ I fear we need--in some practical and non-ostentatious way--now
+ and then to remind all these European folk that we get no
+ particular encouragement by being unduly leaned on.
+
+ It is, however, the weariest Christmas in all British annals,
+ certainly since the Napoleonic wars. The untoward event after the
+ British advance toward Cambrai caused the retirement of six British
+ generals and deepened the depression here. Still I can see it now
+ passing. Even a little victory will bring back a wave of
+ cheerfulness.
+
+ Depression or elation show equally the undue strain that British
+ nerves are under. I dare say nobody is entirely normal. News of
+ many sorts can now be circulated only by word of mouth. The
+ queerest stories are whispered about and find at least temporary
+ credence. For instance: The report has been going around that the
+ revolution that took place in Portugal the other day was caused by
+ the Germans (likely enough); that it was a monarchical movement and
+ that the Germans were going to put the King back on the throne as
+ soon as the war ended. Sensation-mongers appear at every
+ old-woman's knitting circle. And all this has an effect on conduct.
+ Two young wives of noble officers now in France have just run away
+ with two other young noblemen--to the scandal of a large part of
+ good society in London. It is universally said that the morals of
+ more hitherto good people are wrecked by the strain put upon women
+ by the absence of their husbands than was ever before heard of.
+ Everybody is overworked. Fewer people are literally truthful than
+ ever before. Men and women break down and fall out of working ranks
+ continuously. The number of men in the government who have
+ disappeared from public view is amazing, the number that would like
+ to disappear is still greater--from sheer overstrain. The Prime
+ Minister is tired. Bonar Law in a long conference that Crosby and
+ I had with him yesterday wearily ran all round a circle rather than
+ hit a plain proposition with a clear decision. Mr. Balfour has kept
+ his house from overwork a few days every recent week. I lunched
+ with Mr. Asquith yesterday; even he seemed jaded; and Mrs. Asquith
+ assured me that "everything is going to the devil damned fast."
+ Some conspicuous men who have always been sober have taken to
+ drink. The very few public dinners that are held are served with
+ ostentatious meagreness to escape criticism. I attended one last
+ week at which there was no bread, no butter, no sugar served. All
+ of which doesn't mean that the world here is going to the bad--only
+ that it moves backward and forward by emotions; and this is
+ normally a most unemotional race. Overwork and the loss of Sons and
+ friends--the list of the lost grows--always make an abnormal
+ strain. The churches are fuller than ever before. So, too, are the
+ "parlours" of the fortune-tellers. So also the theatres--in the
+ effort to forget one's self. There are afternoon dances for young
+ officers at home on leave: the curtains are drawn and the music is
+ muffled. More marriages take place--blind and maimed, as well as
+ the young fellows just going to France--than were ever celebrated
+ in any year within men's memory. Verse-writing is rampant. I have
+ received enough odes and sonnets celebrating the Great Republic and
+ the Great President to fill a folio volume. Several American
+ Y.M.C.A. workers lately turned rampant Pacifists and had to be sent
+ home. Colonial soldiers and now and then an American sailor turn up
+ at our Y.M.C.A. huts as full as a goat and swear after the event
+ that they never did such a thing before. Emotions and strain
+ everywhere!
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+In March Page, a very weary man--as these letters indicate--took a brief
+holiday at St. Ives, on the coast of Cornwall. As he gazed out on the
+Atlantic, the yearning for home, for the sandhills and the pine trees of
+North Carolina, again took possession of his soul. Yet it is evident,
+from a miscellaneous group of letters written at this time, that his
+mind revelled in a variety of subjects, ranging all the way from British
+food and vegetables to the settlement of the war and from secret
+diplomacy to literary style.
+
+ _To Mrs. Charles G. Loring_
+ St. Ives, Cornwall, March 3, 1918.
+
+ DEAR KITTY:
+
+ Your mother of course needed a rest away from London after the
+ influenza got done with her; and I discovered that I had gone
+ stale. So she and I and the golf clubs came here yesterday--as near
+ to the sunlit land of Uncle Sam as you can well get on this island.
+ We look across the ocean--at least out into it--in your direction,
+ but I must confess that Labrador is not in sight. The place is all
+ right, the hotel uncommonly good, but it's Greenlandish in its
+ temperature--a very cold wind blowing. The golf clubs lean up
+ against the wall and curse the weather. But we are away from the
+ hordes of people and will have a little quiet here. It's as quiet
+ as any far-off place by the sea, and it's clean. London is the
+ dirtiest town in the world.
+
+ By the way that picture of Chud came (by Col. Honey) along with
+ Alice Page's adorable little photograph. As for the wee chick, I
+ see how you are already beginning to get a lot of fun with her. And
+ you'll have more and more as she gets bigger. Give her my love and
+ see what she'll say. You won't get so lonesome, dear Kitty, with
+ little Alice; and I can't keep from thinking as well as hoping
+ that the war will not go on as long as it sometimes seems that it
+ must. The utter collapse of Russia has given Germany a vast victory
+ on that side and it may turn out that this will make an earlier
+ peace possible than would otherwise have come. And the Germans may
+ be--in fact, _must_ be, very short of some of the essentials of war
+ in their metals or in cotton. They are in a worse internal plight
+ than has been made known, I am sure. I can't keep from hoping that
+ peace may come this year. Of course, my guess may be wrong; but
+ everything I hear points in the direction of my timid prediction.
+
+ Bless you and little Alice,
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+Page's oldest son was building a house and laying out a garden at
+Pinehurst, North Carolina, a fact which explains the horticultural and
+gastronomical suggestions contained in the following letter:
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ Tregenna Castle Hotel,
+ St. Ives, Cornwall, England,
+ March 4, 1918.
+
+DEAR RALPH:
+
+ Asparagus
+ Celery
+ Tomatoes
+ Butter Beans
+ Peas
+ Sweet Corn
+ Sweet Potatoes
+ Squash--the sort you cook in the rind
+ Cantaloupe
+ Peanuts
+ Egg Plant
+ Figs
+ Peaches
+ Pecans
+ Scuppernongs
+ Peanut-bacon, in glass jars
+ Razor-back hams, divinely cured
+ Raspberries
+ Strawberries
+ etc. etc. etc. etc.
+
+ You see, having starved here for five years, my mind, as soon as it
+ gets free, runs on these things and my mouth waters. All the
+ foregoing things that grow can be put up in pretty glass jars, too.
+
+ Add cream, fresh butter, buttermilk, fresh eggs. Only one of all
+ the things on page one grows with any flavour here at
+ all--strawberries; and only one or two more grow at all. Darned if
+ I don't have to confront Cabbage every day. I haven't yet
+ surrendered, and I never shall unless the Germans get us. Cabbage
+ and Germans belong together: God made 'em both the same stinking
+ day.
+
+ Now get a bang-up gardener no matter what he costs. Get him
+ started. Put it up to him to start toward the foregoing programme,
+ to be reached in (say) three years--two if possible. He must learn
+ to grow these things absolutely better than they are now grown
+ anywhere on earth. He must get the best seed. He must get muck out
+ of the swamp, manure from somewhere, etc. etc. He must have the
+ supreme flavour in each thing. Let him take room enough for
+ each--plenty of room. He doesn't want much room for any one thing,
+ but good spaces between.
+
+ This will be the making of the world. Talk about fairs? If he fails
+ to get every prize he must pay a fine for every one that goes to
+ anybody else.
+
+ How we'll live! I can live on these things and nothing else. But
+ (just to match this home outfit) I'll order tea from Japan, ripe
+ olives from California, grape fruit and oranges from Florida. Then
+ poor folks will hang around, hoping to be invited to dinner!
+
+ Plant a few fig trees now; and pecans? Any good?
+
+ The world is going to come pretty close to starvation not only
+ during the war but for five or perhaps ten years afterward. An acre
+ or two _done right_--divinely right--will save us. An acre or two
+ on my land in Moore County--no king can live half so well if the
+ ground be got ready this spring and such a start made as one
+ natural-born gardener can make. The old Russian I had in Garden
+ City was no slouch. Do you remember his little patch back of the
+ house? That far, far, far excelled anything in all Europe. And
+ you'll recall that we jarred 'em and had good things all winter.
+
+ This St. Ives is the finest spot in England that I've ever seen.
+ To-day has been as good as any March day you ever had in North
+ Carolina--a fine air, clear sunshine, a beautiful sea--looking out
+ toward the United States; and this country grows--the best golf
+ links that I've ever seen in the world, and nothing else worth
+ speaking of but--tin. Tin mines are all about here. Tin and golf
+ are good crops in their way, but they don't feed the belly of man.
+ As matters stand the only people that have fit things to eat now in
+ all Europe are the American troops in France, and their food comes
+ out of tins chiefly. Ach! Heaven! In these islands man is
+ amphibious and carnivorous. It rains every day and meat, meat,
+ meat is the only human idea of food. God bless us, one acre of the
+ Sandhills is worth a vast estate of tin mines and golf links to
+ feed the innards of
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. And cornfield peas, of just the right rankness, cooked with
+ just the right dryness.
+
+ When I become a citizen of the Sandhills I propose to induce some
+ benevolent lover of good food to give substantial prizes to the
+ best grower of each of these things and to the best cook of each
+ and to the person who serves each of them most daintily.
+
+ We can can and glass jar these things and let none be put on the
+ market without the approval of an expert employed by the community.
+ Then we can get a reputation for Sandhill Food and charge double
+ price.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ St. Ives, Cornwall,
+
+ England, March 8, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ Your letter, written from the University Club, is just come. It
+ makes a very distinct impression on my mind which my own
+ conclusions and fears have long confirmed. Let me put it at its
+ worst and in very bald terms: The Great White Chief is at bottom
+ pacifist, has always been so and is so now. Of course I do not mean
+ a pacifist at any price, certainly not a cowardly pacifist. But
+ (looked at theoretically) war is, of course, an absurd way of
+ settling any quarrel, an irrational way. Men and nations are
+ wasteful, cruel, pigheaded fools to indulge in it. Quite true. But
+ war is also the only means of adding to a nation's territory the
+ territory of other nations which they do not wish to sell or to
+ give up--the robbers' only way to get more space or to get booty.
+ This last explains this war. Every Hohenzollern (except the present
+ Emperor's father, who reigned only a few months) since Frederick
+ the Great has added to Prussian and German area of rule. Every one,
+ therefore, as he comes to the throne, feels an obligation to make
+ his addition to the Empire. For this the wars of Prussia with
+ Austria, with Denmark, with France were brought on. They succeeded
+ and won the additions that old William I made to the Empire. Now
+ William II must make _his_ addition. He prepared for more than
+ forty years; the nation prepared before he came to the throne and
+ his whole reign has been given to making sure that he was ready.
+ It's a robber's raid. Of course, the German case has been put so as
+ to direct attention from this bald fact.
+
+ Now the philosophical pacifists--I don't mean the cowardly,
+ yellow-dog ones--have never quite seen the war in this aspect. They
+ regard it as a dispute about something--about trade, about more
+ seaboard, about this or that, whereas it is only a robber's
+ adventure. They want other people's property. They want money,
+ treasure, land, indemnities, minerals, raw materials; and they set
+ out to take them.
+
+ Now confusing this character of the war with some sort of rational
+ dispute about something, the pacifists try in every way to stop it,
+ so that the "issue" may be reasoned out, debated, discussed,
+ negotiated. Surely the President tried to reach peace--tried as
+ hard and as long as the people would allow him. The Germans argued
+ away time with him while they got their submarine fleet built. Then
+ they carried out the programme they had always had in mind and had
+ never thought of abandoning. Now they wish to gain more time, to
+ slacken the efforts of the Allies, if possible to separate them by
+ asking for "discussions"--peace by "negotiation." When you are
+ about to kill the robber, he cries out, "For God's sake, let's
+ discuss the question between us. We can come to terms."--Now here's
+ where the danger comes from the philosophical pacifist--from any
+ man who does not clearly understand the nature of the war and of
+ the enemy. To discuss the difference between us is so very
+ reasonable in sound--so very reasonable in fact if there were a
+ discussable difference. It is a programme that would always be in
+ order except with a burglar or a robber.
+
+ The yet imperfect understanding of the war and of the nature of the
+ German in the United States, especially at Washington--more
+ especially in the White House--herein lies the danger.
+
+ ... This little rest down here is a success. The weather is a
+ disappointment--windy and cold. But to be away from London and away
+ from folks--that's much. Shoecraft is very good[66]. He sends us
+ next to nothing. Almost all we've got is an invitation to lunch
+ with Their Majesties and they've been good enough to put that off.
+ It's a far-off country, very fine, I'm sure in summer, and with
+ most beautiful golf links. The hill is now so windy that no sane
+ man can play there.
+
+ We're enjoying the mere quiet. And your mother is quite well again.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ To Mrs. Charles G. Loring
+ St. Ives, Cornwall,
+ March 10, 1918.
+
+ DEAR KITTY:
+
+ A week here. No news. Shoecraft says we've missed nothing in
+ London. What we came for we've got: your mother's quite well. She
+ climbs these high hills quite spryly. We've had a remarkable week
+ in this respect--we haven't carried on a conversation with any
+ human being but ourselves. I don't think any such thing has ever
+ happened before. I can stand a week, perhaps a fortnight of this
+ now. But I don't care for it for any long period. At the bottom of
+ this high and steep hill is the quaintest little town I ever saw.
+ There are some streets so narrow that when a donkey cart comes
+ along the urchins all have to run to the next corner or into doors.
+ There is no sidewalk, of course; and the donkey cart takes the
+ whole room between the houses. Artists take to the town, and they
+ have funny little studios down by the water front in tiny houses
+ built of stone in pieces big enough to construct a tidewater front.
+ Imagine stone walls made of stone, each weighing tons, built into
+ little houses about as big as your little back garden! There's one
+ fellow here (an artist) whom I used to know in New York, so small
+ has the world become!
+
+ On another hill behind us is a triangular stone monument to John
+ Knill. He was once mayor of the town. When he died in 1782, he left
+ money to the town. If the town is to keep the money (as it has) the
+ Mayor must once in every five years form a procession and march up
+ to this monument. There ten girls, natives of the town, and two
+ widows must dance around the monument to the playing of a fiddle
+ and a drum, the girls dressed in white. This ceremony has gone on,
+ once in five years, all this time and the town has old Knill's
+ money!
+
+ Your mother and I--though we are neither girls nor widows--danced
+ around it this morning, wondering what sort of curmudgeon old John
+ Knill was.
+
+ Don't you see how easily we fall into an idle mood? Well, here's a
+ photograph of little Alice looking up at me from the table where I
+ write--a good, sweet face she has.
+
+ And you'll never get another letter from me in a time and from a
+ place whereof there is so little to tell.
+
+ Affectionately, dear Kitty,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ To Ralph W. Page
+ Tregenna Castle Hotel,
+ St. Ives, Cornwall,
+ March 12, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR RALPH:
+
+ Arthur has sent me Gardiner's 37-page sketch of American-British
+ Concords and Discords--a remarkable sketch; and he has reminded me
+ that your summer plan is to elaborate (into a popular style) your
+ sketch of the same subject. You and Gardiner went over the same
+ ground, each in a very good fashion. That's a fascinating task, and
+ it opens up a wholly new vista of our History and of Anglo-Saxon,
+ democratic history. Much lies ahead of that. And all this puts it
+ in my mind to write you a little discourse on _style_. Gardiner has
+ no style. He put his facts down much as he would have noted on a
+ blue print the facts about an engineering project that he sketched.
+ The style of your article, which has much to be said for it as a
+ magazine article, is not the best style for a book.
+
+ Now, this whole question of style--well, it's the gist of good
+ writing. There's no really effective writing without it. Especially
+ is this true of historical writing. Look at X Y Z's writings. He
+ knows his American history and has written much on it. He's written
+ it as an Ohio blacksmith shoes a horse--not a touch of literary
+ value in it all; all dry as dust--as dry as old Bancroft.
+
+ Style is good breeding--and art--in writing. It consists of the
+ arrangement of your matter, first; then, more, of the gait; the
+ manner and the manners of your expressing it. Work every group of
+ facts, naturally and logically grouped to begin with, into a
+ climax. Work every group up as a sculptor works out his idea or a
+ painter, each group complete in itself. Throw out any superfluous
+ facts or any merely minor facts that prevent the orderly working up
+ of the group--that prevent or mar the effect you wish to present.
+
+ Then, when you've got a group thus presented, go over what you've
+ made of it, to make sure you've used your material and its
+ arrangement to the best effect, taking away merely extraneous or
+ superfluous or distracting facts, here and there adding concrete
+ illustrations--putting in a convincing detail here, and there a
+ touch of colour.
+
+ Then go over it for your vocabulary. See that you use no word in a
+ different meaning than it was used 100 years ago and will be used
+ 100 years hence. You wish to use only the permanent words--words,
+ too, that will be understood to carry the same meaning to English
+ readers in every part of the world. Your vocabulary must be chosen
+ from the permanent, solid, stable parts of the language.
+
+ Then see that no sentence contains a hint of obscurity.
+
+ Then go over the words you use to see if they be the best. Don't
+ fall into merely current phrases. If you have a long word, see if a
+ native short one can be put in its place which will be more natural
+ and stronger. Avoid a Latin vocabulary and use a plain English
+ one--short words instead of long ones.
+
+ Most of all, use _idioms_--English idioms of force. Say an
+ agreement was "come to." Don't say it was "consummated." For the
+ difference between idioms and a Latin style, compare Lincoln with
+ George Washington. One's always interesting and convincing. The
+ other is dull in spite of all his good sense. How most folk do
+ misuse and waste words!
+
+ Freeman went too far in his use of one-syllable words. It became an
+ affectation. But he is the only man I can think of that ever did go
+ too far in that direction. X--would have written a great history if
+ he had had the natural use of idioms. As it is, he has good sense
+ and no style; and his book isn't half so interesting as it would
+ have been if he had some style--some proper value of short,
+ clear-cut words that mean only one thing and that leave no
+ vagueness.
+
+ You'll get a good style if you practice it. It is in your blood and
+ temperament and way of saying things. But it's a high art and must
+ be laboriously cultivated.
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+This glimpse of a changing and chastened England appears in a letter of
+this period:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The disposition shown by an endless number of such incidents is
+something more than a disposition of gratitude of a people helped when
+they are hard pressed. All these things show the changed and changing
+Englishman. It has already come to him that he may be weaker than he
+had thought himself and that he may need friends more than he had once
+imagined; and, if he must have helpers and friends, he'd rather have his
+own kinsmen. He's a queer "cuss," this Englishman. But he isn't a liar
+nor a coward nor any sort of "a yellow dog." He's true, and he never
+runs--a possible hero any day, and, when heroic, modest and quiet and
+graceful. The trouble with him has been that he got great world power
+too easily. In the times when he exploited the world for his own
+enrichment, there were no other successful exploiters. It became an easy
+game to him. He organized sea traffic and sea power. Of course he became
+rich--far, far richer than anybody else, and, therefore, content with
+himself. He has, therefore, kept much of his medięval impedimenta, his
+dukes and marquesses and all that they imply--his outworn ceremonies and
+his medięval disregard of his social inferiors. Nothing is well done in
+this Kingdom for the big public, but only for the classes. The railway
+stations have no warm waiting rooms. The people pace the platform till
+the train comes, and milord sits snugly wrapt up in his carriage till
+his footman announces the approach of the train. And occasional
+discontent is relieved by emigration to the Colonies. If any man becomes
+weary of his restrictions he may go to Australia and become a gentleman.
+The remarkable loyalty of the Colonies has in it something of a
+servant's devotion to his old master.
+
+Now this trying time of war and the threat and danger of extinction are
+bringing--have in fact already brought--the conviction that many changes
+must come. The first sensible talk about popular education ever heard
+here is just now beginning. Many a gentleman has made up his mind to try
+to do with less than seventeen servants for the rest of his life since
+he now _has_ to do with less. Privilege, on which so large a part of
+life here rests, is already pretty well shot to pieces. A lot of old
+baggage will never be recovered after this war: that's certain. During a
+little after-dinner speech in a club not long ago I indulged in a
+pleasantry about excessive impedimenta. Lord Derby, Minister of War and
+a bluff and honest aristocrat, sat near me and he whispered to
+me--"That's me." "Yes," I said, "that's you," and the group about us
+made merry at the jest. The meaning of this is, they now joke about what
+was the most solemn thing in life three years ago.
+
+None of this conveys the idea I am trying to explain--the change in the
+English point of view and outlook--a half century's change in less than
+three years, radical and fundamental change, too. The mother of the Duke
+of X came to see me this afternoon, hobbling on her sticks and feeble,
+to tell me of a radiant letter she had received from her granddaughter
+who has been in Washington visiting the Spring Rices. "It's all very
+wonderful," said the venerable lady, "and my granddaughter actually
+heard the President make a speech!" Now, knowing this lady and knowing
+her son, the Duke, and knowing how this girl, his daughter, has been
+brought up, I dare swear that three years ago not one of them would have
+crossed the street to hear any President that ever lived. They've simply
+become different people. They were very genuine before. They are very
+genuine now.
+
+It is this steadfastness in them that gives me sound hope for the
+future. They don't forget sympathy or help or friendship. Our going into
+the war has eliminated the Japanese question. It has shifted the virtual
+control of the world to English-speaking peoples. It will bring into the
+best European minds the American ideal of service. It will, in fact,
+give us the lead and make the English in the long run our willing
+followers and allies. I don't mean that we shall always have plain
+sailing. But I do mean that the direction of events for the next fifty
+or one hundred years has now been determined.
+
+[Illustration: Lord Robert Cecil, Minister of Blockade, 1916-18,
+Assistant Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1918]
+
+[Illustration: General John J. Pershing, Commander-in-Chief of the
+American Expeditionary Force in the Great War]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yet Page found one stolid opposition to his attempts to establish the
+friendliest relations between the two peoples. That offish attitude of
+the Washington Administration, to which reference has already been made,
+did not soften with the progress of events. Another experience now again
+brought out President Wilson's coldness toward his allies. About this
+time many rather queer Americans--some of the "international"
+breed--were coming to England on more or less official missions. Page
+was somewhat humiliated by these excursions; he knew that his country
+possessed an almost unlimited supply of vivid speakers, filled with zeal
+for the allied cause, whose influence, if they could be induced to cross
+the Atlantic, would put new spirit into the British. The idea of having
+a number of distinguished Americans come to England and tell the British
+public about the United States and especially about the American
+preparations for war, was one that now occupied his thoughts. In June,
+1917, he wrote his old friend Dr. Wallace Buttrick, extending an
+invitation to visit Great Britain as a guest of the British Government.
+Dr. Buttrick made a great success; his speeches drew large crowds and
+proved a source of inspiration to the British masses. So successful were
+they, indeed, that the British Government desired that other Americans
+of similar type should come and spread the message. In November,
+therefore, Dr. Buttrick returned to the United States for the purpose of
+organizing such a committee. Among the eminent Americans whom he
+persuaded to give several months of their time to this work of
+heartening our British allies were Mr. George E. Vincent, President of
+the Rockefeller Foundation, Mr. Harry Pratt Judson, President of Chicago
+University, Mr. Charles H. Van Hise, President of the University of
+Wisconsin, Mr. Edwin A. Alderman, President of the University of
+Virginia, Mr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, and Bishop Lawrence of
+Massachusetts. It was certainly a distinguished group, but it was the
+gentleman selected to be its head that gave it almost transcendent
+importance in the eyes of the British Government. This was ex-President
+William H. Taft. The British lay greater emphasis upon official rank
+than do Americans, and the fact that an ex-President of the United
+States was to head this delegation made it almost an historic event. Mr.
+Taft was exceedingly busy, but he expressed his willingness to give up
+all his engagements for several months and to devote his energies to
+enlightening the British public about America and its purposes in the
+war. An official invitation was sent him from London and accepted.
+
+Inasmuch as Mr. Taft was an ex-President and a representative of the
+political party opposed to the one in power, he thought it only
+courteous that he call upon Mr. Wilson, explain the purpose of his
+mission, and obtain his approval. He therefore had an interview with the
+President at the White House; the date was December 12, 1917. As soon as
+Mr. Wilson heard of the proposed visit to Great Britain he showed signs
+of irritation. He at once declared that it met with his strongest
+disapproval. When Mr. Taft remarked that the result of such an
+enterprise would be to draw Great Britain and the United States more
+closely together, Mr. Wilson replied that he seriously questioned the
+desirability of drawing the two countries any more closely together than
+they already were. He was opposed to putting the United States in a
+position of seeming in any way to be involved with British policy. There
+were divergencies of purpose, he said, and there were features of the
+British policy in this war of which he heartily disapproved. The motives
+of the United States in this war, the President continued, "were
+unselfish, but the motives of Great Britain seemed to him to be of a
+less unselfish character." Mr. Wilson cited the treaty between Great
+Britain and Italy as a sample of British statesmanship which he regarded
+as proving this contention. The President's reference to this Italian
+treaty has considerable historic value; there has been much discussion
+as to when the President first learned of its existence, but it is
+apparent from this conversation with ex-President Taft that he must have
+known about it on December 12, 1917, for President Wilson based his
+criticism of British policy largely upon this Italian convention[67].
+
+The President showed more and more feeling about the matter as the
+discussion continued. "There are too many Englishmen," he said, "in this
+country and in Washington now and I have asked the British Ambassador to
+have some of them sent home."
+
+Mr. Wilson referred to the jealousy of France at the close relations
+which were apparently developing between Great Britain and the United
+States. This was another reason, he thought, why it was unwise to make
+the bonds between them any tighter. He also called Mr. Taft's attention
+to the fact that there were certain elements in the United States which
+were opposed to Great Britain--this evidently being a reference to the
+Germans and the Irish--and he therefore believed that any conspicuous
+attempts to increase the friendliness of the two countries for each
+other would arouse antagonism and resentment.
+
+As Mr. Taft was leaving he informed Mr. Wilson that the plan for his
+visit and that of the other speakers had originated with the American
+Ambassador to Great Britain. This, however, did not improve the
+President's temper.
+
+"Page," said the President, "is really an Englishman and I have to
+discount whatever he says about the situation in Great Britain."
+
+And then he added, "I think you ought not to go, and the same applies to
+the other members of the party. I would like you to make my attitude on
+this question known to those having the matter in charge."
+
+Despite this rebuff Dr. Buttrick and Mr. Taft were reluctant to give up
+the plan. An appeal was therefore made to Colonel House. Colonel House
+at once said that the proposed visit was an excellent thing and that he
+would make a personal appeal to Mr. Wilson in the hope of changing his
+mind. A few days afterward Colonel House called up Dr. Buttrick and
+informed him that he had not succeeded. "I am sorry," wrote Colonel
+House to Page, "that the Buttrick speaking programme has turned out as
+it has. The President was decidedly opposed to it and referred to it
+with some feeling."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 64: August 1, 1917, Pope Benedict XV sent a letter to the
+Powers urging them to bring the war to an end and outlining possible
+terms of settlement. On August 29th President Wilson sent his historic
+reply. This declared, in memorable language, that the Hohenzollern
+dynasty was unworthy of confidence and that the United States would have
+no negotiations with its representatives. It inferentially took the
+stand that the Kaiser must abdicate, or be deposed, and the German
+autocracy destroyed, as part of the conditions of peace.]
+
+[Footnote 65: On November 29, 1917, the London _Daily Telegraph_
+published a letter from the Marquis of Lansdowne, which declared that
+the war had lasted too long and suggested that the British restate their
+war aims. This letter was severely condemned by the British press and by
+practically all representative British statesmen. It produced a most
+lamentable impression in the United States also.]
+
+[Footnote 66: Eugene C. Shoecraft, the Ambassador's secretary.]
+
+[Footnote 67: As related in Chapter XXII, page 267, President Wilson was
+informed of the so-called "secret treaties" by Mr. Balfour, in the
+course of his memorable visit to the White House.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+GETTING THE AMERICAN TROOPS TO FRANCE
+
+
+A group of letters, written at this time, touch upon a variety of topics
+which were then engaging the interest of all countries:
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ London, January 19, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ While your letter is still fresh in my mind I dictate the following
+ in answer to your question about Palestine.
+
+ It has not been settled--and cannot be, I fancy, until the Peace
+ Conference--precisely what the British will do with Palestine, but
+ I have what I think is a correct idea of their general attitude on
+ the subject. First, of course, they do not propose to allow it to
+ go back into Turkish hands; and the same can be said also of
+ Armenia and possibly of Mesopotamia. Their idea of the future of
+ Palestine is that whoever shall manage the country, or however it
+ shall be managed, the Jews shall have the same chance as anybody
+ else. Of course that's quite an advance for the Jews there, but
+ their idea is not that the Jews should have command of other
+ populations there or control over them--not in the least. My guess
+ at the English wish, which I have every reason to believe is the
+ right guess, is that they would wish to have Palestine
+ internationalized, whatever that means. That is to say, that it
+ should have control of its own local affairs and be a free country
+ but that some great Power, or number of Powers, should see to it
+ that none of the races that live there should be allowed to impose
+ upon the other races. I don't know just how such a guarantee can be
+ given by the great Powers or such a responsibility assumed except
+ by an agreement among two or three of them, or barely possibly by
+ the English keeping control themselves; but the control by the
+ English after the war of the former German colonies will put such a
+ large task on them that they will not be particularly eager to
+ extend the area of their responsibility elsewhere. Of course a
+ difficult problem will come up also about Constantinople and the
+ Dardanelles. The Dardanelles must be internationalized.
+
+ I have never been able to consider the Zionist movement seriously.
+ It is a mere religious sentiment which will express itself in
+ action by very few people. I have asked a number of Jews at various
+ times who are in favour of the Zionist movement if they themselves
+ are going there. They always say no. The movement, therefore, has
+ fixed itself in my mind as a Jewish movement in which no Jew that
+ you can lay your hands on will ever take part but who wants other
+ Jews to take part in it. Of course there might be a flocking to
+ Palestine of Jews from Russia and the adjoining countries where
+ they are not happy, but I think the thing is chiefly a sentiment
+ and nothing else. Morgenthau[68] is dead right. I agree with him
+ _in toto_. I do not think anybody in the United States need be the
+ least concerned about the Zionist movement because there isn't a
+ single Jew in our country such a fool as to go to Palestine when he
+ can stay in the United States. The whole thing is a sentimental,
+ religious, more or less unnatural and fantastic idea and I don't
+ think will ever trouble so practical a people as we and our Jews
+ are.
+
+The following memorandum is dated February 10, 1918:
+
+ General Bliss[69] has made a profound and the best possible
+ impression here by his wisdom and his tact. The British have a deep
+ respect for him and for his opinions, and in inspiring and keeping
+ high confidence in us he is worth an army in himself. I have seen
+ much of him and found out a good deal about his methods. He is
+ simplicity and directness itself. Although he is as active and
+ energetic as a boy, he spends some time by himself to think things
+ out and even to say them to himself to see how his conclusions
+ strike the ear as well as the mind. He has been staying here at the
+ house of one of our resident officers. At times he goes to his room
+ and sits long by the fire and argues his point--out loud--oblivious
+ to everything else. More than once when he was so engaged one of
+ his officers has knocked at the door and gone in and laid telegrams
+ on the table beside him and gone out without his having known of
+ the officer's entrance. Then he comes out and tries his conclusion
+ on someone who enjoys his confidence. And then he stands by it and
+ when the time comes delivers it slowly and with precision; and
+ there he is; and those who hear him see that he has thought the
+ matter out on all sides and finally.
+
+ Our various establishments in London have now become big--the
+ Embassy proper, the Naval and Army Headquarters, the Red Cross, the
+ War Trade Board's representatives, and now (forthwith) the Shipping
+ Board, besides Mr. Crosby of the Treasury. The volume of work is
+ enormous and it goes smoothly, except for the somewhat halting
+ Army Headquarters, the high personnel of which is now undergoing a
+ change; and that will now be all right. I regularly make the rounds
+ of all the Government Departments with which we deal to learn if
+ they find our men and methods effective, and the rounds of all our
+ centres of activity to find whether there be any friction with the
+ British The whole machine moves very well. For neither side
+ hesitates to come to me whenever they strike even small snags. All
+ our people are at work on serious tasks and (so far as I know)
+ there are now none of those despicable creatures here who used
+ during our neutrality days to come from the United States on peace
+ errands and what-not to spy on the Embassy and me (their inquiries
+ and their correspondence were catalogued by the police). I have
+ been amazed at the activity of some of them whose doings I have
+ since been informed of.
+
+ We now pay this tribute to the submarines--that we have entered the
+ period of compulsory rations. There is enough to eat in spite of
+ the food that has gone to feed the fishes. But no machinery of
+ distribution to a whole population can be uniformly effective. The
+ British worker with his hands is a greedy feeder and a sturdy
+ growler and there will be trouble. But I know no reason to
+ apprehend serious trouble.
+
+ The utter break-up of Russia and the German present occupation of
+ so much of the Empire as she wants have had a contrary effect on
+ two sections of opinion here, as I interpret the British mind. On
+ the undoubtedly enormously dominant section of opinion these events
+ have only stiffened resolution. They say that Germany now must be
+ whipped to a finish. Else she will have doubled her empire and will
+ hold the peoples of her new territory as vassals without regard to
+ their wishes and the war lord caste will be more firmly seated
+ than ever before. If her armies be literally whipped she'll have to
+ submit to the Allies' terms, which will dislodge her from
+ overlordship over these new unwilling subjects--and she can be
+ dislodged in no other way. This probably means a long war, now that
+ after a time she can get raw materials for war later and food from
+ Rumania and the Ukraine, etc. This will mean a fight in France and
+ Belgium till a decisive victory is won and the present exultant
+ German will is broken.
+
+ The minority section of public opinion--as I judge a small
+ minority--has the feeling that such an out-and-out military victory
+ cannot be won or is not worth the price; and that the enemies of
+ Germany, allowing her to keep her Eastern accretions, must make the
+ best terms they can in the East; that there's no use in running the
+ risk of Italy's defeat and defection before some sort of bargain
+ could be made about Belgium, Alsace-Lorraine, and Serbia. Of course
+ this plan would leave the German warlordship intact and would bring
+ no sort of assurance of a prolonged peace. It would, too, leave
+ European Russia at least to German mercy, and would leave the
+ Baltic and the Black Seas practically wholly under German
+ influence. As for the people of Russia, there seems small chance
+ for them in this second contingency. The only way to save them is
+ to win a decisive victory.
+
+ As matters stand to-day Lord Lansdowne and his friends (how
+ numerous they are nobody knows) are the loudest spokesmen for such
+ a peace as can be made. But it is talked much of in Asquith circles
+ that the time may come when this policy will be led by Mr. Asquith,
+ in a form somewhat modified from the Lansdowne formula. Mr. Asquith
+ has up to this time patriotically supported the government and he
+ himself has said nothing in public which could warrant linking his
+ name with an early peace-seeking policy. But his friends openly
+ and incessantly predict that he will, at a favourable moment, take
+ this cue. I myself can hardly believe it. Political victory in
+ Great Britain doesn't now lie in that direction.
+
+ The dominant section of opinion is much grieved at Russia's
+ surrender, but they refuse to be discouraged by it. They recall how
+ Napoleon overran most of Europe, and the French held practically
+ none of his conquests after his fall.
+
+ Such real political danger as exists here--if any exists, of which
+ I am not quite sure--comes not only now mainly of this split in
+ public opinion but also and to a greater degree from the personal
+ enemies of the present government. Lloyd George is kept in power
+ because he is the most energetic man in sight--by far. Many who
+ support him do not like him nor trust him-except that nobody doubts
+ his supreme earnestness to win the war. On all other subjects he
+ has enemies of old and he makes new ones. His intense and superb
+ energy has saved him in two notable crises. His dismissal of Sir
+ William Robertson[70] has been accepted in the interest of greater
+ unity of military control, but it was a dangerous rapids that he
+ shot, for he didn't do it tactfully. Yet there's a certain danger
+ to the present powers in the feeling that some of them are wearing
+ out. Parliament itself--an old one now--is thought to have gone
+ stale. Bonar Law is over-worked and tired; Balfour is often said to
+ be too philosophical and languid; but, when this feeling seems in
+ danger of taking definite shape, he makes a clearer statement than
+ anybody else and catches on his feet. The man of new energy, not
+ yet fagged, is Geddes[71], whose frankness carries conviction.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, March 17, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ The rather impatient and unappreciative remarks made by the Prime
+ Minister before a large meeting of preachers of the "free" churches
+ about a League of Nations reminds me to write you about the state
+ of British opinion on that subject. What Lloyd George said to these
+ preachers is regrettable because it showed a certain impatience of
+ mind from which he sometimes suffers; but it is only fair to him to
+ say that his remarks that day did not express a settled opinion.
+ For on more than one previous occasion he has spoken of the subject
+ in a wholly different tone--much more appreciatively. On that
+ particular day he had in mind only the overwhelming necessity to
+ win the war--other things, _all_ other things must wait. In a way
+ this is his constant mood--the mood to make everybody feel that the
+ only present duty is to win the war. He has been accused of almost
+ every defect in the calendar except of slackness about the war.
+ Nobody has ever doubted his earnestness nor his energy about
+ _that_. And the universal confidence in his energy and earnestness
+ is what keeps him in office. Nobody sees any other man who can push
+ and inspire as well as he does. It would be a mistake, therefore,
+ to pay too much heed to any particular utterance of this electrical
+ creature of moods, on any subject.
+
+ Nevertheless, he hasn't thought out the project of a league to
+ enforce peace further than to see the difficulties. He sees that
+ such a league might mean, in theory at least, the giving over in
+ some possible crisis the command of the British Fleet to an officer
+ of some other nationality. That's unthinkable to any red-blooded
+ son of these islands. Seeing a theoretical possibility even of
+ raising such a question, the British mind stops and refuses to go
+ further--refuses in most cases even to inquire seriously whether
+ any such contingency is ever likely to come.
+
+ The British Grand Fleet, in fact, is a subject that stands alone in
+ power and value and in difficulties. It classifies itself with
+ nothing else. Since over and over again it has saved these islands
+ from invasion when nothing else could have saved them and since
+ during this war in particular it has saved the world from German
+ conquest--as every Englishman believes--it lies in their reverence
+ and their gratitude and their abiding convictions as a necessary
+ and perpetual shield so long as Great Britain shall endure. If the
+ Germans are thrashed to a frazzle (and we haven't altogether done
+ that yet) and we set about putting the world in order, when we come
+ to discuss Disarmament, the British Fleet will be the most
+ difficult item in the world to dispose of. It is not only a Fact,
+ with a great and saving history, it is also a sacred Tradition and
+ an Article of Faith.
+
+ The first reason, therefore, why the British general mind has not
+ firmly got hold on a league is the instinctive fear that the
+ formation of any league may in some conceivable way affect the
+ Grand Fleet. Another reason is the general inability of a somewhat
+ slow public opinion to take hold on more than one subject at a time
+ or more than one urgent part of one subject. The One Subject, of
+ course, is winning the war. Since everything else depends on that,
+ everything else must wait on that.
+
+ The League, therefore, has not taken hold on the public imagination
+ here as it has in the United States. The large mass of the people
+ have not thought seriously about it: it has not been strongly and
+ persistently presented to the mass of the people. There is no
+ popular or general organization to promote it. There is even, here
+ and there, condemnation of the idea. The (London) _Morning Post_,
+ for example, goes out of its way once in a while to show the
+ wickedness of the idea because, so it argues, it will involve the
+ sacrifice, more or less, of nationality. But the _Morning Post_ is
+ impervious to new ideas and is above all things critical in its
+ activities and very seldom constructive. The typical Tory mind in
+ general sees no good in the idea. The typical Tory mind is the
+ insular mind.
+
+ On the other hand, the League idea is understood as a necessity and
+ heartily approved by two powerful sections of public opinion--(1)
+ the group of public men who have given attention to it, such as
+ Bryce, Lord Robert Cecil, and the like, and (2) some of the best
+ and strongest leaders of Labour. There is good reason to hope that
+ whenever a fight and an agitation is made for a League these two
+ sections of public opinion will win; but an agitation and a fight
+ must come. Lord Bryce, in the intervals of his work as chairman of
+ a committee to make a plan for the reorganization of the House of
+ Lords, which, he remarked to me the other day, "involves as much
+ labour as a Government Department," has fits of impatience about
+ pushing a campaign for a league, and so have a few other men. They
+ ask me if it be not possible to have good American public speakers
+ come here--privately, of course, and in no way connected with our
+ Government nor speaking for it--to explain the American movement
+ for a League in order to arouse a public sentiment on the subject.
+
+ Thus the case stands at present.
+
+ Truth and error alike and odd admixtures of them come in waves over
+ this censored land where one can seldom determine what is true,
+ before the event, from the newspapers. "News" travels by word of
+ mouth, and information that one can depend on is got by personal
+ inquiry from sources that can be trusted.
+
+ There is a curious wave of fear just now about what Labour may do,
+ and the common gossip has it that there is grave danger in the
+ situation. I can find no basis for such a fear. I have talked with
+ labour leaders and I have talked with members of the government who
+ know most about the subject. There is not a satisfactory
+ situation--there has not been since the war began. There has been a
+ continuous series of labour "crises," and there have been a good
+ many embarrassing strikes, all of which have first been hushed up
+ and settled--at least postponed. One cause of continuous trouble
+ has been the notion held by the Unions, sometimes right and
+ sometimes wrong, that the employers were making abnormal profits
+ and that they were not getting their due share. There have been and
+ are also other causes of trouble. It was a continuous quarrel even
+ in peace times. But I can find no especial cause of fear now. Many
+ of the Unions have had such advances of wages that the Government
+ has been severely criticized for giving in. Just lately a large
+ wing of the Labour Party put forth its war aims which--with
+ relatively unimportant exceptions--coincide with the best
+ declarations made by the Government's own spokesmen.
+
+ Of course, no prudent man would venture to make dogmatic
+ predictions. There have been times when for brief intervals any one
+ would have been tempted to fear that these quarrels might cause an
+ unsatisfactory conclusion of the war. But the undoubted patriotism
+ of the British workman has every time saved the situation. While a
+ danger point does lie here, there is no reason to be more fearful
+ now than at any preceding time when no especial trouble was
+ brewing. This wave of gossip and fear has no right to sweep over
+ the country now.
+
+ Labour hopes and expects and is preparing to win the next General
+ Election--whether with good reason or not I cannot guess. But most
+ men expect it to win the Government at some time--most of them
+ _after_ the war. I recall that Lord Grey once said to me, before
+ the war began, that a general political success of the Labour Party
+ was soon to be expected.
+
+ Another wave which, I hear, has swept over Rome as well as London
+ is a wave of early peace expectation. The British newspapers have
+ lately been encouraging this by mysterious phrases. Some men here
+ of good sense and sound judgment think that this is the result of
+ the so-called German "peace offensive," which makes the present the
+ most dangerous period of the war.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To David F. Houston_[72]
+
+ London, March 23, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSTON:
+
+ It is very kind of you indeed to write so generously about the
+ British visitors who are invading our sacred premises, such as the
+ Archbishop of York, and it is good to hear from you anyhow about
+ any subject and I needn't say that it is quite a rare experience
+ also. I wish you would take a little of your abundant leisure and
+ devote it to good letters to me.
+
+ And in some one of your letters tell me this.--The British send
+ over men of this class that you have written about to see us, but
+ they invite over here--and we permit to come--cranks on
+ prohibition, experts in the investigation of crime, short-haired
+ women who wish to see how British babies are reared, peace cranks
+ and freaks of other kinds[73]. Our Government apparently won't let
+ plain, honest, normal civilians come over, but if a fellow comes
+ along who wants to investigate some monstrosity then one half of
+ the Senate, one half of the House of Representatives, and a number
+ of the executive offices of the Government give him the most
+ cordial letters. Now there are many things, of course, that I don't
+ know, but it has been my fate to have a pretty extensive
+ acquaintance with cranks of every description in the United States.
+ I don't think there is any breed of them that didn't haunt my
+ office while I was an editor. Now I am surely punished for all my
+ past sins by having those fellows descend on me here. I know them,
+ nearly all, from past experience and now just for the sake of
+ keeping the world as quiet as possible I have to give them time
+ here far out of proportion to their value.
+
+ Now, out of your great wisdom, I wish you would explain to me why
+ the deuce we let all this crew come over here instead of sending a
+ shipload of perfectly normal, dignified, and right-minded
+ gentlemen. These thug reformers!--Baker will be here in a day or
+ two and if I can remember it I am going to suggest to him that he
+ round them all up and put them in the trenches in France where
+ those of them who have so far escaped the gallows ought to be put.
+
+ I am much obliged to have the illuminating statement about our
+ crops. I am going to show it to certain gentlemen here who will be
+ much cheered by it. By gracious, you ought to hear their
+ appreciation of what we are doing! We are not doing it for the sake
+ of their appreciation, but if we were out to win it we could not do
+ it better. Down at bottom the Englishman is a good fellow. He has
+ his faults but he doesn't get tired and he doesn't suffer spasms of
+ emotion.
+
+ Give my love to Mrs. Houston, and do sit down and write me a
+ good long letter--a whole series of them, in fact.
+
+ Believe me, always most heartily yours,
+
+ WALTER HINES PAGE.
+
+[Illustration: From a painting by Irving R. Wiles Admiral William Sowden
+Sims, Commander of American naval forces operating in European waters
+during the Great War]
+
+[Illustration: A silver model of the _Mayflower_, the farewell gift of
+the Plymouth Council to Mr. Page]
+
+ _To Frank L. Polk_
+
+ London, March 22, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. POLK:
+
+ You are good enough to mention the fact that the Embassy has some
+ sort of grievance against the Department. Of course it has, and you
+ are, possibly, the only man that can remove it. It is this: You
+ don't come here to see the war and this government and these people
+ who are again saving the world as we are now saving them. I thank
+ Heaven and the Administration for Secretary Baker's visit. It is a
+ dramatic moment in the history of the race, of democracy, and of
+ the world. The State Department has the duty to deal with foreign
+ affairs--the especial duty--and yet no man in the State Department
+ has been here since the war began. This doesn't look pretty and it
+ won't look pretty when the much over-worked "future historian"
+ writes it down in a book. Remove that grievance.
+
+ The most interesting thing going on in the world to-day--a thing
+ that in History will transcend the war and be reckoned its greatest
+ gain--is the high leadership of the President in formulating the
+ struggle, in putting its aims high, and in taking the democratic
+ lead in the world, a lead that will make the world over--and in
+ taking the democratic lead of the English-speaking folk. Next most
+ impressive to that is to watch the British response to that lead.
+ Already they have doubled the number of their voters, and even more
+ important definite steps in Democracy will be taken. My aim--and
+ it's the only way to save the world--is to lead the British in this
+ direction. They are the most easily teachable people in our way of
+ thinking and of doing. Of course everybody who works toward such an
+ aim provokes the cry from a lot of fools among us who accuse him of
+ toadying to the English and of "accepting the conventional English
+ conclusion." They had as well talk of missionaries to India
+ accepting Confucius or Buddha. Their fleet has saved us four or
+ five times. It's about time we were saving them from this bloods
+ Thing that we call Europe, for our sake and for theirs.
+
+ The bloody Thing will get us all if we don't fight our level best;
+ and it's only by _our_ help that we'll be saved. That clearly gives
+ us the leadership. Everybody sees that. Everybody acknowledges it.
+ The President authoritatively speaks it--speaks leadership on a
+ higher level than it was ever spoken before to the whole world. As
+ soon as we get this fighting job over, the world procession toward
+ freedom--our kind of freedom--will begin under our lead. This being
+ so, can't you delegate the writing of telegrams about "facilitating
+ the license to ship poppy seed to McKesson and Robbins," and come
+ over and see big world-forces at work?
+
+ I cannot express my satisfaction at Secretary Baker's visit. It was
+ historic--the first member of the Cabinet, I think, who ever came
+ here while he held office. He made a great impression and received
+ a hearty welcome.
+
+ That's the only grievance I can at the moment unload on you. We're
+ passing out of our old era of isolation. These benighted heathen on
+ this island whom we'll yet save (since they are well worth saving)
+ will be with us as we need them in future years and centuries.
+ Come, help us heighten this fine spirit.
+
+ Always heartily yours,
+
+ WALTER HINES PAGE.
+
+ P.S. You'd see how big our country looks from a distance. It's
+ gigantic, I assure you.
+
+The above letter was written on what was perhaps the darkest day of the
+whole war. The German attack on the Western Front, which had been long
+expected, had now been launched, and, at the moment that Page was
+penning this cheery note to Mr. Polk, the German armies had broken
+through the British defenses, had pushed their lines forty miles ahead,
+and, in the judgment of many military men, had Paris almost certainly
+within their grasp. A great German gun, placed about seventy miles from
+the French capital, was dropping shells upon the apparently doomed city.
+This attack had been regarded as inevitable since the collapse of
+Russia, which had enabled the Germans to concentrate practically all
+their armies on the Western Front.
+
+The world does not yet fully comprehend the devastating effect of this
+apparently successful attack upon the allied morale. British statesmen
+and British soldiers made no attempt to conceal from official Americans
+the desperate state of affairs. It was the expectation that the Germans
+might reach Calais and thence invade England. The War Office discussed
+these probabilities most freely with Colonel Slocum, the American
+military attaché. The simple fact was that both the French and the
+British armies were practically bled white.
+
+"For God's sake, get your men over!" they urged General Slocum. "You
+have got to finish it."
+
+Page was writing urgently to President Wilson to the same purpose. Send
+the men and send them at once. "I pray God," were his solemn words to
+Mr. Wilson, "that you will not be too late!"
+
+One propitious event had taken place at the same time as the opening of
+the great German offensive. Mr. Newton D. Baker, the American Secretary
+of War, had left quietly for France in late February, 1918, and had
+reached the Western Front in time to obtain a first-hand sight of the
+great March drive. No visit in history has ever been better timed, and
+no event could have better played into Page's hands. He had been urging
+Washington to send all available forces to France at the earliest
+possible date; he knew, as probably few other men knew, the extent to
+which the Allies were depending upon American troops to give the final
+blow to Germany; and the arrival of Secretary Baker at the scene of
+action gave him the opportunity to make a personal appeal. Page
+immediately communicated with the Secretary and persuaded him to come at
+once to London for a consultation with British military and political
+leaders. The Secretary spent only three days in London, but the visit,
+brief as it was, had historic consequences. He had many consultations
+with the British military men; he entered into their plans with
+enthusiasm; he himself received many ideas that afterward took shape in
+action, and the British Government obtained from him first-hand
+information as to the progress of the American Army and the American
+determination to cooperate to the last man and the last dollar. "Baker
+went straight back to France," Page wrote to his son Arthur, "and our
+whole coöperation began."
+
+Page gave a dinner to Mr. Baker at the Embassy on March 23rd--two days
+after the great March drive had begun. This occasion gave the visitor a
+memorable glimpse of the British temperament. Mr. Lloyd George, Mr.
+Balfour, Lord Derby, the War Secretary, General Biddle, of the United
+States Army, and Admiral Sims were the Ambassador's guests. Though the
+mighty issues then overhanging the world were not ignored in the
+conversation the atmosphere hardly suggested that the existence of the
+British Empire, indeed that of civilization itself, was that very night
+hanging in the balance. Possibly it was the general sombreness of events
+that caused these British statesmen to find a certain relief in jocular
+small talk and reminiscence. For the larger part of the evening not a
+word was said about the progress of the German armies in France. Mr.
+Lloyd George and Mr. Balfour, seated on opposite sides of the table,
+apparently found relaxation in reviewing their political careers and
+especially their old-time political battles. They would laughingly
+recall occasions when, in American parlance, they had put each other "in
+a hole"; the exigencies of war had now made these two men colleagues in
+the same government, but the twenty years preceding 1914 they had spent
+in political antagonism. Page's guests on this occasion learned much
+political history of the early twentieth century, and the mutual
+confessions of Mr. Lloyd George and Mr. Balfour gave these two men an
+insight into each others' motives and manoeuvres which was almost as
+revealing. "Yes, you caught me that time," Mr. Lloyd George would say,
+and then he would counter with an episode of a political battle in which
+he had got the better of Mr. Balfour. The whole talk was lively and
+bantering, and accompanied with much laughter; and all this time shells
+from that long-distance gun were dropping at fifteen minute intervals
+upon the devoted women and children of Paris and the Germans were every
+hour driving the British back in disorder. At times the conversation
+took a more philosophic turn. Would the men present like to go back
+twenty-five years and live their lives all over again? The practically
+unanimous decision of every man was that he would not wish to do so.
+
+All this, of course, was merely on the surface; despite the laughter and
+the banter, there was only one thing which engrossed the Ambassador's
+guests, although there were not many references to it. That was the
+struggle which was then taking place in France. At intervals Mr. Lloyd
+George would send one of the guests, evidently a secretary, from the
+room. The latter, on his return, would whisper something in the Prime
+Minister's ear, but more frequently he would merely shake his head.
+Evidently he had been sent to obtain the latest news of the battle.
+
+At one point the Prime Minister did refer to the great things taking
+place in France.
+
+"This battle means one thing," he said. "That is a generalissimo."
+
+"Why couldn't you have taken this step long ago?" Admiral Sims asked Mr.
+Lloyd George.
+
+The answer came like a flash.
+
+"If the cabinet two weeks ago had suggested placing the British Army
+under a foreign general, it would have fallen. Every cabinet in Europe
+would also have fallen, had it suggested such a thing."
+
+ _Memorandum on Secretary Baker's visit_
+
+ Secretary Baker's visit here, brief as it was, gave the heartiest
+ satisfaction. So far as I know, he is the first member of an
+ American Cabinet who ever came to England while he held office, as
+ Mr. Balfour was the first member of a British Cabinet who ever went
+ to the United States while he held office. The great governments of
+ the English-speaking folk have surely dealt with one another with
+ mighty elongated tongs. Governments of democracies are not exactly
+ instruments of precision. But they are at least human. But personal
+ and human neglect of one another by these two governments over so
+ long a period is an astonishing fact in our history. The wonder is
+ that we haven't had more than two wars. And it is no wonder that
+ the ignorance of Englishmen about America and the American
+ ignorance of England are monumental, stupendous, amazing, passing
+ understanding. I have on my mantelpiece a statuette of Benjamin
+ Franklin, an excellent and unmistakable likeness which was made
+ here during his lifetime; and the inscription burnt on its base is
+ _Geo. Washington_. It serves me many a good turn with my English
+ friends. I use it as a measure of their ignorance of us. Of course
+ this is a mere little error of a statuette-maker, an error,
+ moreover, of a hundred years ago. But it tells the story of to-day
+ also. If I had to name the largest and most indelible impression
+ that has been made on me during my five years' work here, I should
+ say the ignorance and aloofness of the two peoples--not an
+ ignorance of big essential facts but of personalities and
+ temperaments--such as never occur except between men who had never
+ seen one another.
+
+ But I was writing about Mr. Baker's visit and I've got a long way
+ from that. I doubt if he knows himself what gratification it gave;
+ for these men here have spoken to me about it as they could not
+ speak to him.
+
+ Here is an odd fact: For sixty years, so far as I know, members of
+ the Administration have had personal acquaintance with some of the
+ men in power in Salvador, Costa Rica, Venezuela, Peru, etc., etc.,
+ and members of the British Government have had personal
+ acquaintance with some men in authority in Portugal, Serbia,
+ Montenegro and Monte Carlo; but during this time (with the single
+ exception of John Hay) I think no member of any Administration had
+ a real personal acquaintance while he held office with any member
+ of the British Government while he held office, and vice
+ versa--till Mr. Balfour's visit. Suspicion grows out of ignorance.
+ The longer I live here the more astonished I become at the
+ fundamental ignorance of the British about us and of our
+ fundamental ignorance about them. So colossal is this ignorance
+ that every American sent here is supposed to be taken in, to become
+ Anglophile; and often when one undertakes to enlighten Englishmen
+ about the United States one becomes aware of a feeling inside the
+ English of unbelief, as if he said, "Oh, well! you are one of those
+ queer people who believe in republican government." All this is
+ simply amazing. Poor Admiral Sims sometimes has a sort of mania, a
+ delusion that nobody at Washington trusts his judgment because he
+ said seven or eight years ago that he liked the English. Yet every
+ naval officer who comes here, I understand, shares his views about
+ practically every important naval problem or question. I don't
+ deserve the compliment (it's a very high one) that some of my
+ secretaries sometimes pay me when they say that I am the only man
+ they know who tries to tell the whole truth to our Government in
+ favour of the Englishman as well as against him. It is certain that
+ American public opinion is universally supposed to suspect any
+ American who tries to do anything with the British lion except to
+ twist his tail--a supposition that I never believed to be
+ true.--But it is true that the mutual ignorance is as high as the
+ Andes and as deep as the ocean. Personal acquaintance removes it
+ and nothing else will.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ American Embassy,
+ London, April 7, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ I daresay you remember this epic:
+
+ Old Morgan's wife made butter and cheese;
+ Old Morgan drank the whey.
+ There came a wind from West to East
+ And blew Old Morgan away.
+
+ I'm Old Morgan and your mother got ashamed of my wheyness and made
+ the doctor prescribe cream for me. There's never been such a
+ luxury, and anybody who supposes that I am now going to get fat and
+ have my cream stopped simply doesn't know me. So, you see why I'm
+ intent on shredded wheat biscuits. That's about the best form of
+ real wheat that will keep. And there's no getting real wheat-stuff,
+ pure and simple, in any other form.
+
+ There's no use in talking about starving people--except perhaps in
+ India and China. White men can live on anything. The English could
+ fight a century on cabbage and Brussels sprouts. I've given up hope
+ of starving the Germans. A gut of dogmeat or horse flesh and a
+ potato will keep them in fighting trim forever. I've read daily for
+ two years of impending starvation across the Rhine; but I never
+ even now hear of any dead ones from hunger. Cold steel or lead is
+ the only fatal dose for them.
+
+ Therefore I know that shredded wheat will carry me through.
+
+ You'll see, I hope, from the clippings that I enclose that I'm not
+ done for yet anyhow. Two speeches a day is no small stunt; and I
+ did it again yesterday--hand running; and I went out to dinner
+ afterward. It was a notable occasion--this celebration of the
+ anniversary of our coming into the war[74].
+
+ Nobody here knows definitely just what to fear from the big battle;
+ but everybody fears more or less. It's a critical time--very. I am
+ told that that long-range gunning of Paris is the worst form of
+ frightfulness yet tried. The shells do not kill a great many
+ people. But their falling every fifteen minutes gets on people's
+ nerves and they can't sleep. I hear they are leaving Paris in great
+ numbers. Since the big battle began and the Germans have needed all
+ their planes and more in France, they've let London alone. But
+ nobody knows when they will begin again.
+
+ Nobody knows any future thing about the war, and everybody faces a
+ fear.
+
+ Secretary Baker stayed with me the two days and three nights he was
+ here. He made a good impression but he received a better one. He
+ now knows something about the war. I had at dinner to meet him:
+
+ Lloyd George, Prime Minister.
+
+ Balfour, Foreign Secretary.
+
+ The Chief of Staff.
+
+ Lord Derby, War Secretary.
+
+ General Biddle, U.S.A., in command in London.
+
+ Admiral Sims, U.S.N.
+
+ The talk was to the point--good and earnest. Baker went straight
+ back to France and our _whole_ coöperation began. With the first
+ group of four he had conferences besides for two days. His coming
+ was an admirable move.
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ London, April 13, 1918.
+
+ DEAR RALPH:
+
+ Your cheery letters about entertaining governors, planting trees
+ and shrubbery and your mother's little orchard give us much
+ pleasure. The Southern Pines paper brings news of very great damage
+ to the peach crop. I hope it is much exaggerated. Is it?
+
+ We haven't any news here, and I send you my weekly note only to
+ keep my record clear. The great battle--no one talks or thinks of
+ anything else. We have suffered and still suffer a good deal of
+ fear and anxiety, with real reason, too. But the military men are
+ reassuring. Yet I don't know just how far to trust their judgment
+ or to share their hopes. Certainly this is the most dangerous
+ situation that modern civilization was ever put in. If we can keep
+ them from winning any _great_ objective, like Paris or a channel
+ port, we ought to end the war this year. If not, either they win or
+ at the least prolong the war indefinitely. It's a hazardous and
+ trying time.
+
+ There were never such casualties on either side as now. Such a
+ bloody business cannot keep up all summer. But before everybody is
+ killed or a decisive conclusion is reached, the armies will, no
+ doubt, dig themselves in and take a period of comparative rest.
+ People here see and feel the great danger. But the extra effort now
+ _may_ come too late. Still we keep up good hope. The British are
+ hard to whip. They never give up. And as for the French army, I
+ always remember Verdun and keep my courage up.
+
+ The wounded are coming over by the thousand. We are incomparably
+ busy and in great anxiety about the result (though still pretty
+ firm in the belief that the Germans will lose), and luckily we keep
+ very well.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ London, April 7, 1918.
+
+ DEAR RALPH:
+
+ There used to be a country parson down in Wake County who, when
+ other subjects were talked out, always took up the pleasing topic
+ of saving your soul. That's the way your mother and I do--with the
+ subject of going home. We talk over the battle, we talk over the
+ boys, we talk over military and naval problems, we discuss the
+ weather and all the babies, and then take up politics, and talk
+ over the gossip of the wiseacres; but we seldom finish a
+ conversation without discussing going home. And we reach just about
+ as clear a conclusion on our topic as the country parson reached on
+ his. I've had the doctors going over me (or rather your mother has)
+ as an expert accountant goes over your books; and I tried to bribe
+ them to say that I oughtn't to continue my arduous duties here
+ longer. They wouldn't say any such thing. Thus that device
+ failed--dead. It looks as if I were destined for a green old age
+ and no _martyr_ business at all.
+
+ All this is disappointing; and I don't see what to do but to go on.
+ I can't keep from hoping that the big battle may throw some light
+ on the subject; but there's no telling when the big battle will
+ end. Nothing ends--that's the trouble. I sometimes feel that the
+ war may never end, that it may last as the Napoleonic Wars did, for
+ 20 years; and before that time we'll all have guns that shoot 100
+ miles. We can stay at home and indefinitely bombard the enemy
+ across the Rhine--have an endless battle at long range.
+
+ So, we stick to it, and give the peach trees time to grow up.
+
+ We had a big day in London yesterday--the anniversary of our entry
+ into the war. I send you some newspaper clippings about it.
+
+ The next best news is that we have a little actual sunshine--a very
+ rare thing--and some of the weather is now almost decent....
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 68: Mr. Henry Morgenthau, American Ambassador to Turkey,
+1913-16, an American of Jewish origin who opposed the Zionist movement
+as un-American and deceptive.]
+
+[Footnote 69: American member of the Supreme War Council. Afterward
+member of the American Commission to Negotiate Peace.]
+
+[Footnote 70: Sir Henry Wilson had recently succeeded Sir William
+Robertson as Chief of the Imperial General Staff.]
+
+[Footnote 71: First Lord of the Admiralty.]
+
+[Footnote 72: Secretary of Agriculture.]
+
+[Footnote 73: See Chapter XXIV.]
+
+[Footnote 74: This meeting, on April 6, 1918, was held at the Mansion
+House. Page and Mr. Balfour were the chief speakers.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+LAST DAYS IN ENGLAND
+
+
+In spite of the encouraging tone of the foregoing letters, everything
+was not well with Page. All through the winter of 1917-1918 his
+associates at the Embassy had noticed a change for the worse in his
+health. He seemed to be growing thinner; his face was daily becoming
+more haggard; he tired easily, and, after walking the short distance
+from his house to his Embassy, he would drop listlessly into his chair.
+His general bearing was that of a man who was physically and nervously
+exhausted. It was hoped that the holiday at St. Ives would
+help him; that he greatly enjoyed that visit, especially the
+westward--homeward--outlook on the Atlantic which it gave him, his
+letters clearly show; there was a temporary improvement also in his
+health, but only a temporary one. The last great effort which he made in
+the interest of the common cause was Secretary Baker's visit; the
+activities which this entailed wearied him, but the pleasure he obtained
+from the resultant increase in the American participation made the
+experience one of the most profitable of his life. Indeed, Page's last
+few months in England, though full of sad memories for his friends,
+contained little but satisfaction for himself. He still spent many a
+lonely evening by his fire, but his thoughts were now far more
+pleasurable than in the old _Lusitania_ days. The one absorbing subject
+of contemplation now was that America was "in." His country had
+justified his deep confidence. The American Navy had played a
+determining part in defeating the submarine, and American shipyards
+were turning out merchant ships faster than the Germans were destroying
+them. American troops were reaching France at a rate which necessarily
+meant the early collapse of the German Empire. Page's own family had
+responded to the call and this in itself was a cause of great
+contentment to a sick and weary man. The Ambassador's youngest son,
+Frank, had obtained a commission and was serving in France; his
+son-in-law, Charles G. Loring, was also on the Western Front; while from
+North Carolina Page's youngest brother Frank and two nephews had sailed
+for the open battle line. The bravery and success of the American troops
+did not surprise the Ambassador but they made his last days in England
+very happy.
+
+Indeed, every day had some delightful experience for Page. The
+performance of the Americans at Cantigny especially cheered him. The day
+after this battle he and Mrs. Page entertained Mr. Lloyd George and
+other guests at lunch. The Prime Minister came bounding into the room
+with his characteristic enthusiasm, rushed up to Mrs. Page with both
+hands outstretched and shook hands joyously.
+
+"Congratulations!" he exclaimed. "The Americans have done it! They have
+met the Prussian guard and defeated them!"
+
+Mr. Lloyd George was as exuberant over the achievement as a child.
+
+This was now the kind of experience that had become Page's daily
+routine. Lively as were his spirits, however, his physical frame was
+giving way. In fact Page, though he did not know it at the time, was
+suffering from a specific disease--nephritis; and its course, after
+Christmas of 1917, became rapid. His old friend, Dr. Wallace Buttrick,
+had noted the change for the worse and had attempted to persuade him to
+go home.
+
+"Quit your job, Page," he urged. "You have other big tasks waiting you
+at home. Why don't you go back?"
+
+"No--no--not now."
+
+"But, Page," urged Dr. Buttrick, "you are going to lay down your life."
+
+"I have only one life to lay down," was the reply. "I can't quit now."
+
+ _To Mary E. Page_[75]
+
+ London, May 12, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MARY:
+
+ You'll have to take this big paper and this paint brush pen--it's
+ all the pen these blunt British have. This is to tell you how very
+ welcome your letter to Alice is--how very welcome, for nobody
+ writes us the family news and nothing is so much appreciated. I'll
+ try to call the shorter roll of us in the same way:
+
+ After a miserable winter we, too, are having the rare experience of
+ a little sunshine in this dark, damp world of London. The constant
+ confinement in the city and _in the house_ (that's the worst of
+ it--no outdoor life or fresh air) has played hob with my digestion.
+ It's not bad, but it's troublesome, and for some time I've had the
+ feeling of being one half well. It occurred to me the other day
+ that I hadn't had leave from my work for four years, except my
+ short visit home nearly two years ago. I asked for two months off,
+ and I've got it. We are going down by the shore where there is
+ fresh air and where I can live outdoors and get some exercise. We
+ have a house that we can get there and be comfortable. To get away
+ from London when the weather promises to be good, and to get away
+ from people seemed a joyous prospect. I can, at any time I must,
+ come to London in two hours.
+
+ The job's too important to give up at this juncture. This, then, is
+ the way we can keep it going. I've no such hard task now as I had
+ during the years of our neutrality, which, praise God! I somehow
+ survived, though I am now suffering more or less from the physical
+ effects of that strain. Yet, since I have had the good fortune to
+ win the confidence of this Government and these people, I feel that
+ I ought to keep on now until some more or less natural time to
+ change comes.
+
+ Alice keeps remarkably well--since her influenza late in the
+ winter; but a rest away from London is really needed as much by her
+ as by me. They work her to death. In a little while she is to go,
+ by the invitation of the Government and the consent of the King, to
+ christen a new British warship at Newcastle. It will be named the
+ "Eagle." Meantime I'll be trying to get outdoor life at Sandwich.
+
+ Yesterday a regiment of our National Army marched through the
+ streets of London and were reviewed by the King and me; and the
+ town made a great day of it. While there is an undercurrent of
+ complaint in certain sections of English opinion because we didn't
+ come into the war sooner, there is a very general and very genuine
+ appreciation of everything we have done and of all that we do.
+ Nothing could be heartier than the welcome given our men here
+ yesterday. Nor could any men have made a braver or better showing
+ than they made. They made us all swell with pride.
+
+ They are coming over now, as you know, in great quantities. There
+ were about 8,000 landed here last week and about 30,000 more are
+ expected this week. I think that many more go direct to France
+ than come through England. On their way through England they do not
+ come to London. Only twice have we had them here, yesterday and one
+ day last summer when we had a parade of a regiment of engineers.
+ For the _army_ London is on a sidetrack--is an out of the way
+ place. For our navy, of course, it's the European headquarters,
+ since Admiral Sims has his headquarters here. We thus see a good
+ many of our sailors who are allowed to come to London on leave. A
+ few days ago I had a talk with a little bunch of them who came from
+ one of our superdreadnaughts in the North Sea. They had just
+ returned from a patrol across to the coast of Norway. "Bad luck,
+ bad luck," they said, "on none of our long patrol trips have we
+ seen a single Hun ship!"
+
+ About the war, you know as much as I know. There is a general
+ confidence that the Allies will hold the Germans in their
+ forthcoming effort to get to Calais or to Paris. Yet there is an
+ undercurrent of fear. Nobody knows just how to feel about it.
+ Probably another prodigious onslaught will be made before you
+ receive this letter. It seems to me that we can make no intelligent
+ guess until this German effort is finished in France--no guess
+ about the future. If the Germans get the French ports (Calais, for
+ example) the war will go on indefinitely. If they are held back, it
+ _may_ end next autumn or winter--partly because of starvation in
+ Germany and partly because the Germans will have to confess that
+ they can't whip our armies in France. But, even then, since they
+ have all Russia to draw on, they may keep going for a long time.
+ One man's guess is as good as another's.
+
+ One sad thing is certain: we shall at once begin to have heavy
+ American casualties. Our Red Cross and our army here are getting
+ hospitals ready for such American wounded as are brought over to
+ England--the parts of our army that are fighting with the British.
+
+ We have a lot of miserable politics here which interfere with the
+ public feeling. The British politician is a worse yellow dog than
+ the American--at times he is, at least; and we have just been going
+ through such a time. Another such time will soon come about the
+ Irish.
+
+ Well, we have an unending quantity of work and wear--no very acute
+ bothers but a continuous strain, the strain of actual work, of
+ uneasiness, of seeing people, of uncertainty, of great expense, of
+ doubt and fear at times, of inability to make any plans--all which
+ is only the common lot now all over the world, except that most
+ persons have up to this time suffered incomparably worse than we.
+ And there's nothing to do but to go on and on and on and to keep
+ going with the stoutest hearts we can keep up till the end do at
+ last come. But the Germans now (as the rest of us) are fighting for
+ their lives. They are desperate and their leaders care nothing for
+ human life.
+
+ The Embassy now is a good deal bigger than the whole State
+ Department ever was in times of peace. I have three buildings for
+ offices, and a part of our civil force occupies two other
+ buildings. Even a general supervision of so large a force is in
+ itself a pretty big job. The army and the Navy have each about the
+ same space as the Embassy proper. Besides, our people have huts and
+ inns and clubs and hospitals all over the town. Even though there
+ be fewer vexing problems than there were while we were neutral,
+ there is not less work--on the contrary, more. Nor will there be an
+ end to it for a very long time--long after my time here. The
+ settling of the war and the beginning of peace activities, whenever
+ these come, will involve a great volume of work. But I've no
+ ambition to have these things in hand. As soon as a natural time of
+ relief shall come, I'll go and be happier in my going than you or
+ anybody else can guess.
+
+ Now we go to get my digestion stiffened up for another long
+ tug--unless the Germans proceed forthwith to knock us out--which
+ they cannot do.
+
+ With my love to everybody on the Hill,
+
+ Affectionately yours,
+ W.H.P.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Waldorf Astor--since become Viscount and Viscountess
+Astor--had offered the Pages the use of their beautiful seaside house at
+Sandwich, Kent, and it was the proposed vacation here to which Page
+refers in this letter. He obtained a six weeks' leave of absence and
+almost the last letters which Page wrote from England are dated from
+this place. These letters have all the qualities of Page at his best:
+but the handwriting is a sad reminder of the change that was
+progressively taking place in his physical condition. It is still a
+clear and beautiful script, but there are signs of a less steady hand
+than the one that had written the vigorous papers of the preceding four
+years.
+
+ _Memorandum_
+
+ Sandwich, Kent, Sunday, 19 May, 1918.
+
+We're at Rest Harrow and it's a fine, sunny early spring Carolina day.
+The big German drive has evidently begun its second phase. We hear the
+guns distinctly. We see the coast-guard aeroplanes at almost any time
+o'day. What is the mood about the big battle?
+
+The soldiers--British and French--have confidence in their ability to
+hold the Germans back from the Channel and from Paris. Yet can one rely
+on the judgment of soldiers? They have the job in hand and of course
+they believe in themselves. While one does not like in the least to
+discount their judgment and their hopefulness, for my part I am not
+_quite_ so sure of their ability to make sound judgments as I wish I
+were. The chances are in favour of their success; but--suppose they
+should have to yield and give up Calais and other Channel ports? Well,
+they've prepared for it as best they can. They have made provision for
+commandeering most of the hotels in London that are not yet taken
+over--for hospitals for the wounded now in France.
+
+And the war would take on a new phase. Whatever should become of the
+British and American armies, the Germans would be no nearer having
+England than they now are. They would not have command of the sea. The
+combined British and American fleets could keep every German ship off
+the ocean and continue the blockade by sea--indefinitely; and, if the
+peoples of the two countries hold fast, a victory would be won at
+last--at sea.
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ Rest Harrow, Sandwich, Kent.
+ May 19, 1918.
+
+ DEAR RALPH:
+
+ I felt very proud yesterday when I read T.R.'s good word in the
+ _Outlook_ about your book[76]. If I had written what he said
+ myself--I mean, if I had written what I think of the book--I should
+ have said this very thing. And there is one thing more I should
+ have said, viz.:--All your life and all my life, we have cultivated
+ the opinion at home that we had nothing to do with the rest of the
+ world, nothing to do with Europe in particular--and in our
+ political life our hayseed spokesmen have said this over and over
+ again till many people, perhaps most people, came really to believe
+ that it was true. Now this aloofness, this utterly detached
+ attitude, was a pure invention of the shirt-sleeve statesman at
+ home. I have long concluded, for other reasons as well as for this,
+ that these men are the most ignorant men in the whole world; more
+ ignorant--because they are viciously ignorant--than the Negro boys
+ who act as caddies at Pinehurst; more ignorant than the inmates of
+ the Morganton Asylum; more ignorant than sheep or rabbits or
+ idiots. They have been the chief hindrances of our country--worse
+ than traitors, in effect. It is they, in fact, who kept our people
+ ignorant of the Germans, ignorant of the English, ignorant of our
+ own history, ignorant of ourselves. Now your book, without
+ mentioning the subject, shows this important fact clearly, by
+ showing that our aloofness has all been a fiction. _We've been in
+ the world--and right in the middle of the world--the whole time_.
+
+ And our public consciousness of this fact has enormously slipped
+ back. Take Franklin, Madison, Monroe, Jefferson; take Hay,
+ Root--and then consider some of our present representatives! One
+ good result of the war and of our being in it will be the
+ restoration of our foreign consciousness. Every one of the half
+ million, or three million, soldiers who go to France will know more
+ about foreign affairs than all Congress knew two years ago.
+
+ A stay of nearly five years in London (five years ago to-day I was
+ on the ship coming here) with no absence long enough to give any
+ real rest, have got my digestion wrong. I've therefore got a real
+ leave for two months. Your mother and I have a beautiful house here
+ that has been lent to us, right on the Channel where there's
+ nothing worth bombing and where as much sunshine and warmth come
+ as come anywhere in England. We got here last night and to-day is
+ as fine an early spring day as you ever had in the Sandhills. I
+ shall golf and try to find me an old horse to ride, and I'll stay
+ out in the sunshine and try to get the inside machinery going all
+ right. We may have a few interruptions, but I hope not many, if the
+ Germans leave us alone. Your mother has got to go to Newcastle to
+ christen a new British warship--a compliment the Admiralty pays her
+ "to bind the two nations closer together" etc. etc. And I've got to
+ go to Cambridge to receive an LL.D. for the President. Only such
+ things are allowed to interrupt us. And we are very much hoping to
+ see Frank here.
+
+ We are in sound of the battle. We hear the big guns whenever we go
+ outdoors. A few miles down the beach is a rifle range and we hear
+ the practice there. Almost any time of day we can hear aeroplanes
+ which (I presume) belong to the coast guard. There's no danger of
+ forgetting the war, therefore, unless we become stone deaf. But
+ this decent air and sunshine are blessings of the highest kind. I
+ never became so tired of anything since I had the measles as I've
+ become of London. My Lord! it sounded last night as if we had
+ jumped from the frying pan into the fire. Just as we were about to
+ go to bed the big gun on the beach--just outside the fence around
+ our yard--about 50 yards from the house, began its thundering
+ belch--five times in quick succession, rattling the windows and
+ shaking the very foundation of things. Then after a pause of a few
+ minutes, another round of five shots. Then the other guns all along
+ the beach took up the chorus--farther off--and the inland guns
+ followed. They are planted all the way to London--ninety miles. For
+ about two hours we had this roar and racket. There was an air raid
+ on, and there were supposed to be twenty-five or thirty German
+ planes on their way to London. I hear that it was the worst raid
+ that London has had. Two of them were brought down--that's the only
+ good piece of news I've heard about it. Well, we are not supposed
+ to be in danger. They fly over us on the way to bigger game. At any
+ rate I'll take the risk for this air and sunshine. Trenches and
+ barbed wire run all along the beach--I suppose to help in case of
+ an invasion. But an invasion is impossible in my judgment. Holy
+ Moses! what a world!--the cannon in the big battle in France
+ roaring in our ears all the time, this cannon at our door likely to
+ begin action any night and all the rest along the beach and on the
+ way to London, and this is what we call rest! The world is upside
+ down, all crazy, all murderous; but we've got to stop this barbaric
+ assault, whatever the cost.
+
+ Ray Stannard Baker is spending a few days with us, much to our
+ pleasure.
+
+ With love to Leila and the babies,
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Rest Harrow, Sandwich Beach,
+ Sandwich, Kent, England.
+ May 20, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... I can't get quite to the bottom of the anti-English feeling at
+ Washington. God knows, this people have their faults. Their social
+ system and much else here is medięval. I could write several
+ volumes in criticism of them. So I could also in criticism of
+ anybody else. But Jefferson's[77] letter is as true to-day as it
+ was when he wrote it. One may or may not have a lot of sentiment
+ about it; but, without sentiment, it's mere common sense, mere
+ prudence, the mere instinct of safety to keep close to Great
+ Britain, to have a decent respect for the good qualities of these
+ people and of this government. Certainly it is a mere
+ perversity--lost time--lost motion, lost everything--to cherish a
+ dislike and a distrust of them--a thing that I cannot wholly
+ understand. While we are, I fear, going to have trade troubles and
+ controversies, my feeling is, on the whole, in spite of the
+ attitude of our official life, that an increasing number of our
+ people are waking up to what England has done and is and may be
+ depended on to do. Isn't that true?
+
+ We've no news here. We see nobody who knows anything. I am far from
+ strong--the old stomach got tired and I must gradually coax it back
+ to work. That's practically my sole business now for a time, and
+ it's a slow process. But it's coming along and relief from seeing
+ hordes of people is as good as medicine.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ Sandwich, May 24, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ Your speeches have a cumulative effect in cheering up the British.
+ As you see, if you look over the mass of newspaper clippings that I
+ send to the Department, or have them looked over, the British press
+ of all parties and shades of opinion constantly quote them
+ approvingly and gratefully. They have a cumulative effect, too, in
+ clearing the atmosphere. Take, for instance, your declaration in
+ New York about standing by Russia. All the allied governments in
+ Europe wish to stand by Russia, but their pressing business with
+ the war, near at hand, causes them in a way to forget Russia; and
+ certainly the British public, all intent on the German "drive" in
+ France had in a sense forgotten Russia. You woke them up. And your
+ "Why set a limit to the American Army?" has had a cheering effect.
+ As leader and spokesman of the enemies of Germany--by far the best
+ trumpet-call spokesman and the strongest leader--your speeches are
+ worth an army in France and more, for they keep the proper moral
+ elevation. All this is gratefully recognized here. Public opinion
+ toward us is wholesome and you have a "good press" in this Kingdom.
+ In this larger matter, all is well. The English faults are the
+ failings of the smaller men--about smaller matters--not of the
+ large men nor of the public, about large matters.
+
+ In private, too, thoughtful Englishmen by their fears pay us high
+ tribute. I hear more and more constantly such an opinion as this:
+ "You see, when the war is over, you Americans will have much the
+ largest merchant fleet. You will have much the largest share of
+ money, and England and France and all the rest of the world will
+ owe you money. You will have a large share of essential raw
+ materials. You will have the machinery for marine insurance and for
+ foreign banking. You will have much the largest volume of
+ productive labour. And you will know the world as you have never
+ known it before. What then is going to become of British trade?"
+
+ The best answer I can give is: "Adopt American methods of
+ manufacture, and the devil take the hindmost. There will be for a
+ long time plenty for everybody to do; and let us make sure that we
+ both play the game fairly: that's the chief matter to look out
+ for." That's what I most fear in the decades following the end of
+ the war--trade clashes.
+
+ The Englishman's pride will be hurt. I recall a speech made to me
+ by the friendliest of the British--Mr. Balfour himself: "I confess
+ that as an Englishman it hurts my pride to have to borrow so much
+ even from you. But I will say that I'd rather be in your debt than
+ in anybody else's."
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ May 27, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ ... I can write in the same spirit of the Labour Group which left
+ for home last week. Nobody has been here from our side who had a
+ better influence than they. They emphatically stuck by their
+ instructions and took pleasure, against the blandishments of
+ certain British Socialists, in declaring against any meeting with
+ anybody from the enemy countries to discuss "peace-by-negotiation"
+ or anything else till the enemy is whipped. They made admirable
+ speeches and proved admirable representatives of the bone and sinew
+ of American manhood. They had dead-earnestness and good-humour and
+ hard horse-sense.
+
+ This sort of visit is all to the good. Great good they do, too, in
+ the present English curiosity to see and hear the right sort of
+ frank, candid Americans. Nobody who hasn't been here lately can
+ form an idea of the eagerness of all classes to hear and learn
+ about the United States. There never was, and maybe never will be
+ again, such a chance to inform the British and--to help them toward
+ a rights understanding of the United States and our people. We are
+ not half using the opportunity. There seems to be a feeling on your
+ side the ocean that we oughtn't to send men here to "lecture" the
+ British. No typical, earnest, sound American who has been here has
+ "lectured" the British. They have all simply told facts and
+ instructed them and won their gratitude and removed misconceptions.
+ For instance, I have twenty inquiries a week about Dr. Buttrick. He
+ went about quietly during his visit here and talked to university
+ audiences and to working-men's meetings and he captured and
+ fascinated every man he met. He simply told them American facts,
+ explained the American spirit and aims and left a grateful memory
+ everywhere. Buttrick cost our Government nothing: he paid his own
+ way. But if he had cost as much as a regiment it would have been
+ well spent. The people who heard him, read American utterances,
+ American history, American news in a new light. And most of his
+ talk was with little groups of men, much of it even in private
+ conversation. He did no orating or "lecturing." A hundred such men,
+ if we had them, would do more for a perfect understanding with the
+ British people than anything else whatsoever could do.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Sandwich, May 27, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... I do get tired--my Lord! how tired!--not of the work but of the
+ confinement, of the useless things I have to spend time on, of the
+ bad digestion that has overtaken me, of London, of the weather, of
+ absence from you all--of the general breaking up of the world, of
+ this mad slaughter of men. But, after all, this is the common lot
+ now and I am grateful for a chance to do what I can. That's the
+ true way to look at it.
+
+ ... Worry? I don't worry about anything except the war in general
+ and this mad world so threatened by these devil barbarians. And I
+ have a feeling that, when we get a few thousand flying machines,
+ we'll put an end to that, alas! with the loss of many of our brave
+ boys. I hear the guns across the channel as I write--an unceasing
+ boom! boom! boom! That's what takes the stuff out of me and gets my
+ inside machinery wrong. Still, I'm gradually getting even that back
+ to normal. Golf and the poets are fine medicine. I read Keats the
+ other day, with entire forgetfulness of the guns. Here we have a
+ comfortable house, our own servants (as many as we need), a
+ beautiful calm sea, a perfect air and for the present ideal
+ weather. There's nobody down here but Scottish soldiers. We've
+ struck up a pleasant acquaintance with them; and some of the
+ fellows from the Embassy come down week ends. Only the murderous
+ guns keep their eternal roar.
+
+ Thanks, thanks, a thousand thanks, old man. It'll all work out
+ right.
+
+ ... I look at it in this way: all's well that ends well. We are now
+ doing our duty. That's enough. These things don't bother me,
+ because doing our duty now is worth a million years of past errors
+ and shortcomings.
+
+ Your mother's well and spry--very, and the best company in the
+ world. We're having a great time.
+
+ Bully for the kids! Kiss 'em for me and Mollie too.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+Make Shoecraft tell you everything. He's one of the best boys and truest
+in the world.
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ Rest Harrow, Sandwich, Kent.
+ June 7, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR RALPH:
+
+ ... I have all along cherished an expectation of two things--(1)
+ That when we did get an American Army by conscription, if it should
+ remain at war long enough to learn the game, it would become the
+ best army that the world ever saw, for the simple reason that its
+ ranks would contain more capable men than any other country has
+ ever produced. The proof of this comes at once. Even our new and
+ raw troops have astonished the veterans of the French and British
+ armies and (I have no doubt) of the German Army also. It'll be our
+ men who will whip the Germans, and there are nobody else's men who
+ could do it. We've already saved the Entente from collapse by our
+ money. We'll save the day again by our fighting men. That is to
+ say, we'll save the world, thank God; and I fear it couldn't have
+ been saved in any other way. (2) Since the people by their mood
+ command and compel efficiency, the most efficient people will at
+ last (as recent events show) get at the concrete jobs, in spite of
+ anybody's preferences or philosophy. And this seems at last to be
+ taking place. What we have suffered and shall suffer is not failure
+ but delays and delays and bunglings. But they've got to end by the
+ sheer pressure of the people's earnestness. These two things, then,
+ are all to the good.
+
+ I get the morning papers here at noon. And to-day I am all alone.
+ Your mother went early on her journey to launch a British
+ battleship. I haven't had a soul to speak to all day but my
+ servants. At noon, therefore, I was rather eager for the papers. I
+ saw at a glance that a submarine is at work off the New Jersey
+ coast! It's an awful thing for the innocent victims, to be
+ drowned. But their deaths have done us a greater service than 100
+ times as many lives lost in battle. If anybody lacked earnestness
+ about the war, I venture to guess that he doesn't lack it any
+ longer. If the fools would now only shell some innocent town on the
+ coast, the journey to Berlin would be shortened.
+
+ If the Germans had practised a chivalrous humanity in their war for
+ conquest, they'd have won it. Nothing on earth can now save them;
+ for the world isn't big enough to hold them and civilized people.
+ Nor is there any room for pacifists till this grim business is
+ done.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+The last piece of writing from Sandwich is the following memorandum:
+
+ Sandwich, Kent.
+ June 10, 1918.
+
+ The Germans continue to gain ground in France--more slowly, but
+ still they gain. The French and British papers now give space to
+ plans for the final defense--the desperate defense--of Paris. The
+ Germans are only forty miles away. Slocum, military attaché, thinks
+ they will get it and he reports the same opinion at the War
+ Office--because the Germans have taken such a large number of guns
+ and so much ammunition. Some of these guns were meant for the
+ American troops, and they cannot now be replaced in time if the
+ German advance continues. But I do not know enough facts at first
+ hand to form an opinion. But, if Paris be taken, the war will go on
+ a long time--unless the English-speaking rulers make a compromise.
+ And, then, in another form--and forms--it'll go on
+ indefinitely.--There has been no more perilous or uncertain or
+ anxious time than now.
+
+ The United States too late, too late, too late: what if it should
+ turn out so?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But it did not turn out so. Even while Page was penning these lines
+great events were taking place in France and the American troops were
+having a large share in them. In June the Americans stopped the German
+troops at Belleau Wood--a battle which proved the mettle of these fresh
+levies not only for the benefit of the Germans but of the Allies as
+well. Thus Page had the great satisfaction of returning to London while
+the city was ringing with the praise of these achievements. He found
+that the atmosphere had materially changed since he had last been in the
+British capital; when he had left for Sandwich there had been a general
+expectation that the Germans would get Paris or the Channel ports; now,
+however, there was every confidence of victory. Greatly as Page rejoiced
+over the new prospect, however, the fight at Belleau Wood brought him
+his last great sorrow. His nephew, Allison M. Page, of Aberdeen, North
+Carolina, the son of his youngest brother, Frank, lost his life in that
+engagement. At first the young man was reported "missing"; the
+investigation set afoot by the Ambassador for some time brought no
+definite information. One of the most pathetic of Page's papers is a
+brief note addressed by him to Allison Page, asking him for news: "It's
+been a long time since we heard from you," Page wrote his nephew. "Write
+how it goes with you. Affectionately, Uncle Wat." After travelling over
+a considerable part of France, this note found its way back to the
+Embassy. The boy--he was only 19--had been killed in action near Belleau
+Wood, on June 25th, while leading his detachment in an attack on a
+machine gun. Citations and decorations for gallantry in action were
+given posthumously by General Pershing, Marshal Pétain, Major-General
+Omar Bundy, and Major-General John A. LeJeune.
+
+And now the shadows began to close in rapidly on Page. In early July
+Major Frank C. Page, the Ambassador's youngest son, came over from
+France. A brief glance at his father convinced him that he was dying. By
+this time the Ambassador had ceased to go to the Chancery, but was
+transacting the most imperative business propped up in a chair at home.
+His mind was possessed by two yearnings: one was to remain in London
+until the end of the war, the other was to get back to his childhood
+home in North Carolina. Young Page urged his father to resign, but the
+weary invalid insisted on sticking to his post. On this point it seemed
+impossible to move him. Knowing that his brother Arthur had great
+influence with his father, Frank Page cabled, asking him to come to
+England immediately. Arthur took the first boat, reaching London late in
+July.
+
+The Ambassador's two sons then gently pressed upon their father the fact
+that he must resign. Weak as he was, the Ambassador was still obdurate.
+
+"No," he said. "It's quitting on the job. I must see the war through. I
+can't quit until it's over."
+
+But Sir William Osler, Page's physician and devoted friend, exercised
+his professional authority and insisted on the resignation. Finally Page
+consented.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ American Embassy, London,
+ August 1, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ I have been struggling for a number of months against the necessity
+ to write you this note; for my doctors now advise me to give up all
+ work for a period--my London doctor says for six months. I have a
+ progressive digestive trouble which does not yield to the usual
+ treatment. It's the war, five London winters, and the unceasing
+ labour which is now the common lot. I am ashamed to say that these
+ have brought me to something near a breakdown. I have had Sir
+ William Osler as well as two distinguished London physicians for
+ several months. The digestive trouble has brought other ills in its
+ train; and I am assured that they will yield to freedom from
+ responsibility and complete rest for a time in a dry, warm climate
+ and that they are not likely to yield to anything else.
+
+ I see nothing else to do then but to bow to the inevitable and to
+ ask you to be kind enough to relieve me and to accept my
+ resignation to take effect as soon as I can go to Washington and
+ make a somewhat extended report on the work here, which, I hope,
+ will be of some use to the Department; and I ought to go as soon as
+ possible--say, in September. I cannot tell you how great my
+ disappointment is that this request has become necessary.
+
+ If the world and its work were so organized that we could do what
+ we should like to do, I should like a leave of absence till winter
+ be broken and then to take up my duties here again till the war
+ end. But that, of course, is impracticable. And it is now a better
+ time to change Ambassadors than at any time since the war began. My
+ five years' service has had two main phases--the difficult period
+ of our neutrality and the far easier period since we came into the
+ war. But when the war ends, I fear that there will be again more or
+ less troublesome tasks arising out of commercial difficulties.
+
+ But for any reasonable period the Embassy's work fortunately can
+ now go on perfectly well with Mr. Laughlin as Chargé--until my
+ successor can get here. The Foreign Office like him, he is _persona
+ grata_ to all other Departments of the Government, and he has had
+ a long experience; and he is most conscientious and capable. And
+ the organization is in excellent condition.
+
+ I venture to ask you to have a cable message sent to me (to be
+ deciphered by me alone). It will require quite a little time to
+ pack up and to get away.
+
+ I send this, Mr. President, with more regret than I can express and
+ only after a struggle of more than six months to avoid it.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+Arthur Page took his father to Banff, in Scotland, for a little rest in
+preparation for the voyage. From this place came Page's last letter to
+his wife:
+
+ _To Mrs. Page_
+
+ Duff House, Banff, Scotland.
+ Sunday, September 2, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR:
+
+ ... I've put the period of our life in London, in my mind, as
+ closed. That epoch is ended. And I am glad. It was time it ended.
+ My job (_that_ job) is done. From the letters that Shoecraft has
+ sent me and from what the papers say, I think I couldn't have ended
+ it more happily--or at a better time. I find myself thinking of the
+ winter down South--of a Thanksgiving Day dinner for the older folks
+ of our family, of a Christmas tree for the kids, of frolics of all
+ sorts, of Rest, of some writing (perhaps not much), going over my
+ papers with Ralph--that's what he wants, you know; etc., etc.,
+ etc.--
+
+ And I've got to eat more. I myself come into my thinking and
+ planning in only two ways--(1) I'm going to have a suit like old
+ Lord N.'s and (2) I'm going to get all the good things to eat that
+ there are!
+
+ Meantime, my dear, how are you? Don't you let this getting ready
+ wear you out. Let something go undone rather. Work Miss Latimer and
+ the boys and the moving and packing men, and Petherick and the
+ servants. Take it very easy yourself.
+
+ Nine and a half more days here--may they speed swiftly. Comfortable
+ as I am, I'm mortal tired of being away from you--dead tired.
+
+ Praise God it's only 9-1/2 days. If it were 9-3/4, I should not
+ stand it, but break for home prematurely.
+
+ Yours, dear Allie, with all my love,
+ W.H.P.
+
+On August 24th came the President's reply:
+
+ I have received your communication of August 1st. It caused me
+ great regret that the condition of your health makes it necessary
+ for you to resign. Under the circumstances I do not feel I have the
+ right to insist on such a sacrifice as your remaining in London.
+ Your resignation is therefore accepted. As you request it will take
+ effect when you report to Washington. Accept my congratulations
+ that you have no reason to fear a permanent impairment of your
+ health and that you can resign knowing that you have performed your
+ difficult duties with distinguished success.
+
+ WOODROW WILSON.
+
+The news of Page's resignation inspired tributes from the British press
+and from British public men such as have been bestowed upon few
+Americans. The London _Times_ headed its leader "A Great Ambassador" and
+this note was echoed in all sections of Great Britain. The part of
+Page's career which Englishmen chiefly recalled was his attitude during
+the period of neutrality. This, the newspapers declared, was Page's
+great contribution to the cause. The fact that it had had such
+far-reaching influences on history was the one especially insisted on.
+His conciliatory and skillful behaviour had kept the United States and
+Great Britain friends at a time when a less tactful ambassador might
+easily have made them enemies; the result was that, when the time came,
+the United States could join forces against the common enemy, with
+results that were then daily unfolding on the battlefields of France. "I
+really believe," wrote the Marquess of Crewe, "that there were several
+occasions when we might have made it finally impossible for America to
+join us in the war; that these passed by may have been partly due to
+some glimmering of common sense on our part, with Grey as its main
+exponent; but it was more largely owing to your patience and courtesy
+and to the certainty which the Foreign Office always enjoyed that its
+action would be set before the Secretary of State in as favourable a
+light as it conscientiously could be." That, then, was Page's
+contribution to the statesmanship of this crisis--that of holding the
+two countries together so that, when the time came, the United States
+could join the Allies. A mass of private letters, all breathing the same
+sentiment, began to pour in on Page. There was hardly an illustrious
+name in Great Britain that was not represented among these
+leave-takings. As illustrating the character and spirit animating them,
+the following selections are made:
+
+ _From the King_
+
+ The information communicated to me yesterday through Mr. Laughlin
+ of Your Excellency's resignation of the Post of Ambassador and the
+ cause of this step fill me with the keenest regret. During your
+ term of office in days of peace and of war your influence has done
+ much to strengthen the ties of friendship and good-will which unite
+ the two English-speaking nations of the world. I trust your health
+ will soon be restored and that we may have the pleasure of seeing
+ you and Mrs. Page before your departure.
+
+ GEORGE R.I.
+
+ _From the Prime Minister_
+
+ 10, Downing Street, Whitehall, S.W. 1.
+ 30th August, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR AMBASSADOR:
+
+ It is with the deepest regret that my colleagues and I have
+ received the news that you have been forced by ill health to resign
+ your office and that the President has consented to your
+ relinquishing your ambassadorial duties. We are sorry that you are
+ leaving us, all the more because your tenure of office has
+ coincided with one of the greatest epochs in the history of our two
+ countries and of the world, and because your influence and counsel
+ throughout this difficult time have been of the utmost value to us
+ all.
+
+ The power for good or evil which can be exerted by the occupant of
+ your high position is at all times necessarily very great. That our
+ peoples are now fighting side by side in the cause of human freedom
+ and that they are manifesting an ever growing feeling of cordiality
+ to one another is largely attributable to the exceptional wisdom
+ and good-will with which you have discharged your duties. For the
+ part you have played during the past five years in bringing about
+ this happy result we owe you our lasting gratitude.
+
+ May I add that while you have always firmly presented the point of
+ view of your own country, you have succeeded in winning, not only
+ the respect and admiration of official circles, but the confidence,
+ and I can say without hesitation, the affection of all sections of
+ our people? It will be with universal regret that they will learn
+ that, owing to the strain of the great responsibilities you have
+ borne, you are no longer to remain among us. I earnestly trust that
+ a well-earned rest will speedily restore you to complete health,
+ and that you have many years of public service still in store for
+ you.
+
+ I should like also to say how much we shall miss Mrs. Page. She has
+ won a real place in all our hearts. Through her unfailing tact, her
+ genuine kindliness, and her unvarying readiness to respond to any
+ call upon her time and energy, she has greatly contributed to the
+ success of your ambassadorship.
+
+ Ever sincerely,
+ D. LLOYD GEORGE.
+
+ _From Viscount Grey of Fallodon_
+
+ Glen Innerleithen, Scotland.
+ September 2, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. PAGE:
+
+ I have been out of touch with current events for a few days, but
+ yesterday I read the two articles in the _Times_ on your
+ retirement. I am very grieved to think that you are going. There
+ was not a word of eulogy in the _Times_ articles that was not under
+ rather than over-stated, and reflecting thus I thought how rare it
+ is in public life to have an occasion that justifies the best that
+ can be said. But it is so now, and I am filled with deep regret
+ that you are going and with deep gratitude that you came to us and
+ were here when the war broke out and subsequently. If the United
+ States had been represented here by any one less decided as to the
+ right and wrong of the war and less firm and courageous than
+ yourself, the whole of the relations between your country and ours
+ would have been in peril. And if the two countries had gone apart
+ instead of coming together the whole fate of the world would be
+ very different from what I hope it will now be.
+
+ I have often thought that the forces behind public affairs are so
+ tremendous that individuals have little real, even when much
+ apparent, influence upon the course of events. But in the early
+ years of the war I think everything might have gone wrong if it had
+ not been that certain men of strong moral conviction were in
+ certain places. And you were preėminently one of these. President
+ Wilson I am sure was another, though I know him only through you
+ and Colonel House and his own public utterances. Even so your
+ influence must have counted in his action, by your friendship with
+ him as well as by the fact of your being the channel through which
+ communications passed between him and us.
+
+ I cannot adequately express what it was to me personally in the
+ dark days of 1914, 1915, and 1916 to know how you felt about the
+ great issues involved in the war.
+
+ I go to Fallodon at the end of this week and come to London the
+ first week of September--if you and Mrs. Page have not left by then
+ I hope I may see you. I long to do so before you go. I wish you may
+ recover perfect health. My eyesight continues to fail and I shall
+ soon be absolutely dependent upon other eyes for reading print.
+ Otherwise I feel as well as a schoolboy, but it is depressing to be
+ so well and yet so crippled in sight.
+
+ Please do not trouble to answer this letter--you must have too many
+ letters of the kind to be able to reply to them separately--but if
+ there is a chance of my seeing you before you go please let me
+ have a message to say when and where.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ GREY OF F.
+
+A few months before his resignation Page had received a letter from
+Theodore Roosevelt, who was more familiar than most Americans with
+Page's work in London. This summed up what will be probably the judgment
+of history upon his ambassadorship. The letter was in reply to one
+written to the Ex-President, asking him to show hospitality to the
+Archbishop of York[78], who was about to visit the United States.
+
+ (Office of the Metropolitan Magazine)
+ 342 Fourth Ave., New York,
+ March 1st, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR MR. AMBASSADOR:
+
+ I am very much pleased with your letter, and as soon as the
+ Archbishop arrives, he will be addressed by me with all his titles,
+ and I will get him to lunch with me or dine with me, or do anything
+ else he wishes! I shall do it for his own sake, and still more, my
+ dear fellow, I shall do it for the sake of the Ambassador who has
+ represented America in London during these trying years as no other
+ Ambassador in London has ever represented us, with the exception of
+ Charles Francis Adams, during the Civil War.
+
+ Faithfully yours,
+ THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
+
+The seriousness of Page's condition was not understood in London;
+consequently there were many attempts to do him honour in which he was
+unable to participate. Custom demands that a retiring Ambassador shall
+go to Windsor Castle to dine and to sleep; but King George, who was very
+solicitous about Page's health, offered to spare the Ambassador this
+trip and to come himself to London for this leave-taking. However, Page
+insisted on carrying out the usual programme; but the visit greatly
+tired him and he found it impossible personally to take part in any
+further official farewells. The last ceremony was a visit from the Lord
+Mayor and Council of Plymouth, who came to the Ambassador's house in
+September to present the freedom of the city. Ever since Page's speech
+of August 4, 1917, Plymouth had been planning to do him this honour;
+when the Council heard that the Ambassador's health would make it
+impossible for him to visit Plymouth, they asked if they might not come
+to London. The proceeding was most impressive and touching and the
+Ambassador's five-minute speech, the last one which he made in England,
+had all his old earnestness and mental power, though the physical
+weakness of the man saddened everybody present. The Lord Mayor presented
+the freedom of the ancient borough in a temporary holder, explaining
+that a more permanent receptacle would follow the Ambassador to America.
+When this arrived, it proved to be a beautiful silver model of the
+_Mayflower_. Certainly there could have been no more appropriate
+farewell gift to Page from the English town whose name so closely links
+the old country with the United States.
+
+The last scene took place at Waterloo Station. Sir Arthur Walsh came
+representing the King, while Mr. Balfour, Lord Robert Cecil, and other
+ministers represented the cabinet. The Government had provided a special
+railway carriage, and this was stationed at a convenient place as Page's
+motor drew up. So weak was the Ambassador that it was with difficulty
+that his companions, the ever devoted Mr. Laughlin, on one side, and
+Page's secretary, Mr. Shoecraft, on the other, succeeded in supporting
+him to his chair. Mr. Balfour, Lord Robert Cecil and the others then
+entered the carriage, and, with all that sympathetic dignity in which
+Englishmen of this type excel, said a few gracious and affectionate
+words of good-bye. They all stood, with uncovered heads, as the train
+slowly pulled out of the station, and caught their final glimpse of Page
+as he smiled at them and faintly waved his hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Perhaps the man most affected by this leave-taking was Mr. Balfour. He
+knew, as did the others, that that frail and emaciated figure had been
+one of the greatest friends that Britain had had at the most dreadful
+crisis in her history. He has many times told of this parting scene at
+Waterloo Station and always with emotion.
+
+"I loved that man," he once said to an American friend, recalling this
+event. "I almost wept when he left England."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 75: Of Aberdeen, N.C., the Ambassador's sister.]
+
+[Footnote 76: "Dramatic Moments in American Diplomacy," by Ralph W.
+Page, 1918.]
+
+[Footnote 77: The reference is to a letter written in 1823 by Thomas
+Jefferson to President Monroe at the time when the Holy Alliance was
+threatening the independence of South America. "With Great Britain,"
+Jefferson wrote, "we should most sedulously cherish a cordial friendship
+and nothing would tend more to knit our affections than to be fighting
+once more, side by side, in the same cause."]
+
+[Footnote 78: See Vol. II, page 307.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE END
+
+
+Page came home only to die. In fact, at one time it seemed improbable
+that he would live to reach the United States. The voyage of the
+_Olympic_, on which he sailed, was literally a race with death. The
+great-hearted Captain, Sir Bertram Hayes, hearing of the Ambassador's
+yearning to reach his North Carolina home, put the highest pressure upon
+his ship, which almost leaped through the waves. But for a considerable
+part of the trip Page was too ill to have much consciousness of his
+surroundings. At times he was delirious; once more he lived over the
+long period of "neutrality"; again he was discussing intercepted cargoes
+and "notes" with Sir Edward Grey; from this his mind would revert to his
+English literary friends, and then again he was a boy in North Carolina.
+The _Olympic_ reached New York more than a day ahead of schedule; Page
+was carried down the gangplank on a stretcher, propped up with pillows;
+and since he was too weak then to be taken to his Southern home, he was
+placed temporarily in St. Luke's Hospital. Page arrived on a beautiful
+sunshiny October day; Fifth Avenue had changed its name in honour of the
+new Liberty Loan and had become the "Avenue of the Allies"; each block,
+from Forty-second Street north, was decorated with the colours of one of
+the nations engaged in the battle against Germany; the street was full
+of Red Cross workers and other picturesquely clad enthusiasts selling
+Liberty Bonds; in its animated beauty and in its inspiring significance
+it formed an appropriate setting for Page's homecoming.
+
+The American air seemed to act like a tonic on Page; in a short time he
+showed such improvement that his recovery seemed not impossible. So far
+as his spirits and his mind were concerned, he became his old familiar
+self. He was able to see several of his old friends, he read the
+newspapers and discussed the international situation with his customary
+liveliness. With the assistance of his daughter, Mrs. Loring, he even
+kept track of his correspondence. Evidently the serious nature of his
+illness was not understood, for invitations to speak poured in from all
+quarters. Most of these letters Mrs. Loring answered, but there was one
+that Page insisted on attending to himself. The City of Cleveland was
+organizing some kind of a meeting dedicated to closer relations with
+Great Britain, and the Mayor wrote Page asking him to speak. The last
+thing which Page wrote with his own hand was his reply to this
+invitation; and it is an impressive fact that his final written word
+should have dealt with the subject that had been so close to his heart
+for the preceding five years.
+
+ _To Harry L. Davis, Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio_
+
+ I deeply regret my health will not permit me to attend any public
+ function for some time to come; for I deeply appreciate your
+ invitation on behalf of the City of Cleveland for the meeting on
+ December 7th, and have a profound sympathy with its purpose to
+ bring the two great English-speaking worlds as close together as
+ possible, so that each shall thoroughly understand the courage and
+ sacrifice and ideals of the other. This is the greatest political
+ task of the future. For such a complete and lasting understanding
+ is the only basis for the continued, progress of civilization. I
+ am proud to be associated in your thought, Mr. Mayor, with so
+ fitting and happy an occasion, and only physical inability could
+ cause absence.
+
+ Sincerely,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+Page's improvement was only temporary; a day or two after this letter
+was written he began to sink rapidly; it was therefore decided to grant
+his strongest wish and take him to North Carolina. He arrived in
+Pinehurst on December 12th, so weak that his son Frank had to carry him
+in his arms from the train.
+
+"Well, Frank," said Page, with a slightly triumphant smile, "I did get
+here after all, didn't I?"
+
+He lingered for a few days and died, at eight o'clock in the evening, on
+December 21st, in his sixty-fourth year. He suffered no pain. He was
+buried in the Page family plot in the Bethesda Cemetery near Aberdeen.
+
+He was as much of a war casualty as was his nephew Allison Page, who
+lost his life with his face to the German machine guns in Belleau Wood.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+SCRAPS FROM UNFINISHED DIARIES
+
+
+Page was not methodical in keeping diaries. His documents, however,
+reveal that he took many praiseworthy resolutions in this direction.
+They include a large number of bulky books, each labelled "Diary" and
+inscribed with the year whose events were to be recorded. The outlook is
+a promising one; but when the books are opened they reveal only
+fragmentary good intentions. Entries are kept up for a few days, and
+then the work comes to an end. These volumes contain many scraps of
+interesting writing, however, which are worth preserving; some of them
+are herewith presented in haphazard fashion, with no attempt at order in
+subject matter.
+
+
+1913
+
+PETHERICK
+
+Petherick: may he be immortal; for he is a man who has made of a humble
+task a high calling; and without knowing it he has caused a man of a
+high calling to degrade it to a mean level. Now Petherick is a humble
+Englishman, whose father many years ago enjoyed the distinction of
+carrying the mail pouch to and from the post office for the American
+Embassy in London. As father, so son. Petherick succeeded Petherick. In
+this remote period (_the_ Petherick must now be 60) Governments had
+"despatch agents," men who distributed mail and whatnot, sent it on
+from capital to capital--were a sort of general "forwarding" factotums.
+The office is really out of date now. Telegraph companies, express
+companies, railway companies, the excellent mail service and the like
+out-despatch any conceivable agent--except Petherick. Petherick has
+qualities that defy change, such as an unfailing courtesy, a genuine joy
+in serving his fellows, the very genius of helpfulness. Well, since a
+governmental office once established acquires qualities of perpetuity,
+three United States despatch agents have survived the development of
+modern communication, one in London, one in New York, and the third (I
+think) in San Francisco. At any rate, the London agent remains.
+
+Now in the beginning the London despatch agent was a mail messenger (as
+I understand) for the Embassy. He still takes the pouch to the post
+office, and brings it back. In ordinary times, that's all he does for
+the Embassy, for which his salary of about ---- is paid by the State
+Department--too high a salary for the labour done, but none too high for
+the trustworthy qualities required. If this had been all that Petherick
+did, he would probably have long ago gone to the scrap heap. It is one
+mark of a man of genius that he always makes his job. So Petherick. The
+American Navy came into being and parts of it come to this side of the
+world. Naval officers need help when they come ashore. Petherick was
+always on hand with despatches and mail for them, and Petherick was a
+handy man. Did the Captain want a cab? Petherick had one waiting. Did
+the Captain want rooms? Such-and-such a hotel was the proper one for
+him. Rooms were engaged. Did the Captain's wife need a maid? Petherick
+had thought of that, too. Then a Secretary from some continental
+legation wished to know a good London tailor. He sought Petherick. An
+American Ambassador from the continent came to London. London yielded
+Petherick for his guidance and his wants. Petherick became omni-present,
+universally useful--an American institution in fact. A naval officer who
+had been in Asiatic waters was steaming westward to the Mediterranean.
+His wife and three babies came to London, where she was to meet her
+husband, who was to spend several weeks here. A telegram to Petherick:
+they needed to do nothing else. When the lady arrived a furnished flat,
+a maid and a nurse and a cook and toys awaited her. When her husband
+arrived, a pair of boots awaited him from the same last that his last
+pair had been made on, in London, five years before. At some thoughtful
+moment $1,000 was added to Petherick's salary by the Navy Department;
+and a few years ago a handsome present was made to Petherick by the
+United States Naval Officers all over the world.
+
+But Petherick, with all his virtues, is merely an Englishman, and it is
+not usual for an Englishman to hold a $3,000 office under appointment
+from the United States Government. The office of despatch agent,
+therefore, has been nominally held by an American citizen in London.
+This American citizen for a good many years has been Mr. Crane, a
+barrister, who simply turns over the salary to Petherick; and all the
+world, except the Secretary of State, knows that Petherick is Petherick
+and there is none other but him.
+
+Now comes the story: Mr. Bryan, looking around the world for offices for
+his henchmen, finds that one Crane has been despatch agent in London for
+many years, and he writes me a personal and confidential letter, asking
+if this be not a good office for some Democrat!
+
+I tell the story to the Naval Attaché! He becomes riotous. He'll have
+to employ half a dozen clerks to do for the Navy ill what Petherick does
+well with ease, if he's removed. Life would not be worth living anyhow.
+I uncover Petherick to the Secretary and show him in his glory. It must
+be said to the Secretary's credit that he has said nothing more about
+it. Petherick, let us hope, will live forever. The Secretary's
+petty-spoils mind now works on grand plans for Peace, holy Peace, having
+unsuccessfully attacked poor Petherick. And Petherick knows nothing
+about it and never dreams of an enemy in all the world, and in all naval
+and diplomatic life he has only fast friends. If Mr. Bryan had removed
+him, he might have made a temporary friend of one Democrat from
+Oklahoma, and lasting enemies of all that Democrat's rivals and of the
+whole naval and diplomatic service.
+
+
+_November, 1914._
+
+We have to get away from it--or try to--a minute at a time; and the
+comic gods sometimes help us. Squier[79] has a junior officer here to
+hold his desk down when he's gone. He's a West Point Lieutenant with a
+German name. His study is ordnance. A new kind of bomb gives him the
+same sort of joy that a new species would have given Darwin. He was over
+in France--where the armies had passed to and from Paris--and one day he
+found an unexploded German bomb of a new sort. The thing weighed half a
+ton or thereabouts, and it was loaded. Somehow he got it to London--I
+never did hear how. He wrapped it in blankets and put it under his bed.
+He went out of town to study some other infernal contraption and the
+police found this thing under his bed. The War Office took it and began
+to look for him--to shoot him, the bomb-harbouring German! They soon
+discovered, of course, that he was one of our men and an officer in the
+United States Army. Then I heard of it for the first time. Here came a
+profuse letter of apology from the Government; they had not known the
+owner was one of my attachés. Pardon, pardon--a thousand apologies. But
+while this letter was being delivered to me one of the under-secretaries
+of the Government was asking one of our secretaries, "In Heaven's name,
+what's the Ambassador going to do about it? We have no right to molest
+the property of one of your attachés, but this man's room is less than
+100 yards from Westminster Abbey: it might blow up half of London. We
+can't give the thing back to him!" They had taken it to the Duck Pond,
+wherever that is. About that time the Lieutenant came back. His pet bomb
+gone--what was I going to do about it?
+
+The fellow actually wanted to bring it to his office in the Embassy!
+
+"Look here, Lieutenant, besides the possibility of blow-up this building
+and killing every mother's son of us, consider the scandal of the
+American Embassy in London blown up by a German bomb. That would go down
+in the school histories of the United States. Don't you see?" No, he
+didn't see instantly--he does so love a bomb! I had to threaten to
+disown him and let him be shot before he was content to go and tell them
+to unload it--he _would_ have it, unloaded, if not loaded.
+
+Well, I had to write half a dozen letters before the thing was done for.
+He thinks me a chicken-livered old coward and I know much more about him
+than I knew before; and we are at peace. The newspapers never got the
+story, but his friends about town still laugh at him for trying first to
+blow up Westminster Abbey and then his own Ambassador. He was at my
+house at dinner the other night and one of the ladies asked him:
+"Lieutenant, have you any darling little pet lyddite cartridges in your
+pocket?" Think of a young fellow who just loves bombs! Has loaded bombs
+for pets! How I misspent my youth!
+
+
+_February, 1915._
+
+This is among the day's stories: The British took a ship that had a
+cargo of 100,000 busts of Von Hindenburg--filled with copper.
+
+Another: When Frederick Watts was painting Lord Minto he found it hard
+to make the portrait please him. When he was told that Lord Minto liked
+it and Lady Minto didn't and that So-and-So praised it, he exclaimed: "I
+don't care a d--n what anyone thinks about it--except a fellow named
+Sargent."
+
+And the King said (about the wedding[80]): "I have the regulation of the
+dress to be worn at all functions in the Chapel Royal. I, therefore,
+declare that the American Ambassador may have any dress worn that he
+pleases!"
+
+E.M. House went to Paris this morning, having no peace message from this
+Kingdom whatever. This kind of talk here now was spoken of by the Prime
+Minister the other day "as the twittering of a sparrow in a tumult that
+shakes the world."
+
+Lady P. remarked to me to-day, as many persons do, that I am very
+fortunate to be Ambassador here at this particular time. Perhaps; but it
+isn't easy to point out precisely wherein the good fortune consists.
+This much is certain: it is surely a hazardous occupation now. Henry
+James remarked, too, that nobody could afford to miss the experience of
+being here--nobody who could be here. Perhaps true, again; but I confess
+to enough shock and horror to keep me from being so very sure of that.
+Yet no other phenomenon is more noticeable than the wish of every sort
+of an American to be here. I sometimes wonder whether the really
+well-balanced American does. Most of them are of the overwrought and
+excitable kinds.
+
+A conservative lady, quite conscientious, was taken down to dinner by
+Winston Churchill. Said she, to be quite frank and fair: "Mr. Churchill,
+I must tell you that I don't like your politics. Yet we must get on
+together. You may say, if you like, that this is merely a matter of
+personal taste with me, as I might not like your--well, your moustache."
+"I see no reason, Madam, why you should come in contact with either."
+
+My talk with Bonar Law: He was disposed to believe that if England had
+declared at once that she would go to war with Germany if France was
+attacked, there would have been no war. Well, would English opinion,
+before Belgium was attacked, have supported a government which made such
+a declaration?
+
+Mr. Bonar Law thinks that President Wilson ought to have protested about
+Belgium.
+
+He didn't agree with me that much good human material goes to waste in
+this Kingdom for lack of opportunity. (That's the Conservative in him.)
+
+
+_Friday, April 30, 1915._
+
+Sir Edward Grey came to tea to talk with Mr. House and me--little talk
+of the main subject (peace), which is not yet ripe by a great deal. Sir
+Edward said the Germans had poisoned wells in South Africa. They have
+lately used deadly gases in France. The key to their mind says Sir
+Edward, is this--they attribute to other folk what they are thinking of
+doing themselves.
+
+While Sir Edward was here John Sargent came in and brought Katharine the
+charcoal portrait of her that he had made--his present to her for her
+and Chud to give to W.A.W.P.[81] and me. A very graceful and beautiful
+thing for him to do.
+
+
+_April 30, 1915._
+
+Concerning Peace: The German civil authorities want peace and so does
+one faction of the military party. But how can they save their face?
+They have made their people believe that they are at once the persecuted
+and the victorious. If they stop, how can they explain their stopping?
+The people might rend them. The ingenious loophole discovered by House
+is--mere moonshine, viz., the freedom of the seas in war. That is a
+one-sided proposition unless they couple with it the freedom of the land
+in war also, which is nonsense. Nothing can be done, then, until some
+unfavourable military event brings a new mind to the Germans. Peace
+talk, therefore, is yet mere moonshine. House has been to Berlin, from
+London, thence to Paris, then back to London again--from Nowhere (as far
+as peace is concerned) to Nowhere again.
+
+
+_May 3, 1915._
+
+Why doesn't the President make himself more accessible? Dismiss X and
+get a bigger man? Take his cabinet members really into his confidence?
+Everybody who comes here makes these complaints of him!
+
+We dined to-night at Y's. Professor M. was there, etc. He says we've got
+to have polygamy in Europe after the war to keep the race up.
+
+
+_Friday, May 21, 1915._
+
+Last night the Italian Parliament voted to give the Government
+war-powers; and this means immediate war on the side of the Allies.
+There are now eight nations fighting against Germany, Austria, and
+Turkey; viz., Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy, Japan, Belgium,
+Serbia, Montenegro. And it looks much as if the United States will be
+forced in by Germany.
+
+The British Government is wrestling with a very grave internal
+disruption--to make a Coalition Government. The only portfolios that
+seem absolutely secure are the Prime Minister's and the Foreign
+Secretary's (Sir Edward Grey's)--for which latter, many thanks. The
+two-fold trouble is--(1) a difference between Churchill (First Lord of
+the Admiralty) and Lord Fisher--about the Dardanelles campaign and (I
+dare say) other things, and (2) Lord Kitchener's failure to secure
+ammunition--"to organize the industries of the Kingdom." Some even
+declare K. of K. (they now say Kitchener of Kaos) is a general colossal
+failure. But the prevailing opinion is that his raising of the new army
+has been good work but that he has failed with the task of procuring
+munitions. As for Churchill, he's too restless and erratic and
+dictatorial and fussy and he runs about too much. I talked with him at
+dinner last night at his mother's. He slips far down in his chair and
+swears and be-dams and by-Gods his assertions. But his energy does
+interest one. An impromptu meeting in the Stock Exchange to-day voted
+confidence in K. of K. and burned up a copy of the _Daily Mail_, which
+this morning had a severe editorial about him.
+
+Washington, having sent a severe note to Germany, is now upbraided for
+not sending another to England, to match and pair it. That's largely
+German influence, but also the Chicago packers and the cotton men. These
+latter have easy grievances, like the Irish. The delays of the British
+Government are exasperating, but they are really not so bad now as they
+have been. Still, the President can be influenced by the criticism that
+he must hit one side every time he hits the other, else he's not
+neutral! I am working by every device to help the situation and to
+prevent another note. I proposed to-day to Sir Edward Grey that his
+Government make an immediate advance payment on the cotton that it
+proposes to buy.
+
+Unless Joffre be a man of genius--of which there are some
+indications--and unless French also possibly have some claim to this
+distinction and _perhaps_ the Grand Duke Nikolas, there doesn't yet seem
+to be a great man brought forth by the war. In civil life, Sir Edward
+Grey comes to a high measure. As we yet see it from this English corner
+of the world, no other statesman now ranks with him.
+
+
+_March 20, 1916._
+
+I am sure I have the best secret service that could be got by any
+neutral. I am often amazed at its efficiency. It is good because it is
+not a secret--certainly not a spy service at all. It is all aboveboard
+and it is all done by men of high honour and good character--I mean the
+Embassy staff. Counting the attachés there are about twenty good men,
+every one of whom moves in a somewhat different circle from any other
+one. Every one cultivates his group of English folk, in and out of
+official life, and his group in the diplomatic corps. There isn't a week
+but every man of them sees his particular sources of information--at
+their offices, at the Embassy, at luncheon, at dinner, at the
+clubs--everywhere. We all take every possible occasion to serve our
+friends and they serve us. The result is, I verily believe, that we hear
+more than any other group in London. These young fellows are all keen as
+razors. They know when to be silent, too; and they are trusted as they
+deserve to be. Of course I see them, singly or in pairs, every day in
+the regular conduct of the work of the Embassy; and once a week we all
+meet together and go over everything that properly comes before so large
+a "cabinet" meeting. Thus some of us are on confidential terms with
+somebody in every department of the Government, with somebody in every
+other Embassy and Legation, with all the newspapers and
+correspondents--even with the censors. And the wives of those that are
+married are abler than their husbands. They are most attractive young
+women--welcome everywhere--and indefatigable. Mrs. Page has them spend
+one afternoon a week with her, rolling bandages; and that regular
+meeting always yields something else. They come to my house Thursday
+afternoons, too, when people always drop in to tea-visitors from other
+countries, resident Americans, English--everybody--Sometimes one
+hundred.
+
+Nobody in this company is a "Spy"--God forbid! I know no more honourable
+or attractive group of ladies and gentlemen. Yet can conceive of no
+organization of spies who could find out as many things. And the loyalty
+of them all! Somebody now and then prefaces a revelation with the
+declaration, "This is in strict confidence--absolutely nobody is to hear
+it." The answer is--"Yes, only, you know, I have no secrets from the
+Ambassador: no member of his staff can ever have."--Of course, we get
+some fun along with our tragedies. If I can find time, for instance, I
+am going to write out for House's amusement a verbatim report of every
+conversation that he held in London. It has all come to me--from what he
+said to the King down; and it all tallies with what House himself told
+me. He went over it all himself to me the other day at luncheon.--I not
+only believe--I am sure--that in this way I do get a correct judgment
+of public feeling and public opinion, from Cabinet Ministers to
+stock-brokers.
+
+
+_December 11, 1916._
+
+The new Government is quite as friendly to us in its intentions as the
+old, and much more energetic. The old Government was a spent force. Mr.
+Balfour is an agreeable man to deal with, with a will to keep our
+sympathy, unless the dire need of ships forces him to unpleasantness.
+The Prime Minister is--American in his ways. Lord Robert has the old
+Cecil in him, and he's going to maintain the blockade at any cost that
+he can justify to himself and to public opinion, and the public opinion
+is with him. They are all eager to have American approval--much more
+eager, I think, than a large section of public opinion, which has almost
+ceased to care what Americans think or do. The more we talk about peace,
+the more they think about war. There is no vindictiveness in the
+English. They do not care to do hurt to the German people: they regard
+them as misguided and misled. But no power on earth can stop the British
+till the German military caste is broken--that leadership which attacked
+Belgium and France and would destroy England. Balfour, Lloyd George, the
+people, the army and the navy are at one in this matter, every labouring
+man, everybody, except a little handful of Quakers and professors and
+Noel Buxton. I think I know and see all the peace men. They feel that
+they can talk to me with safety. They send me their pamphlets and
+documents. I think that all of them have now become warlike but three,
+and one of them is a woman. If you meet a woman you know on the street
+and express a sympathy on the loss of her second son, she will say to
+you, "Yes, he died in defence of his country. My third son will go next
+week. They all die to save us." Doubtless she sheds tears in private.
+But her eyes are dry in public. She has discarded her luxuries to put
+money in the war loan. Say "Peace" to her? She would insult you.
+
+
+_May 10, 1917._
+
+We dined at Lambeth Palace. There was Lord Morley, whom I had not seen
+since his long illness--much reduced in flesh, and quite feeble and
+old-looking. But his mind and speech were most alert. He spoke of Cobden
+favouring the Confederate States because the constitution of the
+Confederacy provided for free trade. But one day Bright informed Cobden
+that he was making the mistake of his life. Thereafter Cobden came over
+to the Union side. This, Morley heard direct from Bright.
+
+The Archbishop spoke in high praise of Charnwood's Lincoln--was
+surprised at its excellence, etc. Geoffrey Robinson[82] asked who wrote
+the _Quarterly_ articles in favour of the Confederacy all through the
+war--was it Lord Salisbury? Nobody knew.
+
+The widow of the former Archbishop Benson was there--the mother of all
+the Bensons, Hugh, A.C., etc., etc.--a remarkable old lady, who talked
+much in admiration of Balfour.
+
+The Bishop of--Winchester(?)--was curious to know whether the people in
+the United States really understood the Irish question--the two-nation,
+two-religion aspect of the case. I had to say no!
+
+There is an orphan asylum founded by some preceding Archbishop, by the
+sea. The danger of bombardment raised the question of safety. The
+Archbishop ordered all the children (40) to be sent to Lambeth Palace.
+We dined in a small dining room: "The children," Mrs. Davidson
+explained, "have the big dining room." Each child has a lady as
+patroness or protector who "adopts" her, i.e., sees that she is looked
+after, etc. Some of the ladies who now do this were themselves orphans!
+
+At prayers as usual at 10 o'clock in the chapel where prayers have been
+held every night--for how many centuries?
+
+At lunch to-day at Mr. Asquith's--Lord Lansdowne there; took much
+interest in the Knapp farm work while I briefly explained.
+
+Lord Morley said to Mrs. Page he had become almost a Tolstoyan--Human
+progress hasn't done much for mankind's happiness, etc. Look at the
+war--by a "progressive" nation. Now the mistake here is horn of a
+class-society, a society that rests on privilege. "Progress," has done
+everything (1) in liberating men's minds and spirits in the United
+States. This is the real gain; (2) in arraying all the world _against_
+Germany.
+
+
+_Tuesday, January 22, 1918._
+
+Some days bring a bunch of interesting things or men. Then there
+sometimes come relatively dull days--not often, however. To-day came:
+
+General Tasker H. Bliss, Chief-of-Staff, now 64--the wisest (so I judge)
+of our military men, a rather wonderful old chap. He's on his way to
+Paris as a member of the Supreme War Council at Versailles. The big
+question he has struck is: Shall American troops be put into the British
+and French lines, in small groups, to fill up the gaps in those armies?
+The British have persuaded him that it is a military necessity. If it
+were less than a necessity, it would, of course, be wrong--i.e., it
+would cut across our national pride, force our men under another flag,
+etc. It is not proposed to deprive Pershing of his command nor even of
+his army. The plan is to bring over troops that would not otherwise now
+come and to lend these to the British and French armies, and to let
+Pershing go on with his army as if this hadn't been done. Bliss is
+inclined to grant this request on condition the British bring these men
+over, equip and feed them, etc. He came in to ask me to send a telegram
+for him to-morrow to the President, making this recommendation. But on
+reflection he decided to wait till he had seen and heard the French
+also, who desire the same thing as the British.
+
+General Bliss is staying with Major Warburton; and Warburton gave me
+some interesting glimpses of him. A telegram came for the General.
+Warburton thought that he was out of the house and he decided to take it
+himself to the General's room. He opened the door. There sat the General
+by the fire talking to himself, wrapped in thought. Warburton walked to
+the middle of the room. The old man didn't see him. He decided not to
+disturb him, for he was rehearsing what he proposed to say to the
+Secretary of State for War or to the Prime Minister--getting his ears as
+well as his mind used to it. Warburton put the telegram on the table
+near the General, went out, and wasn't discovered.
+
+Several nights, he sat by the fire with Warburton and began to talk,
+again rehearsing to himself some important conclusions that he had
+reached. Every once in a while he'd look up at Warburton and say: "Now,
+what do you think of that?"
+
+That's an amazing good way to get your thought clear and your plans well
+laid out. I've done it myself.
+
+I went home and Kipling and Carrie[83] were at lunch with us. Kipling
+said: "I'll tell you, your coming into the war made a new earth for me."
+He is on a committee to see that British graves are properly marked and
+he talked much about it. I could not help thinking that in the back of
+his mind there was all the time thought of his own dead boy, John.
+
+Then in the afternoon Major Drain brought the copy of a contract between
+the United States Government and the British to build together 1500
+tanks ($7,500,000). We took it to the Foreign Office and Mr. Balfour and
+I signed it. Drain thinks that the tanks are capable of much development
+and he wishes our army after the war to keep on studying and
+experimenting with and improving such machines of destruction. Nobody
+knows what may come of it.
+
+Then I dined at W.W. Astor's (Jr.) There were Balfour, Lord Salisbury,
+General and Lady Robertson, Mrs. Lyttleton and Philip Kerr.
+
+During the afternoon Captain Amundsen, Arctic explorer came in, on his
+way from Norway to France as the guest of our Government, whereafter he
+will go to the United States and talk to Scandinavian people there.
+
+That's a pretty good kind of a full day.
+
+
+_April, 19, 1918._
+
+Bell[84], and Mrs. Bell during the air raid took their little girl
+(Evangeline, aged three) to the cellar. They told her they went to the
+cellar to hear the big fire crackers. After a bomb fell that shook all
+Chelsea, Evangeline clapped her hands in glee. "Oh, mummy, what a _big_
+fire cracker!"
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[Footnote 79: Colonel (now Major General) George O. Squier, Military
+Attaché at the American Embassy.]
+
+[Footnote 80: The wedding of Mr. Page's daughter at the Chapel Royal.]
+
+[Footnote 81: Mrs. Page.]
+
+[Footnote 82: Editor of the London _Times_.]
+
+[Footnote 83: Mrs. Kipling.]
+
+[Footnote 84: Mr. Edward Bell, Second Secretary of the American
+Embassy.]
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+_Age_, Louisville, connection with, I 32
+
+Aid to stranded Americans in Europe on outbreak of war, I 304, 307, 329
+
+_Alabama_ claims, the framed check for, in British Foreign Office,
+ I 390, II 78
+
+Alderman, Dr. Edwin A., early efforts in behalf of public education,
+ I 73, 78;
+ stricken with tuberculosis, but recovers health, I 120;
+ on committee to lecture in England, II 346.
+ _Letters to_: expressing fear and hope of Wilson, I 121;
+ on meeting of the Southern and the General Education Boards, I 125;
+ after Wilson's inauguration, I 128;
+ while enroute to port as Ambassador, I 129;
+ on changed world conditions, II 142
+
+Ambassador, some activities of an, I 159;
+ as a preventer of calamities, I 166
+
+America and Great Britain, only free countries in the world, II 121
+
+American Government, slight regard for by British, I 145, 152, 190, II 153;
+ strong feeling against uncourteous Notes of, II 74;
+ on handling of _Lusitania_ case, II 79;
+ on being under German influence, II 80, 97
+
+American Luncheon Club, could not adhere to neutrality, II 230
+
+American Navy, its aid in combatting the submarine, II 294
+
+American supremacy, a before-the-war prophecy, I 144;
+ why the British will acknowledge, I 170
+
+_Ancona_, torpedoed, II 79 _note_
+
+Anderson, Chandler P., counsel for Committee for relief of stranded
+ Americans, I 307;
+ backs up Ambassador in neutrality letter to Wilson, I 373;
+ gives reasons why unwise to demand adoption of Declaration of London,
+ I 387
+
+Anglo-American-German "pact," planned by Wilson and House, I 281
+
+Anglomania, charged against ambassadors, I 257
+
+Anti-Imperialists, protest declaration of war against Spain, I 62
+
+_Arabic_, sinking of, thought surely to bring on war, II 26
+
+Arbitration Treaty, renewal of, I 285;
+ significance of Germany's refusal to sign, I 294
+
+Archbold, John D., attempts to explain Foraker letters, I 88
+
+Archibald, James, trapped by British secret service, II 101
+
+Asquith, H.H., opposition to the House of Lords, I 137;
+ at state dinner to King Christian, I 167;
+ hint to, on Mexican situation, I 185;
+ conciliatory remarks at Guildhall banquet, I 210;
+ explains Dardanelles preparations, I 430;
+ his ministry suspected of pacifist or "defeatist" tendencies, I 430;
+ aged by the war, II 141;
+ conversation with, regarding Casement case, and relations between
+ Great Britain and America, II 168;
+ refuses to discuss Wilson's peace note, II 207;
+ in House of Commons speech welcomes America as ally, II 230;
+ inclined toward seeking peace, II 353
+
+Astor, Mr. and Mrs. Waldorf, at the home of, II 380
+
+_Atlantic Monthly_, editor of, I 53
+
+Atlantic Ocean, a blessing to America, I 162, 170, 310; II 117
+
+Austrian Embassy, left in charge of American Ambassador, I 305, 321;
+ difficulties incident to, I 345
+
+Aycock, Gov. Charles B., efforts in educational reform, I 85;
+ commendatory letter from, I 86
+
+
+Babcock, Commander, arrival in England, II 274
+
+Bacon, Senator Augustus O., declared he would have blocked Page's
+ Ambassadorship had he known he was author of "The Southerner,"
+ I 93, 226
+
+Baker, Secretary Newton D., sees the war at first-hand, II 364;
+ dinner at Embassy to, II 364, 370;
+ Page's memorandum of his visit, II 366
+
+Baker, Ray Stannard, visit at Sandwich, II 384
+
+Balfour, aged by the war, II 141;
+ drafts reply to Wilson's peace note, II 212;
+ reply to question how best America could help, II 219;
+ on the disposition of the German colonies, II 246;
+ friendliness toward United States averts crisis in Venezuela dispute,
+ II 249;
+ much concerned at feeling toward British in the United States, II 251;
+ his home life, II 257;
+ conference with Bonar Law and, over financial help from America, II 261;
+ satisfactory conference with Mr. Polk over blacklist and blockade,
+ II 265;
+ explains "secret
+treaties" to President Wilson, II 267;
+ conference with McAdoo on financial situation, II 267;
+ sends dispatch to President Wilson substantiating previous reports
+ of Page and Sims on submarine peril which were not taken seriously,
+ II 284;
+ indignant over misunderstanding with Brazilian Navy, II 304;
+ at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370;
+ at train to bid good-bye, II 402;
+ most affected at leave-taking, 403
+
+Balfour Mission to the United States, II 249 _et seq._
+
+Barclay, Esther, Mr. Page's maternal grandmother, I 6
+
+Bayard, Thomas F., accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257
+
+Beckendorff, Count, talk with, II 82
+
+Belgium, violation of, the cause of Great Britain's participation in
+ the war, I 315;
+ sending food supplies to aid starving, I 346
+
+_Benham_, misunderstanding over American destroyer's action during
+ submarine operations off Nantucket, II 253
+
+Benton, William S., Englishman, murdered in Mexico, I 285
+
+Beresford, Lord Charles, complains of attitude of Foreign Office in
+ pacifying America, I 365;
+ makes speech in House of Lords on attitude of U.S. Destroyer
+ _Benham_, II 253
+
+Bernstorff, Count von, objectionable activities of, I 335;
+ efforts to secure intercession of the United States toward peace, I 403;
+ at the Speyer dinner, I 404;
+ instructed to start propaganda for "freedom of the seas," I 436;
+ gives pledge that liners would not be submarined without warning,
+ II 30 _note_;
+ thought in England to dominate our State Department, II 80;
+ cable proposing suspending of submarine war, II 149;
+ threatens President Wilson with resumption of submarine sinkings
+ unless he moves for peace, II 200;
+ news of his dismissal received in London, II 215
+
+Bethmann-Hollweg, not seen by Colonel House, I 289;
+ tells King of Bavaria peace must be secured, II 181
+
+Biddle, General, at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370
+
+Bingham School, studies and environment at, I 16;
+ selected for honour prize by Ambassador, I 17
+
+Blacklist, feeling in America over the, II 184;
+ conditions change on American entry into war, II 264, 265, 266
+
+Blanquet, General, in Mexican uprising, I 175
+
+Bliss, General Tasker, wisdom and tact impress the Allies, II 351
+
+Blockade, British, compared to our blockade in Civil War, II 55 _et seq._;
+ the American Note protesting against, II 69
+
+Blockade, strong feeling in America against, II 184
+
+Bolling, Thomas, at President Wilson's luncheon, II 171
+
+Bones, Miss, at President Wilson's luncheon, II 171
+
+Boy-Ed, dismissal of, II 108
+
+Brazilian Navy, ships join American unit in European waters, II 304
+
+Breitung, E.N., makes test case with _Dacia_ registry, I 393
+
+British Navy League, activity in keeping up the navy, I 284
+
+Bryan, William Jennings, uncomplimentary editorial on, in _World's
+ Work_, I 87;
+ attitude toward concession holders in Mexico, I 181;
+ refuses to consider intervention in Mexico, I 193;
+ an increasing lack of confidence in, I 193;
+ tirade against British, to Sir William Tyrrell, I 202,
+ to Col. House, I 206;
+ Asquith's opinion of, 236;
+ Page's appeal to Colonel House that he be kept out of Europe, I 235, 236;
+ regards Ambassador as un-neutral, I 362;
+ insists that Great Britain adopt the Declaration of London, I 373, 377;
+ interested in the Straus peace proposal, I 407;
+ resignation after _Lusitania_ notes, II 6;
+ proposes going to England and Germany to try peace negotiations, II 12
+
+Bryan, comments on his political activity but diplomatic laxity,
+ I 194, 225, 236;
+ crank once, crank always, II 27;
+ democratic party wrecked by his long captaincy, II 190
+
+Bryce, Lord, hopeless of the two countries ever understanding one
+ another, II 39;
+ concern at our trivial notes, II 67;
+ conversation with, on misunderstandings between America and Great
+ Britain, and the peace settlement, II 165;
+ depressed at tenor of Wilson's note proposing peace, sends him
+ personal letter, II 207;
+ in House of Lords speech welcomes America as ally, II 230;
+ frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315;
+ attitude toward a League of Nations, II 357
+
+Burns, John, resigns from British Cabinet on declaration of war, I 316
+
+Buttrick, Dr. Wallace, intimacy with, I 85;
+ efforts in building up Southern agriculture, I 94;
+ in hookworm eradication, I 99;
+ lectures on the United States throughout Great Britain, II 291;
+ his speeches a source of inspiration to British masses, II 345;
+ asked to organize a committee of Americans to extend the work, II 345;
+ informed by Colonel House of Wilson's disapproval, II 348;
+ warns Page of breakdown if he does not at once return to America, II 375;
+ beneficial effects of his lectures, II 388
+
+
+Canterbury, Archbishop of, in House of Lords speech welcomes America as
+ ally, II 231;
+ on gratitude shown to America, II 245
+
+Carden, Sir Lionel Edward Gresley, his being sent to Mexico, a British
+ mistake, I 187;
+ anti-American propaganda in Cuba, I 196;
+ as British Minister to Mexico shows great hostility to the United
+ States, I 197;
+ formally advises Huerta to abdicate, I 209;
+ Page's part in recall from Mexican post, I 215 _et seq._
+
+Carlyle, Thomas, new letters from, discovered in Canada, I 60
+
+Carnegie, Andrew, visit to, at Skibo, I 142
+
+Carranza, Venustiano, thought by Wilson to be a patriot, I 227, 228
+
+Carson, Sir Edward, resists the Home Rule Bill, I 137;
+ at Bonar Law dinner, II 119;
+ tells Lloyd George submarines must be settled before Irish question,
+ II 260
+
+Casement, Sir Roger, trial and conviction inspire movement from
+ Irish-Americans resulting in Senate resolution, II 166
+
+Cecil, Lord Robert, incident of the "Boston Tea Party," I 392;
+ receives German proposal from Page as "German Ambassador," II 201;
+ letters to Sir C. Spring Rice on Germany's peace proposal, II 201, 202;
+ Page's interview with to explain Wilson's peace communication, II 208;
+ at train to bid good-bye, II 402
+
+Chamberlain, Senator, presents petition demanding Ambassador's removal,
+ I 259;
+ demands Senate be furnished with copy of Panama tolls speech, I 260
+
+Chancery, removal of, to better quarters, I 341
+
+Children, crusade for education of, I 72
+
+China case, the, satisfactorily settled, II 154, 155
+
+Choate, Joseph H., understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242;
+ accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257
+
+Christian, King, royal reception to, I 167
+
+Christmas in England, 1915, II 103
+
+Churchill, Winston, proposal for naval holiday, I 277, 278, 279, 298
+
+Civil War, first contact with, I 1;
+ his father's attitude toward, I 5;
+ early recollections of Sherman's invasion, II 10;
+ the aftermath, I 13
+
+Clark, Champ, opponent of repeal of Panama Tolls Bill, I 264
+
+Cleveland, President, an influence in formation of ideals, I 40;
+ conversation with, I 40
+
+Cotton, the question of contraband, I 267
+
+Country Life Commission, appointed on, by President Roosevelt, I 89
+
+Court, presentations at, I 156, 172
+
+Courtesies in diplomatic intercourse, necessity for, I 147, 190
+
+Cowdray, Lord, head of British oil concessions in Mexico, I 181;
+ withdraws request for Colombian oil concession, I 217;
+ long talk with on intervention in Mexico, I 225;
+ great monetary loss in giving up oil concessions, I 227
+
+Cradock, Admiral, does not approve American policy toward Mexico, I 230
+
+Crewe, Marquis of, on Page's tact as Ambassador, II 397
+
+Criticisms and attacks on Ambassador Page;
+ the "knee-breeches" story, I 133;
+ Hearst papers watching for opportunity, I 149, 261;
+ furor over "English-led and English-ruled" phrase, I 258;
+ speech before Associated Chambers of Commerce, on Panama tolls, I 259
+
+Cuba, a problem, I 176
+
+Curzon, Lord, in House of Lords speech welcomes America as ally, II 230
+
+
+_Dacia_ incident, the, a serious crisis averted, I 392, II 4
+
+Daniels, Josephus, protest made against his appointment to
+ Secretaryship of Navy, I 119
+
+Dardanelles:
+ Asquith explains preparations, I 430
+
+Daughters of the Confederacy, considered not helpful to Southern
+ regeneration, I 44
+
+Davis, Harry L., Mayor of Cleveland, letter to, expressing regret at
+ not being able to attend meeting for purpose of bringing England and
+ America closer together, II 405
+
+Davis, Jefferson, call on, I 37
+
+Declaration of London, Bryan insists on adoption by Great Britain,
+ I 373, 377;
+ history of the articles, I 375;
+ the solution of the difficulty, I 385
+
+Declaration of War, America's, and its effect in Great Britain,
+ II 230 _et seq._
+
+Delcassé, Kaiser makes proposal to, to join in producing "complete
+ isolation" of the United States, II 192
+
+De Kalb, Courtney, congratulations from, I 59
+
+Dent, J.M., loses two sons in the war, II 111;
+ opinion of Asquith, II 116
+
+Depression in England, the dark days of the war, II 64, 81, 94
+
+Derby, Lord, "excessive impedimenta," II 344;
+ at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, I 365, 370
+
+Dernburg, Bernhard, instructed to start propaganda for "freedom of the
+ seas," I 436
+
+Desart, Earl of, formulates Declaration of London, I 375
+
+Diaz, Porfirio, authority maintained by genius and force, I 175
+
+Dilettanti, Society of, dinners at, II 312
+
+Doubleday, Frank N., joins in publishing venture with S.S. McClure,
+ I 64;
+ the Harper experiment, I 65;
+ has "business" visit from a politician, I 88
+ _Letters to_: impressions of England, I 138;
+ anent the Christmas holidays, etc., I 164;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 110;
+ impressions of Europeans, II 132;
+ on America's programme after declaration of war, II 224;
+ on wartime conditions and duties, II 240;
+ on the good showing of the Americans in war preparation, II 324;
+ depressed at long continuation and horrors of the war, II 325
+
+Doubleday, Page & Co., founding of the firm, I 66;
+ attains great influence and popularity, I 86
+
+Dumba, Dr. Constantin, given his passports, II 30 _note_
+
+Duncan, Dr., president of Randolph-Macon College, I 20
+
+
+Education:
+ efforts in behalf of Southern child, I 72;
+ church system declared a failure, I 78;
+ organization of Southern Educational Conference, I 83;
+ Southern Education Board organized, I 84;
+ General Education Board founded by John D. Rockefeller, I 84;
+ the South's awakening, I 85
+
+England, why unprepared for war, II 35;
+ changed and chastened, II 342
+
+Englishwoman's letter from Berlin giving Germany's intentions toward
+ England, America, and the world, I 347
+
+"English-led and English-ruled," furor over phrase, I 258
+
+"Excoriators," disregarded, I 80-83
+
+
+Falkenhayn, cynical toward proposals of Colonel House, I 289
+
+Farming, love of, and home in South, I 115, 127, 128
+
+Field, Eugene, succeeds to desk of, on St. Joseph _Gazette_, I 36
+
+Fisher, Lord, remark that Balfour was "too much of a gentleman" for
+ First Lord of the Admiralty, II 101
+
+Flexner, Dr. Abraham, cites Page as greatest educational statesman, I 85
+
+Flexner, Dr. Simon, interested in hookworm campaign, I 100
+
+Foraker, Senator Joseph B., career destroyed by exposure of
+ Archbold-Standard Oil letters, I 88
+
+Forbes, Cameron, fails to see President Wilson on his return from
+ Philippines, II 174
+
+Ford, Henry, the venture in the peace ship, II 110 _note_
+
+Forgotten Man, The, address at Greensboro, I 74
+
+_Forum_, The, made of great influence and a business success,
+ under editorship, I 49
+
+Fosdick, Harry Emerson, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Fowler, Harold, in London, I 134;
+ sent to Belgium, I 338;
+ enlists in British Army, I 358
+
+France, not in favour of England reducing naval programme, I 284;
+ a gift of a billion dollars to, proposed, II 218
+
+"Freedom of the seas," Colonel House's proposed reform, I 435
+
+French, Field Marshal Sir John, informs Page of undiplomatic methods of
+ State Departments in peace proposals, I 425, 427;
+ aged by the war, II 141
+
+Frost, W.G., writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60
+
+Fryatt, Captain, execution of, hardens British people to fight to
+ finish, II 182
+
+
+Garfield, President, assassination deplored throughout the South, I 39
+
+Gates, Dr. Frederick T., interested in hookworm campaign, I 99
+
+Gaunt, Captain, sends news from Washington of Bernstorff's dismissal,
+ II 215
+
+General Education Board, organized by John D. Rockefeller, I 84;
+ assists Dr. Knapp in agricultural demonstration work, I 96
+
+George V, received by, I 135;
+ very likeable, I 157;
+ overwrought condition in speaking with Page on declaration of war, I 309;
+ much distressed at tenor of Wilson's note proposing peace, II 207;
+ as a "human being," II 235;
+ night spent with, II 236, 240;
+ luncheon to General Pershing, II 237;
+ telegram of regret at resignation of Mr. Page and ill-health that
+ occasioned it, II 397
+
+German Embassy, left in charge of American Ambassador, I 306;
+ difficulties incident to, I 306, 345, 359
+
+Germany:
+ ridicules idea of naval holiday, I 279;
+ would have been victorious in World War had she signed arbitration
+ treaty with United States, I 294;
+ attempts to embroil the United States and Great Britain, I 393, 400;
+ move for peace, 1916, II 179
+
+Germany, travels in, in 1877, I 30
+
+Gildersleeve, Professor, Basil L., at Johns Hopkins University
+ I 24, 25;
+ Page a favourite pupil of, in Greek, II 299
+
+Gilman, Daniel Coit, constructive work as president of Johns Hopkins
+ University, I 23
+
+Godkin, E.L., writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60
+
+Grady, Henry, kindness of, I 34, 37
+
+Great Britain and the United States only free countries in the world,
+ II 121
+
+Great Britain's participation in the war, the cause of, I 315
+
+Greek, proficiency in, I 21, 24, 25, 30; II 299
+
+Grey, Lord, ex-Governor-General of Canada, I 150
+
+Grey, Sir Edward, credentials presented to, I 135;
+ high regard for, I 150;
+ his fairness facilitates diplomatic business, I 155;
+ talks with on Mexican situation, I 184, 185, 188, 199;
+ informed as to Carden's activities, I 219, 220;
+ asked to meet Colonel House at luncheon, I 245;
+ note to Sir C. Spring Rice on Wilson's address to Congress on
+ Tolls Bill, I 254;
+ criticized for "bowing too low to the Americans," I 261;
+ depressed at extent of Anglophobia in the United States, I 266;
+ evinces satisfaction at clearing up of problems, I 285;
+ weeps as he informs Page of ultimatum to Germany, I 309, 315;
+ "subservience" to American interests, I 364;
+ accepts Declaration of London with modifications, I 384;
+ joking over serious affairs, I 390;
+ welcomes Page's solution of the _Dacia_ tangle, I 394;
+ letter to Sir Cecil Spring Rice regarding Speyer-Straus peace
+ proposal, I 408;
+ states war could be ended more quickly if America ceased protests
+ against seizure of contraband, I 421;
+ talk on detained shipping and Wordsworth poems, II 103;
+ "a God's mercy for a man like him at his post," II 118;
+ aged by the war, II 141;
+ satisfactory settlement of the _China_ case, II 155;
+ speech in House of Commons on Peace, II 157;
+ nothing but praise heard of him, II 159;
+ memorandum of conversation with, on conditions of peace, II 160;
+ receives Senate Resolution asking clemency for Sir Roger Casement,
+ II 167;
+ forced to resign, because he refused to push the blockade and risk
+ break with America, II 233;
+ guest with Mr. and Mrs. Page at Wilsford Manor, II 288;
+ walk to Stonehenge with, II 292;
+ serious blockade questions give way to talks on poets, II 305;
+ promises government support of Belgian Relief plan, II 310;
+ frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+ _Letters from_: congratulations on Wilson's address to Congress
+ advising declaration of war, II 234;
+ expressing grief at Page's departure and citing his great help, II 400
+
+
+Haldane, Viscount, at Thanksgiving Dinner of the American Society, I 213;
+ discussion with Von Tirpitz as to relative sizes of navies, I 278;
+ knew that Germany intended war, II 35
+
+Hall, Admiral William Reginald, brings news of Bernstorff's dismissal,
+ II 215
+
+Hanning, Mrs. Robert, sister of Thomas Carlyle, I 60
+
+Harcourt, Right Honourable Lewis, eulogizes work of International
+ Health Board, I 101
+
+Harden, Maximilian, says Germany must get rid of its predatory
+ feudalism, II 193
+
+Harper & Brothers, difficulties of, I 64
+
+Harrow, visit to, and talk to schoolboys, I 17
+
+Harvey, George, succeeds Page as editor of Harper's, I 66
+
+Hay, John, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242;
+ accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257
+
+Hays, Sir Bertram, captain of the _Olympic_, races ship to hasten
+ Page's homecoming, II 404
+
+Hearst, William Randolph, used by Germans in their peace propaganda,
+ I 410, 411
+
+Hearst papers, antagonism of, I 149, 256, 264, 286
+
+_Hesperian_, submarined in violation of Bernstorff's pledges, II 30
+
+Hewlett, Maurice, his son among the missing, II 115
+
+Home Rule Bill, Carson threatens resistance to, I 137;
+ "division" in house of Lords, I 138
+
+Hookworm eradication, efforts in, I 98
+
+Hoover, Charles L., war relief work while American Consul at Carlsbad,
+ I 334
+
+Hoover, Herbert C., relief work at beginning of war, I 333;
+ selected by Page for Belgian Relief post, II 310
+
+House, Colonel Edward M., wires Page to come North, expecting to offer
+ Secretaryship of Interior, I 118;
+ transmits offer of Ambassadorship, I 130;
+ on Cowdray and Carden, I 218, 220;
+ meets Sir Edward Grey to talk over Panama Tolls question, I 246;
+ mission to the Kaiser a disappointment, I 289;
+ no success in France, I 297;
+ fancied security in England, thinks his mission unnecessary, I 298;
+ telegrams, to and from Wilson on proffering good offices to avert
+ war, I 317, 318;
+ declares bill admitting foreign ships to American registry "full of
+ lurking dangers," I 392;
+ declares America will declare war on Germany after _Lusitania_
+ sinking, II 2;
+ sees "too proud to fight" poster in London, II 6;
+ recommends Page's appointment as Secretary of State, II 11;
+ fails to alter Wilson's opposition to Taft Committee visiting
+ England, I 348
+ _Letters from_: reporting progress in Panama Tolls matter, I 253;
+ plans to visit Kaiser and bring about naval holiday between nations,
+ I 277;
+ cites further plans for visiting Germany, I 281;
+ respecting proposed trip to Germany, I 285, 286,
+ en route, I 288;
+ note from Berlin, I 296;
+ from Paris, I 297;
+ on the outbreak of the war, I 299;
+ transmitting Wilson's warning to adhere more strictly to neutrality,
+ I 362;
+ explains the toning down of demands that Declaration of London be
+ adhered to, I 378;
+ on German peace proposals, and giving his ideas for a settlement,
+ I 413;
+ proposing that Wilson start peace parleys, I 416;
+ thinks Germany ready for peace proposals, I 424, 425;
+ decides to visit combatants in interests of peace, I 425, 429;
+ talks in Berlin with Zimmermann and others regarding peace parleys,
+ I 432, 433, 434;
+ on appointment of Lansing to succeed Bryan, II 11;
+ on Bryan's intentions of going to England and Germany to try peace
+ negotiations, II 12;
+ reporting success of Balfour Mission, II 263
+ _Letters to_: comparing the Civil War with the World War, I 5;
+ on the Mexican situation, I 189;
+ asked personally to deliver memorandum to President on intervention
+ in Mexico, I 194;
+ on visit of Sir William Tyrrell to the United States, I 201;
+ letters to Page on Mexican situation, I 205, 206;
+ on Mexican question, I 210, 211;
+ on Lord Cowdray and oil concessions in Mexico, etc., I 216;
+ protesting publication of secret information respecting Carden, I 223;
+ suggesting intervention in Mexico, I 230;
+ on serious disadvantage in not having suitable Embassy, I 233;
+ on rashness of Bryan's visit to Europe, I 235;
+ appeal for attention to cables and letters by State Department, I 239;
+ on necessity of repeal of Panama Tolls Bill, I 247;
+ on the prevention of wars, I 270;
+ asked to further plan to have Wilson visit England, as a
+ preventative of European war, I 275;
+ favouring alliance of English-speaking peoples, I 282;
+ on French protest against reduction of British naval programme, I 283;
+ transmitting pamphlets on "federation" and disarmament, I 284;
+ told he will have no effect on Kaiser, I 287;
+ reply to note as to prevention of the war, I 300;
+ describing conditions in second month of the war, I 327;
+ on the horrors of war, and the settlement, I 340;
+ on difficulties of Sir Edward Grey with Army and Navy officers in
+ releasing American cargoes, I 365;
+ on evil of insisting on Declaration of London adoption, I 380;
+ regarding the Straus peace proposal, I 410;
+ explaining there can be no premature peace, I 417;
+ on harmlessness of Bryan on proposed peace visit and cranks in
+ general, II 13;
+ commenting on slowness of Wilson in _Lusitania_ matter, II 26;
+ on sinking of _Arabic_, II 27;
+ not interested in "pleasing the Allies," II 28;
+ on Dumba's intrigues, and Wilson's "watchful waiting and nothing
+ doing," II 30, 31, 37, 38;
+ on the lawyer-like attitude of the State Department, II 54;
+ the best peace programme--the British and American fleets, II 69;
+ on uncourteous notes from State Department, II 72;
+ on British adherence to the blockade, and an English Christmas,
+ 1915, II 103;
+ on the conditions of peace and the German militarism, II 134, 157;
+ on prophecy as to ending the war by dismissal of Bernstorff, II 197;
+ on the beneficial visit of the Labour Group and others, II 387
+
+Houston, David F., suggested to Wilson for Secretary of Agriculture,
+ II 114; has proper perspective of European situation, II 176
+ _Letters to_: impressions of diplomatic life, II 151;
+ suggesting vigorous action of Administration in prosecuting the war,
+ II 226;
+ on American cranks being sent to England, others prevented, II 359
+
+Houston, Herbert S., letters to, giving impressions of England, I 139
+
+Huerta, General Victoriano, seizes presidency of Mexico, I 175;
+ attitude of Great Britain and the United States toward recognition,
+ I 180;
+ an epochal figure, I 183;
+ rejects proposals submitted by Lind, I 193;
+ proclaims himself dictator, I 197
+
+Huxley, Thomas H., delivers address at opening of Johns Hopkins
+ University, I 25
+
+
+International Health Commission, endowed by John D. Rockefeller, I 100;
+ coöperation by British Government, I 101
+
+Irish Question, the, British difficulties with, I 159;
+ cause of feeling against British in the United States, II 251;
+ Wilson requests Great Britain to settle, II 255;
+ Lloyd George striving for solution, II 259
+
+
+James, Henry, frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+
+Jeanes Board, appointment to, I 89
+
+Jellicoe, Admiral Sir John, vigilance in war time, I 335;
+ after battle of Jutland, II 141;
+ reply to question how best America could help, II 219;
+ drafts dispatch explaining seriousness of submarine situation which
+ Balfour sends to President Wilson, II 285
+
+Johns Hopkins University, teaching on new lines, I 23
+
+Johnston, Miss Mary, noted serial of, in _Atlantic Monthly_, I 56, 61
+
+Judson, Harry Pratt, on proposed Committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Jusserand, opinion of the Straus peace proposal, I 407
+
+
+Keller, Helen, persuaded to write "Story of My Life," I 90
+
+Kent, Mr., forms American Citizens Relief Committee in London at
+ outbreak of war, I 304, 307
+
+Kerr, Philip, conversation with on future relations of the United
+ States and Great Britain, II 84
+
+Kipling, Rudyard, loses his son in the war, II 115
+
+Kitchener, Lord, speech in House of Lords a disappointment, II 96;
+ criticism of, II 120;
+ Memorandum after attending service in memory of, II 140
+
+Knapp, Dr. Seaman A., his "Demonstration Work" in Southern agriculture,
+ I 95;
+ his funeral, I 96
+
+Kropotkin, Prince Peter, writes Memoirs for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 61
+
+
+Lane, Secretary Franklin, comment on feeling against British for
+ conduct in Huerta affair, I 198
+
+Lansdowne, Marquis of, letter favouring premature peace severely
+ criticized, II 327, 353
+
+Lansing, Robert, regards Ambassador as un-neutral, I 362;
+ a lawyer, not a statesman, I 369;
+ insistence that Great Britain adopt Declaration of London, I 378 _et seq._;
+ attitude of lawyer, not statesman, II 53;
+ arguments against British blockade, II 62;
+ mind running on "cases", not diplomacy, II 176;
+ answers Page's letter of resignation, transmitting President Wilson's
+ request to reconsider and stay at his post, II 199
+
+Lassiter, General, encouraged on trip to the front, II 245
+
+Laughlin, Irwin, First Secretary of the Embassy, I 133;
+ requested to ascertain Great Britain's attitude toward recognition of
+ Huerta, I 180;
+ tells Colonel House he will have no success with Kaiser, I 285;
+ on Germany's intentions toward America, I 351 _note_;
+ as to depressing effect of the war on Page, I 357;
+ backs up Ambassador in neutrality letter to Wilson, I 373;
+ gives opinion that persistence is unwise in demanding acceptance of
+ Declaration of London, I 387;
+ Wilson's comment to, on Page's letters, II 22;
+ diplomatically presents to Sir Edward Grey the Senate Resolution
+ asking clemency' for Casement, II 167;
+ letters from, on occasion of Germany's 1916 peace movement, II 180;
+ commended to President Wilson in letter of resignation, II 394
+
+Law, Ponar, gives depressing news from the Balkans, II 104;
+ dinner with, II 119;
+ reply to question how best America could help, II 219;
+ conference with Balfour and, over financial help from America, II 261
+
+Lawrence, Bishop, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Leadership of the world, American, II 105, 110, 145, 254
+
+League to Enforce Peace, Page's opinion of, II 144;
+ Sir Edward Grey in sympathy with objects of, II 163;
+ Lord Bryce, remarks as to favourable time for setting up such a
+ league, II 165
+
+Leaks in diplomatic correspondence, gravity of,
+ I 147, 148, 151, 222, 223, 224, 235, II 7, 276
+
+Lichnowsky, German Ambassador at London, almost demented at breaking
+ out of the war, I 306, 309, 315;
+ places blame for war on Germany, I 322
+
+Lincoln, Abraham, monument to, erected at Westminster, I 274
+
+Lind, John, failure of mission to Mexico, I 193
+
+Literary style and good writing, advice on, II 341
+
+Lloyd George, his taxing of the aristocracy, I 137;
+ landowners fear of, I 158;
+ at state dinner to King Christian, I 167;
+ on the necessity of reducing navy programme, I 283;
+ holding up under strain of war, II 83;
+ aged by the war, II 141;
+ in House of Commons speech welcomes America as ally, II 230;
+ has the touch of genius in making things move, II 259;
+ working for solution of Irish question, II 259;
+ too optimistic regarding submarine situation, II 287;
+ his energy keeps him in power, II 354;
+ at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370;
+ congratulates Mr. and Mrs. Page on American success at Cantigny, II 375;
+ letter expressing sorrow at Mr. and Mrs. Page's departure and
+ reviewing their good work, II 398
+
+Loring, Charles G., marries Miss Katharine Page, II 87;
+ in service on western front, II 375
+
+Loring, Mrs. Charles G., letters to, on travelling-and staying at home,
+ II 88;
+ autumn, gardens, family, and war news, II 92;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 117;
+ from St. Ives, II 332, 339
+
+Lowell, James Russell, accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257
+
+_Lusitania_, torpedoed, I 436;
+ bulletins of the tragedy received at the dinner given in honour of
+ Colonel and Mrs. House, II 1;
+ distress and disillusionment of the Wilson notes, II 6
+
+
+Madero, Francisco, overthrown as president of Mexico, and assassinated,
+ I 175
+
+_Mayflower_ Pilgrims, dedication of monument to, at Southampton, I 258
+
+Mayo, Admiral, sent to Europe to study naval situation, II 322
+
+McAdoo, Secretary, conference with Balfour Mission on financial
+ situation, II 267
+
+McClure, S.S., joins forces with F.N. Doubleday, I 64;
+ the Harper experiment, I 65;
+ anecdote of, II 303
+
+McCrary, Lieut.-Commander, on Committee for relief of stranded
+ Americans, 307
+
+McIver, Dr. Charles D., educational statesman, I 73, 74, 78;
+ as the character, Professor Billy Bain, in "The Southerner," I 93
+
+McKinley Administration endorsed on measures against Spain, by
+ _Atlantic Monthly_, I 63
+
+Mary, Queen, received by, I 136
+
+Mensdorf, Austrian Ambassador, marooned in London, at outbreak of war.
+ I 305, 309;
+ the war a tragedy to, I 321
+
+Mersey, Lord, comments on the tariff, I 150;
+ at dinner of Dilettanti Society, II 312
+
+Mexico, "policy and principle" in, I 175 _et seq._;
+ difficulties of self-government, II 177;
+ progress due to foreign enterprise, I 178;
+ the problem of oil concessions, I 179, 181;
+ intervention believed by Page the only solution,
+ I 188, 193, 194, 200, 230, 273
+
+Mims, Professor Edwin, letter to, on attacks of Southern theologians, I 80
+
+Monroe Doctrine, the Kaiser's proposal to smash it, II 192
+
+Moore, John Bassett, suggestion that he be put in charge of
+ American-British affairs, I 239
+
+Morley, John, at state dinner to King Christian, I 167;
+ resigns from British cabinet on declaration of war, I 316;
+ visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+
+Morley, Lord, on reforms, I 141
+
+Morgan, J.P., account of Allies with, greatly overdrawn at time of
+ America's entrance into war, II 272;
+ this paid by proceeds of Liberty Loans, II 273
+
+Morgan, J.P. & Co., in control of Harper & Brothers, I 64
+
+"Mummy" theme applied to the unawakened South, I 45, 75
+
+Munitions, American, importance of to the Allies, I 368
+
+Munsterberg, Prof. Hugo, pro-German activities of, I 335
+
+
+Navy Department, ignores urgent recommendations of Admiral Sims that
+ destroyers be sent, II 276, 284
+
+Negro, the, the invisible "freedom", I 12;
+ wrong leadership after the Civil War, I 14;
+ fails to take advantage of university education during
+ Reconstruction, I 18
+
+Negro education, and industrial training advocated, I 43
+
+Neutrality, strictly observed, I 358, 360;
+ the mask of, II 230
+
+New York _Evening Post_, connection with, I 48
+
+New York _World_, correspondent for, at Atlanta Exposition, I 34;
+ on editorial staff, I 35
+
+Northcliffe, Lord, illness from worry, II 66;
+ "saving the nation from its government", II 116;
+ attitude on Wilson's peace note, II 207
+
+Norway, shipping destroyed by submarines, II 281
+
+Nicolson, Harold, the silent toast with, II 301
+
+
+Ogden, Robert C., organizes Southern Educational Conference, I 83;
+ after twenty years of zealous service, I 126
+
+O'Gorman, Senator, active in Panama Tolls controversy, I 243, 283
+
+"O. Henry," on Page's "complimentary" rejection of manuscripts, II 303
+
+Osler, Sir William, Page's physician, insists on the return home, II 393
+
+
+Pacifism, work of the "peace spies," II 210
+
+Pact of London, binding the Allies not to make a separate peace, I 409 _note_
+
+Page, Allison Francis, a builder of the commonwealth, I 4;
+ attitude toward slavery and the Civil War, I 5;
+ ruined by the war, I 13
+
+Page, Allison M., falls at Belleau Wood, II 392, 406
+
+Page, Anderson, settles in Wake County, N.C., I 4
+
+Page, Arthur W., Delcassé in conversation with tells of Kaiser's
+ proposal to join in producing "complete isolation" of the United
+ States, II 192;
+ called to London in hopes of influencing his father to resign and
+ return home before too late, II 393
+ _Letters to_;
+ on the motor trip to Scotland, I 142;
+ on conditions in second month of the war, I 335;
+ a national depression and the horrors of war, I 344;
+ emotions after _Lusitania_ sinking, II 5;
+ on the tendency toward fads and coddling, II 10;
+ on the future relations of the United States and Great Britain, II 84;
+ on the vicissitudes of the "German Ambassador to Great Britain," 1190;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 121;
+ on the attitude in the United States toward Germany, II 129;
+ on the effect of the war on future of America, and the world, II 217;
+ never lost faith in American people, II 223;
+ on America's entrance into the war, II 238;
+ on grave conditions, submarine and financial, II 287;
+ on the occasion of the Plymouth speech, and the receptions, II 317;
+ on the Administration's lack of confidence in British Navy, Wilson's
+ reply to Pope, etc., II 322;
+ Christmas letter, 1917, depicting a war-weary world, II 328;
+ on pacifists-from the President down, II 337;
+ views on Palestine, II 350;
+ on personal diet, and the benefit of Secretary Baker's visit, II 369;
+ on the anti-English feeling at Washington, II 385;
+ while resting at Sandwich, II 388
+
+Page, Mrs. Catherine, mother and close companion, I 7;
+ Christmas letter to, I 8
+
+Page, Frank C. in London, I 134;
+ with his father in Rowsley when news of _Arabic_ sinking was
+ received, II 26;
+ in service with American troops, II 375;
+ realizes his father is failing fast and insists on his returning home,
+ II 393
+ _Letters to_: on building up the home farm, and the stress of war, I 353;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 121
+
+Page, Henry A., letters to, stating a government might be neutral, but
+ no _man_ could be, I 361;
+ on illusions as to neutrality and the peace proposals, II 152
+
+Page, Miss Katharine A., arrival in London, I 134;
+ married in the chapel Royal, II 87;
+ _see also_, Loring, Mrs. Charles G.
+
+Page, Lewis, leaves Virginia to settle in North Carolina, I 3
+
+Page, Logan Waller, has proper perspective of European situation, II 176
+
+Page, Mary E., letter to, II 376
+
+Page, Ralph W., letters to;
+ impressions of London life, I 161;
+ on wartime conditions, I 352;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 121;
+ on longings for fresh Southern vegetables and fruits and farm life,
+ II 335;
+ on style and good writing, II 340;
+ on the big battle, etc., II 371, 372;
+ in praise of book on American Diplomacy, II 381;
+ on success of our Army and Navy, II 390
+
+Page, Mrs. Ralph W., Christmas letter to, 163
+
+Page, Robert N., letters to, impressions of social London, I 153
+
+Page, Thomas Nelson, Colonel House confers with in regard to peace
+ parleys, I 434
+
+Page, Walter Hines, impressions of his early life, 1;
+ family an old one in Virginia and North Carolina, 3;
+ maternal ancestry, 6;
+ close sympathy between mother and son, 8, 11;
+ birthplace, and date of birth, 9;
+ recollections of the Civil War, 10;
+ finds a market for peaches among Northern soldiers, 14;
+ boyhood and early studies, 16;
+ intense ambition, 20;
+ Greek Fellowship at Johns Hopkins University, 24;
+ renewed for the next year, 27;
+ early prejudices against Yankees, 28;
+ travels in Germany, 1877, 30;
+ lectures on Shakespeare, 30;
+ teacher of English at Louisville, Ky., 32;
+ enters journalism, 32;
+ experience with Louisville _Age_, 32;
+ reporter on, then editor of, _Gazette_, at St. Joseph, Mo., 33;
+ a free lance, 34;
+ correspondent for N.Y. _World_ at Atlanta Exposition, 34;
+ on the staff of N.Y. _World_, 35;
+ married, 37;
+ first acquaintance with Woodrow Wilson, 37;
+ Americanism fully developed, 40;
+ regard for President Cleveland, 40;
+ founds _State Chronicle_ at Raleigh, 42;
+ a breaker of images--of the South, 44;
+ the "mummy letters," 45;
+ instrumental in establishment of State College, Raleigh, 47;
+ with N.Y. _Evening Post_, 48;
+ makes the _Forum_ of great influence and a business success, 49;
+ a new type of editor, 50;
+ editor of _Atlantic Monthly_, 53;
+ discovers unpublished letters of Thomas Carlyle, 60;
+ attitude toward Spanish American War, 62;
+ the Harper experiment, 65;
+ joins in founding Doubleday, Page & Co., 66;
+ his policy for the _World's Work_, 66;
+ public activities, 72;
+ in behalf of education, 72;
+ his address, "The Forgotten Man," 74;
+ his Creed of Democracy, 78;
+ work with General Education Board, 85;
+ independence as an editor, 87;
+ severely criticizes John D. Archbold for Foraker bribery, 88;
+ appointed by Roosevelt on Country Life Commission, 89;
+ other public services, 89;
+ author of "the Southerner" 90;
+ activities in behalf of Southern agriculture and Hookworm
+ eradication, 94;
+ his interest in Wilson's candidacy and election, 102, _et seq._;
+ discourages efforts to have him named for Cabinet position, 113;
+ why he was not named, 118;
+ protests against appointment of Daniels, 119;
+ love for farming, 127, 128;
+ offered Ambassadorship, 130;
+ impressions of London and the Embassy, 132, 144;
+ impressions of Scotland, 142;
+ handling of the Mexican situation, 183;
+ belief in intervention in Mexico, 193, 194;
+ complimented by President Wilson, Bryan, and Sir William Tyrrell, 208;
+ his part in the removal of Sir Lionel Carden from Mexican post, 215;
+ commended by Wilson, 219, 221;
+ suggested for Secretary of Agriculture, 232, 286;
+ why he wished to remain in London, 240;
+ work in behalf of Panama Tolls Bill repeal, 244;
+ assailed for certain speeches, 258, 259;
+ opposed to including Germany in international alliance, favouring
+ understanding between English-speaking peoples, 282;
+ difficulties at outbreak of the war, 301 _et seq._;
+ asked to take over Austrian Embassy, 305, German Embassy, 306;
+ varied duties of war time, 337;
+ difficulties in charge of German and Austrian and Turkish embassies, 345;
+ relief work in starving Belgium, 346;
+ ageing under the strain and the depressing environment, 357;
+ difficulties of maintaining neutrality, 358;
+ warned from Washington, 362;
+ tactful handling of the demands that Declaration of London be
+ adopted, 370, 373;
+ writes Colonel House that he will resign if demands are insisted on, 383;
+ memorandum of the affair, 385;
+ his solution of the _Dacia_ puzzle, 394;
+ attitude toward a premature peace, 417;
+ learns through General French of the undiplomatic methods of State
+ Department in peace proposals, 425, 427
+
+ VOL. II
+
+ Humiliations from Washington's failure to meet the situation, 5;
+ remarks on Bryan's resignation, 10;
+ considered for appointment as Secretary of State, 11;
+ his feeling toward policies of Wilson, 18;
+ boldness of his criticism, 21;
+ Wilson and Lansing express anxiety that he may resign, 24;
+ describes Zeppelin attack on London, 34, 38;
+ Christmas in England, 1915, 103;
+ perplexed at attitude of the United States, 128;
+ his impressions of Europeans, 132;
+ summoned to Washington, 148;
+ memorandum of his visit to Washington, 171;
+ Impressions of President Wilson, 172;
+ waits five weeks before obtaining interview, 183;
+ disappointing interview at Shadow Lawn, 184;
+ letter of resignation seat to Wilson, 189;
+ and the reply, 199;
+ delivers Germany's peace proposal to Lord Robert Cecil, 201;
+ comments to Secretary of State on "insulting words" of President
+ Wilson's peace proposal, 207;
+ implores Wilson to leave out the "peace without victory" phrase
+ from his speech, 213;
+ learns of Bernstorff's dismissal, 215;
+ memorandum of his final judgment of Wilson's foreign policy to
+ April 1, 1917, 222;
+ memorandum written on April 3, the day after Wilson advised Congress
+ to declare war, 228;
+ on friendly footing with King George, 234;
+ joins with Admiral Sims in trying to waken the Navy Department to
+ seriousness of the submarine situation, 278;
+ Page--the man, 295-320;
+ moves for relief of Belgium, 310,
+ and delegates Hoover, 311;
+ Speech at Plymouth, 316;
+ goes to St. Ives for brief rest, 332;
+ heatedly referred to as "really an Englishman" by President Wilson, 348;
+ memorandum on Secretary Baker's visit, 366;
+ failing health, 374;
+ resignation in obedience to physicians orders, 393;
+ representatives from King, and Cabinet at train to bid good-bye, 402;
+ rallies somewhat on arrival in America, 405;
+ the end--at home, 406
+
+Page, Walter H. Jr., Christmas letter from his "granddaddy," II 124
+
+Page, Mrs. Walter H., arrival in London, I 134;
+ plays part in diplomacy, I 215, 224, 226;
+ her great help to the Ambassador, II 315;
+ the last letter, II 395
+
+Palestine and Zionism, views on, II 351
+
+Panama Tolls, a wrong policy, I 190;
+ Sir William Tyrrell's talk with President Wilson, I 207, 209
+
+Panama Tolls Bill, Wilson writes of hopes for repeal, I 222;
+ repeal of, I 232 _et seq._, the bill a violation of solemn treaties, I 242;
+ the contest before Congress, I 255
+
+Paris, capture of city thought inevitable, I 401
+
+Parliament, holds commemorative sessions in honour of America's
+ participation in the war, II 230
+
+Pasha, Tewfik, leaves Turkish Embassy in charge of American
+ Ambassador, I 345
+
+Peace, Germany's overtures, I 389;
+ her first peace drives, I 398;
+ Wilson's note to warring powers, received with surprise and
+ irritation, II 205
+
+"Peace without Victory" speech, of President Wilson, and its
+ reception in Great Britain, II 212
+
+Peace Centennial, plans being formed for, I 236, 274
+
+Pershing, General, at luncheon with King George, II 237;
+ his presence of moral benefit to French Army, II 290
+
+Philippines, a problem, I 176
+
+Pinero, Sir Arthur, reminiscences of Page at Dilettante gatherings, II 313
+
+Plymouth, Mayor and Council, present the freedom of the city, II 402
+
+Plymouth Speech, inspires confidence in American coöperation, II 316
+
+Polk, Frank L., invited by British Foreign Office to consultation in
+ England, II 248;
+ "could not be spared from his desk," II 256
+ _Letter from_: on wonderful success of Balfour Mission, II 263
+ _Letters to_: on Balfour and his Mission to the United States, II 252;
+ on Secretary Baker's visit, II 361
+
+Price, Thomas R., noted professor at Randolph-Macon, I 22
+
+Probyn, Sir Dighton, calls at Embassy, I 339
+
+
+Raboteau, John Samuel, Mr. Page's maternal grandfather, I 6
+
+Randolph-Macon College, studies at, I 20
+
+Rawnsley, Rev. Hardwicke Drummond, a subject of conversation, I 149
+
+Rayleigh, Lady, political ability, II 257, 258
+
+Rayleigh, Lord Chancellor of Cambridge University, II 145
+
+Reconstruction, more agonizing than war, I 14;
+ effects of, upon State University, I 18
+
+Reed, John, account of Mexican conditions influences Wilson's policy, I 228
+
+Religion, deepest reverence for, I 80
+
+Rüs, Jacob, writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60
+
+Rockefeller, John D., organizes General Education Board, I 84;
+ publication of Reminiscences, I 88;
+ founds Hookworm Commission and International Health Commission, I 100
+
+Roosevelt, Theodore, writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60;
+ appoints Country Life Commission, I 89
+ _Letter to_: introducing the Archbishop of York, II 307
+ _Letter from_: praising the Ambassador's services, II 401
+
+Root, Elihu, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242
+
+Rose, Dr. Wickliffe, dinner to, in London, as head of International
+ Health Board, I 101;
+ hookworm work, I 127
+
+Round Table, The, organization for study of political subjects, II 84;
+ _Round Table, The_, organ of above, a quarterly publication, II 84, 105
+
+Royal Institution of Great Britain, address before, I 191
+
+Royce, Josiah, associate at Johns Hopkins, I 25
+
+Russian Collapse, effect on the Allies, II 353
+
+Rustem Bey, Turkish Ambassador, given passports, II 49 _note_
+
+
+St. Ives, Cornwall, seeking rest at, II 332
+
+St. Joseph _Gazelle_, connection with, I 33, 37,
+ succeeds to Eugene Field's desk, on I 36
+
+Sackville-West, Sir Lionel, handed his passports by Cleveland, II 33 _note_
+
+Sargent, John, frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+
+Saw-mill units, favourable reception of, II 291
+
+Sayre, Mr. and Mrs., hearty reception in London, I 213, 222, 275
+
+Schrippenfest, celebration of, in Berlin, I 291
+
+Schwab, Charles M., supplying war material to Allies, I 341
+
+Scotland, impressions of, I 142
+
+Scudder, Horace E., succeeded as editor of _Atlantic Monthly_, I 53
+
+Secret treaties, explained to President Wilson by Mr. Balfour, II 267
+
+Sedgwick, Ellery, recollections of Mr. Page, as editor of _Atlantic
+ Monthly_, I 55;
+ on the high regard in which Page was held, II 298
+
+Shakespeare, lectures on, I 30
+
+Sharp, Ambassador, his mention of peace resented by the French, I 389;
+ at President Wilson's luncheon, II 171
+
+Sherman's army, cavalry troop camp at Page home, ransack, and destroy
+ contents, I 10
+
+Shoecraft, Mr., receives news of Bernstorff's dismissal, II 215
+
+Sihler, Prof. E.G., reminiscences of Page at Johns Hopkins, I 27
+
+Simon, Sir John, frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+
+Sims, Admiral, with Ambassador Page, dines with Lord Beresford, II 254;
+ advised of terrible submarine situation, II 273, 275;
+ arrival and welcome in England, II 274;
+ recommendations ignored by Washington, II 276;
+ backed up by Page in strong dispatch, II 278;
+ praised in letter to Wilson, II 281;
+ in command of both English and American naval forces at Queenstown,
+ II 282;
+ letters from, on submarine situation, II 282;
+ in high regard with British Admiralty, II 290;
+ at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370
+
+Shaler, Millard, reports on destitution in Belgium, II 310
+
+Skinner, Consul-General, on Committee for relief of stranded
+ Americans, I 307
+
+Slocum, Colonel, urged to hasten arrival of American troops, II 363
+
+Smith, C. Alphonso, an exchange professor to Germany, II 145
+
+Smith, Senator Hoke, "friendly deportation" of, suggested, II 17;
+ campaign against British Blockade, II 56, 61, 63;
+ urging embargo on shipments to Allies, II 211
+
+South, the, efforts in behalf of, I 38, 43, 74;
+ three "ghosts" which prevent progress, I 91
+
+Southampton speech, press comments on, I 41
+
+Southern Education Board, active work with, I 84
+
+Southern Educational Conference, organization of, I 83
+
+"Southerner, The," only effort at novel writing, I 90
+
+Spanish-American War, attitude toward, I 62
+
+Speyer, James, connected with German peace move, I 403
+
+Spring Rice, Sir Cecil, notifies Washington of British change of
+ attitude toward recognition of Huerta, I 181;
+ confidentially consulted by Cot. House regarding demands that
+ Declaration of London be adopted, I 379;
+ notifies Washington that _Dacia_ would be seized, I 393;
+ opinion of Straus peace proposal, I 407;
+ letters from Lord Robert Cecil on Germany's peace proposal, II 201, 202
+
+Squier, Colonel, American military attaché in London at outbreak of the
+ war, I 301
+
+Standard Oil Co., editorial against, in Archbold-Foraker scandal,
+ I 88
+
+_State Chronicle_, connection with, I 42;
+ editorially a success, I 48
+
+State College, Raleigh, N.C., instrumental in establishment of,
+ I 47, 48
+
+State Department, leaks of diplomatic correspondence through,
+ I 147, 148, 151, 223, 224
+
+State Dept., ignores official correspondence,
+ I 94, 213, 219, 224, 225, 232, 238, 239, II 7, 55, 217, 253;
+ not properly organized and conducted, II 8;
+ trivial demands and protests, II 54, 68;
+ uncourteous form of Notes, I 72
+
+Stiles, Dr. Charles W., discovers hookworm, I 98;
+ work in combatting, I 127
+
+Stone, Senator William J., spokesman of pro-German cause, I 380
+
+Stovall, Pleasant A., Colonel House confers with, regarding peace
+ parleys, I 434
+
+Straus, Oscar S., used as a tool in German peace propaganda,
+ I 389, 403 _et seq._
+
+Submarine sinkings, Germany threatens to resume, unless Wilson moves
+ for peace, II 200;
+ German military chieftains at Pless conference decide to resume
+ unrestricted warfare, II 212;
+ the most serious problem at time of American entry into war,
+ II 273, 275, _et seq._
+
+Sulgrave Manor, ancestral home of the Washingtons, restoration and
+ preservation, I 274;
+ plan to have President Wilson at dedication of, I 274, 275, II 248
+
+_Sussex_ "pledge", a peace move of Germany, II 150
+
+
+Taft, William H., fails in having Carden removed from Cuba,
+ I 196, 215, 219;
+ accepts British invitation to head delegation explaining America's
+ purposes in the war, II 346;
+ Wilson's strong disapproval interferes with the project, II 347
+
+Tariff Commission, travelling with, for N.Y. _World_, I 35
+
+Teaching democracy to the British Government, I 187, 211
+
+_Tennessee_, sent to England on outbreak of war with gold for
+ relief of stranded Americans, I 307
+
+Thayer, William Roscoe, disappointed in policy of the _World's Work_, I 66;
+ letter to, in explanation, I 67
+
+Tillett, Wilbur Fisk, friend at Randolph-Macon College, I 20
+
+Towers, Lieutenant, shown remnant of torpedo from _Hesperian_, II 40
+
+Trinity College, studies at, I 19
+
+Turkish Embassy left in charge of American Ambassador, I 346
+
+Tyrrell, Sir William, significance of his visit to the United States,
+ I 201;
+ unsatisfactory consultation with Bryan, I 202;
+ explains to President Wilson the British policy toward Mexico,
+ I 204, 207;
+ conversation with Colonel House, I 206;
+ Colonel House informs him of plan to visit Kaiser in behalf of
+ naval holiday plan, I 277;
+ advises House not to stop in England on way to Germany, I 289;
+ expresses relief on withdrawal of demands that Declaration of
+ London be adopted, I 387;
+ comment on Dumba's dismissal, and Bernstorff, II 101
+
+
+Underwood Tariff Bill, impressions of in Great Britain, 150, 172
+
+
+Van Hise, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Vanderlip, Frank A., at the Speyer "peace dinner", I 404
+
+Villa, Pancho, thought by Wilson to be a patriot, I 227, 228
+
+Vincent, George, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Von Jagow, offers no encouragement to Colonel House's proposals, I 289
+
+Von Papen, dismissal of, II 108
+
+Von Tirpitz, discussion with Viscount Haldane as to relative sizes of
+ navies, I 278;
+ hostile to Colonel House's proposals, I 289
+
+
+Waechter, Sir Max, efforts for "federation" and disarmament, I 284
+
+"Waging neutrality", policy of, I 362
+
+Wallace, Henry, letters to:
+ on Wilson's candidacy, I 105;
+ on backing up new Secretary of Agriculture, etc., I 115
+
+Wallace, Hugh C., accompanies Colonel House to Europe, I 288;
+ joins "assemblage of immortals" at Embassy, II 315
+
+Walsh, Sir Arthur, Master of the Ceremonies, I 135;
+ at train to bid good-bye, II 402
+
+Walsh, Senator Thomas, anti-English attitude, II 61
+
+War, American efforts to prevent the, I 270 _et seq._
+
+War, memorandum at outbreak of the, I 301
+
+Washington, Booker T., writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60;
+ induced to write "Up From Slavery", I 90
+
+Wantauga Club, activities of the, I 47;
+ crusade for education of Southern child, 73
+
+Wheeler, Benjamin Ide, gives Colonel House information of conditions
+ in Germany, I 281
+
+White, Henry, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242
+
+White, William Allen, writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60
+
+Whitlock, Brand, eulogized, I 334
+
+Willard, Joseph E., Colonel House confers with, in regard to peace
+ parleys, I 434
+
+Williams, Senator John Sharp, demonstrates blockade against Germany
+ not an injury to cotton-producing states, II 63
+
+Wilhelm II, nullifies Hague Conferences, I 280;
+ Colonel House disappointed in mission to, I 289;
+ derides American arbitration treaty, I 294;
+ Colonel House's impressions of, I 295;
+ asks President Wilson to transmit peace offer to Great Britain, I 426;
+ makes proposal to Delcassé to join in producing "complete isolation"
+ of the United States, II 192
+
+Wilson, Miss Willia Alice, married to Page, I 37
+
+Wilson, Dr. William, father of Mrs. Page, I 37
+
+Wilson, Sir Henry, succeeds Sir William Robertson as Chief of Imperial
+ General Staff, II 354 _note_
+
+Wilson, Woodrow, first acquaintance with, I 37;
+ writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60;
+ Page greatly interested in his candidacy and election, I 102, _et seq._;
+ Colonel House introduced to, I 107;
+ memorandum of interview with, soon after election, I 110;
+ offers Ambassadorship, I 130;
+ attitude toward recognition of Huerta, I 180;
+ formulates new principle for dealing with Latin American republics,
+ I 182;
+ refuses to consider intervention in Mexico, I 193;
+ suggestion that he officially visit Sulgrave Manor, the ancestral
+ home of the Washingtons, I 195;
+ explains attitude on Panama Toll question to Sir William Tyrrell, I 207;
+ expresses gratification in way Page has handled Mexican situation, I 208;
+ letter giving credit for Carden's recall from Mexico, and for
+ constructive work, I 221;
+ addresses Congress asking repeal of Panama Tolls Bill, I 253;
+ plan to visit England on occasion of restoration of Sulgrave Manor,
+ 1274, 275, II 248;
+ requested by resolution of the Senate to proffer his good offices
+ for mediation between Austria and Serbia, I 317;
+ telegrams to and from Colonel House on proffering good offices to
+ avert war, I 317, 318;
+ message to King George proffering good offices to avert war, I 320;
+ neutrality letter to the Senate, I 360;
+ desires to start peace parleys, I 416;
+ insists on pressing the issue, I 423;
+ the "Too proud to fight" speech derided and denounced in England, II 6;
+ the _Lusitania_ notes, II 6;
+ Page's feeling toward policies of, II 8;
+ appreciation of Page letters, II 22;
+ peace activities after Sussex "pledge", II 148;
+ his reply to the German note concerning the submarine cessation,
+ II 150, 156;
+ reluctant to speak on foreign matters with his ambassadors, II 171, 172;
+ lived too much alone, no social touch, II 173;
+ addresses Congress on threatened railroad strike, II 172;
+ refuses to send high ranking officers as military attachés, II 177;
+ interview with Ambassador Page at Shadow Lawn, II 185;
+ sends peace communication to all the warring Powers, II 204;
+ reception in Great Britain of the "Peace without Victory" speech, II 212;
+ answer to the Pope's peace proposal, II 321, 323;
+ coldness toward the Allies, II 345;
+ his strong disapproval of closer relations with Great Britain,
+ prevents visit of Taft and noted committee, II 346
+ _Letters from_:
+ on "mistaken" opinion of British critics of Carranza and Villa,
+ I 227, 228;
+ expressing gratitude and regard of and hopes for repeal of Toll
+ Bill, I 254;
+ regarding the criticized speeches, I 262, 265;
+ reply to proposal to visit England, I 276;
+ acceptance of Page's resignation, II 396
+ _Letters to_:
+ congratulations and suggestions on Election Day, I 108;
+ as to best man for Secretary of Agriculture, I 114;
+ impressions of the British people, I 144;
+ on royal reception to King Christian of Denmark, I 167;
+ on the Mexican situation, I 184, 185, 188;
+ memorandum sent through Colonel House on intervention in Mexico, I 194;
+ on feeling in England toward Panama Tolls question, I 248;
+ recapitulating events bringing the two countries more in unity, I 251;
+ explanation of speech before Associated Chambers of Commerce, I 260, 263;
+ suggests speech attacking Anglophobia, I 264;
+ on the outbreak of war, I 303;
+ on German atrocities, I 325;
+ on agreement of nations not to make peace separately, etc., I 338;
+ attempts to enlighten on the real nature of the war, I 370;
+ "Rough notes toward an explanation of the British feeling toward the
+ United States," I 373;
+ on liability of Paris being captured and German peace drive being
+ launched, I 401;
+ on feeling of English toward American inaction after _Lusitania_
+ notes, II 40, 41, 43, 44, 45;
+ told that if he broke diplomatic relations with Germany he would end
+ the war, II 51;
+ on the military situation, fall of 1915, and the loss of American
+ prestige, II 94;
+ while waiting for interview sends notes of conversations with Lord
+ Grey and Lord Bryce, II 183;
+ letter of resignation--with some great truths, II 190;
+ regarding success of Balfour Mission, etc., II 256;
+ on financial situation among the Allies and the necessity of
+ American assistance, II 269;
+ on seriousness of submarine situation, II 280, 283, 286;
+ on slow progress of war and comments on Lord Lansdowne's peace
+ letter, II 327;
+ on British opinion on subject of League of Nations, II 355;
+ on the cheering effect of his war speeches and letters, II 385;
+ the resignation in obedience to physician's orders, II 393
+
+Wilson Doctrine, the, I 217
+
+Wood, Gen. Leonard, methods in Cuba an object lesson, I 177
+
+_World's Work_, founding of, I 66
+
+Worth, Nicholas, nom de plume in writing "The Southerner", I 90
+
+
+York, Archbishop of, letter commending him to Roosevelt, II 401
+
+
+Zeppelin attack on London, II 34, 38
+
+Zionism, view of, II 350
+
+Zimmermann, German under Foreign Secretary in communication with
+ Colonel House regarding peace proposals to Great Britain, I 426;
+ talk with House on peace terms, I 432
+
+Zimmermann, says Germany must apply for armistice, II 182
+
+Zimmermann-Mexico telegram influence on the United States declaration
+ of war, II 214.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Letters of Walter H.
+Page, Volume II, by Burton J. Hendrick
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF ***
+
+***** This file should be named 17018-8.txt or 17018-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/7/0/1/17018/
+
+Produced by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+*** END: FULL LICENSE ***
+
diff --git a/17018-8.zip b/17018-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..30e52f8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h.zip b/17018-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dc88b44
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/17018-h.htm b/17018-h/17018-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..83890b2
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/17018-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,18954 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Vol. I, by Burton J. Hendrick.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
+ p { margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+ }
+ h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+ }
+ hr { width: 33%;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+ }
+ body{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ }
+
+ table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;}
+
+ .linenum {position: absolute; top: auto; left: 4%;} /* poetry number */
+ .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ span.pagenum {position: absolute; left: 92%; font-size: smaller; text-align: right;} /* page numbers */
+ .sidenote {width: 20%; padding-bottom: .5em; padding-top: .5em;
+ padding-left: .5em; padding-right: .5em; margin-left: 1em;
+ float: right; clear: right; margin-top: 1em;
+ font-size: smaller; background-color: #eeeeee; border: dashed 1px;}
+
+ .bb {border-bottom: solid 2px;}
+ .bl {border-left: solid 2px;}
+ .bt {border-top: solid 2px;}
+ .br {border-right: solid 2px;}
+ .bbox {border: solid 2px;}
+
+ .center {text-align: center;}
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+ .redletter {color: #FF9966;}
+
+ .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;}
+
+ .figleft {float: left; clear: left; margin-left: 0; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-top:
+ 1em; margin-right: 1em; padding: 0; text-align: center;}
+
+ .figright {float: right; clear: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;
+ margin-top: 1em; margin-right: 0; padding: 0; text-align: center;}
+
+ .footnotes {border: dashed 1px;}
+ .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
+ .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
+ .fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;}
+
+ .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left;}
+ .poem br {display: none;}
+ .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+ .poem span {display: block; margin: 0; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;}
+ .poem span.i2 {display: block; margin-left: 2em;}
+ .poem span.i4 {display: block; margin-left: 4em;}
+ // -->
+ /* XML end ]]>*/
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page,
+Volume II, by Burton J. Hendrick
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume II
+
+Author: Burton J. Hendrick
+
+Release Date: November 6, 2005 [EBook #17018]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="Frontispiece2" id="Frontispiece2" />
+<a href="images/2001.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2001.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>Sir Edward Grey (now Viscount Grey of Fallodon),<br />
+Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1905-1916</b>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="redletter">
+<h1>THE<br />
+LIFE AND LETTERS OF<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE</h1>
+</div>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h2>BURTON J. HENDRICK</h2>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/2002.png" width="10%" alt="" title="" /><br />
+</div>
+
+<h3>VOLUME II</h3>
+
+<div class='center'>
+GARDEN CITY&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;NEW YORK<br />
+DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY<br />
+1924<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div class='center'>
+PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES<br />
+AT<br />
+THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N.Y.<br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-v" id="page2-v"></a>[pg II-v]</span>
+</div>
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<h2>VOLUME II</h2>
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr>
+<td align='right'>CHAPTER</td>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td align='right'>PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">XIV.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">THE &quot;LUSITANIA&quot; AND AFTER</a></td>
+<td align='right'>1</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">XV.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">THE AMBASSADOR AND THE LAWYERS</a></td>
+<td align='right'>53</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">XVI.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">DARK DAYS FOR THE ALLIES</a></td>
+<td align='right'>81</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">XVII.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHRISTMAS IN ENGLAND, 1915</a></td>
+<td align='right'>103</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">XVIII.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">A PERPLEXED AMBASSADOR</a></td>
+<td align='right'>128</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">XIX.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">WASHINGTON IN THE SUMMER OF 1916</a></td>
+<td align='right'>148</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">XX.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">&quot;PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY&quot;</a></td>
+<td align='right'>189</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">XXI.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">THE UNITED STATES AT WAR</a></td>
+<td align='right'>215</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">XXII.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">THE BALFOUR MISSION TO THE UNITED STATES</a></td>
+<td align='right'>248</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">XXIII.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">PAGE&mdash;THE MAN</a></td>
+<td align='right'>295</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">XXIV.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">A RESPITE AT ST. IVES</a></td>
+<td align='right'>321</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">XXV.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">GETTING THE AMERICAN TROOPS TO FRANCE</a></td>
+<td align='right'>349</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">XXVI.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">LAST DAYS IN ENGLAND</a></td>
+<td align='right'>374</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td align='right'><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">XXVII.</a></td>
+<td><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">THE END</a></td>
+<td align='right'>404</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td><a href="#APPENDIX">APPENDIX</a></td>
+<td align='right'>407</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td><a href="#INDEX">INDEX</a></td>
+<td align='right'>425</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-vii" id="page2-vii"></a>[pg II-vii]</span>
+</div>
+<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#Frontispiece2">Sir Edward Grey</a></td>
+<td align='right'><i><a href="#Frontispiece2">Frontispiece</a></i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td align='right'>FACING PAGE</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2098">Col. Edward M. House.</a> From a painting by P.A. Laszlo</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2098">88</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2099">The Rt. Hon. Herbert Henry Asquith</a>, Prime Minister<br />
+of Great Britain, 1908-1916</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2099">89</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr><td><a href="#i2116">Herbert C. Hoover</a>, in 1914</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2116">104</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2117">A facsimile page from the Ambassador's letter</a> of<br />
+November 24, 1916, resigning his Ambassadorship</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2117">105</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2230">Walter H. Page</a>, at the time of America's entry into<br />
+the war, April, 1917</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2230">216</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2231">Resolution passed by the two Houses of Parliament</a>,<br />
+April 18, 1917, on America's entry into the war</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2231">217</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2248">The Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George</a>, Prime Minister<br />
+of Great Britain, 1916&mdash;</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2248">232</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2249">The Rt. Hon. Arthur James Balfour</a> (now the Earl of<br />
+Balfour), Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,<br />
+1916-1919</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2249">233</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2362">Lord Robert Cecil</a>, Minister of Blockade, 1916-1918,<br />
+Assistant Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,<br />
+1918</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2362">344</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2363">General John J. Pershing</a>, Commander-in-Chief of<br />
+the American Expeditionary Force in the Great War</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2363">345</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2380">Admiral William Sowden Sims</a>, Commander of<br />
+American Naval Forces operating in European<br />
+waters during the Great War</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2380">360</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td><a href="#i2381">A silver model of the <i>Mayflower</i></a>, the farewell gift<br />
+of the Plymouth Council to Mr. Page</td>
+<td align='right'><a href="#i2381">361</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div>
+<h1>THE</h1>
+<br />
+<h1>LIFE AND LETTERS</h1>
+<br />
+<h1>OF</h1>
+<br />
+<h1>WALTER H. PAGE</h1>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-1" id="page2-1"></a>[pg II-1]</span>
+</div>
+<h2>THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF WALTER H. PAGE</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV" />CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE &quot;LUSITANIA&quot;&mdash;AND AFTER</h3>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>The news of the <i>Lusitania</i> was received at the American
+Embassy at four o'clock on the afternoon of
+May 7, 1915. At that time preparations were under way
+for a dinner in honour of Colonel and Mrs. House; the
+first <i>Lusitania</i> announcement declared that only the ship
+itself had been destroyed and that all the passengers and
+members of the crew had been saved; there was, therefore,
+no good reason for abandoning this dinner.</p>
+
+<p>At about seven o'clock, the Ambassador came home;
+his manner showed that something extraordinary had
+taken place; there were no outward signs of emotion, but
+he was very serious. The first news, he now informed
+Mrs. Page, had been a mistake; more than one thousand
+men, women, and children had lost their lives, and more
+than one hundred of these were American citizens. It was
+too late to postpone the dinner but that affair was one of
+the most tragic in the social history of London. The
+Ambassador was constantly receiving bulletins from his
+Chancery, and these, as quickly as they were received, he
+read to his guests. His voice was quiet and subdued;
+there were no indications of excitement in his manner or
+in that of his friends, and hardly of suppressed emotion.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-2" id="page2-2"></a>[pg II-2]</span>
+The atmosphere was rather that of dumb stupefaction.
+The news seemed to have dulled everyone's capacity for
+thought and even for feeling. If any one spoke, it was in
+whispers. Afterward, in the drawing room, this same mental
+state was the prevailing one; there was little denunciation
+of Germany and practically no discussion as to the
+consequences of the crime; everyone's thought was engrossed
+by the harrowing and unbelievable facts which
+the Ambassador was reading from the little yellow slips
+that were periodically brought in. An irresistible fascination
+evidently kept everybody in the room; the guests
+stayed late, eager for every new item. When they
+finally left, one after another, their manner was still abstracted
+and they said their good-nights in low voices.
+There were two reasons for this behaviour. The first was
+that the Ambassador and his guests had received the details
+of the greatest infamy which any supposedly civilized
+state had perpetrated since the massacre of Saint Bartholomew.
+The second was the conviction that the United
+States would at once declare war on Germany.</p>
+
+<p>On this latter point several of the guests expressed their
+ideas and one of the most shocked and outspoken was
+Colonel House. For a month the President's personal
+representative had been discussing with British statesmen
+possible openings for mediation, but all his hopes in this
+direction now vanished. That President Wilson would
+act with the utmost energy Colonel House took for
+granted. This act, he evidently believed, left the United
+States no option. &quot;We shall be at war with Germany
+within a month,&quot; he declared.</p>
+
+<p>The feeling that prevailed in the Embassy this evening
+was the one that existed everywhere in London for several
+days. Emotionally the event acted like an an&aelig;sthetic.
+This was certainly the condition of all Americans associated
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-3" id="page2-3"></a>[pg II-3]</span>
+with the American Embassy, especially Page himself.
+A day or two after the sinking the Ambassador
+went to Euston Station, at an early hour in the morning,
+to receive the American survivors. The hundred or more
+men and women who shambled from the train made a listless
+and bedraggled gathering. Their grotesque clothes,
+torn and unkempt&mdash;for practically none had had the opportunity
+of obtaining a change of dress&mdash;their expressionless
+faces, their lustreless eyes, their uncertain and
+bewildered walk, faintly reflected an experience such as
+comes to few people in this world. The most noticeable
+thing about these unfortunates was their lack of interest
+in their surroundings; everything had apparently been
+reduced to a blank; the fact that practically none made
+any reference to their ordeal, or could be induced to discuss
+it, was a matter of common talk in London. And
+something of this disposition now became noticeable in
+Page himself. He wrote his dispatches to Washington
+in an abstracted mood; he went through his duties almost
+with the detachment of a sleep-walker; like the <i>Lusitania</i>
+survivors, he could not talk much at that time about the
+scenes that had taken place off the coast of Ireland. Yet
+there were many indications that he was thinking about
+them, and his thoughts, as his letters reveal, were concerned
+with more things than the tragedy itself. He
+believed that his country was now face to face with its
+destiny. What would Washington do?</p>
+
+<p>Page had a characteristic way of thinking out his problems.
+He performed his routine work at the Chancery
+in the daytime, but his really serious thinking he did in
+his own room at night. The picture is still a vivid one
+in the recollection of his family and his other intimates.
+Even at this time Page's health was not good, yet he frequently
+spent the evening at his office in Grosvenor
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-4" id="page2-4"></a>[pg II-4]</span>
+Gardens, and when the long day's labours were finished,
+he would walk rather wearily to his home at No. 6 Grosvenor
+Square. He would enter the house slowly&mdash;and his
+walk became slower and more tired as the months went
+by&mdash;go up to his room and cross to the fireplace, so apparently
+wrapped up in his own thoughts that he hardly
+greeted members of his own family. A wood fire was kept
+burning for him, winter and summer alike; Page would
+put on his dressing gown, drop into a friendly chair, and
+sit there, doing nothing, reading nothing, saying nothing&mdash;only
+thinking. Sometimes he would stay for an hour;
+not infrequently he would remain till two, three, or four
+o'clock in the morning; occasions were not unknown when
+his almost motionless figure would be in this same place
+at daybreak. He never slept through these nights, and
+he never even dozed; he was wide awake, and his mind was
+silently working upon the particular problem that was
+uppermost in his thoughts. He never rose until he had
+solved it or at least until he had decided upon a course of
+action. He would then get up abruptly, go to bed, and
+sleep like a child. The one thing that made it possible
+for a man of his delicate frame, racked as it was by anxiety
+and over work, to keep steadily at his task, was the
+wonderful gift which he possessed of sleeping.</p>
+
+<p>Page had thought out many problems in this way. The
+tension caused by the sailing of the <i>Dacia</i>, in January,
+1915, and the deftness with which the issue had been
+avoided by substituting a French for a British cruiser,
+has already been described. Page discovered this solution
+on one of these all-night self-communings. It was
+almost two o'clock in the morning that he rose, said to
+himself, &quot;I've got it!&quot; and then went contentedly to bed.
+And during the anxious months that followed the <i>Lusitania</i>,
+the <i>Arabic</i>, and those other outrages which have now
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-5" id="page2-5"></a>[pg II-5]</span>
+taken their place in history, he spent night after night
+turning the matter over in his mind. But he found no
+way out of the humiliations presented by the policy of
+Washington.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Here we are swung loose in time,&quot; he wrote to his son
+Arthur, a few days after the first <i>Lusitania</i> note had been
+sent to Germany, &quot;nobody knows the day or the week or
+the month or the year&mdash;and we are caught on this island,
+with no chance of escape, while the vast slaughter goes on
+and seems just beginning, and the degradation of war
+goes on week by week; and we live in hope that the United
+States will come in, as the only chance to give us standing
+and influence when the reorganization of the world must
+begin. (Beware of betraying the word 'hope'!) It has
+all passed far beyond anybody's power to describe. I
+simply go on day by day into unknown experiences and
+emotions, seeing nothing before me very clearly and remembering
+only dimly what lies behind. I can see only
+one proper thing: that all the world should fall to and hunt
+this wild beast down.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Two photographs of little Mollie<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1" /><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> on my mantelpiece
+recall persons and scenes and hopes unconnected with the
+war: few other things can. Bless the baby, she couldn't
+guess what a sweet purpose she serves.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The sensations of most Americans in London during
+this crisis are almost indescribable. Washington's failure
+promptly to meet the situation affected them with astonishment
+and humiliation. Colonel House was confident
+that war was impending, and for this reason he hurried
+his preparations to leave England; he wished to be in the
+United States, at the President's side, when the declaration
+was made. With this feeling about Mr. Wilson,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-6" id="page2-6"></a>[pg II-6]</span>
+Colonel House received a fearful shock a day or two after
+the <i>Lusitania</i> had gone down: while walking in Piccadilly,
+he caught a glimpse of one of the famous sandwich men,
+bearing a poster of an afternoon newspaper. This glaring
+broadside bore the following legend: &quot;We are too proud
+to fight&mdash;Woodrow Wilson.&quot; The sight of that placard
+was Colonel House's first intimation that the President
+might not act vigorously. He made no attempt to conceal
+from Page and other important men at the American Embassy
+the shock which it had given him. Soon the whole
+of England was ringing with these six words; the newspapers
+were filled with stinging editorials and cartoons,
+and the music halls found in the Wilsonian phrase materials
+for their choicest jibes. Even in more serious quarters
+America was the subject of the most severe denunciation.
+No one felt these strictures more poignantly than President
+Wilson's closest confidant. A day or two before sailing
+home he came into the Embassy greatly depressed at
+the prevailing revulsion against the United States. &quot;I
+feel,&quot; Colonel House said to Page, &quot;as though I had been
+given a kick at every lamp post coming down Constitution
+Hill.&quot; A day or two afterward Colonel House sailed for
+America.</p>
+
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>And now came the period of distress and of disillusionment.
+Three <i>Lusitania</i> notes were sent and were evasively
+answered, and Washington still seemed to be marking
+time. The one event in this exciting period which
+gave Page satisfaction was Mr. Bryan's resignation as
+Secretary of State. For Mr. Bryan personally Page had a
+certain fondness, but as head of the State Department the
+Nebraska orator had been a cause of endless vexation.
+Many of Page's letters, already printed, bear evidence of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-7" id="page2-7"></a>[pg II-7]</span>
+the utter demoralization which existed in this branch of
+the Administration and this demoralization became especially
+glaring during the <i>Lusitania</i> crisis. No attempt
+was made even at this momentous period to keep the London
+Embassy informed as to what was taking place in
+Washington; Page's letters and cablegrams were, for the
+most part, unacknowledged and unanswered, and the
+American Ambassador was frequently obliged to obtain
+his information about the state of feeling in Washington
+from Sir Edward Grey. It must be said, in justice to Mr.
+Bryan, that this carelessness was nothing particularly new,
+for it had worried many ambassadors before Page. Readers
+of Charles Francis Adams's correspondence meet with the
+same complaints during the Civil War; even at the time
+of the <i>Trent</i> crisis, when for a fortnight Great Britain and
+the United States were living on the brink of war, Adams
+was kept entirely in the dark about the plans of
+Washington<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2" /><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a>. The letters of John Hay show a similar
+condition during his brief ambassadorship to Great Britain
+in 1897-1898<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3" /><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Bryan's incumbency was guilty of diplomatic
+vices which were peculiarly its own. The &quot;leaks&quot; in the
+State Department, to which Page has already referred,
+were constantly taking place; the Ambassador would send
+the most confidential cipher dispatches to his superior,
+cautioning the Department that they must be held inviolably
+secret, and then he would pick up the London
+newspapers the next morning and find that everything
+had been cabled from Washington. To most readers, the
+informal method of conducting foreign business, as it is
+disclosed in these letters, probably comes as something of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-8" id="page2-8"></a>[pg II-8]</span>
+a shock. Page is here discovered discussing state matters,
+not in correspondence with the Secretary of State,
+but in private unofficial communications to the President,
+and especially to Colonel House&mdash;the latter at that
+time not an official person at all. All this, of course,
+was extremely irregular and, in any properly organized
+State Department, it would have been even reprehensible.
+But the point is that there was no properly organized
+State Department at that time, and the impossibility of
+conducting business through the regular channels compelled
+Page to adopt other means. &quot;There is only one
+way to reform the State Department,&quot; he informed Colonel
+House at this time. &quot;That is to raze the whole building,
+with its archives and papers, to the ground, and begin
+all over again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This state of affairs in Washington explains the curious
+fact that the real diplomatic history of the United States
+and Great Britain during this great crisis is not to be found
+in the archives of the State Department, for the official
+documents on file there consist of the most routine telegrams,
+which are not particularly informing, but in the
+Ambassador's personal correspondence with the President,
+Colonel House, and a few other intimates. The State
+Department did not have the first requisite of a properly
+organized foreign office, for it could not be trusted with
+confidential information. The Department did not tell
+Page what it was doing, but it apparently told the whole
+world what Page was doing. It is an astonishing fact that
+Page could not write and cable the most important details,
+for he was afraid that they would promptly be given
+to the reporters.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&quot;I shall not send another confidential message to the
+State Department,&quot; Page wrote to Colonel House,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-9" id="page2-9"></a>[pg II-9]</span>
+September 15, 1914; &quot;it's too dangerous. Time and time
+again now the Department has leaked. Last week, I
+sent a dispatch and I said in the body of it, '<i>this is confidential
+and under no condition to be given out or made public,
+but to be regarded as inviolably secret</i>.' The very next
+morning it was telegraphed from Washington to the London
+newspapers. Bryan telegraphed me that he was sure it
+didn't get out from the Department and that he now had
+so fixed it that there could be no leak. He's said that at
+least four times before. The Department swarms with
+newspaper men, I hear. But whether it does or not the
+leak continues. I have to go with my tail between my
+legs and apologize to Sir Edward Grey and to do myself that
+shame and to do my very best to keep his confidence&mdash;against
+these unnecessary odds. The only way to be safe
+is to do the job perfunctorily, to answer the questions the
+Department sends and to do nothing on your own account.
+That's the reason so many of our men do their
+jobs in that way&mdash;or <i>one</i> reason and a strong one. We can
+never have an alert and energetic and powerful service
+until men can trust the Department and until they can
+get necessary information from it. I wrote the President
+that of course I'd go on till the war ended and all the questions
+growing out of it were settled, and that then he must
+excuse me, if I must continue to be exposed to this danger
+and humiliation. In the meantime, I shall send all my
+confidential matter in private letters to him.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Page did not regard Mr. Bryan's opinions and attitudes
+as a joke: to him they were a serious matter and, in his
+eyes, Bryan was most interesting as a national menace.
+He regarded the Secretary as the extreme expression of
+an irrational sentimentalism that was in danger of undermining
+the American character, especially as the kind of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-10" id="page2-10"></a>[pg II-10]</span>
+thought he represented was manifest in many phases of
+American life. In a moment of exasperation, Page gave
+expression to this feeling in a letter to his son:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+London, June 6, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>... We're in danger of being feminized and fad-ridden&mdash;grape
+juice (God knows water's good enough:
+why grape juice?); pensions; Christian Science; peace
+cranks; efficiency-correspondence schools; aid-your-memory;
+women's clubs; co-this and co-t'other and coddling
+in general; Billy Sunday; petticoats where breeches
+ought to be and breeches where petticoats ought to be;
+white livers and soft heads and milk-and-water;&mdash;I don't
+want war: nobody knows its horrors or its degradations or
+its cost. But to get rid of hyphenated degenerates perhaps
+it's worth while, and to free us from 'isms and soft
+folk. That's the domestic view of it. As for being
+kicked by a sauerkraut caste&mdash;O Lord, give us backbone!</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Heartily yours,<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>In the bottom of this note, Page has cut a notch in the
+paper and against it he has written: &quot;This notch is the
+place to apply a match to this letter.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&quot;Again and ever I am reminded,&quot; Page also wrote in
+reference to Bryan's resignation, &quot;of the danger of having
+to do with cranks. A certain orderliness of mind and
+conduct seems essential for safety in this short life.
+Spiritualists, bone-rubbers, anti-vivisectionists, all sort
+of anti's in fact, those who have fads about education or
+fads against it, Perfectionists, Daughters of the Dove of
+Peace, Sons of the Roaring Torrent, itinerant peace-mongers&mdash;all
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-11" id="page2-11"></a>[pg II-11]</span>
+these may have a real genius among them
+once in forty years; but to look for an exception to the
+common run of yellow dogs and damfools among them is
+like opening oysters with the hope of finding pearls. It's
+the common man we want and the uncommon common
+man when we can find him&mdash;never the crank. This is
+the lesson of Bryan.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>At one time, however, Mr. Bryan's departure seemed
+likely to have important consequences for Page. Colonel
+House and others strongly urged the President to call him
+home from London and make him Secretary of State.
+This was the third position in President Wilson's Cabinet
+for which Page had been considered. The early plans
+to make him Secretary of the Interior or Secretary of
+Agriculture have already been described. Of all cabinet
+posts, however, the one that would have especially attracted
+him would have been the Department of State.
+But President Wilson believed that the appointment of an
+Ambassador at one of the belligerent capitals, especially
+of an Ambassador whose sympathies for the Allies were
+so pronounced as were Page's, would have been an &quot;un-neutral&quot;
+act, and, therefore, Colonel House's recommendation
+was not approved.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>From Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+Roslyn, Long Island,<br />
+June 25th, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR PAGE:</p>
+
+<p>The President finally decided to appoint Lansing to
+succeed Mr. Bryan. In my opinion, he did wisely, though
+I would have preferred his appointing you.</p>
+
+<p>The argument against your appointment was the fact
+that you are an Ambassador at one of the belligerent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-12" id="page2-12"></a>[pg II-12]</span>
+capitals. The President did not think it would do, and
+from what I read, when your name was suggested I take
+it there would have been much criticism. I am sorry&mdash;sorrier
+than I can tell you, for it would have worked admirably
+in the general scheme of things.</p>
+
+<p>However, I feel sure that Lansing will do the job, and
+that you will find your relations with him in every way
+satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>The President spent yesterday with me and we talked
+much of you. He is looking well and feeling so.
+I read the President your letter and he enjoyed it as
+much as I did.</p>
+
+<p>I am writing hastily, for I am leaving for Manchester,
+Massachusetts, where I shall be during July and August.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Your sincere friend,<br />
+E.M. HOUSE.<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>But, in addition to the <i>Lusitania</i> crisis, a new terror now
+loomed on the horizon. Page's correspondence reveals
+that Bryan had more reasons than one for his resignation;
+he was now planning to undertake a self-appointed mission
+to Europe for the purpose of opening peace negotiations
+entirely on his own account.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>From Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+Manchester, Massachusetts,<br />
+August 12th, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR PAGE:</p>
+
+<p>The Bryans have been stopping with the X's. X
+writes me that Bryan told him that he intended to go to
+Europe soon and try peace negotiations. He has Lloyd
+George in mind in England, and it is then his purpose to
+go to Germany.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-13" id="page2-13"></a>[pg II-13]</span>
+<p>I take it he will want credentials from the President
+which, of course, he will not want to give, but just what
+he will feel obliged to give is another story. I anticipated
+this when he resigned. I knew it was merely a matter of
+time when he would take this step.</p>
+
+<p>He may find encouragement in Germany, for he is in
+high favour now in that quarter. It is his purpose to
+oppose the President upon the matter of &quot;preparedness,&quot;
+and, from what we can learn, it will not be long before
+there will be open antagonism between the Administration
+and himself.</p>
+
+<p>It might be a good thing to encourage his going to
+Europe. He would probably come back a sadder and
+wiser man. I take it that no one in authority in England
+would discuss the matter seriously with him, and, in
+France, I do not believe he could even get a hearing.</p>
+
+<p>Please let me have your impressions upon this subject.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could be near you to-day for there are so many
+things I could tell that I cannot write.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Your friend,<br />
+E.M. House.<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy, London [Undated].<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>Never mind about Bryan. Send him over here if you
+wish to get rid of him. He'll cut no more figure than a
+tar-baby at a Negro camp-meeting. If he had come while
+he was Secretary, I should have jumped off London
+Bridge and the country would have had one ambassador
+less. But I shall enjoy him now. You see some peace
+crank from the United States comes along every week&mdash;some
+crank or some gang of cranks. There've been two
+this week. Ever since the Daughters of the Dove of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-14" id="page2-14"></a>[pg II-14]</span>
+Peace met at The Hague, the game has become popular
+in America; and I haven't yet heard that a single one has
+been shot&mdash;so far. I think that some of them are likely
+soon to be hanged, however, because there are signs that
+they may come also from Germany. The same crowd
+that supplies money to buy labour-leaders and the press
+and to blow up factories in the United States keeps a good
+supply of peace-liars on tap. It'll be fun to watch Bryan
+perform and never suspect that anybody is lying to him
+or laughing at him; and he'll go home convinced that he's
+done the job and he'll let loose doves all over the land till
+they are as thick as English sparrows. Not even the
+President could teach him anything permanently. He
+can do no harm on this side the world. It's only your
+side that's in any possible danger; and, if I read the signs
+right, there's a diminishing danger there.</p>
+
+<p>No, there's never yet come a moment when there was
+the slightest chance of peace. Did the Emperor not say
+last year that peace would come in October, and again
+this year in October? Since he said it, how can it come?</p>
+
+<p>The ambitions and the actions of men, my friend, are
+determined by their antecedents, their surroundings, and
+their opportunities&mdash;the great deeds of men before them
+whom consciously or unconsciously they take for models,
+the codes they are reared by, and the chances that they
+think they see. These influences shaped Alexander and
+C&aelig;sar, and they shaped you and me. Now every monarch
+on the Continent has behind him the Napoleonic
+example. &quot;Can I do that?&quot; crosses the mind of every one.
+Of course every one thinks of himself as doing it beneficently&mdash;for
+the good of the world. Napoleon, himself,
+persuaded himself of his benevolent intentions, and the
+devil of it was he persuaded other people also. Now the
+only monarch in Europe in our time who thought he had a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-15" id="page2-15"></a>[pg II-15]</span>
+chance is your friend in Berlin. When he told you last
+year (1914) that of course he didn't want war, but that he
+was &quot;ready,&quot; that's what he meant. A similar ambition,
+of course, comes into the mind of every professional
+soldier of the continent who rises to eminence. In Berlin
+you have both&mdash;the absolute monarch and the military
+class of ambitious soldiers and their fighting machine.
+Behind these men walks the Napoleonic ambition all the
+time, just as in the United States we lie down every night
+in George Washington's feather-bed of no entangling
+alliances.</p>
+
+<p>Then remember, too, that the German monarchy is a
+cross between the Napoleonic ambition and its inheritance
+from Frederick the Great and Bismarck. I suppose the
+three damnedest liars that were ever born are these
+three&mdash;old Frederick, Napoleon, and Bismarck&mdash;not, I
+take it, because they naturally loved lying, but because
+the game they played constantly called for lying. There
+was no other way to play it: they <i>had</i> to fool people all the
+time. You have abundant leisure&mdash;do this: Read the
+whole career of Napoleon and write down the startling
+and exact parallels that you will find there to what is
+happening to-day. The French were united and patriotic,
+just as the Germans now are. When they invaded other
+people's territory, they said they were attacked and that
+the other people had brought on war. They had their
+lying diplomats, their corruption funds; they levied money
+on cities and states; they took booty; and they were God's
+elect. It's a wonderful parallel&mdash;not strangely, because
+the game is the same and the moral methods are the same.
+Only the tools are somewhat different&mdash;the submarine, for
+example. Hence the <i>Lusitania</i> disaster (not disavowed,
+you will observe), the <i>Arabic</i> disaster, the propaganda,
+underground and above, in the United States. And
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-16" id="page2-16"></a>[pg II-16]</span>
+there'll be more. The Napoleonic Wars were about eleven
+years long. I fancy that we shall have war and wars
+from this attempt to dominate Europe, for perhaps as
+long a period. The Balkans can't be quieted by this war
+only, nor Russia and Italy perhaps. And Germany may
+have a series of earthquakes herself&mdash;internal explosions.
+Then Poland and perhaps some of the Scandinavian
+States. Nobody can tell.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot express my admiration of the President's
+management, so far at least, of his colossal task of leading
+us right. He has shown his supreme wisdom up to this
+point and I have the profoundest confidence in his judgment.
+But I hope he doesn't fool himself about the future;
+I'm sure he doesn't. I see no possible way for us to
+keep out, because I know the ignorance and falseness of
+the German leaders. They'll drown or kill more Americans&mdash;on
+the sea and in America. They <i>may</i> at last even
+attack one of our own passenger ships, or do something
+that will dramatically reveal them to the whole American
+people. Then, of course, the tune will be called. It's
+only a question of time; and I am afraid the war will last
+long enough to give them time. An early peace is all that
+can prevent them from driving us at last into war; and I
+can see no chance of an early peace. You had as well prepare
+as fast as the condition of public opinion will permit.</p>
+
+<p>There could be no better measure of the immeasurable
+moral advance that the United States has made over
+Europe than the incredulity of our people. They simply
+can't comprehend what the Napoleonic legend can do,
+nor the low political morality of the Continent&mdash;of Berlin
+in particular. Hence they don't believe it. We have
+gone on for 100 years working might and main to better
+our condition and the condition of people about us&mdash;the
+greatest effort made by the largest number of people since
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-17" id="page2-17"></a>[pg II-17]</span>
+the world began to further the mood and the arts of peace.
+There is no other such chapter in human history as our
+work for a hundred years. Yet just a hundred years ago
+the Capitol at Washington was burned by&mdash;a political
+oligarchy in the freest country of Europe&mdash;as damnable
+an atrocity as you will find in history. The Germans
+are a hundred years behind the English in political development
+and political morality.</p>
+
+<p>So, let Willum J. come. He can't hurt Europe&mdash;nor
+help it; and you can spare him. Let all the Peace-gang
+come. You can spare <i>them</i>, too; and they can do no harm
+here. Let somebody induce Hoke Smith to come, too.
+You have hit on a great scheme&mdash;friendly deportation.</p>
+
+<p>And Bryan won't be alone. Daughters of the Dove of
+Peace and Sons of the Olive Branch come every week.
+The latest Son came to see me to-day. He said that the
+German Chancellor told him that he wanted peace&mdash;wants
+it now and wants it bad, and that only one thing
+stood in the way&mdash;if England would agree not to take
+Belgium, Germany would at once make peace! This
+otherwise sensible American wanted me to take him to see
+Sir Edward to tell him this, and to suggest to him to go
+over to Holland next week to meet the German Chancellor
+and fix it up. A few days ago a pious preacher chap
+(American) who had come over to &quot;fix it all up,&quot; came
+back from France and called on me. He had seen something
+in France&mdash;he was excited and he didn't quite make
+it clear what he had seen; but he said that if they'd only
+let him go home safely and quickly he'd promise not to
+mention peace any more&mdash;did I think the American boats
+<i>entirely</i> safe?&mdash;So, you see, I do have some fun even in
+these dark days.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours heartily,<br />
+W.H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-18" id="page2-18"></a>[pg II-18]</span>
+</div>
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<p>This letter discloses that Page was pinning his faith in
+President Wilson, and that he still had confidence in the
+President's determination to uphold the national honour.
+Page was not one of those who thought that the United
+States should declare war immediately after the <i>Lusitania</i>.
+The President's course, in giving Germany a chance to
+make amends, and to disavow the act, met with his approval,
+and he found, also, much to admire in Mr. Wilson's
+first <i>Lusitania</i> note. His judgment in this matter was
+based first of all upon the merits of the case; besides this,
+his admiration for Mr. Wilson as a public man was strong.
+To think otherwise of the President would have been a
+great grief to the Ambassador and to differ with his
+chief on the tremendous issue of the war would have
+meant for Page the severance of one of the most cherished
+associations of his life. The interest which he had shown
+in advocating Wilson's presidential candidacy has already
+been set forth; and many phases of the Wilson administration
+had aroused his admiration. The President's
+handling of domestic problems Page regarded as a masterpiece
+in reconciling statesmanship with practical politics,
+and his energetic attitude on the Panama Tolls had introduced
+new standards into American foreign relations.
+Page could not sympathize with all the details of the Wilsonian
+Mexican policy, yet he saw in it a high-minded
+purpose and a genuine humanitarianism. But the outbreak
+of war presented new aspects of Mr. Wilson's mind.
+The President's attitude toward the European struggle,
+his conception of &quot;neutrality,&quot; and his failure to grasp
+the meaning of the conflict, seemed to Page to show a lack
+of fundamental statesmanship; still his faith in Wilson
+was deep-seated, and he did not abandon hope that the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-19" id="page2-19"></a>[pg II-19]</span>
+President could be brought to see things as they really
+were. Page even believed that he might be instrumental
+in his conversion.</p>
+
+<p>But in the summer and autumn of 1915 one agony
+followed another. The &quot;too proud to fight&quot; speech was
+in Page's mind nothing less than a tragedy. The president's
+first <i>Lusitania</i> note for a time restored the Ambassador's
+confidence; it seemed to show that the President
+intended to hold Germany to that &quot;strict accountability&quot;
+which he had threatened. But Mr. Wilson's course now
+presented new difficulties to his Ambassador. Still Page
+believed that the President, in his own way and in
+his own time, would find a path out of his dilemma
+that would protect the honour and the safety of the
+United States. If any of the Embassy subordinates
+became impatient over the procedure of Washington, he
+did not find a sympathetic listener in the Ambassador.
+The whole of London and of Europe might be resounding
+with denunciations of the White House, but Page would
+tolerate no manifestations of hostility in his presence.
+&quot;The problem appears different to Washington than it
+does to us,&quot; he would say to his confidants. &quot;We see
+only one side of it; the President sees all sides. If we give
+him all the facts, he will decide the thing wisely.&quot; Englishmen
+with whom the Ambassador came into contact
+soon learned that they could not become flippant or critical
+about Mr. Wilson in his presence; he would resent
+the slightest hostile remark, and he had a way of phrasing
+his rebukes that usually discouraged a second attempt.
+About this time Page began to keep closely to himself,
+and to decline invitations to dinners and to country houses,
+even those with which he was most friendly. The reason
+was that he could not meet Englishmen and Englishwomen,
+or even Americans who were resident in England,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-20" id="page2-20"></a>[pg II-20]</span>
+on his old easy familiar terms; he knew the ideas which
+everybody entertained about his country, and he knew
+also what they were saying, when he was not among them;
+the restraint which his presence necessarily put upon his
+friends produced an uncongenial atmosphere, and the
+Ambassador therefore gave up, for a time, those distractions
+which had ordinarily proved such a delightful
+relief from his duties. For the first time since he had come
+to England he found himself a solitary man. He even
+refused to attend the American Luncheon Club in London
+because, in speeches and in conversation, the members
+did not hesitate to assail the Wilson policies.</p>
+
+<p>Events, however, eventually proved too strong for the
+most devoted supporter of President Wilson. After the
+<i>Arabic</i> and the <i>Hesperian</i>, Page's official intimates saw
+signs that the Ambassador was losing confidence in his old
+friend. He would discuss Mr. Wilson occasionally, with
+those secretaries, such as Mr. Laughlin, in whom his confidence
+was strongest; his expressions, however, were never
+flippant or violent. That Page could be biting as well as
+brilliant in his comments on public personages his letters
+abundantly reveal, yet he never exercised his talent
+for sarcasm or invective at the expense of the White
+House. He never forgot that Mr. Wilson was President
+and that he was Ambassador; he would still defend
+the Administration; and he even now continued to
+find consolation in the reflection that Mr. Wilson was
+living in a different atmosphere and that he had difficulties
+to confront of which a man in London could know
+nothing. The Ambassador's emotion was rather one of
+disappointment and sorrow, mingled with anxiety as to
+the plight into which his country was being led. As to
+his duty in this situation, however, Page never hesitated.
+In his relations with his Embassy and with the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-21" id="page2-21"></a>[pg II-21]</span>
+British world he maintained this non-critical attitude; but
+in his letters to President Wilson and Colonel House,
+he was describing the situation, and expressing his convictions,
+with the utmost freedom and frankness. In
+both these attitudes Page was consistent and absolutely
+loyal. It was his duty to carry out the Wilson instructions
+and he had too high a conception of the Ambassadorial
+office to show to the world any unfavourable opinions
+he may have held about his country's course. His
+duty to his post made it just as imperative that he set
+forth to the President the facts exactly as they were.
+And this the Ambassador now proceeded to do. For the
+mere ornamental dignities of an Ambassadorship Page
+cared nothing; he was wasting his health in his duties and
+exhausting his private resources; much as he loved the
+English and congenial as were his surroundings, the fear
+of being recalled for &quot;disloyalty&quot; or insubordination
+never influenced him. The letters which he now wrote
+to Colonel House and to President Wilson himself are
+probably without parallel in the diplomatic annals of this
+or of any other country. In them he told the President
+precisely what Englishmen thought of him and of the extent
+to which the United States was suffering in European
+estimation from the Wilson policy. His boldness sometimes
+astounded his associates. One day a friend and
+adviser of President Wilson's came into the Ambassador's
+office just as Page had finished one of his communications
+to Washington.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Read that!&quot; the Ambassador said, handing over the
+manuscript to his visitor.</p>
+
+<p>As the caller read, his countenance displayed the progressive
+stages of his amazement. When he had finished,
+his hands dropped helplessly upon his knees.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is that the way you write to the President?&quot; he gasped.</p>
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-22" id="page2-22"></a>[pg II-22]</span>
+</div>
+<p>&quot;Of course,&quot; Page replied, quietly. &quot;Why not? Why
+shouldn't I tell him the truth? That is what I am here
+for.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is no other person in the world who dare talk to
+him like that!&quot; was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>This is unquestionably the fact. That President Wilson
+did not like people about him whose views were opposed
+to his own is now no secret, and during the period when his
+policy was one of the great issues of the world there was
+probably no one except Page who intruded upon his solitude
+with ideas that so abruptly disagreed with the opinions of
+the White House. The letters which Page wrote Colonel
+House were intended, of course, for the President himself,
+and practically all of them Colonel House read
+aloud to the head of the nation. The two men would
+closet themselves in the old cabinet room on the second
+floor of the White House&mdash;that same room in which Lincoln
+had met his advisers during Civil War days; and here
+Colonel House would quietly read the letters in which Page
+so mercilessly portrayed the situation as it appeared in
+English and European eyes. The President listened impassively,
+giving no sign of approval or disapproval, and
+hardly, at times, of much interest. In the earlier days,
+when Page's letters consisted of pictures of English life
+and English men, and colourful descriptions of England
+under the stress of war, the President was vastly entertained;
+he would laugh loudly at Page's wit, express his
+delight at his graphic and pungent style and feel deeply
+the horrors of war as his Ambassador unfolded them. &quot;I
+always found Page compelling on paper,&quot; Mr. Wilson remarked
+to Mr. Laughlin, during one of the latter's visits
+to Washington. &quot;I could never resist him&mdash;I get more
+information from his letters than from any other single
+source. Tell him to keep it up.&quot; It was during this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-23" id="page2-23"></a>[pg II-23]</span>
+period that the President used occasionally to read Page's
+letters to the Cabinet, expressing his great appreciation of
+their charm and historical importance. &quot;The President
+quoted from one of the Ambassador's letters to the Cabinet
+to-day,&quot; a member of the Cabinet wrote to Mrs.
+Page in February, 1915. &quot;'Some day,' the President
+said, 'I hope that Walter Page's letters will be published.
+They are the best letters I have ever read. They make
+you feel the atmosphere in England, understand the people,
+and see into the motives of the great actors.'&quot; The
+President repeated this statement many times, and his
+letters to Page show how greatly he enjoyed and profited
+from this correspondence. But after the sinking of the
+<i>Lusitania</i> and the <i>Arabic</i> his attitude toward Page and his
+letters changed.</p>
+
+<p>He now found little pleasure or satisfaction in the Page
+communications. When Mr. Wilson found that one of his
+former confidants had turned out to be a critic, that man
+instantaneously passed out of his life. And this was now
+Page's fate; the friendship and associations of forty years
+were as though they had never been. Just why Mr.
+Wilson did not recall his Ambassador is a question that
+has puzzled Page's friends. He would sometimes refer
+to him as a man who was &quot;more British than the British,&quot;
+as one who had been taken completely captive by British
+blandishments, but he never came to the point of dismissing
+him. Perhaps he did not care to face the public
+scandal that such an act would have caused; but a more
+plausible reason is that Page, despite the causes which he
+had given for irritation, was indispensable to him. Page's
+early letters had furnished the President ideas which had
+taken shape in Wilson's policies, and, disagreeable as the
+communications now became, there are evidences that
+they influenced the solitary statesman in the White House,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-24" id="page2-24"></a>[pg II-24]</span>
+and that they had much to do in finally forcing Mr. Wilson
+into the war. The alternative question, as to why
+Page did not retire when he found himself so out of sympathy
+with the President, will be sufficiently answered in
+subsequent chapters; at present it may be said that he did
+resign and only consented to remain at the urgent request
+of Washington. In fact, all during 1915 and 1916, there
+seemed to be a fear in Washington that Page would definitely
+abandon the London post. On one occasion, when the
+newspapers published rumours to this effect, Page received
+an urgent despatch from Mr. Lansing. The message
+came at a time&mdash;the date was October 26, 1915&mdash;when
+Page was especially discouraged over the Washington
+policy. &quot;Representatives of the press,&quot; said Mr. Lansing,
+&quot;have repeated rumours that you are planning to resign.
+These have been brought to the President's attention,
+and both he and I have denied them. Still these rumours
+persist, and they cause both the President and me great
+anxiety. We cannot believe that they are well founded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In view of the fact that they are so persistent, we have
+thought it well to inform you of them and to tell you how
+earnestly we hope that they are baseless. We trust that
+you will set both our minds at rest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>If Page had ever had any compunction about addressing
+the President in blunt phrases these expressions certainly
+convinced him that he was a free agent.</p>
+
+<p>Yet Page himself at times had his doubts as to the value
+of this correspondence. He would frequently discuss the
+matter with Mr. Laughlin. &quot;That's a pretty harsh letter,&quot;
+he would say. &quot;I don't like to talk that way to the
+President, yet it doesn't express half what I feel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It's your duty to tell the President the real state of
+affairs,&quot; Mr. Laughlin would urge.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But do you suppose it does any good?&quot; Page would ask.</p>
+
+<div>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-25" id="page2-25"></a>[pg II-25]</span>
+</div>
+<p>&quot;Yes, it's bound to, and whether it does or not, it's
+your business to keep him informed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>If in these letters Page seems to lay great stress on the
+judgment of Great Britain and Europe on American
+policy, it must be remembered that that was his particular
+province. One of an Ambassador's most important duties
+is to transmit to his country the public opinion of the
+country to which he is accredited. It was Page's place to
+tell Washington what Great Britain thought of it; it was
+Washington's business to formulate policy, after giving
+due consideration to this and other matters.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+July 21, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>I enclose a pamphlet in ridicule of the President. I
+don't know who wrote it, for my inquiries so far have
+brought no real information. I don't feel like sending it
+to him. I send it to you&mdash;to do with as you think best.
+This thing alone is, of course, of no consequence. But it
+is symptomatic. There is much feeling about the slowness
+with which he acts. One hundred and twenty people
+(Americans) were drowned on the <i>Lusitania</i> and we are
+still writing notes about it&mdash;to the damnedest pirates that
+ever blew up a ship. Anybody who knows the Germans
+knows, of course, that they are simply playing for time,
+that they are not going to &quot;come down,&quot; that Von Tirpitz
+is on deck, that they'd just as lief have war with us as not&mdash;perhaps
+had rather&mdash;because they don't want any large
+nation left fresh when the war ends. They'd like to have
+the whole world bankrupt. There is a fast growing feeling
+here, therefore, that the American Government is pusillanimous&mdash;dallies
+with 'em, is affected by the German propaganda,
+etc., etc. Of course, such a judgment is not fair.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-26" id="page2-26"></a>[pg II-26]</span>
+It is formed without knowing the conditions in the United
+States. But I think you ought to realize the strength of
+this sentiment. No doubt before you receive this, the
+President will send something to Germany that will
+amount to an ultimatum and there will be at least a momentary
+change of sentiment here. But looking at the
+thing in a long-range way, we're bound to get into the war.
+For the Germans will blow up more American travellers
+without notice. And by dallying with them we do not
+change the ultimate result, but we take away from ourselves
+the spunk and credit of getting in instead of being kicked
+and cursed in. We've got to get in: they won't play the
+game in any other way. I have news direct from a high
+German source in Berlin which strongly confirms this....</p>
+
+<p>It's a curious thing to say. But the only solution that
+I see is another <i>Lusitania</i> outrage, which would force war.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>P.S. The London papers every day say that the President
+will send a strong note, etc. And the people here
+say, &quot;Damn notes: hasn't he written enough?&quot; Writing
+notes hurts nobody&mdash;changes nothing. The Washington
+correspondents to the London papers say that Burleson,
+the Attorney-General, and Daniels are Bryan men and
+are holding the President back.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The prophecy contained in this letter was quickly fulfilled.
+A week or two after Colonel House had received
+it, the <i>Arabic</i> was sunk with loss of American life.</p>
+
+<p>Page was taking a brief holiday with his son Frank in
+Rowsley, Derbyshire, when this news came. It was telegraphed
+from the Embassy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That settles it,&quot; he said to his son. &quot;They have sunk
+the <i>Arabic</i>. That means that we shall break with Germany
+and I've got to go back to London.&quot;</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-27" id="page2-27"></a>[pg II-27]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy, London, August 23, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>The sinking of the <i>Arabic</i> is the answer to the President
+and to your letter to me. And there'll be more such answers.
+You said to me one day after you had got back
+from your last visit to Berlin: &quot;They are impossible.&quot;
+I think you told the truth, and surely you know your German
+and you know your Berlin&mdash;or you did know them
+when you were here.</p>
+
+<p>The question is not what we have done for the Allies,
+not what any other neutral country has done or has failed
+to do&mdash;such comparisons, I think, are far from the point.
+The question is when the right moment arrives for us to
+save our self-respect, our honour, and the esteem and fear
+(or the contempt) in which the world will hold us.</p>
+
+<p>Berlin has the Napoleonic disease. If you follow Napoleon's
+career&mdash;his excuses, his evasions, his inventions,
+the wild French enthusiasm and how he kept it up&mdash;you
+will find an exact parallel. That becomes plainer every
+day. Europe may not be wholly at peace in five years&mdash;may
+be ten.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Hastily and heartily,<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I have your note about Willum J.... Crank once, crank
+always. My son, never tie up with a crank.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<br />
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+London, September 2nd, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>You write me about pleasing the Allies, the big Ally in
+particular. That doesn't particularly appeal to me. We
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-28" id="page2-28"></a>[pg II-28]</span>
+don't owe them anything. There's no obligation. I'd
+never confess for a moment that we are under any obligation
+to any of them nor to anybody. I'm not out to
+&quot;please&quot; anybody, as a primary purpose: that's not my
+game nor my idea&mdash;nor yours either. As for England in
+particular, the account was squared when she twice sent
+an army against us&mdash;in her folly&mdash;especially the last time
+when she burnt our Capitol. There's been no obligation
+since. The obligation is on the other foot. We've set
+her an example of what democracy will do for men, an
+example of efficiency, an example of freedom of opportunity.
+The future is ours, and she may follow us and
+profit by it. Already we have three white English-speaking
+men to every two in the British Empire: we
+are sixty per cent. of the Anglo-Saxons in the world. If
+there be any obligation to please, the obligation is on her
+to please us. And she feels and sees it now.</p>
+
+<p>My point is not that, nor is it what we or any other
+neutral nation has done or may do&mdash;Holland or any other.
+This war is the direct result of the over-polite, diplomatic,
+standing-aloof, bowing-to-one-another in gold lace, which
+all European nations are guilty of in times of peace&mdash;castes
+and classes and uniforms and orders and such
+folderol, instead of the proper business of the day. Every
+nation in Europe knew that Germany was preparing
+for war. If they had really got together&mdash;not mere
+Hague Sunday-school talk and resolutions&mdash;but had
+really got together for business and had said to Germany,
+&quot;The moment you fire a shot, we'll all fight
+against you; we have so many millions of men, so many
+men-of-war, so many billions of money; and we'll increase
+all these if you do not change your system and your
+building-up of armies&quot;&mdash;then there would have been no
+war.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-29" id="page2-29"></a>[pg II-29]</span>
+<p>My point is not sentimental. It is:</p>
+
+<p>(1) We must maintain our own self-respect and
+safety. If we submit to too many insults, <i>that</i> will in
+time bring Germany against us. We've got to show at
+some time that we don't believe, either, in the efficacy of
+Sunday-School resolves for peace&mdash;that we are neither
+Daughters of the Dove of Peace nor Sons of the Olive
+Branch, and</p>
+
+<p>(2) About nagging and forever presenting technical
+legal points as lawyers do to confuse juries&mdash;the point is
+the point of efficiency. If we do that, we can't carry
+our main points. I find it harder and harder to get
+answers now to important questions because we ask so
+many unimportant and nagging ones.</p>
+
+<p>I've no sentiment&mdash;perhaps not enough. My gushing
+days are gone, if I ever had 'em. The cutting-out of the
+&quot;100 years of peace&quot; oratory, etc., etc., was one of the
+blessings of the war. But we must be just and firm and
+preserve our own self-respect and keep alive the fear that
+other nations have of us; and we ought to have the courage
+to make the Department of State more than a bureau
+of complaints. We must learn to say &quot;No&quot; even to a
+Gawdamighty independent American citizen when he
+asks an improper or impracticable question. Public
+Opinion in the United States consists of something more
+than the threats of Congressmen and the bleating of newspapers;
+it consists of the judgment of honourable men on
+courageous and frank actions&mdash;a judgment that cannot
+be made up till action is taken.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Heartily yours,<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-30" id="page2-30"></a>[pg II-30]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<br /><br />
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy, London, Sept. 8, 1915.<br />
+<br />
+(This is not prudent. It is only true&mdash;nothing more.)<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>I take it for granted that Dumba<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4" /><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> is going, of course.
+But I must tell you that the President is being laughed
+at by our best friends for his slowness in action. I hardly
+ever pick up a paper without seeing some sarcastic remark.
+I don't mean they expect us to come into the war.
+They only hoped we would be as good as our word&mdash;would
+regard another submarine attack on a ship carrying
+Americans as an unfriendly act and would send Bernstorff
+home. Yet the <i>Arabic</i> and now the <i>Hesperian</i> have
+had no effect in action. Bernstorff's personal <i>note to
+Lansing<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5" /><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a>, even as far as it goes, does not bind his Government</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The upshot of all this is that the President is fast losing
+in the minds of our best friends here all that he gained
+by his courageous stand on the Panama tolls. They feel
+that if he takes another insult&mdash;keeps taking them&mdash;and
+is satisfied with Bernstorff's personal word, which is
+proved false in four days&mdash;he'll take anything. And the
+British will pay less attention to what we say. That's
+inevitable. If the American people and the President
+accept the <i>Arabic</i> and the <i>Hesperian</i> and do nothing to
+Dumba till the Government here gave out his letter,
+which the State Department had (and silently held) for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-31" id="page2-31"></a>[pg II-31]</span>
+several days&mdash;then nobody on this side the world will
+pay much heed to anything we say hereafter.</p>
+
+<p>This, as I say, doesn't mean that these (thoughtful)
+people wish or expect us to go to war. They wish only
+that we'd prove ourselves as good as the President's word.
+That's the conservative truth; we're losing influence
+more rapidly than I supposed it were possible.</p>
+
+<p>Dumba's tardy dismissal will not touch the main
+matter, which is the rights of neutrals at sea, and keeping
+our word in action.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours sincerely,<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>P.S. They say it's Mexico over again&mdash;watchful waiting
+and nothing doing. And the feeling grows that Bryan has
+really conquered, since his programme seems to prevail.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+London, Tuesday night, Sept. 8, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>The Germans seem to think it a good time to try to
+feel about for peace. They have more to offer now than
+they may have again. That's all. A man who seriously
+talks peace now in Paris or in London on any terms that
+the Germans will consider, would float dead that very
+night in the Seine or in the Thames. The Germans have
+for the time being &quot;done-up&quot; the Russians; but the
+French have shells enough to plough the German trenches
+day and night (they've been at it for a fortnight now);
+Joffre has been to see the Italian generalissimo; and the
+English destroy German submarines now almost as fast
+as the Germans send them out. I am credibly told that
+several weeks ago a group of Admiralty men who are in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-32" id="page2-32"></a>[pg II-32]</span>
+the secret had a little dinner to celebrate the destruction
+of the 50th submarine.</p>
+
+<p>While this is going on, you are talking on your side of
+the water about a change in German policy! The only
+change is that the number of submarines available becomes
+smaller and smaller, and that they wish to use
+Uncle Sam's broad, fat back to crawl down on when
+they have failed.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, they are laughing at Uncle Sam here&mdash;it
+comes near to being ridicule, in fact, for seeming to
+jump at Bernstorff's unfrank assurances. And, as I
+have telegraphed the President, English opinion is&mdash;well,
+it is very nearly disrespectful. Men say here (I
+mean our old friends) that with no disavowal of the
+<i>Lusitania</i>, the <i>Falaba</i>, the <i>Gulflight</i>, or the <i>Arabic</i> or of the
+<i>Hesperian</i>, the Germans are &quot;stuffing&quot; Uncle Sam, that
+Uncle Sam is in the clutches of the peace-at-any-price
+public opinion, that the United States will suffer any
+insult and do nothing. I hardly pick up a paper that
+does not have a sarcastic paragraph or cartoon. We are
+on the brink of convincing the English that we'll not
+act, whatever the provocation. By the English, I do
+not mean the lighter, transitory public opinion, but I
+mean the thoughtful men who do not wish us or expect
+us to fire a gun. They say that the American democracy,
+since Cleveland's day, has become a mere agglomeration
+of different races, without national unity, national aims,
+and without courage or moral qualities. And (I deeply
+regret to say) the President is losing here the high esteem
+he won by his Panama tolls repeal. They ask, why on
+earth did he raise the issue if under repeated provocation
+he is unable to recall Gerard or to send Bernstorff home?
+The <i>Hesperian</i> follows the <i>Arabic</i>; other &quot;liners&quot; will
+follow the <i>Hesperian</i>, if the Germans have submarines.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-33" id="page2-33"></a>[pg II-33]</span>
+And, when Sackville-West<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6" /><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> was promptly sent home for
+answering a private citizen's inquiry about the two political
+parties, Dumba is (yet awhile) retained in spite of a far
+graver piece of business. There is a tone of sad disappointment
+here&mdash;not because the most thoughtful men want us
+in the war (they don't), but because for some reason, which
+nobody here understands, the President, having taken a
+stand, seems unable to do anything.</p>
+
+<p>All this is a moderate interpretation of sorrowful
+public opinion here. And the result will inevitably be
+that they will pay far less heed to anything we may hereafter
+say. In fact men now say here every day that the
+American democracy has no opinion, can form no opinion,
+has no moral quality, and that the word of its President
+never gets as far as action even of the mildest form. The
+atmosphere is very depressing. And this feeling has apparently
+got beyond anybody's control. I've even heard
+this said: &quot;The voice of the United States is Mr. Wilson's:
+its actions are controlled by Mr. Bryan.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So, you see, the war will go on a long long time. So far as
+English opinion is concerned, the United States is useful
+to make ammunition and is now thought of chiefly in
+this connection. Less and less attention is paid to what
+we say. Even the American telegrams to the London
+papers have a languid tone.</p>
+
+<p>Yet recent revelations have made it clearer than ever
+that the same qualities that the English accuse us of
+having are in them and that these qualities are directly
+to blame for this war. I recall that when I was in Germany
+a few weeks, six years ago, I became convinced that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-34" id="page2-34"></a>[pg II-34]</span>
+Germany had prepared to fight England; I didn't know
+when, but I did know that was what the war-machine had
+in mind. Of course, I had no opportunities to find out
+anything in particular. You were told practically that
+same thing by the Kaiser, before the war began. &quot;We
+are ready,&quot; said he. Of course the English feared it and
+Sir Edward put his whole life into his effort to prevent it.
+The day the war began, he told me with tears that it
+seemed that his life had been wasted&mdash;that his life work
+had gone for naught.&mdash;Nobody could keep from wondering
+why England didn't&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>(Here comes a parenthesis. Word came to me a little
+while ago that a Zeppelin was on its way to London.
+Such a remark doesn't arouse much attention. But just
+as I had finished the fifth line above this, Frank and Mrs.
+Page came in and challenged me to play a game of cards
+before we should go to bed. We sat down, the cards
+were dealt, and bang! bang!&mdash;with the deep note of an
+explosion. A third, a fourth shot. We went into the
+street. There the Zeppelin was revealed by a searchlight&mdash;sailing
+along. I think it had probably dropped its
+bombs; but the aircraft guns were cracking away at it.
+Some of them shot explosive projectiles to find the range.
+Now and then one such explosive would almost reach the
+Zeppelin, but it was too high for them and it sailed away,
+the air guns doing their ineffectual best. I couldn't see
+whether airplanes were trying to shoot it or not. The
+searchlight revealed the Zeppelin but nothing else.&mdash;While
+we were watching this battle in the air, the maids
+came down from the top of the house and went into the
+cellar. I think they've already gone back. You can't
+imagine how little excitement it caused. It produces
+less fright than any other conceivable engine of war.</p>
+
+<p>We came back as soon as the Zeppelin was out of sight
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-35" id="page2-35"></a>[pg II-35]</span>
+and the firing had ceased; we played our game of cards;
+and here I am writing you the story-all within about
+half an hour.&mdash;There was a raid over London last
+night, too, wherein a dozen or two women and children
+and a few men were killed. I haven't the slightest idea
+what harm this raid to-night has done. For all I know
+it may not be all done. But of all imaginable war-experiences
+this seems the most futile. It interrupted a
+game of cards for twenty minutes!)</p>
+
+<p>Now&mdash;to go on with my story: I have wondered ever
+since the war began why the Allies were not better
+prepared&mdash;especially England on land. England has just
+one <i>big</i> land gun&mdash;no more. Now it has turned out, as
+you have doubtless read, that the British Government
+were as good as told by the German Government that
+Germany was going to war pretty soon&mdash;this in 1912 when
+Lord Haldane<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7" /><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> was sent to make friends with Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The only answer he brought back was a proposition
+that England should in any event remain neutral&mdash;stand
+aside while Germany whipped Russia and France. This
+insulting proposal was kept secret till the other day.
+Now, why didn't the British Cabinet inform the people
+and get ready? They were afraid the English people
+wouldn't believe it and would accuse them of fomenting
+war. The English people were making money and pursuing
+their sports. Probably they wouldn't have believed
+it. So the Liberal Cabinet went on in silence,
+knowing that war was coming, but not exactly when it
+was coming, and they didn't make even a second big gun.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-36" id="page2-36"></a>[pg II-36]</span>
+<p>Now here was the same silence in this &quot;democracy&quot;
+that they now complain of in ours. Rather an interesting
+and discouraging parallel&mdash;isn't it? Public opinion
+has turned Lord Haldane out of office because he didn't
+tell the public what he declares they wouldn't have believed.
+If the English had raised an army in 1912, and
+made a lot of big guns, Austria would not have trampled
+Serbia in the earth. There would have been no war
+now; and the strong European Powers might have made
+then the same sort of protective peace-insurance combine
+that they will try to make after this war is ended.
+Query: A democracy's inability to <i>act</i>&mdash;how much is this
+apparently inherent quality of a democracy to blame for
+this war and for&mdash;other things?</p>
+
+<p>When I am asked every day &quot;Why the United States
+doesn't <i>do</i> something&mdash;send Dumba and Bernstorff
+home?&quot;&mdash;Well, it is not the easiest question in the world
+to answer.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours heartily,<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>P.S. This is the most comical of all worlds: While I
+was writing this, it seems the maids went back upstairs
+and lighted their lights without pulling their shades down&mdash;they
+occupy three rooms, in front. The doorbell rang
+furiously. Here were more than half a dozen policemen
+and special constables&mdash;must investigate! &quot;One light
+would be turned on, another would go out; another one
+on!&quot;&mdash;etc., etc. Frank tackled them, told 'em it was only
+the maids going to bed, forgetting to pull down the shades.
+Spies and signalling were in the air! So, in the morning,
+I'll have to send over to the Foreign Office and explain.
+The Zeppelin did more &quot;frightfulness&quot; than I had supposed,
+after all. Doesn't this strike you as comical?</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-37" id="page2-37"></a>[pg II-37]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<br />
+Friday, September 10, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>P.S. The news is just come that Dumba is dismissed.
+That will clear the atmosphere&mdash;a little, but only a little.
+Dumba committed a diplomatic offence. The German
+Government has caused the death of United States citizens,
+has defied us, has declared it had changed its policy
+and yet has gone on with the same old policy. Besides,
+Bernstorff has done everything that Dumba did except
+employ Archibald, which was a mere incident of the
+game. The President took a strong stand: they have
+disregarded it&mdash;no apology nor reparation for a single
+boat that has been sunk. Now the English opinion of
+the Germans is hardly a calm, judicial opinion&mdash;of course
+not. There may be facts that have not been made
+known. There must be good reasons that nobody here
+can guess, why the President doesn't act in the long succession
+of German acts against us. <i>But I tell you with
+all solemnity that British opinion and the British Government
+have absolutely lost their respect for us and their former
+high estimate of the President. And that former respect is
+gone for good unless he acts now very quickly</i><a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8" /><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a>. They will
+pay nothing more than formal and polite attention to
+anything we may hereafter say. This is not resentful.
+They don't particularly care for us to get into the war.
+Their feeling (I mean among our best old friends) is not
+resentful. It is simply sorrowful. They had the highest
+respect for our people and our President. The Germans
+defy us; we sit in silence. They conclude here that we'll
+submit to anything from anybody. We'll write strong
+notes&mdash;nothing more.</p>
+
+<p>I can't possibly exaggerate the revulsion of feeling.
+Members of the Government say (in private, of course)
+that we'll submit to any insult. The newspapers refuse
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-38" id="page2-38"></a>[pg II-38]</span>
+to publish articles which attempt to make the President's
+silence reasonable. &quot;It isn't defensible,&quot; they say,
+&quot;and they would only bring us thousands of insulting
+letters from our readers.&quot; I can't think of a paper nor
+of a man who has a good word to say for us&mdash;except,
+perhaps, a few Quaker peace-at-any-price people. And
+our old friends are disappointed and sorrowful. They
+feel that we have dropped out of a position of influence
+in the world.</p>
+
+<p>I needn't and can't write more. Of course there are
+more important things than English respect. But the
+English think that every Power has lost respect for us&mdash;the
+Germans most of all. And (unless the President acts
+very rigorously and very quickly) we'll have to get along
+a long time without British respect.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>P.S. The last Zeppelin raid&mdash;which interrupted the
+game of cards&mdash;killed more than twenty persons and destroyed
+more than seven million dollars' worth of private
+business property&mdash;all non-combatants!</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+21st of September, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>The insulting cartoon that I enclose (destroy it without
+showing it) is typical of, I suppose, five hundred that
+have appeared here within a month. This represents the
+feeling and opinion of the average man. They say we
+wrote brave notes and made courageous demands, to
+none of which a satisfactory reply has come, but only
+more outrages and no guarantee for the future. Yet
+we will not even show our displeasure by sending Bernstorff
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-39" id="page2-39"></a>[pg II-39]</span>
+home. We've simply &quot;gone out,&quot; like a snuffed
+candle, in the regard and respect of the vast volume of
+British opinion. (The last <i>Punch</i> had six ridiculing
+allusions to our &quot;fall.&quot;)</p>
+
+<p>It's the loneliest time I've had in England. There's a
+tendency to avoid me.</p>
+
+<p>They can't understand here the continued declaration
+in the United States that the British Government is
+trying to take our trade&mdash;to use its blockade and navy
+with the direct purpose of giving British trade profit out
+of American detentions. Of course, the Government had
+no such purpose and has done no such thing&mdash;with any
+such purpose. It isn't thinking about trade but only
+about war.</p>
+
+<p>The English think they see in this the effect on our
+Government and on American opinion of the German
+propaganda. I have had this trade-accusation investigated
+half a dozen times&mdash;the accusation that this Government
+is using its military power for its own trade advantage
+to our detriment: it simply isn't true. They stop
+our cargoes, not for their advantage, but wholly to keep
+things from the enemy. Study our own trade reports.</p>
+
+<p>In a word, our importers are playing (so the English
+think) directly into the hands of the Germans. So matters
+go on from bad to worse.</p>
+
+<p>Bryce<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9" /><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> is very sad. He confessed to me yesterday
+the utter hopelessness of the two people's ever understanding
+one another.</p>
+
+<p>The military situation is very blue&mdash;very blue. The
+general feeling is that the long war will begin next March
+and end&mdash;nobody dares predict.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-40" id="page2-40"></a>[pg II-40]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot"><p>P.S. There's not a moral shadow of a doubt (1) that
+the commander of the submarine that sunk the <i>Arabic</i> is
+dead&mdash;although he makes reports to his government!
+nor (2) that the <i>Hesperian</i> was torpedoed. The State
+Department has a piece of the torpedo.</p></div>
+
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+<p>The letters which Page sent directly to the President
+were just as frank. &quot;Incidents occur nearly every day,&quot;
+he wrote to President Wilson in the autumn of 1915,
+&quot;which reveal the feeling that the Germans have taken
+us in. Last week one of our naval men, Lieutenant
+McBride, who has just been ordered home, asked the
+Admiralty if he might see the piece of metal found on
+the deck of the <i>Hesperian</i>. Contrary to their habit, the
+British officer refused. 'Take my word for it,' he said.
+'She was torpedoed. Why do you wish to investigate?
+Your country will do nothing&mdash;will accept any excuse,
+any insult and&mdash;do nothing.' When McBride told me
+this, I went at once to the Foreign Office and made a
+formal request that this metal should be shown to our
+naval attach&eacute;, who (since Symington is with the British
+fleet and McBride has been ordered home) is Lieutenant
+Towers. Towers was sent for and everything that the
+Admiralty knows was shown to him and I am sending
+that piece of metal by this mail. But to such a pass
+has the usual courtesy of a British naval officer come.
+There are many such instances of changed conduct.
+They are not hard to endure nor to answer and are of no
+consequence in themselves but only for what they denote.
+They're a part of war's bitterness. But my mind runs
+ahead and I wonder how Englishmen will look at this
+subject five years hence, and it runs afield and I wonder
+how the Germans will regard it. A sort of pro-German
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-41" id="page2-41"></a>[pg II-41]</span>
+American newspaper correspondent came along the other
+day from the German headquarters; and he told me that
+one of the German generals remarked to him: 'War with
+America? Ach no! Not war. If trouble should come,
+we'd send over a platoon of our policemen to whip your
+little army.' (He didn't say just how he'd send 'em.)&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy, London, Oct. 5, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>I have two letters that I have lately written to you but
+which I have not sent because they utterly lack good
+cheer. After reading them over, I have not liked to send
+them. Yet I should fail of my duty if I did not tell you
+bad news as well as good.</p>
+
+<p>The high esteem in which our Government was held
+when the first <i>Lusitania</i> note to Germany was sent seems
+all changed to indifference or pity&mdash;not hatred or
+hostility, but a sort of hopeless and sad pity. That ship
+was sunk just five months ago; the German Government
+(or its Ambassador) is yet holding conversations about
+the principle involved, making &quot;concessions&quot; and promises
+for the future, and so far we have done nothing to
+hold the Germans to accountability<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10" /><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a>. In the meantime
+their submarine fleet has been so reduced that probably
+the future will take care of itself and we shall be used as a
+sort of excuse for their failure. This is what the English
+think and say; and they explain our failure to act by concluding
+that the peace-at-any-price sentiment dominates
+the Government and paralyzes it. They have now, I
+think, given up hope that we will ever take any action.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-42" id="page2-42"></a>[pg II-42]</span>
+So deeply rooted (and, I fear, permanent) is this feeling
+that every occurrence is made to fit into and to strengthen
+this supposition. When Dumba was dismissed, they said:
+&quot;Dumba, merely the abject tool of German intrigue.
+Why not Bernstorff?&quot; When the Anglo-French loan<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11" /><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a>
+was oversubscribed, they said: &quot;The people's sympathy
+is most welcome, but their Government is paralyzed.&quot;
+Their respect has gone&mdash;at least for the time being.</p>
+
+<p>It is not that they expect us to go to war: many, in fact,
+do not wish us to. They expected that we would be as
+good as our word and hold the Germans to accountability.
+Now I fear they think little of our word. I shudder to
+think what our relations might be if Sir Edward Grey
+were to yield to another as Foreign Minister, as, of course,
+he must yield at some time.</p>
+
+<p>The press has less to say than it had a few weeks ago.
+<i>Punch</i>, for instance, which ridiculed and pitied us in six
+cartoons and articles in each of two succeeding numbers,
+entirely forgets us this week. But they've all said their
+say. I am, in a sense, isolated&mdash;lonely in a way that I
+have never before been. I am not exactly avoided, I
+hope, but I surely am not sought. They have a polite
+feeling that they do not wish to offend me and that to
+make sure of this the safest course is to let me alone.
+There is no mistaking the great change in the attitude of
+men I know, both in official and private life.</p>
+
+<p>It comes down and comes back to this&mdash;that for five
+months after the sinking of the <i>Lusitania</i> the Germans are
+yet playing with us, that we have not sent Bernstorff
+home, and hence that we will submit to any rebuff or any
+indignity. It is under these conditions&mdash;under this judgment
+of us&mdash;that we now work&mdash;the English respect for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-43" id="page2-43"></a>[pg II-43]</span>
+our Government indefinitely lessened and instead of the
+old-time respect a sad pity. I cannot write more.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Heartily yours,<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+
+<p>&quot;I have authoritatively heard,&quot; Page writes to President
+Wilson in early September, &quot;of a private conversation between
+a leading member of the Cabinet and a group of important
+officials all friendly to us in which all sorrowfully
+expressed the opinion that the United States will submit
+to any indignity and that no effect is now to be hoped for
+from its protests against unlawful submarine attacks or
+against anything else. The inactivity of our Government,
+or its delay, which they assume is the same as inactivity,
+is attributed to domestic politics or to the lack of national,
+consciousness or unity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No explanation has appeared in the British press of
+our Government's inactivity or of any regret or promise of
+reparation by Germany for the sinking of the <i>Lusitania</i>,
+the <i>Falaba</i>, the <i>Gulflight</i>, the <i>Nebraskan</i>, the <i>Arabic</i>, or
+the <i>Hesperian</i>, nor any explanation of a week's silence
+about the Dumba letter; and the conclusion is drawn
+that, in the absence of action by us, all these acts have
+been practically condoned.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I venture to suggest that such explanations be made
+public as will remove, if possible, the practically unanimous
+conclusion here that our Government will permit these and
+similar future acts to be explained away. I am surprised
+almost every hour by some new evidence of the loss of respect
+for our Government, which, since the sinking of the
+<i>Arabic</i>, has become so great as to warrant calling it a complete
+revulsion of English feeling toward the United States.
+There is no general wish for us to enter the war, but there
+is genuine sorrow that we are thought to submit to any
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-44" id="page2-44"></a>[pg II-44]</span>
+indignity, especially after having taken a firm stand. I
+conceive I should be lacking in duty if I did not report
+this rapid and unfortunate change in public feeling, which
+seems likely to become permanent unless facts are quickly
+made public which may change it.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>There are many expressions of such feelings in Page's
+letters of this time. They brought only the most perfunctory
+acknowledgment from the White House. On
+January 3, 1916, Page sent the President a mass of clippings
+from the British press, all criticizing the Wilson Administration
+in unrestrained terms. In his comment on
+these, he writes the President:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Public opinion, both official and unofficial, is expressed
+by these newspaper comments, with far greater restraint
+than it is expressed in private conversation. Ridicule of
+the Administration runs through the programmes of the
+theatres; it inspires hundreds of cartoons; it is a staple of
+conversation at private dinners and in the clubs. The
+most serious class of Englishmen, including the best
+friends of the United States, feel that the Administration's
+reliance on notes has reduced our Government to a third-or
+fourth-rate power. There is even talk of spheres of
+German influence in the United States as in China. No
+government could fall lower in English opinion than we
+shall fall if more notes are sent to Austria or to Germany.
+The only way to keep any shred of English respect is the
+immediate dismissal without more parleying of every
+German and Austrian official at Washington. Nobody
+here believes that such an act would provoke war.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can do no real service by mincing matters. My
+previous telegrams and letters have been purposely restrained
+as this one is. We have now come to the parting
+of the ways. If English respect be worth preserving
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-45" id="page2-45"></a>[pg II-45]</span>
+at all, it can be preserved only by immediate action.
+Any other course than immediate severing of diplomatic
+relations with both Germany and Austria will deepen the
+English opinion into a conviction that the Administration
+was insincere when it sent the <i>Lusitania</i> notes and
+that its notes and protests need not be taken seriously on
+any subject. And English opinion is allied opinion. The
+Italian Ambassador<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12" /><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> said to me, 'What has happened?
+The United States of to-day is not the United States I
+knew fifteen years ago, when I lived in Washington.'
+French officers and members of the Government who
+come here express themselves even more strongly than
+do the British. The British newspapers to-day publish
+translations of ridicule of the United States from German
+papers.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+London,<br />
+January 5, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>I wish&mdash;an impossible thing of course&mdash;that some sort
+of guidance could be given to the American correspondents
+of the English newspapers. Almost every day they telegraph
+about the visits of the Austrian Charg&eacute; or the
+German Ambassador to the State Department to assure
+Mr. Lansing that their governments will of course make a
+satisfactory explanation of the latest torpedo-act in the
+Mediterranean or to &quot;take one further step in reaching a
+satisfactory understanding about the <i>Lusitania</i>.&quot; They
+usually go on to say also that more notes are in preparation
+to Germany or to Austria. The impression made upon
+the European mind is that the German and Austrian
+officials in Washington are leading the Administration on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-46" id="page2-46"></a>[pg II-46]</span>
+to endless discussion, endless notes, endless hesitation.
+Nobody in Europe regards their pledges or promises as
+worth anything at all: the <i>Arabic</i> follows the <i>Lusitania</i>,
+the <i>Hesperian</i> follows the <i>Arabic</i>, the <i>Persia</i> follows the
+<i>Ancona</i>. &quot;Still conferences and notes continue,&quot; these
+people say, &quot;proving that the American Government,
+which took so proper and high a stand in the <i>Lusitania</i>
+notes, is paralyzed&mdash;in a word is hoodwinked and 'worked'
+by the Germans.&quot; And so long as these diplomatic
+representatives are permitted to remain in the United
+States, &quot;to explain,&quot; &quot;to parley&quot; and to declare that the
+destruction of American lives and property is disavowed
+by their governments, atrocities on sea and land will of
+course continue; and they feel that our Government, by
+keeping these German and Austrian representatives in
+Washington, condones and encourages them and their
+governments.</p>
+
+<p>This is a temperate and even restrained statement of the
+English feeling and (as far as I can make out) of the whole
+European feeling.</p>
+
+<p>It has been said here that every important journal
+published in neutral or allied European countries, daily,
+weekly, or monthly, which deals with public affairs, has
+expressed a loss of respect for the United States Government
+and that most of them make continuous severe
+criticisms (with surprise and regret) of our failure by action
+to live up to the level of our <i>Lusitania</i> notes. I had
+(judiciously) two American journalists, resident here&mdash;men
+of judgment and character&mdash;to inquire how true this
+declaration is. After talking with neutral and allied
+journalists here and with men whose business it is to read
+the journals of the Continent, they reported that this
+declaration is substantially true&mdash;that the whole European
+press (outside Germany and its allies) uses the same tone
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-47" id="page2-47"></a>[pg II-47]</span>
+toward our Government that the English press uses&mdash;to-day,
+disappointment verging on contempt; and many
+of them explain our keeping diplomatic intercourse with
+Germany by saying that we are afraid of the German vote,
+or of civil war, or that the peace-at-any-price people really
+rule the United States and have paralyzed our power to
+act&mdash;even to cut off diplomatic relations with governments
+that have insulted and defied us.</p>
+
+<p>Another (similar) declaration is that practically all men
+of public influence in England and in the European allied
+and neutral countries have publicly or privately expressed
+themselves to the same effect. The report that I have
+about this is less definite than about the newspapers, for,
+of course, no one can say just what proportion of men of
+public influence have so expressed themselves; but the
+number who have so expressed themselves is overwhelming.</p>
+
+<p>In this Kingdom, where I can myself form some opinion
+more or less accurate, and where I can check or verify my
+opinion by various methods&mdash;I am afraid, as I have frequently
+already reported, that the generation now living
+will never wholly regain the respect for our Government
+that it had a year ago. I will give you three little indications
+of this feeling; it would be easy to write down hundreds
+of them:</p>
+
+<p>(One) The governing class: Mr. X [a cabinet member]
+told Mrs. Page a few nights ago that for sentimental reasons
+only he would be gratified to see the United States in
+the war along with the Allies, but that merely sentimental
+reasons were not a sufficient reason for war&mdash;by no means;
+that he felt most grateful for the sympathetic attitude of
+the large mass of the American people, that he had no
+right to expect anything from our Government, whose
+neutral position was entirely proper. Then he added;
+&quot;But what I can't for the life of me understand is your
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-48" id="page2-48"></a>[pg II-48]</span>
+Government's failure to express its disapproval of the
+German utter disregard of its <i>Lusitania</i> notes. After
+eight months, it has done nothing but write more notes.
+My love for America, I must confess, is offended at this
+inaction and&mdash;puzzled. I can't understand it. You
+will pardon me, I am sure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>(Two) &quot;Middle Class&quot; opinion: A common nickname
+for Americans in the financial and newspaper districts of
+London is &quot;Too-prouds.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>(Three) The man in the street: At one of the moving
+picture shows in a large theatre a little while ago they filled
+in an interval by throwing on the screen the picture of the
+monarch, or head of state, and of the flag of each of the
+principal nations. When the American picture appeared,
+there was such hissing and groaning as caused the managers
+hastily to move that picture off the screen.</p>
+
+<p>Some time ago I wrote House of some such incidents
+and expressions as these; and he wrote me that they were
+only part and parcel of the continuous British criticism
+of their own Government&mdash;in other words, a part of the
+passing hysteria of war. This remark shows how House
+was living in an atmosphere of illusion.</p>
+
+<p>As the matter stands to-day our Government has sunk
+lower, as regards British and European opinion, than it
+has ever been in our time, not as a part of the hysteria of
+war but as a result of this process of reasoning, whether it
+be right or wrong:</p>
+
+<p>We said that we should hold the Germans to strict accountability
+on account of the <i>Lusitania</i>. We have not
+settled that yet and we still allow the German Ambassador
+to discuss it after the <i>Hesperian</i> and other such acts
+showed that his <i>Arabic</i> pledge was worthless.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Lusitania</i> grows larger and larger in European
+memory and imagination. It looks as if it would become
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-49" id="page2-49"></a>[pg II-49]</span>
+the great type of war atrocities and barbarities. I have
+seen pictures of the drowned women and children used
+even on Christmas cards. And there is documentary
+proof in our hands that the warning, which was really an
+advance announcement, of that disaster was paid for by
+the German Ambassador and charged to his Government.
+It is the <i>Lusitania</i> that has caused European opinion to
+regard our foreign policy as weak. It is not the wish for
+us to go to war. No such general wish exists.</p>
+
+<p>I do not know, Mr. President, who else, if anybody,
+puts these facts before you with this complete frankness.
+But I can do no less and do my duty.</p>
+
+<p>No Englishman&mdash;except two who were quite intimate
+friends&mdash;has spoken to me about our Government for
+months, but I detect all the time a tone of pity and grief
+in their studied courtesy and in their avoidance of the
+subject. And they talk with every other American in
+this Kingdom. It is often made unpleasant for Americans
+in the clubs and in the pursuit of their regular business
+and occupations; and it is always our inaction about
+the <i>Lusitania</i>. Our controversy with the British Government
+causes little feeling and that is a sort of echo of the
+<i>Lusitania</i>. They feel that we have not lived up to our
+promises and professions.</p>
+
+<p>That is the whole story.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Believe me always heartily,<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>This dismissal of Dumba and of the Attach&eacute;s has had
+little more effect on opinion here than the dismissal of
+the Turkish Ambassador<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13" /><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>. Sending these was regarded as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-50" id="page2-50"></a>[pg II-50]</span>
+merely kicking the dogs of the man who had stolen our
+sheep.</p>
+
+
+<h3>VI</h3>
+
+<p>One of the reasons why Page felt so intensely about
+American policy at this time was his conviction that the
+severance of diplomatic relations, in the latter part of 1915,
+or the early part of 1916, in itself would have brought the
+European War to an end. This was a conviction from
+which he never departed. Count Bernstorff was industriously
+creating the impression in the United States that
+his dismissal would immediately cause war between Germany
+and the United States, and there is little doubt
+that the Administration accepted this point of view. But
+Page believed that this was nothing but Prussian bluff.
+The severance of diplomatic relations at that time, in
+Page's opinion, would have convinced the Germans of the
+hopelessness of their cause. In spite of the British
+blockade, Germany was drawing enormous quantities of
+food supplies from the United States, and without these
+supplies she could not maintain indefinitely her resistance.
+The severance of diplomatic relations would
+naturally have been accompanied by an embargo suspending
+trade between the United States and the Fatherland.
+Moreover, the consideration that was mainly
+leading Germany to hope for success was the belief that
+she could embroil the United States and Great Britain
+over the blockade. A break with Germany would of
+course mean an end to that manoeuvre. Page regarded
+all Mr. Wilson's attempts to make peace in 1914 and early
+1915&mdash;before the <i>Lusitania</i>&mdash;as mistakes, for reasons that
+have already been set forth. Now, however, he believed
+that the President had a real opportunity to end
+the war and the unparalleled suffering which it was causing.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-51" id="page2-51"></a>[pg II-51]</span>
+The mere dismissal of Bernstorff, in the Ambassador's
+opinion, would accomplish this result.</p>
+
+<p>In a communication sent to the President on February
+15, 1916, he made this plain.</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+February 15, 7 P.M.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The Cabinet has directed the Censor to suppress, as far
+as he can with prudence, comment which is unfavourable
+to the United States. He has taken this action because
+the public feeling against the Administration is constantly
+increasing. Because the <i>Lusitania</i> controversy has been
+going on so long, and because the Germans are using it in
+their renewed U-boat campaign, the opinion of this country
+has reached a point where only prompt action can
+bring a turn in the tide. Therefore my loyalty to you
+would not be complete if I should refrain from sending,
+in the most respectful terms, the solemn conviction which
+I hold about our opportunity and our duty.</p>
+
+<p>If you immediately refuse to have further parley or to
+yield one jot or tittle of your original <i>Lusitania</i> notes, and
+if you at once break diplomatic relations with the German
+Empire, and then declare the most vigorous embargo of
+the Central Powers, you will quickly end the war. There
+will be an immediate collapse in German credit. If there
+are any Allies who are wavering, such action will hold
+them in line. Certain European neutrals&mdash;Sweden, Rumania,
+Greece, and others&mdash;will put up a firm resistance
+to Germanic influences and certain of them will take part
+with Great Britain and France. There will be an end at
+once to the German propaganda, which is now world-wide.
+The moral weight of our country will be a determining
+influence and bring an early peace. The credit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-52" id="page2-52"></a>[pg II-52]</span>
+you will receive for such a decision will make you immortal
+and even the people of Germany will be forever grateful.</p>
+
+<p>It is my conviction that we would not be called upon
+to fire a gun or to lose one human life.</p>
+
+<p>Above all, such an action will settle the whole question
+of permanent peace. The absolute and grateful loyalty
+of the whole British Empire, of the British Fleet, and of
+all the Allied countries will be ours. The great English-speaking
+nations will be able to control the details of the
+peace and this without any formal alliance. There will
+be an incalculable saving of human life and of treasure.
+Such an act will make it possible for Germany to give in
+honourably and with good grace because the whole world
+will be against her. Her bankrupt and blockaded people
+will bring such pressure to bear that the decision will be
+hastened.</p>
+
+<p>The sympathies of the American people will be brought
+in line with the Administration.</p>
+
+<p>If we settle the <i>Lusitania</i> question by compromising
+in any way your original demands, or if we permit it to
+drag on longer, America can have no part in bringing the
+war to an end. The current of allied opinion will run so
+strongly against the Administration that no censorship
+and no friendly interference by an allied government
+can stem the distrust of our Government which is now so
+strong in Europe.</p>
+
+<p>We shall gain by any further delay only a dangerous,
+thankless, and opulent isolation. The <i>Lusitania</i> is the
+turning point in our history. The time to act is now.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1" /><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The Ambassador's granddaughter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2" /><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> &quot;A Cycle of Adams Letters, 1861-1865,&quot; edited by
+Worthington Chauncey Ford. Vol. I, p. 84.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3" /><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> &quot;The Life and Letters of John Hay,&quot; by William Roscoe
+Thayer. Vol. II, p. 166.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4" /><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> On September 6th, certain documents seriously compromising
+Dr. Constantin Dumba, Austro-Hungarian Ambassador to the United States,
+were published in the British press. They disclosed that Dr. Dumba was
+fomenting strikes in the United States and conducting other intrigues.
+The American Government gave Dr. Dumba his passports on September 17th.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5" /><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> August 26th, Count Bernstorff gave a pledge to the United
+States Government, that, in future, German submarines would not attack
+liners without warning. This promise was almost immediately violated.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6" /><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> Sir Lionel Sackville-West was British Minister to the
+United States from 1881 to 1888. In the latter year a letter was
+published which he had written to an American citizen of British origin,
+the gist of which was that the re&euml;lection of President Cleveland would
+be of advantage to British interests. For this gross interference in
+American domestic affairs, President Cleveland immediately handed Sir
+Lionel his passports. The incident ended his diplomatic career.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7" /><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> In this passage the Ambassador touches on one of the
+bitterest controversies of the war. In order completely to understand
+the issues involved and to obtain Lord Haldane's view, the reader should
+consult the very valuable book recently published by Lord Haldane:
+&quot;Before the War.&quot; Chapter II tells the story of Lord Haldane's visit to
+the Kaiser, and succeeding chapters give the reasons why the creation of
+a huge British army in preparation for the war was not a simple matter.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8" /><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> The italics are Page's.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9" /><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> Viscount Bryce, author of &quot;The American Commonwealth&quot; and
+British Ambassador to the United States, 1907-1913.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10" /><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> In a communication sent February 10, 1915, President
+Wilson warned the German Government that he would hold it to a &quot;strict
+accountability&quot; for the loss of American lives by illegal submarine
+attack.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11" /><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> A reference to the Anglo-French loan for $500,000,000,
+placed in the United States in the autumn of 1915.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12" /><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> The Marquis Imperiali.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13" /><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Rustem Bey, the Turkish Ambassador to the United States,
+was sent home early in the war, for publishing indiscreet newspaper and
+magazine articles.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-53" id="page2-53"></a>[pg II-53]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV" />CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h3>THE AMBASSADOR AND THE LAWYERS</h3>
+
+<p>References in the foregoing letters show that
+Page was still having his troubles over the blockade.
+In the latter part of 1915, indeed, the negotiations with
+Sir Edward Grey on this subject had reached their second
+stage. The failure of Washington to force upon Great
+Britain an entirely new code of naval warfare&mdash;the Declaration
+of London&mdash;has already been described. This
+failure had left both the British Foreign Office and the
+American State Department in an unsatisfactory frame
+of mind. The Foreign Office regarded Washington with
+suspicion, for the American attempt to compel Great
+Britain to adopt a code of naval warfare which was exceedingly
+unfavourable to that country and exceedingly
+favourable to Germany, was susceptible of a sinister interpretation.
+The British rejection of these overtures, on
+the other hand, had evidently irritated the international
+lawyers at Washington. Mr. Lansing now abandoned
+his efforts to revolutionize maritime warfare and confined
+himself to specific protests and complaints. His communications
+to the London Embassy dealt chiefly with particular
+ships and cargoes. Yet his persistence in regarding
+all these problems from a strictly legalistic point of view
+Page regarded as indicating a restricted sense of statesmanship.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-54" id="page2-54"></a>[pg II-54]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+London, August 4, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>... The lawyer-way in which the Department
+goes on in its dealings with Great Britain is losing us the
+only great international friendship that we have any
+chance of keeping or that is worth having. Whatever
+real principle we have to uphold with Great Britain&mdash;that's
+all right. I refer only to the continuous series of
+nagging incidents&mdash;always criticism, criticism, criticism
+of small points&mdash;points that we have to yield at last, and
+never anything constructive. I'll illustrate what I mean
+by a few incidents that I can recall from memory. If I
+looked up the record, I should find a very, very much
+larger list.</p>
+
+<p>(1) We insisted and insisted and insisted, not once but
+half a dozen times, at the very beginning of the war, on
+England's adoption of the Declaration of London entire
+in spite of the fact that Parliament had distinctly declined
+to adopt it. Of course we had to give in&mdash;after we had
+produced a distinctly unfriendly atmosphere and much
+feeling.</p>
+
+<p>(2) We denied the British right to put copper on the
+contraband list&mdash;much to their annoyance. Of course
+we had at last to acquiesce. They were within their
+rights.</p>
+
+<p>(3) We protested against bringing ships into port to
+examine them. Of course we had to give in&mdash;after producing
+irritation.</p>
+
+<p>(4) We made a great fuss about stopped telegrams.
+We have no case at all; but, even after acknowledging
+that we have no case, every Pouch continues to bring
+telegrams with the request that I ask an explanation why
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-55" id="page2-55"></a>[pg II-55]</span>
+they were stopped. Such explanations are practically
+refused. I have 500 telegrams. Periodically I wire the
+state of the case and ask for more specific instructions.
+I never get an answer to these requests. But the Department
+continues to send the telegrams! We confessedly
+have no case here; and this method can produce nothing
+but irritation.</p>
+
+<p>I could extend this list to 100 examples&mdash;of mere lawyer-like
+methods&mdash;mere useless technicalities and objections
+which it is obvious in the beginning cannot be maintained.
+A similar method is now going on about cotton. Now
+this is not the way Sir Edward Grey takes up business.
+It's not the way I've done business all my life, nor that
+you have, nor other frank men who mean what they say
+and do not say things they do not mean. The constant
+continuation of this method is throwing away the real regard
+and confidence of the British Government and of the
+British public&mdash;very fast, too.</p>
+
+<p>I sometimes wish there were not a lawyer in the world.
+I heard the President say once that it took him twenty
+years to recover from his legal habit of mind. Well, his
+Administration is suffering from it to a degree that is
+pathetic and that will leave bad results for 100 years.</p>
+
+<p>I suspect that in spite of all the fuss we have made we
+shall at last come to acknowledge the British blockade;
+for it is pretty nearly parallel to the United States blockade
+of the South during our Civil War. The only difference
+is&mdash;they can't make the blockade of the Baltic
+against the traffic from the Scandinavian neutral states
+effective. That's a good technical objection; but, since
+practically all the traffic between those States and Germany
+is in our products, much of the real force of it is
+lost.</p>
+
+<p>If a protest is made against cotton being made contraband&mdash;it'll
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-56" id="page2-56"></a>[pg II-56]</span>
+amount to nothing and give only irritation.
+It will only play into Hoke Smith<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14" /><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>&mdash;German hands and
+accomplish nothing here. We make as much fuss about
+points which we have silently to yield later as about a
+real principle. Hence they all say that the State Department
+is merely captious, and they pay less and less attention
+to it and care less and less for American opinion&mdash;if
+only they can continue to get munitions. We are reducing
+English regard to this purely mercenary basis....</p>
+
+<p>We are&mdash;under lawyers' quibbling&mdash;drifting apart very
+rapidly, to our complete isolation from the sympathy of
+the whole world.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours forever sincerely,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Page refers in this letter to the &quot;blockade&quot;; this was
+the term which the British Government itself used to describe
+its restrictive measures against German commerce,
+and it rapidly passed into common speech. Yet the truth
+is that Great Britain never declared an actual blockade
+against Germany. A realization of this fact will clear up
+much that is obscure in the naval warfare of the next two
+years. At the beginning of the Civil War, President
+Lincoln laid an interdict on all the ports of the Confederacy;
+the ships of all nations were forbidden entering or
+leaving them: any ship which attempted to evade this
+restriction, and was captured doing so, was confiscated,
+with its cargo. That was a blockade, as the term has
+always been understood. A blockade, it is well to keep
+in mind, is a procedure which aims at completely closing
+the blockaded country from all commercial intercourse
+with the world. A blockading navy, if the blockade is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-57" id="page2-57"></a>[pg II-57]</span>
+successful, or &quot;effective,&quot; converts the whole country into
+a beleaguered fortress, just as an army, surrounding a
+single town, prevents goods and people from entering or
+leaving it. Precisely as it is the purpose of a besieging
+army to starve a particular city or territory into submission,
+so it is the aim of a blockading fleet to enforce the
+same treatment on the nation as a whole. It is also essential
+to keep in mind that the question of contraband has
+nothing to do with a blockade, for, under this drastic
+method of making warfare, everything is contraband.
+Contraband is a term applied to cargoes, such as rifles,
+machine guns, and the like, which are needed in the prosecution
+of war.</p>
+
+<p>That a belligerent nation has the right to intercept
+such munitions on the way to its enemy has been admitted
+for centuries. Differences of opinion have raged only as
+to the extent to which this right could be carried&mdash;the
+particular articles, that is, that constituted contraband,
+and the methods adopted in exercising it. But the important
+point to be kept in mind is that where there is
+a blockade, there is no contraband list&mdash;for everything
+automatically becomes contraband. The seizure of contraband
+on the high seas is a war measure which is availed
+of only in cases in which the blockade has not been established.</p>
+
+<p>Great Britain, when she declared war on Germany, did
+not follow President Lincoln's example and lay the whole
+of the German coast under interdict. Perhaps one reason
+for this inaction was a desire not unduly to offend neutrals,
+especially the United States; but the more impelling motive
+was geographical. The fact is that a blockade of the
+German seacoast would accomplish little in the way of
+keeping materials out of Germany. A glance at the map
+of northwestern Europe will make this fact clear. In the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-58" id="page2-58"></a>[pg II-58]</span>
+first place the seacoast of Germany is a small affair. In
+the North Sea the German coast is a little indentation,
+not more than two hundred miles long, wedged in between
+the longer coastlines of Holland and Denmark; in the
+Baltic it is somewhat more extensive, but the entrances
+to this sea are so circuitous and treacherous that the suggestion
+of a blockade here is not a practicable one. The
+greatest ports of Germany are located on this little North
+Sea coastline or on its rivers&mdash;Hamburg and Bremen. It
+might therefore be assumed that any nation which successfully
+blockaded these North Sea ports would have strangled
+the commerce of Germany. That is far from being the
+case. The point is that the political boundaries of Germany
+are simply fictions, when economic considerations
+are involved. Holland, on the west, and Denmark, on
+the north, are as much a part of the German transportation
+system as though these two countries were parts of
+the German Empire. Their territories and the territories
+of Germany are contiguous; the railroad and the canal
+systems of Germany, Holland, and Denmark are practically
+one. Such ports as Rotterdam, Amsterdam, and
+Copenhagen are just as useful to Germany for purposes of
+commerce as are Hamburg and Bremen, and, in fact, a
+special commercial arrangement with Rotterdam has
+made that city practically a port of Germany since 1868.
+These considerations show how ineffective would be a
+blockade of the German coast which did not also comprehend
+the coast of Holland and Denmark. Germany
+could still conduct her commerce through these neighbouring
+countries. And at this point the great difficulty
+arose. A blockade is an act of war and can be applied
+only to a country upon which war has been declared.
+Great Britain had declared war on Germany and could
+therefore legally close her ports; she had not declared war
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-59" id="page2-59"></a>[pg II-59]</span>
+on Holland and Denmark, and therefore could not use the
+same measure against those friendly countries. Consequently
+the blockade was useless to Great Britain; and so,
+in the first six months of the war, the Admiralty fell back
+upon the milder system of declaring certain articles contraband
+of war and seizing ships that were suspected of
+carrying them to Germany.</p>
+
+<p>A geographical accident had apparently largely destroyed
+the usefulness of the British fleet and had guaranteed
+Germany an unending supply of those foodstuffs
+without which she could not maintain her resistance for
+any extended period. Was Great Britain called upon to
+accept this situation and to deny herself the use of the
+blockade in this, the greatest struggle in her history?
+Unless the British fleet could stop cargoes which were
+really destined to Germany but which were bound for
+neutral ports, Great Britain could not win the war; if the
+British fleet could intercept such cargoes, then the chances
+strongly favoured victory. The experts of the Foreign
+Office searched the history of blockades and found something
+which resembled a precedent in the practices of the
+American Navy during the Civil War. In that conflict
+Nassau, in the Bahamas, and Matamoros, in Mexico,
+played a part not unlike that played by Rotterdam and
+Copenhagen in the recent struggle. These were both
+neutral ports and therefore outside the jurisdiction of the
+United States, just as Rotterdam and Copenhagen were
+outside the jurisdiction of Great Britain. They were the
+ports of powers with which the United States was at
+peace, and therefore they could not be blockaded, just as
+Amsterdam and Copenhagen were ports of powers with
+which Great Britain was now at peace.</p>
+
+<p>Trade from Great Britain to the Bahamas and Mexico
+was ostensibly trade from one neutral port to another
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-60" id="page2-60"></a>[pg II-60]</span>
+neutral port in the same sense as was trade from the
+United States to Holland and Denmark. Yet the fact is
+that the &quot;neutrality&quot; of this trade, in the Civil War, from
+Great Britain to the Bahamas and Mexico, was the most
+transparent subterfuge; such trade was not &quot;neutral&quot; in
+the slightest degree. It consisted almost entirely of
+contraband of war and was intended for the armies of the
+Confederate States, then in arms against the Federal
+Government. What is the reason, our Government
+asked, that these gentle and unwarlike inhabitants of the
+Bahamas have so suddenly developed such an enormous
+appetite for percussion caps, rifles, cannon, and other
+instruments of warfare? The answer, of course, lay upon
+the surface; the cargoes were intended for reshipment into
+the Southern States, and they were, in fact, immediately
+so reshipped. The American Government, which has
+always regarded realities as more important than logic,
+brushed aside the consideration that this trade was conducted
+through neutral ports, unhesitatingly seized these
+ships and condemned both the ships and their cargoes.
+Its action was without legal precedent, but our American
+courts devised a new principle of international law to
+cover the case&mdash;that of &quot;continuous voyage&quot; or &quot;ultimate
+destination.&quot; Under this new doctrine it was maintained
+that cargoes of contraband could be seized anywhere upon
+the high seas, even though they were going from one neutral
+port to another, if it could be demonstrated that this
+contraband was really on its way to the enemy. The
+mere fact that it was transshipped at an intermediate
+neutral port was not important; the important point was
+the &quot;ultimate destination.&quot; British shippers naturally
+raged over these decisions, but they met with little sympathy
+from their own government. Great Britain filed
+no protest against the doctrine of &quot;continuous voyage,&quot;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-61" id="page2-61"></a>[pg II-61]</span>
+but recognized its fundamental soundness, and since 1865
+this doctrine has been a part of international law.</p>
+
+<p>Great Britain's good sense in acquiescing in our Civil
+War practices now met its reward; for these decisions of
+American courts proved a godsend in her hour of trial.
+The one neutral from which trouble was anticipated was
+the United States. What better way to meet this situation
+than to base British maritime warfare upon the decisions
+of American courts? What more ideal solution of the
+problem than to make Chief Justice Chase, of the United
+States Supreme Court, really the author of the British
+&quot;blockade&quot; against Germany? The policy of the British
+Foreign Office was to use the sea power of Great Britain
+to crush the enemy, but to do it in a way that would
+not alienate American sympathy and American support;
+clearly the one way in which both these ends could be
+attained was to frame these war measures upon the
+pronouncements of American prize courts. In a broad sense
+this is precisely what Sir Edward Grey now proceeded to
+do. There was a difference, of course, which Great
+Britain's enemies in the American Senate&mdash;such men as
+Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, and Senator Thomas
+Walsh, of Montana&mdash;proceeded to point out; but it was a
+difference of degree. Great Britain based her blockade
+measures upon the American principle of &quot;ultimate destination,&quot;
+but it was necessary considerably to extend
+that doctrine in order to meet the necessities of the new
+situation. President Lincoln had applied this principle
+to absolute contraband, such as powder, shells, rifles, and
+other munitions of war. Great Britain now proceeded to
+apply it to that nebulous class of commodities known as
+&quot;conditional contraband,&quot; the chief of which was foodstuffs.
+If the United States, while a war was pending,
+could evolve the idea of &quot;ultimate destination&quot; and apply
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-62" id="page2-62"></a>[pg II-62]</span>
+it to absolute contraband, could not Great Britain, while
+another war was pending, carry it one degree further and
+make it include conditional contraband? Thus reasoned
+the British Foreign Office. To this Mr. Lansing replied
+that to stop foodstuffs on the way to Germany through a
+neutral port was simply to blockade a neutral port, and
+that this was something utterly without precedent. Seizing
+contraband is not an act of war against the nation
+whose ships are seized; blockading a port is an act of war;
+what right therefore had Great Britain to adopt measures
+against Holland, Denmark, and Sweden which virtually
+amounted to a blockade?</p>
+
+<p>This is the reason why Great Britain, in the pronouncement
+of March 1, 1915, and the Order in Council of March
+11, 1915, did not describe these measures as a &quot;blockade.&quot;
+President Wilson described his attack on Mexico in 1914
+as &quot;measures short of war,&quot; and now someone referred to
+the British restrictions on neutral commerce as &quot;measures
+short of blockade.&quot; The British sought another escape
+from their predicament by justifying this proceeding,
+not on the general principles of warfare, but on the ground
+of reprisal. Germany declared her submarine warfare
+on merchant ships on February 4, 1915; Great Britain
+replied with her announcement of March 1st, in which
+she declared her intention of preventing &quot;commodities of
+any kind from reaching or leaving Germany.&quot; The British
+advanced this procedure as a retaliation for the illegal
+warfare which Germany had declared on merchant shipping,
+both that of the enemy and of neutrals. &quot;The
+British and French governments will therefore hold
+themselves free to detain and take into port ships carrying
+goods of presumed enemy destination, ownership, and
+origin.&quot; This sentence accurately describes the purposes
+of a blockade&mdash;to cut the enemy off from all commercial
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-63" id="page2-63"></a>[pg II-63]</span>
+relations with the outside world; yet the procedure Great
+Britain now proposed to follow was not that of a blockade.
+When this interdict is classically laid, any ship that attempts
+to run the lines is penalized with confiscation,
+along with its cargo; but such a penalty was not to be
+exacted in the present instance. Great Britain now proposed
+to purchase cargoes of conditional contraband discovered
+on seized ships and return the ships themselves to
+their owners, and this soon became the established practice.
+Not only did the Foreign Office purchase all cotton
+which was seized on its way to Germany, but it took measures
+to maintain the price in the markets of the world.
+In the succeeding months Southern statesmen in both
+Houses of Congress railed against the British seizure of
+their great staple, yet the fact was that cotton was all this
+time steadily advancing in price. When Senator Hoke
+Smith made a long speech advocating an embargo on the
+shipment of munitions as a punishment to Great Britain
+for stopping American cotton on the way to Germany,
+the acute John Sharp Williams, of Mississippi, arose in the
+Senate and completely annihilated the Georgia politician
+by demonstrating how the Southern planters were growing
+rich out of the war.</p>
+
+<p>That the so-called &quot;blockade&quot; situation was a tortuous
+one must be apparent from this attempt to set forth the
+salient facts. The basic point was that there could be no
+blockade of Germany unless the neutral ports of contiguous
+countries were also blockaded, and Great Britain
+believed that she had found a precedent for doing this in
+the operations of the American Navy in the Civil War.
+But it is obvious that the situation was one which would
+provide a great feast for the lawyers. That Page sympathized
+with this British determination to keep foodstuffs
+out of Germany, his correspondence shows. Day
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-64" id="page2-64"></a>[pg II-64]</span>
+after day the &quot;protests&quot; from Washington rained upon
+his desk. The history of our foreign relations for 1915
+and 1916 is largely made up of an interminable correspondence
+dealing with seized cargoes, and the routine of
+the Embassy was an unending nightmare of &quot;demands,&quot;
+&quot;complaints,&quot; &quot;precedents,&quot; &quot;cases,&quot; &quot;notes,&quot; &quot;detentions&quot;
+of Chicago meats, of Southern cotton, and the like.
+The American Embassy in London contains hundreds of
+volumes of correspondence which took place during Page's
+incumbency; more material has accumulated for those five
+years than for the preceding century and a quarter of the
+Government's existence. The greater part of this mass
+deals with intercepted cargoes.</p>
+
+<p>The following extract from a letter which Page wrote
+at this time gives a fair idea of the atmosphere that prevailed
+in London while this correspondence was engaging
+the Ambassador's mind:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The truth is, in their present depressed mood, the
+United States is forgotten&mdash;everything's forgotten but
+the one great matter in hand. For the moment at least,
+the English do not care what we do or what we think or
+whether we exist&mdash;except those critics of things-in-general
+who use us as a target since they must take a crack at
+somebody. And I simply cannot describe the curious
+effect that is produced on men here by the apparent utter
+lack of understanding in the United States of the phase
+the war has now entered and of the mood that this phase
+has brought. I pick up an American paper eight days old
+and read solemn evidence to show that the British Government
+is interrupting our trade in order to advance
+its own at our expense, whereas the truth is that the
+British Government hasn't given six seconds' thought in
+six months to anybody's trade&mdash;not even its own.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-65" id="page2-65"></a>[pg II-65]</span>
+When I am asked to inquire why Pfister and Schmidt's
+telegram from New York to Schimmelpfenig and Johann
+in Holland was stopped (the reason is reasonably obvious),
+I try to picture to myself the British Minister in Washington
+making inquiry of our Government on the day after
+Bull Run, why the sailing boat loaded with persimmon
+blocks to make golf clubs is delayed in Hampton Roads.</p>
+
+<p>I think I have neither heard nor read anything from
+the United States in three months that didn't seem so
+remote as to suggest the captain of the sailing ship from
+Hongkong who turned up at Southampton in February
+and had not even heard that there was a war. All day
+long I see and hear women who come to ask if I can make
+inquiry about their sons and husbands, &quot;dead or missing,&quot;
+with an interval given to a description of a man half of
+whose body was splashed against a brick wall last night on
+the Strand when a Zeppelin bomb tore up the street and
+made projectiles of the pavement; as I walk to and from
+the Embassy the Park is full of wounded and their nurses;
+every man I see tells me of a new death; every member of
+the Government talks about military events or of Balkan
+venality; the man behind the counter at the cigar store
+reads me part of a letter just come from his son, telling
+how he advanced over a pile of dead Germans and one of
+them grunted and turned under his feet-they (the English
+alone) are spending $25,000,000 a day to keep this
+march going over dead Germans; then comes a telegram
+predicting blue ruin for American importers and a
+cheerless Christmas for American children if a cargo of
+German toys be not quickly released at Rotterdam, and
+I dimly recall the benevolent unction with which American
+children last Christmas sent a shipload of toys to
+this side of the world&mdash;many of them for German children&mdash;to
+the tune of &quot;God bless us all&quot;&mdash;do you wonder we
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-66" id="page2-66"></a>[pg II-66]</span>
+often have to pinch ourselves to find out if we are we; and
+what year of the Lord is it? What is the vital thing&mdash;the
+killing of fifty people last night by a Zeppelin within
+sight of St. Paul's on one side and of Westminster Abbey
+on the other, or is it making representations to Sir Edward
+Grey, who has hardly slept for a week because his
+despatches from Sofia, Athens, Belgrade, and Salonika
+come at all hours, each possibly reporting on which side
+a new government may throw its army&mdash;to decide perhaps
+the fate of the canal leading to Asia, the vast British
+Asiatic empire at stake&mdash;is it making representations to
+Sir Edward while his mind is thus occupied, that it is of
+the greatest importance to the United States Government
+that a particular German who is somewhere in this Kingdom
+shall be permitted to go to the United States because
+he knows how to dye sealskins and our sealskins are
+yet undyed and the winter is coming? There will be no
+new sealskins here, for every man and woman must give
+half his income to keep the cigarman's son marching over
+dead Germans, some of whom grunt and turn under his
+feet. Dumba is at Falmouth to-day and gets just two
+lines in the newspapers. Nothing and nobody gets three
+lines unless he or it in some way furthers the war. Every
+morning the Washington despatches say that Mr. Lansing
+is about to send a long note to England. England
+won't read it till there comes a lull in the fighting or in
+the breathless diplomatic struggle with the Balkans.
+London and the Government are now in much the same
+mood that Washington and Lincoln's administration
+were in after Lee had crossed the Potomac on his way to
+Gettysburg. Northcliffe, the Lord of Yellow Journals,
+but an uncommonly brilliant fellow, has taken to his bed
+from sheer nervous worry. &quot;The revelations that are
+imminent,&quot; says he, &quot;will shake the world&mdash;the incompetence
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-67" id="page2-67"></a>[pg II-67]</span>
+of the Government, the losses along the Dardanelles,
+the throwing away of British chances in the Balkans,
+perhaps the actual defeat of the Allies.&quot; I regard
+Lord Northcliffe less as an entity than as a symptom.
+But he is always very friendly to us and he knows the
+United States better than any Englishman that I know
+except Bryce. He and Bryce are both much concerned
+about our Note's coming just &quot;at this most distressing
+time.&quot; &quot;If it come when we are calmer, no matter; but
+now it cannot receive attention and many will feel that
+the United States has hit on a most unhappy moment&mdash;almost
+a cruel moment&mdash;to remind us of our sins.&quot;&mdash;That's
+the substance of what they say.</p>
+
+<p>Overwork, or perhaps mainly the indescribable strain
+on the nerves and vitality of men, caused by this experience,
+for which in fact men are not built, puts one of
+our staff after another in bed. None has been seriously
+sick: the malady takes some form of &quot;grip.&quot; On the
+whole we've been pretty lucky in spite of this almost
+regular temporary breakdown of one man after another.
+I've so far escaped. But I am grieved to hear that
+Whitlock is abed&mdash;&quot;no physical ailment whatever&mdash;just
+worn out,&quot; his doctor says. I have tried to induce him
+and his wife to come here and make me a visit; but one
+characteristic of this war-malady is the conviction of the
+victim that he is somehow necessary to hold the world
+together. About twice a week I get to the golf links and
+take the risk of the world's falling apart and thus escape
+both illness and its illusions.</p></div>
+
+<p>&quot;I cannot begin to express my deep anxiety and even
+uneasiness about the relations of these two great governments
+and peoples,&quot; Page wrote about this time.
+&quot;The friendship of the United States and Great Britain
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-68" id="page2-68"></a>[pg II-68]</span>
+is all that now holds the world together. It is the greatest
+asset of civilization left. All the cargoes of copper and
+oil in the world are not worth as much to the world. Yet
+when a shipper's cargo is held up he does not think of
+civilization and of the future of mankind and of free
+government; he thinks only of his cargo and of the indignity
+that he imagines has been done him; and what is
+the American Government for if not to protect his rights?
+Of course he's right; but there must be somebody somewhere
+who sees things in their right proportion. The
+man with an injury rushes to the Department of State&mdash;quite
+properly. He is in a mood to bring England to
+book. Now comes the critical stage in the journey of his
+complaint. The State Department hurries it on to me&mdash;very
+properly; every man's right must be guarded and defended&mdash;a
+right to get his cargo to market, a right to get
+on a steamer at Queenstown, a right to have his censored
+telegram returned, any kind of a right, if he have a right.
+Then the Department, not wittingly, I know, but humanly,
+almost inevitably, in the great rush of overwork,
+sends his 'demands' to me, catching much of his tone and
+apparently insisting on the removal of his grievance as a
+right, without knowing all the facts in the case. The
+telegrams that come to me are full of 'protests' and
+'demands'&mdash;protest and demand this, protest and demand
+that. A man from Mars who should read my book of
+telegrams received during the last two months would find
+it difficult to explain how the two governments have kept
+at peace. It is this serious treatment of trifling grievances
+which makes us feel here that the exactions and dislocations
+and necessary disturbances of this war are not
+understood at home.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I assure you (and there are plenty of facts to prove it)
+that this Government (both for unselfish and selfish reasons)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-69" id="page2-69"></a>[pg II-69]</span>
+puts a higher value on our friendship than on any
+similar thing in the world. They will go&mdash;they are
+going&mdash;the full length to keep it. But, in proportion to
+our tendency to nag them about little things will the value
+set on our friendship diminish and will their confidence in
+our sincerity decline.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The note which Lord Bryce and Lord Northcliffe so
+dreaded reached the London Embassy in October, 1915.
+The State Department had spent nearly six months in
+preparing it; it was the American answer to the so-called
+blockade established by the Order in Council of the preceding
+March. Evidently its contents fulfilled the worst
+forebodings:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+London, November 12, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>I have a great respect for the British Navy. Admiral
+Jellicoe now has under his command 3,000 ships of all
+sorts-far and away the biggest fleet, I think, that was
+ever assembled. For the first time since the ocean was
+poured out, one navy practically commands all the seas:
+nothing sails except by its grace. It is this fleet of course
+that will win the war. The beginning of the end&mdash;however
+far off yet the end may be&mdash;is already visible by reason
+of the economic pressure on Germany. But for this
+fleet, by the way, London would be in ruins, all its treasure
+looted; every French seacoast city and the Italian
+peninsula would be as Belgium and Poland are; and thousands
+of English women would be violated&mdash;just as dead
+French girls are found in many German trenches that have
+been taken in France. Hence I greatly respect the British
+fleet.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-70" id="page2-70"></a>[pg II-70]</span>
+<p>We have a good navy, too, for its size, and a naval personnel
+as good as any afloat. I hear&mdash;with much joy&mdash;that
+we are going to make our navy bigger&mdash;as much
+bigger (God save the mark!) as Bryan will permit.</p>
+
+<p>Now, whatever the future bring, since any fighting
+enterprise that may ever be thrust on us will be just and
+justified, we must see to it that we win, as doubtless we
+shall and as hitherto we always have won. We must be
+dead sure of winning. Well, whatever fight may be
+thrust on us by anybody, anywhere, at any time, for any
+reason&mdash;if it only be generally understood beforehand that
+our fleet and the British fleet shoot the same language,
+there'll be no fight thrust upon us. The biggest bully in
+the world wouldn't dare kick the sorriest dog we have.
+Here, therefore, is a Peace Programme for you&mdash;the
+only basis for a permanent peace in the world. There's
+no further good in having venerable children build houses
+of sand at The Hague; there's no further good in peace
+organizations or protective leagues to enforce peace. We
+had as well get down to facts. So far as ensuring peace is
+concerned the biggest fact in the world is the British fleet.
+The next biggest fact is the American fleet, because of itself
+and still more because of the vast reserve power of the
+United States which it implies. If these two fleets perfectly
+understand one another about the undesirability of
+wars of aggression, there'll be no more big wars as long
+as this understanding continues. Such an understanding
+calls for no treaty&mdash;it calls only for courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>And there is no other peace-basis worth talking about&mdash;by
+men who know how the world is governed.</p>
+
+<p>Since I have lived here I have spent my days and nights,
+my poor brain, and my small fortune all most freely and
+gladly to get some understanding of the men who rule
+this Kingdom, and of the women and the customs and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-71" id="page2-71"></a>[pg II-71]</span>
+the traditions that rule these men&mdash;to get their trick of
+thought, the play of their ideals, the working of their
+imagination, the springs of their instincts. It is impossible
+for any man to know just how well he himself does
+such a difficult task&mdash;how accurately he is coming to
+understand the sources and character of a people's actions.
+Yet, at the worst, I do know something about the British:
+I know enough to make very sure of the soundness
+of my conclusion that they are necessary to us and we to
+them. Else God would have permitted the world to be
+peopled in some other way. And when we see that the
+world will be saved by such an artificial combination as
+England and Russia and France and Japan and Serbia, it
+calls for no great wisdom to see the natural way whereby
+it must be saved in the future.</p>
+
+<p>For this reason every day that I have lived here it has
+been my conscious aim to do what I could to bring about a
+condition that shall make sure of this&mdash;that, whenever we
+may have need of the British fleet to protect our shores or
+to prevent an aggressive war anywhere, it shall he ours by
+a natural impulse and necessity&mdash;even without the asking.</p>
+
+<p>I have found out that the first step toward that end is
+courtesy; that the second step is courtesy, and the third
+step&mdash;such a fine and high courtesy (which includes
+courage) as the President showed in the Panama tolls
+controversy. We have&mdash;we and the British&mdash;common
+aims and character. Only a continuous and sincere
+courtesy&mdash;over periods of strain as well as of calm&mdash;is
+necessary for as complete an understanding as will be required
+for the automatic guidance of the world in peaceful
+ways.</p>
+
+<p>Now, a difference is come between us&mdash;the sort of
+difference that handled as between friends would serve
+only to bind us together with a sturdier respect. We
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-72" id="page2-72"></a>[pg II-72]</span>
+send a long lawyer's Note, not discourteous but wholly
+uncourteous, which is far worse. I am writing now only
+of the manner of the Note, not of its matter. There is
+not a courteous word, nor a friendly phrase, nor a kindly
+turn in it, not an allusion even to an old acquaintance, to
+say nothing of an old friendship, not a word of thanks for
+courtesies or favours done us, not a hint of sympathy in
+the difficulties of the time. There is nothing in its tone
+to show that it came from an American to an Englishman:
+it might have been from a Hottentot to a Fiji-Islander.</p>
+
+<p>I am almost sure&mdash;I'll say quite sure&mdash;that this uncourteous
+manner is far more important than its endless
+matter. It has greatly hurt our friends, the real men of
+the Kingdom. It has made the masses angry&mdash;which is
+of far less importance than the severe sorrow that our
+discourtesy of manner has brought to our friends&mdash;I fear
+to all considerate and thoughtful Englishmen.</p>
+
+<p>Let me illustrate: When the Panama tolls controversy
+arose, Taft ceased to speak the language of the natural
+man and lapsed into lawyer's courthouse zigzagging mutterings.
+Knox wrote a letter to the British Government
+that would have made an enemy of the most affectionate
+twin brother&mdash;all mere legal twists and turns, as agreeable
+as a pocketful of screws. Then various bovine &quot;international
+lawyers&quot; wrote books about it. I read them and
+became more and more confused the further I went: you
+always do. It took me some time to recover from this
+word-drunk debauch and to find my own natural intelligence
+again, the common sense that I was born with.
+Then I saw that the whole thing went wrong from the place
+where that Knox legal note came in. Congressmen in the
+backwoods quoted cryptic passages from it, thought they
+were saying something, and proceeded to make their
+audiences believe that somehow England had hit us with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-73" id="page2-73"></a>[pg II-73]</span>
+a club&mdash;or would have hit us but for Knox. That pure
+discourtesy kept us apart from English sympathy for
+something like two years.</p>
+
+<p>Then the President took it up. He threw the legal
+twaddle into the gutter. He put the whole question in
+a ten-minutes' speech to Congress, full of clearness and
+fairness and high courtesy. It won even the rural Congressmen.
+It was read in every capital and the men who
+conduct every government looked up and said, &quot;This is a
+real man, a brave man, a just man.&quot; You will recall what
+Sir Edward Grey said to me: &quot;The President has taught us
+all a lesson and set us all a high example in the noblest
+courtesy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This one act brought these two nations closer together
+than they had ever been since we became an independent
+nation. It was an act of courtesy....</p>
+
+<p>My dear House, suppose the postman some morning
+were to leave at your door a thing of thirty-five heads and
+three appendices, and you discovered that it came from
+an old friend whom you had long known and greatly
+valued&mdash;this vast mass of legal stuff, without a word or a
+turn of courtesy in it&mdash;what would you do? He had a
+grievance, your old friend had. Friends often have.
+But instead of explaining it to you, he had gone and had
+his lawyers send this many-headed, much-appendiced
+ton of stuff. It wasn't by that method that you found
+your way from Austin, Texas, to your present eminence
+and wisdom. Nor was that the way our friend found
+his way from a little law-office in Atlanta, where I first
+saw him, to the White House.</p>
+
+<p>More and more I am struck with this&mdash;that governments
+are human. They are not remote abstractions,
+nor impersonal institutions. Men conduct them; and
+they do not cease to be men. A man is made up of six
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-74" id="page2-74"></a>[pg II-74]</span>
+parts of human nature and four parts of facts and other
+things&mdash;a little reason, some prejudice, much provincialism,
+and of the particular fur or skin that suits his habitat.
+When you wish to win a man to do what <i>you</i> want him to
+do, you take along a few well-established facts, some reasoning
+and such-like, but you take along also three or
+four or five parts of human nature&mdash;kindliness, courtesy,
+and such things&mdash;sympathy and a human touch.</p>
+
+<p>If a man be six parts human and four parts of other
+things, a government, especially a democracy, is seven, or
+eight, or nine parts human nature. It's the most human
+thing I know. The best way to manage governments
+and nations&mdash;so long as they are disposed to be friendly&mdash;is
+the way we manage one another. I have a confirmation
+of this in the following comment which came to me
+to-day. It was made by a friendly member of Parliament.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The President himself dealt with Germany. Even
+in his severity he paid the Germans the compliment of a
+most courteous tone in his Note. But in dealing with
+us he seems to have called in the lawyers of German
+importers and Chicago pork-packers. I miss the high
+Presidential courtesy that we had come to expect from
+Mr. Wilson.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>An American banker here has told me of the experience
+of an American financial salesman in the city the day
+after our Note was published. His business is to make
+calls on bankers and other financial men, to sell them securities.
+He is a man of good address who is popular
+with his clients. The first man he called on, on that day,
+said: &quot;I don't wish to be offensive to you. But I have
+only one way to show my feeling of indignation toward
+the United States, and that is, to have nothing more to do
+with Americans.&quot;</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-75" id="page2-75"></a>[pg II-75]</span>
+<p>The next man said: &quot;No, nothing to-day, I thank you.
+No&mdash;nor to-morrow either; nor the next day. Good
+morning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>After four or five such greetings, the fellow gave it up
+and is now doing nothing.</p>
+
+<p>I don't attach much importance to such an incident as
+this, except as it gives a hint of the general feeling. These
+financial men probably haven't even read our Note.
+Few people have. But they have all read the short and
+sharp newspaper summary which preceded it in the English
+papers. But what such an incident does indicate is
+the prevalence of a state of public feeling which would
+prevent the Government from yielding any of our demands
+even if the Government so wished. It has now been
+nearly a week since the Note was published. I have seen
+most of the neutral ministers. Before the Note came they
+expressed great eagerness to see it: it would champion
+their cause. Since it came not one of them has mentioned
+it to me. The Secretary of one of them remarked, after
+being invited to express himself: &quot;It is too&mdash;too&mdash;long!&quot;
+And, although I have seen most of the Cabinet this week,
+not a man mentioned it to me. People seem studiously
+to avoid it, lest they give offense.</p>
+
+<p>I have, however, got one little satisfaction. An American&mdash;a
+half-expatriated loafer who talks &quot;art&quot;&mdash;you
+know the intellectually affected and degenerate type&mdash;screwed
+his courage up and told me that he felt ashamed
+of his country. I remarked that I felt sure the feeling was
+mutual. That, I confess, made me feel better.</p>
+
+<p>As nearly as I can make out, the highwater mark of
+English good-feeling toward us in all our history was after
+the President's Panama tolls courtesy. The low-water
+mark, since the Civil War, I am sure, is now. The Cleveland
+Venezuela message came at a time of no nervous
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-76" id="page2-76"></a>[pg II-76]</span>
+strain and did, I think, produce no long-lasting effect.
+A part of the present feeling is due to the English conviction
+that we have been taken in by the Germans in the
+submarine controversy, but a large part is due to the lack
+of courtesy in this last Note&mdash;the manner in which it was
+written even more than its matter. As regards its matter,
+I have often been over what I conceive to be the main
+points with Sir Edward Grey&mdash;very frankly and without
+the least offense. He has said: &quot;We may have to arbitrate
+these things,&quot; as he might say, &quot;We had better take
+a cab because it is raining.&quot; It is easily possible&mdash;or it
+was&mdash;to discuss anything with this Government without
+offense. I have, in fact, stood up before Sir Edward's
+fire and accused him of stealing a large part of the earth's
+surface, and we were just as good friends afterward as before.
+But I never drew a lawyer's indictment of him as a
+land-thief: that's different.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose no two peoples or governments ever quite understand
+one another. Perhaps they never will. That is
+too much to hope for. But when one government writes
+to another it ought to write (as men do) with some reference
+to the personality of the other and to their previous
+relations, since governments are more human than men.
+Of course I don't know who wrote the Note. Hence I
+can talk about it freely to you without implying criticism
+of anybody in particular. But the man who wrote it
+never saw the British Government and wouldn't know it
+if he met it in the road. To him it is a mere legal entity,
+a wicked, impersonal institution against which he has the
+task of drawing an indictment&mdash;not the task of trying to
+persuade it to confess the propriety of a certain course of
+conduct. In his view, it is a wicked enemy to start with&mdash;like
+the Louisiana lottery of a previous generation or
+the Standard Oil Company of our time.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-77" id="page2-77"></a>[pg II-77]</span>
+<p>One would have thought, since we were six months in
+preparing it, that a draft of the Note would have been
+sent to the man on the ground whom our Government
+keeps in London to study the situation at first hand and
+to make the best judgment he can about the most effective
+methods of approach on delicate and difficult matters.
+If that had been done, I should have suggested a courteous
+short Note saying that we are obliged to set forth such
+and such views about marine law and the rights of neutrals,
+to His Majesty's Government; and that the contention
+of the United States Government was herewith
+sent&mdash;etc., etc.&mdash;Then this identical Note (with certain
+court-house, strong, shirt-sleeve adjectives left out)
+could have come without arousing any feeling whatsoever.
+Of course I have no personal vanity in saying this to you.
+I am sure I outgrew that foible many years ago. But
+such a use of an ambassador&mdash;of any ambassador&mdash;is
+obviously one of the best and most natural uses he could
+be put to; and all governments but ours do put their ambassadors
+to such a use: that's what they have 'em for.</p>
+
+<p><i>Per contra</i>: a telegram has just come in saying that a
+certain Lichtenstein in New York had a lot of goods
+stopped by the British Government, which (by an arrangement
+made with their attorney here) agreed to buy
+them at a certain price: will I go and find out why the
+Government hasn't yet paid Lichtenstein and when he
+may expect his money? Is it an ambassadorial duty to
+collect a private bill for Lichtenstein, in a bargain with
+which our Government has had nothing to do? I have
+telegraphed the Department, quite calmly, that I don't
+think it is. I venture to say no ambassador ever had such
+a request as that before from his Government.</p>
+
+<p>My dear House, I often wonder if my years of work
+here&mdash;the kind of high good work I've tried to do&mdash;have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-78" id="page2-78"></a>[pg II-78]</span>
+not been thrown away. I've tried to take and to busy
+myself with a long-range view of great subjects. The
+British Empire and the United States will be here long
+after we are dead, and their relations will continue to be
+one of the most important matters&mdash;perhaps the most
+important matter&mdash;in the world. Well, now think of
+Lichtenstein's bill!</p>
+
+<p>To get back where I started&mdash;I fear, therefore, that,
+when I next meet the Admiral of the Grand Fleet (with
+whom I used to discuss everything quite freely before he
+sailed away to the war), he may forget to mention that
+we may have his 3,000 ships at our need.</p>
+
+<p>Since this present difference is in danger of losing the
+healing influence of a kindly touch&mdash;has become an uncourteous
+monster of 35 heads and 3 appendices&mdash;I see no
+early end of it. The British Foreign Office has a lot of
+lawyers in its great back offices. They and our lawyers
+will now butt and rebut as long as a goat of them is left
+alive on either side. The two governments&mdash;the two
+human, kindly groups&mdash;have retired: they don't touch, on
+this matter, now. The lawyers will have the time of their
+lives, each smelling the blood of the other.</p>
+
+<p>If more notes must come&mdash;as the English papers report
+over and over again every morning and every afternoon&mdash;the
+President might do much by writing a brief, human
+document to accompany the Appendices. If it be done
+courteously, we can accuse them of stealing sheep and of
+dyeing the skins to conceal the theft-without provoking
+the slightest bad feeling; and, in the end, they'll pay
+another <i>Alabama</i> award without complaint and frame
+the check and show it to future ambassadors as Sir Edward
+shows the <i>Alabama</i> check to me sometimes.</p>
+
+<p>And it'll be a lasting shame (and may bring other Great
+Wars) if lawyers are now permitted to tear the garments
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-79" id="page2-79"></a>[pg II-79]</span>
+with which Peace ought to be clothed as soon as she can
+escape from her present rags and tatters.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours always heartily,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>P.S. My dear House: Since I have&mdash;in weeks and
+months past&mdash;both telegraphed and written the Department
+(and I presume the President has seen what
+I've sent) about the feeling here, I've written this letter
+to you and not to the President nor Lansing. I will not
+run the risk of seeming to complain&mdash;nor even of seeming
+to seem to complain. But if you think it wise to send or
+show this letter to the President, I'm willing you should.
+This job was botched: there's no doubt about that. We
+shall not recover for many a long, long year. The identical
+indictment could have been drawn with admirable
+temper and the way laid down for arbitration and for
+keeping our interpretation of the law and precedents
+intact&mdash;all done in a way that would have given no offense.</p>
+
+<p>The feeling runs higher and higher every day&mdash;goes
+deeper and spreads wider.</p>
+
+<p>Now on top of it comes the <i>Ancona</i><a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15" /><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>. The English
+press, practically unanimously, makes sneering remarks
+about our Government. After six months it has got no
+results from the <i>Lusitania</i> controversy, which Bernstorff
+is allowed to prolong in secret session while factories are
+blown up, ships supplied with bombs, and all manner of
+outrages go on (by Germans) in the United States. The
+English simply can't understand why Bernstorff is allowed
+to stay. They predict that nothing will come of the
+<i>Ancona</i> case, nor of any other case. Nobody wants us
+to get into the war&mdash;nobody who counts&mdash;but they are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-80" id="page2-80"></a>[pg II-80]</span>
+losing respect for us because we seem to them to submit to
+anything.</p>
+
+<p>We've simply dropped out. No English person ever
+mentions our Government to me. But they talk to one
+another all the time about the political an&aelig;mia of the
+United States Government. They think that Bernstorff
+has the State Department afraid of him and that the
+Pacifists dominate opinion&mdash;the Pacifists-at-any-price.
+I no longer even have a chance to explain any of these
+things to anybody I know.</p>
+
+<p>It isn't the old question we used to discuss of our having
+no friend in the world when the war ends. It's gone far
+further than that. It is now whether the United States
+Government need be respected by anybody.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14" /><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, was at this time&mdash;and
+afterward&mdash;conducting bitter campaign against the British blockade and
+advocating an embargo as a retaliation.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15" /><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Torpedoed off Sardinia on Nov. 7, 1915, by the Austrians.
+There was a large toss of life, including many Americans.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-81" id="page2-81"></a>[pg II-81]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI" />CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h3>DARK DAYS FOR THE ALLIES</h3>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+June 30, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>There's a distinct wave of depression here&mdash;perhaps
+I'd better say a period of setbacks has come. So far as
+we can find out only the Germans are doing anything in
+the war on land. The position in France is essentially
+the same as it was in November, only the Germans are
+much more strongly entrenched. Their great plenty of
+machine guns enables them to use fewer men and to kill
+more than the Allies. The Russians also lack ammunition
+and are yielding more and more territory. The Allies&mdash;so
+you hear now&mdash;will do well if they get their little
+army away from the Dardanelles before the German-Turks
+eat 'em alive, and no Balkan state comes in to help
+the Allies. Italy makes progress-slowly, of course,
+over almost impassable mountains&mdash;etc., etc. Most of
+this doleful recital I think is true; and I find more and
+more men here who have lost hope of seeing an end of the
+war in less than two or three years, and more and more
+who fear that the Germans will never be forced out of
+Belgium. And the era of the giant aeroplane seems about
+to come&mdash;a machine that can carry several tons and
+several men and go great distances&mdash;two engines, two
+propellers, and the like. It isn't at all impossible, I am
+told, that these machines may be the things that will at
+last end the war&mdash;possibly, but I doubt it.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-82" id="page2-82"></a>[pg II-82]</span>
+<p>At any rate, it is true that a great wave of discouragement
+is come. All these events and more seem to prove
+to my mind the rather dismal failure the Liberal Government
+made&mdash;a failure really to grasp the problem. It was
+a dead failure. Of course they are waking up now, when
+they are faced with a certain dread lest many soldiers
+prefer frankly to die rather than spend another winter in
+practically the same trenches. You hear rumours, too, of
+great impending military scandals&mdash;God knows whether
+there be any truth in them or not.</p>
+
+<p>In a word, while no Englishman gives up or will ever
+give up&mdash;that's all rot&mdash;the job he has in hand is not going
+well. He's got to spit on his hands and buckle up his belt
+two holes tighter yet. And I haven't seen a man for a
+month who dares hope for an end of the fight within any
+time that he can foresee.</p>
+
+<p>I had a talk to-day with the Russian Ambassador<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16" /><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a>. He
+wished to know how matters stood between the United
+States and Great Britain. I said to him: &quot;I'll give you
+a task if you have leisure. Set to and help me hurry up
+your distinguished Ally in dealing with our shipping
+troubles.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The old man laughed&mdash;that seemed a huge joke to
+him; he threw up his hands and exclaimed&mdash;&quot;My God!
+He is slow about his own business&mdash;has always been slow&mdash;can't
+be anything else.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>After more such banter, the nigger in his wood-pile
+poked his head out: &quot;Is there any danger,&quot; he asked,
+&quot;that munitions may be stopped?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The Germans have been preparing northern France for
+German occupation. No French are left there, of course,
+except women and children and old men. They must be
+fed or starved or deported. The Germans put them on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-83" id="page2-83"></a>[pg II-83]</span>
+trains&mdash;a whole village at a time&mdash;and run them to the
+Swiss frontier. Of course the Swiss pass them on into
+France. The French have their own and&mdash;the Germans
+will have northern France without any French population,
+if this process goes on long enough.</p>
+
+<p>The mere bang! bang! frightful era of the war is passed.
+The Germans are settling down to permanent business
+with their great organizing machine. Of course they talk
+about the freedom of the seas and such mush-mush; of
+course they'd like to have Paris and rob it of enough
+money to pay what the war has cost them, and London,
+too. But what they really want for keeps is seacoast&mdash;Belgium
+and as much of the French coast as they can win.
+That's really what they are out gunning for. Of course,
+somehow at some time they mean to get Holland, too,
+and Denmark, if they really need it. Then they'll have
+a very respectable seacoast&mdash;the thing that they chiefly
+lack now.</p>
+
+<p>More and more people are getting their nerves knocked
+out. I went to a big hospital on Sunday, twenty-five
+miles out of London. They showed me an enormous,
+muscular Tommy sitting by himself in a chair under the
+trees. He had had a slight wound which quickly got
+well. But his speech was gone. That came back, too,
+later. But then he wouldn't talk and he'd insist on
+going off by himself. He's just knocked out&mdash;you can't
+find out just how much gumption he has left. That's
+what the war did for him: it stupefied him. Well, it's
+stupefied lots of folks who have never seen a trench.
+That's what's happened. Of all the men who started in
+with the game, I verily believe that Lloyd George is holding
+up best. He organized British finance. Now he's
+organizing British industry.</p>
+
+<p>It's got hot in London&mdash;hotter than I've ever known
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-84" id="page2-84"></a>[pg II-84]</span>
+it. It gets lonelier (more people going away) and sadder&mdash;more
+wounded coming back and more visible sorrow.
+We seem to be settling down to something that is more
+or less like Paris&mdash;so far less, but it may become more and
+more like it. And the confident note of an earlier period
+is accompanied by a dull undertone of much less cheerfulness.
+The end is&mdash;in the lap of the gods.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy, London,<br />
+<br />
+July 25, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>... Many men here are very active in their
+thought about the future relations of the United States
+and Great Britain. Will the war bring or leave them
+closer together? If the German machine be completely
+smashed (and it may not be completely smashed) the
+Japanese danger will remain. I do not know how to
+estimate that danger accurately. But there is such a
+danger. And, if the German wild beast ever come to life
+again, there's an eternal chance of trouble with it. For
+defensive purposes it may become of the very first importance
+that the whole English-speaking world should
+stand together&mdash;not in entangling alliance, but with a
+much clearer understanding than we have ever yet had.
+I'll indicate to you some of my cogitations on this subject
+by trying to repeat what I told Philip Kerr<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17" /><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> a fortnight
+ago&mdash;one Sunday in the country. I can write this
+to you without seeming to parade my own opinions.&mdash;Kerr
+is one of &quot;The Round Table,&quot; perhaps the best
+group of men here for the real study and free discussion
+of large political subjects. Their quarterly, <i>The Round
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-85" id="page2-85"></a>[pg II-85]</span>
+Table</i>, is the best review, I dare say, in the world. Kerr is
+red hot for a close and perfect understanding between
+Great Britain and the United States. I told him that,
+since Great Britain had only about forty per cent. of
+the white English-speaking people and the United States
+had about sixty per cent., I hoped in his natural history
+that the tail didn't wag the dog. I went on:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You now have the advantage of us in your aggregation
+of three centuries of accumulated wealth&mdash;the spoil
+of all the world&mdash;and in the talent that you have developed
+for conserving it and adding to it and in the institutions
+you have built up to perpetuate it&mdash;your merchant
+ships, your insurance, your world-wide banking, your
+mortgages on all new lands; but isn't this the only advantage
+you have? This advantage will pass. You are
+now shooting away millions and millions, and you will
+have a debt that is bound to burden industry. On our
+side, we have a more recently mixed race than yours;
+you've begun to inbreed. We have also (and therefore)
+more adaptability, a greater keenness of mind in our
+masses; we are Old-World men set free&mdash;free of classes
+and traditions and all that they connote. Your so-called
+democracy is far behind ours. Your aristocracy
+and your privileges necessarily bring a social and economic
+burden. Half your people look backward.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your leadership rests on your wealth and on the
+power that you've built on your wealth.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>When he asked me how we were to come closer together&mdash;&quot;closer
+together, with your old-time distrust of
+us and with your remoteness?&quot;&mdash;I stopped him at &quot;remoteness.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's the reason,&quot; I said. &quot;Your idea of our 'remoteness.'
+'Remoteness' from what? From you? Are
+you not betraying the only real difficulty of a closer sympathy
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-86" id="page2-86"></a>[pg II-86]</span>
+by assuming that you are the centre of the world?
+When you bring yourself to think of the British Empire
+as a part of the American Union&mdash;mind you, I am not
+saying that you would be formally admitted&mdash;but when
+you are yourselves in close enough sympathy with us to
+wish to be admitted, the chief difficulty of a real union
+of thought will be gone. You recall Lord Rosebery's
+speech in which he pictured the capital of the British
+Empire being moved to Washington if the American
+Colonies had been retained under the Crown? Well, it
+was the Crown that was the trouble, and the capital of
+English-speaking folk has been so moved and you still
+remain 'remote.' Drop 'remote' from your vocabulary
+and your thought and we'll actually be closer together.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It's an enormous problem&mdash;just how to bring these
+countries closer together. Perhaps nothing can do it but
+some great common danger or some great common adventure.
+But this is one of the problems of your lifetime.
+England can't get itself clean loose from the continent
+nor from continental medi&aelig;valism; and with that
+we can have nothing to do. Men like Kerr think that
+somehow a great push toward democracy here will be
+given by the war. I don't quite see how. So far the
+aristocracy have made perhaps the best showing in defence
+of English liberty. They are paying the bills of
+the war; they have sent their sons; these sons have died
+like men; and their parents never whimper. It's a fine
+breed for such great uses as these. There was a fine
+incident in the House of Lords the other day, which gave
+the lie to the talk that one used to hear here about
+&quot;degeneracy.&quot; Somebody made a perfectly innocent proposal
+to complete a list of peers and peers' sons who had
+fallen in the war&mdash;a thing that will, of course, be done,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-87" id="page2-87"></a>[pg II-87]</span>
+just as a similar list will be compiled of the House of
+Commons, of Oxford and Cambridge Universities. But
+one peer after another objected vigorously lest such a
+list appear immodest. &quot;We are but doing our duty.
+Let the matter rest there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>In a time like this the aristocracy proves its worth. In
+fact, all aristocracies grew chiefly out of wars, and perhaps
+they are better for wars than a real democracy. Here,
+you see, you run into one of those contradictions in life
+and history which make the world so hard to change....</p>
+
+<p>You know there are some reasons why peace, whenever
+it may come, will bring problems as bad as the problems
+of the war itself. I can think of no worse task than the
+long conferences of the Allies with their conflicting interests
+and ambitions. Then must come their conferences
+with the enemy. Then there are sure to be other
+conferences to try to make peace secure. And, of course,
+many are going to be dissatisfied and disappointed, and
+perhaps out of these disappointments other wars may
+come. The world will not take up its knitting and sit
+quietly by the fire for many a year to come....</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>One happiness came to Mr. and Mrs. Page in the midst
+of all these war alarums. On August 4, 1915, their only
+daughter, Katharine, was married to Mr. Charles G.
+Loring, of Boston, Massachusetts. The occasion gave the
+King an opportunity of showing the high regard in which
+Page and his family were held. It had been planned
+that the wedding should take place in Westminster Abbey,
+but the King very courteously offered Miss Page
+the Royal chapel in St. James's Palace. This was a distinguished
+compliment, as it was the first time that any
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-88" id="page2-88"></a>[pg II-88]</span>
+marriage, in which both bride and bridegroom were
+foreigners, had ever been celebrated in this building, which
+for centuries has been the scene of royal weddings. The
+special place which his daughter had always held in the
+Ambassador's affections is apparent in the many letters
+that now followed her to her new home in the United
+States. The unique use Page made of the initials of his
+daughter's name was characteristic.</p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Mrs. Charles G. Loring</i><br />
+<br />
+London, September 1, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR K.A. P-TAIN:</p>
+
+<p>Here's a joke on your mother and Frank: We three
+(and Smith) went up to Broadway in the car, to stay
+there a little while and then to go on into Wales, etc.
+The hotel is an old curiosity shop; you sit on Elizabethan
+chairs by a Queen Anne table, on a drunken floor,
+and look at the pewter platters on the wall or do your best
+to look at them, for the ancient windows admit hardly any
+light. &quot;Oh! lovely,&quot; cries Frank; and then he and your
+mother make out in the half-darkness a perfectly wonderful
+copper mug on the mantelpiece; and you go out
+and come in the ramshackle door (stooping every time)
+after you've felt all about for the rusty old iron latch, and
+then you step down two steps (or fall), presently to step
+up two more. Well, for dinner we had six kinds of meat
+and two meat pies and potatoes and currants! My
+dinner was a potato. I'm old and infirm and I have
+many ailments, but I'm not so bad off as to be able to
+live on a potato a day. And since we were having a vacation,
+I didn't see the point. So I came home where I
+have seven courses for dinner, all good; and Mrs. Leggett
+took my place in the car. That carnivorous company
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-89" id="page2-89"></a>[pg II-89]</span>
+went on. They've got to eat six kinds of meat and two
+meat pies and&mdash;currants! I haven't. Your mother calls
+me up on the phone every morning&mdash;me, who am living
+here in luxury, seven courses at every dinner&mdash;and asks
+anxiously, &quot;And how <i>are</i> you, dear?&quot; I answer: &quot;Prime,
+and how are <i>you</i>?&quot; We are all enjoying ourselves, you
+see, and I don't have to eat six kinds of meat and two
+meat pies and&mdash;currants! They do; and may Heaven
+save 'em and get 'em home safe!</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2098" id="i2098" />
+<a href="images/2098.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2098.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>Col. Edward M. House. From a painting by P.A. Laszlo</b>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2099" id="i2099" />
+<a href="images/2099.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2099.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>The Rt. Hon. Herbert Henry Asquith,<br />
+Prime Minister of Great Britain, 1908-1916</b>
+</div>
+
+<p>It's lovely in London now&mdash;fine, shining days and
+showers at night and Ranelagh beautiful, and few people
+here; but I don't deny its loneliness&mdash;somewhat. Yet
+sleep is good, and easy and long. I have neither an
+ocean voyage nor six kinds of meat and two meat pies
+and currants. I congratulate myself and write to you
+and mother.</p>
+
+<p>You'll land to-morrow or next day&mdash;good; I congratulate
+you. Salute the good land for me and present my
+respectful compliments to vegetables that have taste and
+fruit that is not sour&mdash;to the sunshine, in fact, and to
+everything that ripens and sweetens in its glow.</p>
+
+<p>And you're now (when this reaches you) fixing up
+your home&mdash;your <i>own</i> home, dear Kitty. Bless your
+dear life, you left a home here&mdash;wasn't it a good and nice
+one?&mdash;left it very lonely for the man who has loved you
+twenty-four years and been made happy by your presence.
+But he'll love you twenty-five more and on and
+on&mdash;always. So you haven't lost that&mdash;nor can you.
+And it's very fit and right that you should build your own
+nest; that adds another happy home, you see. And I'm
+very sure it will be very happy always. Whatever I can
+do to make it so, now or ever, you have only to say.
+But&mdash;your mother took your photograph with her and got
+it out of the bag and put it on the bureau as soon as she
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-90" id="page2-90"></a>[pg II-90]</span>
+went to her room&mdash;a photograph taken when you were a
+little girl.</p>
+
+<p>Hodson<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18" /><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> came up to see me to-day and with tears of
+gratitude in his voice told me of the present that you and
+Chud had made him. He is very genuinely pleased. As
+for the rest, life goes on as usual.</p>
+
+<p>I laugh as I think of all your new aunts and cousins
+looking you over and wondering if you'll fit, and then
+saying to one another as they go to bed: &quot;She is lovely&mdash;isn't
+she?&quot; I could tell 'em a thing or two if I had a
+whack at 'em.</p>
+
+<p>And you'll soon have all your pretty things in place in
+your pretty home, and a lot more that I haven't seen.
+I'll see 'em all before many years&mdash;and you, too! Tell
+me, did Chud get you a dinner book? Keep your record
+of things: you'll enjoy it in later years. And you'll have
+a nice time this autumn&mdash;your new kinsfolk, your new
+friends and old and Boston and Cambridge. If you run
+across Mr. Muffin, William Roscoe Thayer, James Ford
+Rhodes, President Eliot&mdash;these are my particular old
+friends whose names occur at the moment.</p>
+
+<p>My love to you and Chud too,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>The task of being &quot;German Ambassador to Great
+Britain&quot; was evidently not without its irritations.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+September 15, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday was my German day. When the boy came
+up to my room, I told him I had some official calls to make.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-91" id="page2-91"></a>[pg II-91]</span>
+&quot;Therefore get out my oldest and worst suit.&quot; He
+looked much confused; and when I got up both my worst
+and best suits were laid out. Evidently he thought he
+must have misunderstood me. I asked your mother if she
+was ready to go down to breakfast. &quot;Yes.&quot;&mdash;&quot;Well,
+then I'll leave you.&quot; She grunted something and when
+we both got down she asked: &quot;What <i>did</i> you say to me
+upstairs?&quot; I replied: &quot;I regard the incident as closed.&quot;
+She looked a sort of pitying look at me and a minute or
+two later asked: &quot;What on earth is the matter with you?
+Can't you hear at all?&quot; I replied: &quot;No. Therefore let's
+talk.&quot; She gave it up, but looked at me again to make
+sure I was all there.</p>
+
+<p>I stopped at the barber shop, badly needing a shave.
+The barber got his brush and razor ready. I said: &quot;Cut
+my hair.&quot; He didn't talk for a few minutes, evidently
+engaged in deep thought.</p>
+
+<p>When I got to my office, a case was brought to me of a
+runaway American who was caught trying to send news
+to Germany. &quot;Very good,&quot; said I, &quot;now let it be made
+evident that it shall appear therefore that his innocence
+having been duly established he shall be shot.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What, sir?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That since it must be evident that his guilt is genuine
+therefore see that he be acquitted and then shot.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Laughlin and Bell and Stabler were seen in an earnest
+conference in the next room for nearly half an hour.</p>
+
+<p>Shoecraft brought me a letter. &quot;This is the most
+courteous complaint about the French passport bureau
+we have yet had. I thought you'd like to see this lady's
+letter. She says she knows you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do not answer it, then.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He went off and conferred with the others.</p>
+
+<p>Hodson spoke of the dog he sold to Frank. &quot;Yes,&quot;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-92" id="page2-92"></a>[pg II-92]</span>
+said I, &quot;since he was a very nice dog, therefore he was
+worthless.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sir?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And he went off after looking back at me in a queer way.</p>
+
+<p>The day went on in that fashion. When I came out to
+go to lunch, the stairs down led upward and I found myself,
+therefore, stepping out of the roof on to the sidewalk&mdash;the
+house upside down. Smith looked puzzled. &quot;Home,
+Sir?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No. Go the other way.&quot; After he had driven two
+or three blocks, I told him to turn again and go the other
+way&mdash;home!</p>
+
+<p>Your mother said almost as soon as I got into the door&mdash;&quot;What
+was the matter with you this morning?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, nothing. You forget that I am the German
+Ambassador.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Now this whole narrative is a lie. Nothing in it occurred.
+If it were otherwise it wouldn't be German.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Mrs. Charles G. Loring</i><br />
+<br />
+London, 6 Grosvenor Square.<br />
+Sunday, September 19, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR KITTY:</p>
+
+<p>You never had a finer autumnal day in the land of the
+free than this day has been in this old kingdom&mdash;fresh
+and fair; and so your mother said to herself and me:
+&quot;Let's go out to the Laughlins' to lunch,&quot; and we went.
+There never was a prettier drive. We found out among
+other things that you pleased Mrs. Laughlin very much
+by your letter. Her garden changes every week or so,
+and it never was lovelier than it is now.&mdash;Then we came
+back home and dined alone. Well, since we can't have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-93" id="page2-93"></a>[pg II-93]</span>
+you and Chud and Frank, I don't care if we do dine
+alone sometimes for some time to come. Your mother's
+monstrous good company, and sometimes three is a
+crowd. And now is a good time to be alone. London
+never was so dull or deserted since I've known it, nor
+ever so depressed. The military (land) operations are
+not cheerful; the hospitals are all full; I see more wounded
+soldiers by far than at any previous time; the Zeppelins
+came somewhere to this island every night for a week&mdash;one
+of them, on the night of the big raid, was visible from
+our square for fifteen or twenty minutes&mdash;in general it is
+a dull and depressing time. I have thought that since
+you were determined to run off with a young fellow, you
+chose a pretty good time to go away. I'm afraid there'll
+be no more of what we call &quot;fun&quot; in this town as long
+as we stay here.</p>
+
+<p>Worse yet: in spite of the Coalition Government and
+everybody's wish to get on smoothly and to do nothing
+but to push the war, since Parliament convened there's
+been a great row, which doesn't get less. The labour
+men give trouble; people blame the politicians: Lloyd
+George is saving the country, say some; Lloyd George
+ought to be hanged, say others. Down with Northcliffe!
+They seem likely to burn him at the stake&mdash;except those
+who contend that he has saved the nation. Some maintain
+that the cabinet is too big&mdash;twenty-two. More say
+that it has no leadership. If you favour conscription,
+you are a traitor: if you don't favour it, you are pro-German.
+It's the same sort of old quarrel they had before
+the war, only it is about more subjects. In fact,
+nobody seems very clearly to know what it's about.
+Meantime the Government is spending money at a rate
+that nobody ever dreamed of before. Three million
+pounds a day&mdash;some days five million. The Germans,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-94" id="page2-94"></a>[pg II-94]</span>
+meantime are taking Russia; the Allies are not taking the
+Dardanelles; in France the old deadlock continues. Boston
+at its worst must be far more cheerful than this.</p>
+
+<p>Affectionately and with my love to Chud,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+London, September 26, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>The suppression of facts about the military situation is
+more rigorous than ever since the military facts have become
+so discouraging. The volume of pretty well authenticated
+news that I used to hear privately has become
+sensibly diminished. Rumours that reach me by the back
+door, in all sorts of indirect ways, are not fewer, but fewer
+of them are credible. There is great confusion, great fear,
+very great depression&mdash;far greater, I think, than England
+has felt, certainly since the Napoleonic scare and probably
+since the threat of the Armada. Nobody, I think, supposes
+that England herself will be conquered: confidence
+in the navy is supreme. But the fear of a practical defeat
+of the Allies on the continent is become general. Russia
+may have to pay a huge indemnity, going far to reimburse
+Germany for the cost of the war; Belgium may be permanently
+held unless Germany receive an indemnity to
+evacuate, and her seaports may be held anyhow; the Germans
+may reach Constantinople before the Allies, and
+Germany may thus hold, when the war ends, an open way
+to the East; and France may have to pay a large sum to
+regain her northern territory now held by the Germans.
+These are not the convictions of men here, but they have
+distinctly become the fears; and many men's mind are
+beginning to adjust themselves to the possible end of the
+war, as a draw, with these results. Of course such an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-95" id="page2-95"></a>[pg II-95]</span>
+end would be a real German victory and&mdash;another war as
+soon as enough men grow up to fight it.</p>
+
+<p>When the more cheerful part of public opinion, especially
+when any member of the Government, affects to
+laugh at these fears, the people say: &quot;Well, make known
+the facts that you base your hope on. Precisely how
+many men have volunteered? Is the voluntary system
+a success or has it reached its limit? Precisely what is the
+situation in the Dardanelles? Are the allied armies
+strong enough to make a big drive to break through the
+German line in France? Have they big guns and ammunition
+enough? What are the facts about the chance
+in the Dardanelles? What have we done with reference
+to the Balkan States?&quot; Thus an angry and ominous political
+situation is arising. The censorship on war news apparently
+becomes severer, and the general fear spreads and
+deepens. The air, of course, becomes heavily charged
+with such rumours as these: that if the Government continue
+its policy of secrecy, Lloyd George will resign, seeing
+no hope of a real victory: that, if he do resign, his resignation
+will disrupt the Government&mdash;cause a sort of
+earthquake; that the Government will probably fall and
+Lloyd George will be asked to form another one, since he
+is, as the public sees it, the most active and efficient man
+in political life; that, if all the Balkan States fail the Allies,
+Sir Edward Grey will be reckoned a failure and must
+resign; and you even now hear talk of Mr. Balfour's
+succeeding him.</p>
+
+<p>It is impossible to say what basis there is for these and
+other such rumours, but they show the general very serious
+depression and dissatisfaction. Of that there is no doubt.
+Nor is there any doubt about grave differences in the
+Cabinet about conscription nor of grave fear in the public
+mind about the action of labour unions in hindering the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-96" id="page2-96"></a>[pg II-96]</span>
+utmost production of ammunition, nor of the increasing
+feeling that the Prime Minister doesn't lead the nation.
+Except Lloyd George and the Chancellor of the Exchequer<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19" /><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a>
+the Cabinet seems to suffer a sort of paralysis.
+Lord Kitchener's speech in the House of Lords, explaining
+the military situation, reads like a series of month-old
+bulletins and was a great disappointment. Mr. Asquith's
+corresponding speech in the House seemed to lack complete
+frankness. The nation feels that it is being kept
+in the dark, and all the military information that it gets
+is discouraging. Sir Edward Grey, as philosophic and
+enduring a man as I know, seems much more depressed
+than I have ever known him to be; Bryce is very very far
+from cheerful; Plunkett<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20" /><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>, whom also you know, is in the
+dumps&mdash;it's hard to find a cheerful or a hopeful man.</p>
+
+<p>The secrecy of official life has become so great and successful
+that prophecy of political changes must be mere
+guess work. But, unless good news come from the Dardanelles
+in particular, I have a feeling that Asquith may
+resign&mdash;be forced out by the gradual pressure of public
+opinion; that Lloyd George will become Prime Minister,
+and that (probably) Sir Edward Grey may resign. Yet
+I cannot take the prevailing military discouragement
+at its face value. The last half million men and the last
+million pounds will decide the contest, and the Allies will
+have these. This very depression strengthens the nation's
+resolution to a degree that they for the moment forget.
+The blockade and the armies in the field will wear Germany
+down&mdash;not absolutely conquer her, but wear her
+down&mdash;probably in another year.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime our prestige (if that be the right word),
+in British judgment, is gone. As they regard it, we have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-97" id="page2-97"></a>[pg II-97]</span>
+permitted the Germans to kill our citizens, to carry on a
+worldwide underhand propaganda from our country (as
+well as in it), for which they have made no apology
+and no reparation but only vague assurances for the
+future now that their submarine fleet has been almost
+destroyed. They think that we are credulous to the
+point of simplicity to accept any assurances that Bernstorff
+may give&mdash;in a word, that the peace-at-any-price
+sentiment so dominates American opinion and the American
+Government that we will submit to any indignity
+or insult&mdash;that we will learn the Germans' real character
+when it is too late to save our honour or dignity.
+There is no doubt of the definiteness or depth of this
+opinion.</p>
+
+<p>And I am afraid that this feeling will show itself in our
+future dealings with this government. The public opinion
+of the nation as well as the Government accepts their
+blockade as justified as well as necessary. They will not
+yield on that point, and they will regard our protests as
+really inspired by German influence&mdash;thus far at least:
+that the German propaganda has organized and encouraged
+the commercial objection in the United States,
+and that this propaganda and the peace-at-any-price
+sentiment demand a stiff controversy with England to
+offset the stiff controversy with Germany; and, after all,
+they ask, what does a stiff controversy with the United
+States amount to? I had no idea that English opinion
+could so quickly become practically indifferent as to what
+the United States thinks or does. And as nearly as I can
+make it out, there is not a general wish that we should go
+to war. The prevalent feeling is not a selfish wish for
+military help. In fact they think that, by the making of
+munitions, by the taking of loans, and by the sale of food
+we can help them more than by military and naval action.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-98" id="page2-98"></a>[pg II-98]</span>
+Their feeling is based on their disappointment at our submitting
+to what they regard as German dallying with us
+and to German insults. They believe that, if we had sent
+Bernstorff home when his government made its unsatisfactory
+reply to our first <i>Lusitania</i> note, Germany would
+at once have &quot;come down&quot;; opportunist Balkan States
+would have come to the help of the Allies; Holland and
+perhaps the Scandinavian States would have got some consideration
+at Berlin for their losses by torpedoes; that
+more attention would have been paid by Turkey to our
+protest against the wholesale massacre of the Armenians;
+and that a better settlement with Japan about Pacific
+islands and Pacific influence would have been possible for
+the English at the end of the war. Since, they argue,
+nobody is now afraid of the United States, her moral influence
+is impaired at every capital; and I now frequently
+hear the opinion that, if the war lasts another year and
+the Germans get less and less use of the United States as
+a base of general propaganda in all neutral countries,
+especially all American countries, they are likely themselves
+to declare war on us as a mere defiance of the whole
+world and with the hope of stirring up internal trouble
+for our government by the activity of the Germans and
+the Irish in the United States, which may hinder munitions
+and food and loans to the Allies.</p>
+
+<p>I need not remark that the English judgment of the
+Germans is hardly judicial. But they reply to this that
+every nation has to learn the real, incredible character of
+the Prussian by its own unhappy experience. France had
+so to learn it, and England, Russia, and Belgium; and we
+(the United States), they say, fail to profit in time by the
+experience of these. After the Germans have used us to
+the utmost in peace, they will force us into war&mdash;or even
+flatly declare war on us when they think they can thus
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-99" id="page2-99"></a>[pg II-99]</span>
+cause more embarrassment to the Allies, and when they
+conclude that the time is come to make sure that no great
+nation shall emerge from the war with a clear commercial
+advantage over the others; and in the meantime they will
+prove to the world by playing with us that a democracy
+is necessarily pacific and hence (in their view) contemptible.
+I felt warranted the other day to remark to Lord
+Bryce on the unfairness of much of the English judgment
+of us (he is very sad and a good deal depressed). &quot;Yes,&quot;
+he said, &quot;I have despaired of one people's ever really
+understanding another even when the two are as closely
+related and as friendly as the Americans and the English.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>You were kind enough to inquire about my health in
+your last note. If I could live up to the popular conception
+here of my labours and responsibilities and delicate
+duties (which is most flattering and greatly exaggerated),
+I should be only a walking shadow of a man. But I am
+most inappreciately well. I imagine that in some year
+to come, I may enjoy a vacation, but I could not enjoy
+it now. Besides since civilization has gone backward
+several centuries, I suppose I've gone back with it to a
+time when men knew no such thing as a vacation. (Let's
+forgive House for his kindly, mistaken solicitude.) The
+truth is, I often feel that I do not know myself&mdash;body or
+soul, boots or breeches. This experience is making us
+all here different from the men we were&mdash;but in just
+what respects it is hard to tell. We are not within hearing
+of the guns (except the guns that shoot at Zeppelins when
+they come); but the war crowds itself in on us sensibly
+more and more. There are more wounded soldiers on the
+streets and in the parks. More and more families one
+knows lose their sons, more and more women their husbands.
+Death is so common that it seems a little thing.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-100" id="page2-100"></a>[pg II-100]</span>
+Four persons have come to my house to-day (Sunday) in
+the hope that I may find their missing kinsmen, and two
+more have appealed to me on the telephone and two
+more still have sent me notes. Since I began this letter,
+Mrs. Page insisted on my going out on the edge of
+the city to see an old friend of many years who has
+just lost both his sons and whose prospective son-in-law
+is at home wounded. The first thing he said was:
+&quot;Tell me, what is America going to do?&quot; As we drove
+back, we made a call on a household whose nephew is
+&quot;missing.&quot;&mdash;&quot;Can't you possibly help us hear definitely
+about him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This sort of thing all day every day must have some
+effect on any man. Then&mdash;yesterday morning gave
+promise of a calm, clear day. I never know what sensational
+experience awaits me around the next corner.
+Then there was put on my desk the first page of a reputable
+weekly paper which was filled with an open letter
+to me written by the editor and signed. After the usual
+description of my multitudinous and delicate duties, I
+was called on to insist that my government should protest
+against Zeppelin raids on London because a bomb might
+kill me! Humour doesn't bubble much now on this side
+the world, for the censor had forbidden the publication of
+this open letter lest it should possibly cause American-German
+trouble! Then the American correspondents
+came in to verify a report that a news agency is said to
+have had that I was deluged with threatening letters!&mdash;More
+widows, more mothers looking for lost sons!...
+Once in a while&mdash;far less often than if I lived in a sane
+and normal world&mdash;I get a few hours off and go to a lonely
+golf club. Alas! there is seldom anybody there but now
+and then a pair of girls and now and then a pair of old
+fellows who have played golf for a century. Yet back in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-101" id="page2-101"></a>[pg II-101]</span>
+London in the War Office I hear they indulge in disrespectful
+hilarity at the poor game I play. Now how do
+they know? (You'd better look to your score with
+Grayson: the English have spies in America. A major-general
+in their spy-service department told Mrs. Page
+that they knew all about Archibaldi<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21" /><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> before he got on the
+ship in New York.)</p>
+
+<p>All this I send you not because it is of the slightest
+permanent importance (except the English judgment of us)
+but because it will prove, if you need proof, that the world
+is gone mad. Everything depends on fighting power and
+on nothing else. A victory will save the Government.
+Even distinctly hopeful military news will. And English
+depression will vanish with a turn of the military tide.
+If it had been Bernstorff instead of Dumba&mdash;<i>that</i> would
+have affected even the English judgment of us. Tyrrell<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22" /><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a>
+remarked to me&mdash;did I write you? &quot;Think of the freaks
+of sheer, blind Luck; a man of considerable ability like
+Dumba caught for taking a risk that an idiot would have
+avoided, and a fool like Bernstorff escaping!&quot; Then he
+added: &quot;I hope Bernstorff will be left. No other human
+being could serve the English as well as he is serving
+them.&quot; So, you see, even in his depression the Englishman
+has some humour left&mdash;e.g., when that old sea dog
+Lord Fisher heard that Mr. Balfour was to become First
+Lord of the Admiralty, he cried out: &quot;Damn it! he
+won't do: Arthur Balfour is too much of a gentleman.&quot;
+So John Bull is now, after all, rather pathetic&mdash;depressed
+as he has not been depressed for at least a hundred
+years. The nobility and the common man are doing their
+whole duty, dying on the Bosphorus or in France without
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-102" id="page2-102"></a>[pg II-102]</span>
+a murmur, or facing an insurrection in India; but the
+labour union man and the commercial class are holding
+hack and hindering a victory. And there is no great
+national leader.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Sincerely yours,<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16" /><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> Count Beckendorff.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17" /><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Afterward private secretary to Premier Lloyd George.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18" /><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> A messenger in the American Embassy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19" /><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> The Rt. Hon. Reginald McKenna.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20" /><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> Sir Horace Plunkett.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21" /><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> It was Archibald's intercepted baggage that furnished the
+documents which caused Dumba's dismissal.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22" /><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> Sir William Tyrrell, private secretary to Sir Edward
+Grey.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-103" id="page2-103"></a>[pg II-103]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII" />CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h3>CHRISTMAS IN ENGLAND, 1915</h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+To Edward M. House<br />
+London, December 7, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>I hear you are stroking down the Tammany tiger&mdash;an
+easier job than I have with the British lion. You can
+find out exactly who your tiger is, you know the house he
+lives in, the liquor he drinks, the company he goes with.
+The British lion isn't so easy to find. At times in English
+history he has dwelt in Downing Street&mdash;not so now. So
+far as our struggle with him is concerned, he's all over the
+Kingdom; for he is public opinion. The governing crowd
+in usual times and on usual subjects can here overrun
+public opinion&mdash;can make it, turn it, down it, dodge it.
+But it isn't so now&mdash;as it affects us. Every mother's son
+of 'em has made up his mind that Germany must and
+shall be starved out, and even Sir Edward's scalp isn't
+safe when they suspect that he wishes to be lenient in
+that matter. They keep trying to drive him out, on
+two counts: (1) he lets goods out of Germany for the
+United States &quot;and thereby handicaps the fleet&quot;; and
+(2) he failed in the Balkans. Sir Edward is too much of a
+gentleman for this business of rough-riding over all neutral
+rights and for bribing those Balkan bandits.</p>
+
+<p>I went to see him to-day about the <i>Hocking</i>, etc. He
+asked me: &quot;Do <i>you know</i> that the ships of this line are
+really owned, in good faith, by Americans?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll answer your question,&quot; said I, &quot;if I may then ask
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-104" id="page2-104"></a>[pg II-104]</span>
+you one. No, I don't know of my own knowledge. Now,
+<i>do you know</i> that they are <i>not</i> owned by Americans?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He had to confess that he, of his own knowledge, didn't
+know.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then,&quot; I said, &quot;for the relief of us both, I pray you
+hurry up your prize court.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>When we'd got done quarrelling about ships and I
+started to go, he asked me how I liked Wordsworth's war
+poems. &quot;The best of all war poems,&quot; said he, &quot;because
+they don't glorify war but have to do with its philosophy.&quot;
+Then he told me that some friend of his had just
+got out a little volume of these war poems selected from
+Wordsworth; &quot;and I'm going to send you a copy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just in time,&quot; said I, &quot;for I have a copy of 'The Life
+and Letters of John Hay'<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23" /><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> that I'm sending to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He's coming to dine with me in a night or two: he'll do
+anything but discuss our Note with me. And he's the
+only member of the Government who, I think, would like
+to meet our views; and he can't. To use the language of
+Lowell about the campaign of Governor Kent&mdash;these
+British are hell-bent on starving the Germans out, and
+neutrals have mighty few rights till that job's done.</p>
+
+<p>The worst of it is that the job won't be done for a very
+long time. I've been making a sort of systematic round
+of the Cabinet to see what these fellows think about things
+in general at this stage of the game. Bonar Law (the
+Colonies) tells me that the news from the Balkans is
+worse than the public or the newspapers know, and that
+still worse news will come. Germany will have it all her
+own way in that quarter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And take Egypt and the canal?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I didn't say <i>that</i>,&quot; he replied. But he showed that
+he fears even that.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2116" id="i2116" />
+<a href="images/2116.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2116.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>Herbert C. Hoover, in 1914</b>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2117" id="i2117" />
+<a href="images/2117.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2117.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>A facsimile page from the Ambassador's letter of November
+24. 1916,<br />
+resigning his Ambassadorship</b>
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-105" id="page2-105"></a>[pg II-105]</span>
+<p>I could go on with a dozen of 'em; but I sat down to
+write you a Christmas letter, and nothing else. The
+best news I have for you is not news at all, but I conceive
+it to be one of the best hopes of the future. In spite of
+Irishmen past, present, and to come; in spite of Germans,
+whose fuss will soon be over; in spite of lawyers, who (if
+left alone) would bankrupt empires as their clients and
+think they'd won a victory; I'm going to leave things
+here in a year and a half so that, if wise men wish to lay
+a plan for keeping the peace of the world, all they need
+to do will be to say first to Uncle Sam: &quot;This fellow or
+that must understand that he can't break loose like a
+wild beast.&quot; If Uncle Sam agrees (and has a real navy
+himself), he'll wink at John Bull, and John will follow
+after. You see our blackleg tail-twisters have the whole
+thing backward. They say we truckle to the British.
+My plan is to lead the British&mdash;not for us to go to them
+but to have them come to us. We have three white men
+to every two white men in their whole Empire; and, when
+peace comes, we'll be fairly started on the road to become
+as rich as the war will leave them. There are four clubs
+in London which have no other purpose than this; and the
+best review<a name="FNanchor_24_24" id="FNanchor_24_24" /><a href="#Footnote_24_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> in the world exists chiefly for this purpose.
+All we need to do is to be courteous (we can do what we
+like if we do it courteously). Our manners, our politicians,
+and our newspapers are all that keep the English-speaking
+white man, under our lead, from ruling the
+world, without any treaty or entangling alliance whatsoever.
+If, when you went to Berlin to talk to your gentle
+and timid friend, the Emperor, about disarmament
+before the war&mdash;if about 200 American dreadnaughts and
+cruisers, with real grog on 'em, had come over to make a
+friendly call, in the North Sea, on the 300 English dreadnaughts
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-106" id="page2-106"></a>[pg II-106]</span>
+and cruisers&mdash;just a friendly call, admirals on
+admirals&mdash;the &quot;Star-Spangled Banner&quot; and &quot;God Save
+the King&quot;&mdash;and if General Bell, from the Philippines, had
+happened in London just when Kitchener happened to
+be home from Egypt&mdash;<i>then, there wouldn't have been this
+war now</i>. Nothing need have been said&mdash;no treaty, no
+alliance, nothing. For then 100 or more British naval
+ships would have joined the Panama naval procession
+and any possible enemy would have seen that combined
+fleet clean across the Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>Now this may all be a mere Christmas fancy&mdash;a mere
+yarn about what might have been&mdash;because we wouldn't
+have sent ships here in our old mood; the crew would have
+missed one Sunday School. But it's <i>this kind</i> of thing
+that does the trick. But this means the practice of
+courtesy, and we haven't acquired the habit. Two years
+or more ago the training ships from Annapolis with the
+cadets aboard anchored down the Thames and stayed
+several weeks and let the boys loose in England. They
+go on such a voyage every two years to some country,
+you know. The English didn't know that fact and they
+took the visit as a special compliment. Their old admirals
+were all greatly pleased, and I hear talk about that yet.
+We ought to have two or three of our rear-admirals
+here on their fleet now. Symington, of course, is a good
+fellow; but he's a mere commander and attach&eacute;&mdash;not an
+admiral&mdash;in other words, not any particular compliment
+or courtesy to the British Navy. (As soon as the war
+began, a Japanese admiral turned up here and he is here
+now.) We sent over two army captains as military observers.
+The Russians sent a brigadier-general. We
+ought to have sent General Wood. You see the difference?
+There was no courtesy in our method. It would
+be the easiest and prettiest job in the world to swallow
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-107" id="page2-107"></a>[pg II-107]</span>
+the whole British organization, lock, stock, and barrel&mdash;King,
+Primate, Cabinet, Lords, and Commons, feathers
+and all, and to make 'em follow our <i>courteous</i> lead anywhere.
+The President had them in this mood when the
+war started and for a long time after&mdash;till the <i>Lusitania</i>
+seemed to be forgotten and till the lawyers began to write
+his Notes. He can get 'em back, after the war ends, by
+several acts of courtesy&mdash;if we could get into the habit of
+doing such things as sending generals and admirals as
+compliments to them. The British Empire is ruled by a
+wily use of courtesies and decorations. If I had the President
+himself to do the correspondence, if I had three or
+four fine generals and admirals and a good bishop or
+two, a thoroughbred senator or two and now and then a
+Supreme Court Justice to come on proper errands and
+be engineered here in the right way&mdash;we could do or say
+anything we liked and they'd do whatever we'd say. I'd
+undertake to underwrite the whole English-speaking world
+to keep peace, under our leadership. Instead whereof,
+every move we now make is to <i>follow</i> them or to <i>drive</i>
+them. The latter is impossible, and the former is unbecoming
+to us.</p>
+
+<p>But to return to Christmas.&mdash;I could go on writing for
+a week in this off-hand, slap-dash way, saying wise things
+flippantly. But Christmas&mdash;that's the thing now. Christmas!
+What bloody irony it is on this side the world!
+Still there will be many pleasant and touching things
+done. An Englishman came in to see me the other day
+and asked if I'd send $1,000 to Gerard<a name="FNanchor_25_25" id="FNanchor_25_25" /><a href="#Footnote_25_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> to use in making
+the English prisoners in Germany as happy as possible
+on Christmas Day&mdash;only I must never tell anybody who
+did it. A lady came on the same errand&mdash;for the British
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-108" id="page2-108"></a>[pg II-108]</span>
+prisoners in Turkey, and with a less but still a generous
+sum. The heroism, the generosity, the endurance and
+self-restraint and courtesy of these people would melt a
+pyramid to tears. Of course there are yellow dogs among
+'em, here and there; but the genuine, thoroughbred
+English man or woman is the real thing&mdash;one of the realest
+things in this world. So polite are they that not a single
+English person has yet mentioned our Note to me&mdash;not
+one.</p>
+
+<p>But every one I've met for two days has mentioned
+the sending of Von Papen and Boy-Ed<a name="FNanchor_26_26" id="FNanchor_26_26" /><a href="#Footnote_26_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> home&mdash;not that
+they expect us to get into the war, but because they regard
+this action as maintaining our self-respect.</p>
+
+<p>Nor do they neglect other things because of the war.
+I went to the annual dinner of the Scottish Corporation
+the other night-an organization which for 251 years has
+looked after Scotchmen stranded in London; and they
+collected $20,000 then and there. There's a good deal
+of Christmas in 'em yet. One fellow in a little patriotic
+speech said that the Government is spending twenty-five
+million dollars a day to whip the Germans.&mdash;&quot;Cheap
+work, very cheap work. We can spend twice that if
+necessary. Why, gentlemen, we haven't exhausted our
+pocket-change yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Somehow I keep getting away from Christmas. It
+doesn't stay put. It'll be a memorable one here for its
+sorrows and for its grim determination&mdash;an empty chair
+at every English table. But nowhere in the world will it
+be different except in the small neutral states here and in
+the lands on your side the world.</p>
+
+<p>How many Christmases the war may last, nobody's
+wise enough to know. That depends absolutely on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-109" id="page2-109"></a>[pg II-109]</span>
+Germany. The Allies announced their terms ten months
+ago, and nothing has yet happened to make them change
+them. That would leave the Germans with Germany and
+a secure peace&mdash;no obliteration or any other wild nonsense,
+but only a secure peace. Let 'em go back home,
+pay for the damage they've done, and then stay there.
+I do hope that the actual fighting will be ended by Christmas
+of next year. Of course it <i>may</i> end with dramatic
+suddenness at any time, this being the only way, perhaps,
+for the Kaiser to save his throne. Or it may go on for
+two or three years. My guess is that it'll end next year&mdash;a
+guess subject to revision, of course, by events that can't
+be foreseen.</p>
+
+<p>But as I said before&mdash;to come back to Christmas. Mrs.
+Page and I send you and Mrs. House our affectionate good
+wishes and the hope that you keep very well and very
+happy in your happy, prosperous hemisphere. We do,
+I thank you. We haven't been better for years&mdash;never
+before so busy, never, I think, so free from care. We get
+plenty to eat (such as it is in this tasteless wet zone), at a
+high cost, of course; we have comfortable beds and shoes
+(we spend all our time in these two things, you know);
+we have good company, enough to do (!!), no grievances
+nor ailments, no ill-will, no disappointments, a keen
+interest in some big things&mdash;all the chips are blue, you
+know; we don't feel ready for halos, nor for other uncomfortable
+honours; we deserve less than we get and
+are content with what the gods send. This, I take it, is
+all that Martin<a name="FNanchor_27_27" id="FNanchor_27_27" /><a href="#Footnote_27_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> would call a comfortable mood for
+Christmas; and we are old enough and tough enough to
+have thick armour against trouble. When Worry knocks
+at the door, the butler tells him we're not at home.</p>
+
+<p>And I see the most interesting work in the world cut
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-110" id="page2-110"></a>[pg II-110]</span>
+out for me for the next twenty-five or thirty years&mdash;to get
+such courtesy into our dealings with these our kinsmen
+here, public and private&mdash;as will cause them to follow us
+in all the developments of democracy and-in keeping
+the peace of the world secure. I can't impress it on you
+strongly enough that the English-speaking folk have got
+to set the pace and keep this world in order. Nobody
+else is equal to the job. In all our dealings with the
+British, public and private, we allow it to be assumed
+that <i>they</i> lead: they don't. <i>We</i> lead. They'll follow, if
+we do really lead and are courteous to them. If we hold
+back, the Irishman rears up and says we are surrendering
+to the English! Suppose we go ahead and the English
+surrender to us, what can your Irishmen do then? Or
+your German? The British Navy is a pretty good sort
+of dog to have to trot under your wagon. If we are
+willing to have ten years of thoughtful good manners, I
+tell you Jellicoe will eat out of your hand.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, cheer up! It's not at all improbable that
+Ford<a name="FNanchor_28_28" id="FNanchor_28_28" /><a href="#Footnote_28_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> and his cargo of cranks, if they get across the ocean,
+may strike a German mine in the North Sea. Then
+they'll die happy, as martyrs; and the rest of us will live
+happy, and it'll be a Merry Christmas for everybody.</p>
+
+<p>Our love to Mrs. House.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Always heartily yours,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+<br />
+<i>To Frank N. Doubleday and Others</i><br />
+<br />
+London, Christmas, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR D.P. &amp; Co.</p>
+
+<p>... Now, since we're talking about the war, let
+me deliver my opinion and leave the subject. They're
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-111" id="page2-111"></a>[pg II-111]</span>
+killing one another all right; you needn't have any doubt
+about that&mdash;so many thousand every day, whether there's
+any battle or not. When there's &quot;nothing to report&quot;
+from France, that means the regular 5,000 casualties that
+happen every day. There isn't any way of getting rid of
+men that has been forgotten or neglected. Women and
+children, too, of course, starve in Serbia and Poland and
+are massacred in Turkey. England, though she has by
+very much the largest army she ever had, has the smallest
+of all the big armies and yet I don't know a family that
+had men of fighting age which hasn't lost one or more
+members. And the worst is to come. But you never
+hear a complaint. Poor Mr. Dent<a name="FNanchor_29_29" id="FNanchor_29_29" /><a href="#Footnote_29_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>, for instance (two
+sons dead), says: &quot;It's all right. England must be
+saved.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And this Kingdom alone, as you know, is spending
+twenty-five million dollars a day. The big loan placed in
+the United States<a name="FNanchor_30_30" id="FNanchor_30_30" /><a href="#Footnote_30_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> would last but twenty days! if this
+pace of slaughter and of spending go on long enough,
+there won't be any men or any money left on this side the
+world. Yet there will be both left, of course; for somehow
+things never quite go to the ultimate smash that seems to
+come. Read the history of the French Revolution. How
+did the French nation survive?</p>
+
+<p>It will go on, unless some unexpected dramatic military
+event end it, for something like another year at least&mdash;many
+say for two years more, and some, three years
+more. It'll stop, of course, whenever Germany will propose
+terms that the Allies can consider&mdash;or something
+near such terms; and it won't stop before. By blockade
+pressure and by fighting, the Allies are gradually wearing
+the Germans out. We can see here the gradual pressure
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-112" id="page2-112"></a>[pg II-112]</span>
+of events in that direction. My guess is that they won't
+go into a third winter.</p>
+
+<p>Well, dear gentlemen, however you may feel about it,
+that's enough for me. My day&mdash;every day&mdash;is divided
+into these parts: (1) two to three hours listening to Americans
+or their agents here whose cargoes are stopped, to
+sorrowing American parents whose boys have run away
+and gone into the English Army, to nurses and doctors
+and shell makers who wish to go to France, to bereaved
+English men and women whose sons are &quot;missing&quot;: can
+I have them found in Germany? (2) to answering letters
+about these same cheerful subjects; (3) to going over cases
+and documents prepared about all these sorts of troubles
+and forty other sorts, by the eight or ten secretaries of
+the Embassy, and a conference with every one of them;
+(4) the reading of two books of telegrams, one incoming,
+the other outgoing, and the preparation of a lot of answers;
+(5) going to the Foreign Office, not every day but often,
+to discuss more troubles there; (6) home to dinner at 8
+o'clock&mdash;at home or somewhere else, and there is more
+talk about the war or about the political troubles. That
+for a regular daily routine for pretty nearly a year and a
+half! As I say, if anybody is keeping the war up for my
+entertainment, he now has my permission to stop. No
+time to read, no time to write, little time to think, little
+or no time to see the people you most wish to see, I often
+don't know the day of the week or of the month: it's a
+sort of life in the trenches, without the immediate physical
+danger. Then I have my cabinet meetings, my financial
+reports (money we spend for four governments: I had till
+recently about a million dollars subject to my check);
+then the commission for the relief of Belgium; then the
+Ambassadors and Ministers of the other neutral states&mdash;our
+task is worse than war!</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-113" id="page2-113"></a>[pg II-113]</span>
+<p>Well, praise God for sleep. I get from seven to nine
+hours a night, unbroken; and I don't take Armageddon
+to bed with me.</p>
+
+<p>I don't mind telling <i>you</i> (nobody else) that the more I
+see just how great statesmen work and manage great
+governments&mdash;the more I see of them at close range&mdash;whether
+in Washington or London or Berlin or Vienna or
+Constantinople (for these are <i>my</i> Capitals), the more I
+admire the methods of the Long Island farmers. Boys, I
+swear I could take our crowd and do a better job than
+many of these great men do. I have to spend a lot of
+time to correct their moves before the other fellow finds
+out the mistake. For instance I know I spent $2,000 in
+telegrams before I could make the German Government
+understand the British military age, and the British
+Government understand the German military age, for
+exchanging prisoners who had lost two legs or arms or
+both eyes; and I've had to send a man to Berlin to get a
+financial report from one man on one floor of a building
+there and to take it to another man on the floor above.
+Just yesterday I was reminded that I had made eighteen
+requests for the same information of the British Government,
+when the nineteenth request for it came from Washington;
+and I have now telegraphed that same thing nineteen
+times since the war began. Of course everybody's
+worked to death. But something else ails a lot of 'em all
+the way from Constantinople to London. Leaving out
+common gutter lying (and there's much of it) the sheer
+stupidity of governments is amazing. They are all so
+human, so mighty human! I wouldn't be a government
+for any earthly consideration. I'd rather be a brindled
+dog and trot under the wagon.</p>
+
+<p>But it has been an inexpressibly interesting experience
+to find all this out for myself. There's a sort of weary
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-114" id="page2-114"></a>[pg II-114]</span>
+satisfaction in feeling that you've seen too much of them
+to be fooled by 'em any more. And, although most men
+now engaged in this game of government are mere common
+mortals with most of the common mortal weaknesses, now
+and then a really big man does stumble into the business.
+I have my doubts whether a really big man ever deliberately
+goes into it. And most of the men who the
+crowd for the moment thinks are big men don't really
+turn out so. It's a game like bull fighting. The bull
+is likely to kill you&mdash;pretty sure to do so if you keep
+at the business long enough; but in the meantime you have
+some exciting experiences and the applause of the audience.
+When you get killed, they forget you&mdash;immediately.
+There are two rather big men in this Government,
+and you wouldn't guess in three rounds who they are.
+But in general the war hasn't so far developed very big
+men in any country. Else we are yet too close to them to
+recognize their greatness. Joffre seems to have great
+stuff in him; and (I assure you) you needn't ever laugh at a
+Frenchman again. They are a great people. As for the
+British, there was never such a race. It's odd&mdash;I hear that
+it happens just now to be the fashion in the United States
+to say that the British are not doing their share. There
+never was a greater slander. They absolutely hold the
+Seven Seas. They have caught about seventy submarines
+and some of them are now destroying German ships
+in the Baltic Sea. They've sent to France by several
+times the largest army that any people ever sent over the
+sea. They are financing most of their allies and they
+have turned this whole island into gun and shell factories.
+They made a great mistake at the Dardanelles and they
+are slower than death to change their set methods. But
+no family in the land, from charcoal burners to dukes,
+hesitates one moment to send its sons into the army.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-115" id="page2-115"></a>[pg II-115]</span>
+When the news comes of their death, they never whimper.
+When you come right down to hard facts, the courage and
+the endurance of the British and the French excel anything
+ever before seen on this planet. All the old stories
+of bravery from Homer down are outdone every day by
+these people. I see these British at close range, full-dress
+and undress; and I've got to know a lot of 'em as well as
+we can ever come to know anybody after we get grown.
+There is simply no end to the silly sides of their character.
+But, when the real trial comes, they don't flinch; and (except
+the thoroughbred American) there are no such men
+in the world.</p>
+
+<p>A seven-foot Kansas lawyer (Kansas all over him) came
+to see me yesterday. He came here a month ago on
+some legal business. He told me yesterday that he had
+always despised Englishmen. He's seen a few with stud-horse
+clothes and white spats and monocles on who had
+gone through Kansas to shoot in the Rocky Mountains.
+He couldn't understand 'em and he didn't like 'em.
+&quot;So infernally uppish,&quot; said he.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, what do you think of 'em now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The very best people in the world,&quot; said he. I think
+he has a notion of enlisting!</p>
+
+<p>You're still publishing books, I hear. That's a good
+occupation. I'd like to be doing it myself. But I can't
+even get time to read 'em now.</p>
+
+<p>But, as you know, nobody's writing anything but war
+books&mdash;from Kipling to Hall Caine. Poor Kipling!&mdash;his
+boy's dead. I have no doubt of it. I've had all the German
+hospitals and prison camps searched for him in vain.
+These writing men and women, by the way, are as true
+blue and as thoroughbred as any other class. I can never
+forget Maurice Hewlett's brave behaviour when he
+thought that his flying corps son had been killed by the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-116" id="page2-116"></a>[pg II-116]</span>
+Germans or drowned at sea. He's no prig, but a real man.
+And the women are as fine as the men....</p>
+
+<p>To go back to books: Of course nobody can tell what
+effect the war will have on the writing of them, nor what
+sort of new writers may come up. You may be sure that
+everything is stirred to its profoundest depths and will
+be stirred still more. Some old stagers will be laid on
+the shelf; that's certain. What sort of new ones will
+come? I asked H.G. Wells this question. He has
+promised to think it out and tell me. He has the power
+to guess some things very well. I'll put that question to
+Conrad when I next see him.</p>
+
+<p>Does anybody in the United States take the Prime
+Minister, Mr. Asquith, to be a great man? His wife is a
+brilliant woman; and she has kept a diary ever since he
+became Prime Minister; and he now has passed the longest
+single term in English history. Mr. Dent thinks he's
+the biggest man alive, and Dent has some mighty good
+instincts.</p>
+
+<p>Talk about troubles! Think of poor Northcliffe. He
+thinks he's saved the nation from its miserable government,
+and the government now openly abuses him in
+the House of Commons. Northcliffe puts on his brass
+knuckles and turns the <i>Times</i> building upside down and
+sets all the <i>Daily Mail</i> machine guns going, and has to go
+to bed to rest his nerves, while the row spreads and
+deepens. The Government keeps hell in the prayer-book
+because without it they wouldn't know what to do
+with Northcliffe; and Northcliffe is just as sure that he
+has saved England as he is sure the Duke of Wellington
+did.</p>
+
+<p>To come back to the war. (We always do.) Since
+I wrote the first part of this letter, I spent an evening with
+a member of the Cabinet and he told me so much bad
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-117" id="page2-117"></a>[pg II-117]</span>
+military news, which they prevent the papers from publishing
+or even hearing, that to-night I almost share this
+man's opinion that the war will last till 1918. That
+isn't impossible. If that happens the offer that I heard
+a noble old buck make to a group of ladies the other night
+may be accepted. This old codger is about seventy-five,
+ruddy and saucy yet. &quot;My dear ladies,&quot; said he, &quot;if
+the war goes on and on we shall have no young men left.
+A double duty will fall on the old fellows. I shall be
+ready, when the need comes, to take four extra wives, and
+I daresay there are others of my generation who are as
+patriotic as I am.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>All of which is only my long-winded, round-about diplomatic
+way of wishing you every one and every one of
+yours and all the folk in the office, their assigns, superiors,
+dependents, companions in labour&mdash;all, everyone and
+sundry, the happiest of Christmases; and when you take
+stock of your manifold blessings, don't forget to be thankful
+for the Atlantic Ocean. That's the best asset of
+safety that we have.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately yours,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Mrs. Charles G. Loring</i><br />
+<br />
+6 Grosvenor Square,<br />
+<br />
+London, December 7, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR KITTY:</p>
+
+<p>This is my Christmas letter to you and Chud&mdash;a poor
+thing, but the best I have to give you. At least it carries
+my love, dear, and my wishes that every Christmas under
+your own roof will be happier than the preceding one.
+Since your starting point is on the high level of your first
+Christmas in your own home&mdash;that's a good wish: isn't it?</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-118" id="page2-118"></a>[pg II-118]</span>
+<p>I'm beginning to think a good deal of your mother and
+me. Here we are left alone by every one of you&mdash;in a
+foreign land; and, contrary to all predictions that any of
+you would have made about us four or five years ago,
+we're faring pretty well, thank you, and not on the edge
+of dying of loneliness at all. I tell you, I think we're
+pretty brave and hardy.</p>
+
+<p>We're even capable of becoming cocky and saucy to
+every one of you. Be careful, then.</p>
+
+<p>You see if you have a war to live with you don't necessarily
+need children: you'll have strife enough without
+'em. We'll console ourselves with such reflections as
+these.</p>
+
+<p>And the truth is&mdash;at least about me&mdash;that there isn't
+time to think of what you haven't got. Of course, I'm
+working, as always, to soften the relations between these
+two governments. So far, in spite of the pretty deep
+latent feeling on both sides&mdash;far worse than it ought to be
+and far worse than I wish it were&mdash;I'm working all the
+time to keep things as smooth as possible. Happily,
+nobody can prove it, but I believe it, that there is
+now and there has been all along more danger of a
+serious misunderstanding than anybody has known.
+The Germans have, of course, worked in 1000 ways to
+cause misunderstanding between England and the United
+States. Then, of course, there has been constant danger
+in the English bull-headed insularity which sees nothing
+but the Englishman's immediate need, and in the English
+slowness. Add to these causes the American ignorance
+of war and of European conditions. It has been a God's
+mercy for us that we have so far had a man like Sir
+Edward Grey in his post. And in my post, while there
+might well have been a better man, this much at least has
+been lucky&mdash;that I do have a consciousness of English
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-119" id="page2-119"></a>[pg II-119]</span>
+history and of our common origin and some sense of the
+inevitable destiny of the great English-speaking race&mdash;so
+that, when we have come to sharp corners in the road,
+I have known that whatever happen we must travel in the
+right general direction&mdash;have known that no temporary
+difference must be allowed to assume a permanent quality.
+I have thought several times that we had passed the
+worst possible place, and then a still worse one would appear.
+It does look now as if we had faced most of the
+worst difficulties that can come, but I am not sure what
+Congress may do or provoke. If we outlast Congress, we
+shall be safe. Now to come through this enormous war
+even with no worse feeling than already exists between the
+two countries&mdash;that'll be a big thing to have done. But
+it's work like the work of the English fleet. Nobody can
+prove that Jellicoe has been a great admiral. Yet the fleet
+has done the whole job more successfully than if it had
+had sea-fights and lost a part of their ships.</p>
+
+<p>Our Note has left a great deal of bad feeling&mdash;suppressed,
+but existent. A part of it was inevitable and
+(I'd say) even necessary. But we put in a lot of things
+that seem to me to be merely disputatious, and we didn't
+write it in the best form. It corresponds to what you
+once called <i>suburban</i>: do you remember? Not thoroughbred.
+But we'll get over even that, especially if the Administration
+and the courts continue to bring the Germans
+to book who are insulting our dignity and destroying
+our property and killing Americans. If we can satisfactorily
+settle the <i>Lusitania</i> trouble, the whole outlook
+will be very good.</p>
+
+<p>Your mother and I are hearing much interesting political
+talk. We dined last night with Mr. Bonar Law.
+Sir Edward Carson was there. To-day we lunched with
+Lady P.&mdash;the other side, you see. There are fundamental
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-120" id="page2-120"></a>[pg II-120]</span>
+differences continually arising. They thought a
+few weeks ago that they had the Prime Minister's scalp.
+He proved too nimble for them. Now one person after another
+says to you: &quot;Kitchener doesn't deserve the reverence
+the people give him.&quot; More and more folks say he's
+hard to work with&mdash;is domineering and selfish. Nobody
+seems really to know him; and there are some signs that
+there may be a row about him.</p>
+
+<p>We've heard nothing from Harold in quite a little
+while. We have, you know, three of our footmen in the
+war. Allen was wounded at Loos&mdash;a flesh, bullet-wound.
+He's about well now and is soon going back. Leslie is
+in the trenches and a postal card came from him the other
+day. The third one, Philip, is a prisoner in Germany.
+Your mother sent him a lot of things, but we've never
+heard whether he received them or not. The general
+strain&mdash;military, political, financial&mdash;gets greater. The
+streets are darker than ever. The number of wounded
+increases rapidly. More houses are turned into hospitals.
+The Manchesters', next door, is a hospital now. And
+everybody fears worse days are to come. But they have
+no nerves, these English. They grit their teeth, but they
+go on bravely, enduring everything. We run into experiences
+every day that melt you, and the heroic things
+we hear outnumber and outdo all the stories in all the
+books.</p>
+
+<p>I keep forgetting Xmas, Kitty, and this is my Xmas
+letter. You needn't put it in your stocking, but you'd
+really better burn it up. It would be the ruination of
+the world if my frank comments got loose. It's for you
+and Chud only. You may fill your stocking full of the
+best wishes you ever received&mdash;enough to fill the polar
+bear skin. And I send you both my love.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-121" id="page2-121"></a>[pg II-121]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Ralph W., Arthur 147., and Frank C. Page</i><a name="FNanchor_31_31" id="FNanchor_31_31" /><a href="#Footnote_31_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a><br />
+<br />
+London, Christmas, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR Boys: R.W.P., A.W.P., F.C.P.</p>
+
+<p>A Merry Christmas to you! Good cheer, good company,
+good food, good fires, good golf. I suppose (though
+the Lord only knows) that I'll have to be here another
+Christmas; but another after that? Not on your
+life!</p>
+
+<p>I think I'm as cheerful and hopeful as I ever was, but
+this experience here and the war have caused my general
+confidence in the orderly progress of civilization somewhat
+to readjust itself. I think that any man who looks
+over the world and who knows something of the history
+of human society&mdash;I mean any American who really believes
+in democracy and in human progress&mdash;is somewhat
+saddened to see the exceeding slowness of that progress.
+In the early days of our Republic hopeful Americans held
+the opinion that the other countries of the world would
+follow our example; that is to say, would educate the
+people, would give the masses a chance to become real
+men, would make their governments and institutions
+serve the people, would dispense with kings and gross
+privileges and become free. Well, they haven't done it.
+France is nominally a republic, but the masses of its
+people are far, far backward. Switzerland <i>is</i> a republic,
+but a very small one. Denmark is a very free state, in
+spite of its monarchical form of government. In South
+America they think they have republics, but they haven't
+the slightest idea of the real education and freedom of the
+people. Practically, therefore, the United States and
+the self-governing British colonies are the only really
+free countries of much importance in the whole world&mdash;these
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-122" id="page2-122"></a>[pg II-122]</span>
+and this Kingdom. Our example hasn't been followed.
+In Europe, Germany and Russia in particular
+have monarchs who are in absolute command. Thus on
+both sides the world, so far as government and the danger
+of war are concerned, there hasn't been very much real
+progress in five hundred years.</p>
+
+<p>This is a little disappointing. And it means, of course,
+that we are likely to have periodical earthquakes like this
+present one till some radical change come. Republics
+have their faults, no doubt. But they have at least this
+virtue: that no country where the people really have the
+control of their government is likely to start out
+deliberately on any war of conquest&mdash;is not likely to run
+amuck&mdash;and will not regard its population as mere food
+for shell and powder.</p>
+
+<p>Nor do I believe that our example of our government
+has, relatively to our strength and wealth and population,
+as much influence in the world as we had one hundred
+years ago. Our people have no foreign consciousness and
+I know that our government knows almost nothing about
+European affairs; nor do our people know. As regards
+foreign affairs our government lacks proper machinery.
+Take this as an illustration: The President wrote vigorous
+and proper notes about the <i>Lusitania</i> and took a
+firm stand with Germany. Germany has paid no attention
+to the <i>Lusitania</i> outrage. Yet (as I understand it)
+the people will not run the risk of war&mdash;or the Administration
+thinks they will not&mdash;and hence the President
+can do nothing to make his threat good. Therefore we
+stand in a ridiculous situation; and nobody cares how
+many notes we write. I don't know that the President
+could have done differently&mdash;unless, before he sent the
+<i>Lusitania</i> notes, he had called Congress together and
+submitted his notes to Congress. But, as the matter
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-123" id="page2-123"></a>[pg II-123]</span>
+stands, the Germans are merely encouraged to blow up
+factories and practically to carry on war in the United
+States, because they know we can (or will) do nothing.
+Mere notes break nobody's skin.</p>
+
+<p>We don't seem to have any machinery to bring any
+influence to bear on foreign governments or on foreign
+opinion; and, this being so, it is little wonder that the rest
+of the world does not follow our republican example.</p>
+
+<p>And this sort of impotence in influence has curious
+effects at home. For example, the ship-purchase bill, as
+it was at the last session of Congress, was an economic
+crime. See what has happened: We have waked up to
+the fact that we must have a big navy. Well, a navy is
+of no far-fighting value unless we have auxiliary ships and
+a lot of 'em. Admiral Jellicoe has 3,000 ships under his
+command; and he couldn't keep his fleet on the job if
+he didn't have them. Most of them are commandeered
+merchant, passenger, and fishing ships. Now we haven't
+merchant, passenger, and fishing ships to commandeer.
+We've got to build and buy auxiliary ships to our navy.
+This, to my mind, makes the new ship-purchase bill, or
+something like it, necessary. Else our navy, when it
+comes to the scratch, will be of no fighting value, however
+big it be. It's the price we've got to pay for not having
+built up a merchant marine. And we haven't built up a
+merchant marine because we've had no foreign consciousness.
+While our Irishmen have been leading us to twist
+the Lion's tail, we've been depending almost wholly on
+English ships&mdash;and, in late years, on German ships. You
+can't cross the ocean yet in a decent American ship. You
+see, we've declared our independence; and, so far as
+individual development goes, we've worked it out. But
+the governmental machinery for maintaining it and for
+making it visible to the world&mdash;we've simply neglected to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-124" id="page2-124"></a>[pg II-124]</span>
+build it or to shape it. Hence the President's notes hurt
+nobody and accomplish nothing; nor could our navy put
+up a real fight, for lack of colliers and supply ships. It's
+the same way all around the horizon. And these are the
+reasons we haven't made our democracy impress the
+world more.</p>
+
+<p>A democracy is not a quick-trigger war-engine and
+can't be made into one. When the quick-trigger engines
+get to work, they forget that a democracy does not consider
+fighting the first duty of man. You can bend your
+energies to peaceful pursuits or you can bend them to
+war. It's hard to do both at the same time. The Germans
+are the only people who have done both at the same
+time; and even they didn't get their navy big enough for
+their needs.</p>
+
+<p>When the infernal thing's over&mdash;that'll be a glad day;
+and the European world won't really know what it has
+cost in men and money and loss of standards till it is
+over....</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<i>To Walter H. Page, Jr</i><a name="FNanchor_32_32" id="FNanchor_32_32" /><a href="#Footnote_32_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a>.<br />
+<br />
+London, Christmas, 1915.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>SIR:</p>
+
+<p>For your first Christmas, I have the honour to send you
+my most affectionate greetings; and in wishing you all
+good health, I take the liberty humbly to indicate some of
+the favours of fortune that I am pleased to think I enjoy
+in common with you.</p>
+
+<p><i>First</i>&mdash;I hear with pleasure that you are quite well content
+with yourself&mdash;not because of a reasoned conviction
+of your own worth, which would be mere vanity and unworthy
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-125" id="page2-125"></a>[pg II-125]</span>
+of you, but by reason of a philosophical disposition.
+It is too early for you to bother over problems of
+self-improvement&mdash;as for me it is too late; wherefore we
+are alike in the calm of our self-content. What others
+may think or say about us is a subject of the smallest
+concern to us. Therefore they generally speak well of
+us; for there is little satisfaction in speaking ill of men
+who care nothing for your opinion of them. Then, too,
+we are content to be where we happen to be&mdash;a fact that
+we did not order in the beginning and need not now
+concern ourselves about. Consider the eternal coming
+and going of folk. On every road many are travelling
+one way and an equal number are travelling the other way.
+It is obvious that, if they were all content to remain at
+the places whence they set forth, the distribution of the
+population would be the same. Why therefore move
+hither and yon at the cost of much time and labour and
+money, since nothing is accomplished thereby? We
+spare ourselves by being content to remain where we are.
+We thereby have the more time for reflection. Nor can
+we help observing with a smile that all persons who have
+good reasons to see us themselves make the necessary
+journey after they discover that we remain fixed.</p>
+
+<p>Again, people about us are continually doing this service
+and that for some other people&mdash;running errands,
+mending fences, bearing messages, building, and tearing
+down; and they all demand equal service in return. Thus
+a large part of mankind keeps itself in constant motion
+like bubbles of water racing around a pool at the foot of a
+water-fall&mdash;or like rabbits hurrying into their warrens
+and immediately hurrying out again. Whereas, while
+these antics amuse and sadden us, we for the most part
+remain where we are. Hence our wants are few; they
+are generally most courteously supplied without our asking;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-126" id="page2-126"></a>[pg II-126]</span>
+or, if we happen to be momentarily forgotten, we
+can quickly secure anything in the neighbourhood by a
+little judicious squalling. Why, then, should we whirl
+as bubbles or scurry as rabbits? Our conquering self-possession
+gives a masterful charm to life that the victims
+of perpetual locomotion never seem to attain.</p>
+
+<p>You have discovered, and my experience confirms yours,
+that a perpetual self-consciousness brings most of the
+misery of the world. Men see others who are richer than
+they; or more famous, or more fortunate&mdash;so they think;
+and they become envious. You have not reached the
+period of such empty vanity, and I have long passed it.
+Let us, therefore, make our mutual vows not to be disturbed
+by the good luck or the good graces of others,
+but to continue, instead, to contemplate the contented
+cat on the rug and the unenvious sky that hangs over all
+alike.</p>
+
+<p>This mood will continue to keep our lives simple. Consider
+our diet. Could anything be simpler or better?
+We are not even tempted by the poisonous victuals wherewith
+mankind destroys itself. The very first sound law
+of life is to look to the belly; for it is what goes into a
+man that ruins him. By avoiding murderous food, we
+may hope to become centenarians. And why not? The
+golden streets will not be torn up and we need be in no
+indecent haste to travel even on them. The satisfactions
+of this life are just beginning for us; and we shall
+be wise to endure this world for as long a period as possible.</p>
+
+<p>And sleep is good&mdash;long sleep and often; and your age
+and mine permit us to indulge in it without the sneers of
+the lark or the cock or the dawn.</p>
+
+<p>I pray you, sir, therefore, accept my homage as the
+philosopher that you are and my assurance of that high
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-127" id="page2-127"></a>[pg II-127]</span>
+esteem indicated by my faithful imitation of your virtues.
+I am,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+With the most distinguished consideration,<br />
+With the sincerest esteem, and<br />
+With the most affectionate good wishes,<br />
+Sir,<br />
+Your proud,<br />
+Humble,<br />
+Obedient<br />
+GRANDDADDY.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>To Master Walter Hines Page,</p>
+
+<p>On Christmas, 1915.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23" /><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> By William Roscoe Thayer, published in 1915.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_24_24" id="Footnote_24_24" /><a href="#FNanchor_24_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> The Ambassador had in mind <i>The Round Table</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_25_25" id="Footnote_25_25" /><a href="#FNanchor_25_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> James W. Gerard, American Ambassador to Germany, and, as
+such, in charge of British interests in Germany.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_26_26" id="Footnote_26_26" /><a href="#FNanchor_26_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> The German military and naval attach&eacute;s, whose persistent
+and outrageous violation of American laws led to their dismissal by
+President Wilson.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_27_27" id="Footnote_27_27" /><a href="#FNanchor_27_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> E.S. Martin, Editor of <i>Life</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_28_28" id="Footnote_28_28" /><a href="#FNanchor_28_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Mr. Henry Ford at this time was getting together his
+famous peace ship, which was to sail to Europe &quot;to get the boys out of
+the trenches by Christmas.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_29_29" id="Footnote_29_29" /><a href="#FNanchor_29_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> J.M. Dent, the London publisher.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_30_30" id="Footnote_30_30" /><a href="#FNanchor_30_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> $500,000,000.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_31_31" id="Footnote_31_31" /><a href="#FNanchor_31_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> The Ambassador's Sons.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_32_32" id="Footnote_32_32" /><a href="#FNanchor_32_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> The Ambassador's infant grandson, son of Arthur W. Page.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-128" id="page2-128"></a>[pg II-128]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII" />CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<h3>A PERPLEXED AMBASSADOR</h3>
+
+
+<p>The beginning of the new year saw no improvement
+in German-American relations. Germany
+and Austria continued to violate the pledge given by
+Bernstorff after the sinking of the <i>Arabic</i>&mdash;if that shifty
+statement could be regarded as a &quot;pledge.&quot; On November
+7, 1915, the Austrians sank the <i>Ancona</i>, in the Mediterranean,
+drowning American citizens under conditions
+of particular atrocity, and submarine attacks on merchant
+ships, without the &quot;warning&quot; or attempt to save
+passengers and crew which Bernstorff had promised, took
+place nearly every day. On April 18, 1916, the <i>Sussex</i>
+was torpedoed in the English Channel, without warning
+and with loss of American life. This caused what seemed
+to be a real crisis; President Wilson sent what was practically
+an ultimatum to Germany, demanding that it &quot;immediately
+declare and effect an abandonment of its present
+methods of warfare against passenger and freight
+carrying vessels,&quot; declaring that, unless it did so, the
+United States would sever diplomatic relations with the
+German Empire. In reply, Germany apparently backed
+down and gave the promise the President had demanded.
+However, it coupled this concession with an expression
+of its expectation that the United States would compel
+Great Britain to observe international law in the blockade.
+As this latter statement might be interpreted as a
+qualification of its surrender, the incident hardly ended
+satisfactorily.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-129" id="page2-129"></a>[pg II-129]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+Bournemouth<br />
+<br />
+May 22, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>I stick on the back of this sheet a letter that Sydney
+Brooks wrote from New York (May 1st) to the <i>Daily Mail</i>.
+He formulates a question that we have many times asked
+ourselves and that, in one way or other, comes into everybody's
+mind here. Of course the common fellow in Jonesville
+who has given most of his time and energy to earning
+a living for his wife and children has no foreign consciousness,
+whether his Jonesville be in the United States or in
+England or in France or in Zanzibar. The real question
+is, <i>Do</i> these fellows in Jonesville make up the United
+States? or has there been such a lack of prompt leadership
+as to make all the Jonesville people confused? It's hard
+for me to judge at this distance just how far the President
+has led and just how far he has waited and been pushed
+along. Suppose he had stood on the front steps every
+morning before breakfast for a month after the <i>Lusitania</i>
+went down and had called to the people in the same tone
+that he used in his note to Germany&mdash;had sounded a bugle
+call&mdash;would we have felt as we now feel? What would
+the men in Jonesville have done then? Would they
+have got their old guns down from over the doors? Or
+do they so want peace and so think that they can have
+peace always that they've lost their spine? Have they
+really been Bryanized, Fordized, Janeaddamsized, Sundayschooled,
+and Chautauquaed into supine creatures
+to whom the United States and the ideals of the Fathers
+mean nothing? Who think a German is as good as an
+Englishman? Who have no particular aims or aspirations
+for our country and for democracy? When T.R. was in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-130" id="page2-130"></a>[pg II-130]</span>
+the White House he surely was an active fellow. He
+called us to exercise ourselves every morning. He bawled
+&quot;Patriotism&quot; loudly. We surely thought we were awake
+during those strenuous years. Were we really awake or
+did we only look upon him and his antics as a sort of good
+show? All that time Bryan was peace-a-footing and
+prince-of-peacing. Now did he really have the minds
+of the people or did T.R.?</p>
+
+<p>If we've really gone to sleep and if the United States
+stands for nothing but personal comfort and commercialism
+to our own people, what a job you and the patriotic
+men of your generation have cut out for you!</p>
+
+<p>My own conviction (which I don't set great store by)
+is that our isolation and prosperity have not gone so far
+in softening us as it seems. They've gone a good way,
+no doubt; but I think that even the Jonesville people yet
+feel their Americanism. What they need is&mdash;leadership.
+Their Congressmen are poor, timid, pork-barrel creatures.
+Their governors are in training for the Senate. The Vice-President
+reads no official literature of the war, &quot;because
+then I might have a conviction about it and that wouldn't
+be neutral.&quot; And so on. If the people had a <i>real</i> leadership,
+I believe they'd wake up even in Jonesville.</p>
+
+<p>Well, let's let these things go for the moment. How's
+the Ambassador<a name="FNanchor_33_33" id="FNanchor_33_33" /><a href="#Footnote_33_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>? And the Ambassador's mother and
+sister? They're nice folks of whom and from whom I
+hear far too little. Give 'em my love. I don't want you
+to rear a fighting family. But these kids won't and
+mustn't grow up peace-cranks&mdash;not that anybody objects
+to peace, but I do despise and distrust a crank, a crank
+about anything. That's the lesson we've got to learn
+from these troubled times. First, let cranks alone&mdash;the
+other side of the street is good enough for them. Then,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-131" id="page2-131"></a>[pg II-131]</span>
+if they persist, I see nothing to do but to kill 'em, and
+that's troublesome and inconvenient.</p>
+
+<p>But, as I was saying, bless the babies. I can't begin to
+tell you how very much I long to see them, to make their
+acquaintance, to chuckle 'em and punch 'em and see 'em
+laugh, and to see just what sort of kids they be.</p>
+
+<p>I've written you how in my opinion there's no country
+in the world fit for a modern gentleman and man-of-character
+to live in except (1) the United States and (2) this
+island. And this island is chiefly valuable for the breed
+of men&mdash;the right stock. They become more valuable to
+the world after they go away from home. But the right
+blood's here. This island's breed is the best there is. An
+Englishman or a Scotchman is the best ancestor in this
+world, many as his shortcomings are. Some Englishman
+asked me one night in what, I thought, the Englishman
+appeared at his best. I said, &quot;As an ancestor to
+Americans!&quot; And this is the fundamental reason why we
+(two peoples) belong close together. Reasons that flow
+from these are such as follows: (1) The race is the sea-mastering
+race and the navy-managing race and the ocean-carrying
+race; (2) the race is the literary race, (3) the
+exploring and settling and colonizing race, (4) the race to
+whom fair play appeals, and (5) that insists on individual
+development.</p>
+
+<p>Your mother having read these two days 1,734 pages of
+memoirs of the Coke family, one of whose members wrote
+the great law commentaries, another carried pro-American
+votes in Parliament in our Revolutionary times, refused
+peerages, defied kings and&mdash;begad! here they are
+now, living in the same great house and saying and doing
+what they darn please&mdash;we know this generation of 'em!&mdash;well,
+your mother having read these two big volumes
+about the old ones and told me 175 good stories out of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-132" id="page2-132"></a>[pg II-132]</span>
+these books, bless her soul! she's gone to sleep in a big chair
+on the other side of the table. Well she may, she walked
+for two hours this morning over hills and cliffs and through
+pine woods and along the beach. I guess I'd better wake
+her up and get her to go to bed&mdash;as the properer thing to
+do at this time o'night, viz. 11. My golf this afternoon
+was too bad to confess. But I must say that a 650 and
+a 730 yard hole argues the audacity of some fellow and the
+despair of many more. Nature made a lot of obstructions
+there and Man made more. It must be seven or eight
+miles around that course! It's almost a three hour task
+to follow my slow ball around it. I suggested we play
+with howitzers instead of clubs. Good night!</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Frank N. Doubleday and Others</i><br />
+<br />
+Royal Bath and East Cliff Hotel,<br />
+Bournemouth, May 29, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR D.P. &amp; Co.:</p>
+
+<p>I always have it in mind to write you letters; but there's
+no chance in my trenches in London; and, since I have
+not been out of London for nearly two years&mdash;since the
+war began&mdash;only an occasional half day and a night&mdash;till
+now&mdash;naturally I've concocted no letter. I've been down
+here a week&mdash;a week of sunshine, praise God&mdash;and people
+are not after me every ten minutes, or Governments
+either; and my most admirable and efficient staff (now
+grown to one hundred people) permit few letters and
+telegrams to reach me. There never was a little rest more
+grateful. The quiet sea out my window shows no sign of
+crawling submarines; and, in general, it's as quiet and
+peaceful here as in Garden City itself.</p>
+
+<p>I'm on the home-stretch now in all my thoughts and
+plans. Three of my four years are gone, and the fourth
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-133" id="page2-133"></a>[pg II-133]</span>
+will quickly pass. That's not only the limit of my leave,
+but it's quite enough for me. I shouldn't care to live
+through another such experience, if the chance should ever
+come to me. It has changed my whole life and my whole
+outlook on life; and, perhaps, you'd like to hear some impressions
+that it has made upon me.</p>
+
+<p>The first impression&mdash;perhaps the strongest&mdash;is a loss
+of permanent interest in Europe, especially all Europe
+outside of this Kingdom. I have never had the illusion
+that Europe had many things that we needed to learn.
+The chief lesson that it has had, in my judgment, is the
+lesson of the art of living&mdash;the comforts and the courtesies
+of life, the refinements and the pleasures of conversation
+and of courteous conduct. The upper classes have this
+to teach us; and we need and can learn much from them.
+But this seems to me all&mdash;or practically all. What we
+care most for are individual character, individual development,
+and a fair chance for every human being. Character,
+of course, the English have&mdash;immense character,
+colossal character. But even they have not the dimmest
+conception of what we mean by a fair chance for every
+human being&mdash;not the slightest. In one thousand years
+they <i>may</i> learn it from us. Now on the continent, the
+only important Nation that has any character worth
+mentioning is the French. Of course the little nations&mdash;some
+of them&mdash;have character, such as Holland, Switzerland,
+Sweden, etc. But these are all. The others are
+simply rotten. In giving a free chance to every human
+creature, we've nothing to learn from anybody. In character,
+I bow down to the English and Scotch; I respect
+the Frenchman highly and admire his good taste. But,
+for our needs and from our point of view, the English can
+teach us only two great lessons&mdash;character and the art of
+living (if you are rich).</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-134" id="page2-134"></a>[pg II-134]</span>
+<p>The idea that we were brought up on, therefore, that
+Europe is the home of civilization in general&mdash;nonsense!
+It's a periodical slaughter-pen, with all the vices that this
+implies. I'd as lief live in the Chicago stock-yards.
+There they kill beeves and pigs. Here they kill men and
+(incidentally) women and children. I should no more
+think of encouraging or being happy over a child of mine
+becoming a European of any Nation than I should be
+happy over his fall from Grace in any other way.</p>
+
+<p>Our form of government and our scheme of society&mdash;God
+knows they need improving&mdash;are yet so immeasurably
+superior, as systems, to anything on this side the
+world that no comparison need be made.</p>
+
+<p>My first strong impression, then, is not that Europe is
+&quot;effete&quot;&mdash;that isn't it. It is medi&aelig;val&mdash;far back toward
+the Dark Ages, much of it yet uncivilized, held back by
+<i>inertia</i> when not held back by worse things. The caste
+system is a constant burden almost as heavy as war itself
+and often quite as cruel.</p>
+
+<p>The next impression I have is, that, during the thousand
+years that will be required for Europe to attain real (modern)
+civilization, wars will come as wars have always
+come in the past. The different countries and peoples and
+governments will not and cannot learn the lesson of federation
+and co&ouml;peration so long as a large mass of their
+people have no voice and no knowledge except of their
+particular business. Compare the miles of railway in
+proportion to population with the same proportion in
+the United States&mdash;or the telephones, or the use of
+the mails, or of bank checks; or make any other practical
+measure you like. Every time, you'll come back to the
+discouraging fact that the masses in Europe are driven as
+cattle. So long as this is true, of course, they'll be driven
+periodically into wars. So many countries, so many races,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-135" id="page2-135"></a>[pg II-135]</span>
+so many languages all within so small an area as Europe
+positively invite deadly differences. If railroads had
+been invented before each people had developed its own
+separate language, Europe could somehow have been
+coordinated, linked up, federated, made to look at life
+somewhat in the same way. As it is, wars will be bred
+here periodically for about another thousand years. The
+devil of this state of things is that they may not always
+be able to keep their wars at home.</p>
+
+<p>For me, then, except England and the smaller exceptions
+that I have mentioned, Europe will cut no big
+figure in my life. In all the humanities, we are a thousand
+years ahead of any people here. So also in the adaptabilities
+and the conveniences of life, in its versatilities and
+in its enjoyments. Most folk are stolid and sad or dull
+on this side of the world. Else how could they take their
+kings and silly ceremonies seriously?</p>
+
+<p>Now to more immediate and definite impressions. I
+have for a year had the conviction that we ought to get
+into the war&mdash;into the economic war&mdash;for the following
+among many reasons.</p>
+
+<p>1. That's the only way to shorten it. We could cause
+Germany's credit (such as she has) instantly to collapse,
+and we could hasten her hard times at home which would
+induce a surrender.</p>
+
+<p>2. That's the only way we can have any real or important
+influence in adjusting whatever arrangements can
+be made to secure peace.</p>
+
+<p>3. That's the best way we can inspire complete respect
+for us in the minds of other nations and thereby, perhaps,
+save ourselves from some wars in the future.</p>
+
+<p>4. That's the best way we can assert our own character&mdash;our
+Americanism, and forever get rid of all kinds of
+hyphens.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-136" id="page2-136"></a>[pg II-136]</span>
+<p>5. That's the only way we shall ever get a real and
+sensible preparedness, which will be of enormous educational
+value even if no military use should ever be made
+of our preparation.</p>
+
+<p>6. That's the only way American consciousness will
+ever get back to the self-sacrificing and patriotic point
+of view of the Fathers of the Republic.</p>
+
+<p>7. That's the best way to emancipate ourselves from
+cranks.</p>
+
+<p>8. That's the only way we'll ever awaken in our whole
+people a foreign consciousness that will enable us to assert
+our natural influence in the world&mdash;political, financial,
+social, commercial&mdash;the best way to make the rest of the
+world our customers and friends and followers.</p>
+
+<p>All the foregoing I have fired at the Great White Chief
+for a year by telegraph and by mail; and I have never
+fired it anywhere else till now. Be very quiet, then.
+No man with whom I have talked or whose writings I
+have read seems to me to have an adequate conception
+of the colossal changes that the war is bringing and will
+bring. Of course, I do not mean to imply that I have any
+adequate conception. Nobody can yet grasp it. The
+loss of (say) ten million men from production of work or
+wares or children; what a changed world that fact alone
+will make! The presence in all Europe of (perhaps)
+fifteen or twenty million more women than men will upset
+the whole balance of society as regards the sexes. The
+loss of most of the accumulated capital of Europe and the
+vast burdens of debt for the future to pay will change the
+financial relations of the whole world. From these two
+great losses&mdash;men and money&mdash;God knows the many
+kinds of changes that will come. Women are doing and
+will continue to do many kinds of work hitherto done by
+men.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-137" id="page2-137"></a>[pg II-137]</span>
+<p>Of course there are some great gains. Many a flabby
+or abject fellow will come out of the war a real man: he'll
+be nobody's slave thereafter. The criminal luxury of the
+rich will not assert itself again for a time. The unparalleled
+addition to the world's heroic deeds will be to
+the good of mankind, as the unparalleled suffering has
+eclipsed all records. The survivors will be in an heroic
+mood for the rest of their lives. In general, life will start
+on a new plane and a lot of old stupid habits and old party
+quarrels and class prejudices will disappear. To get
+Europe going again will call for new resolution and a new
+sort of effort. Nobody can yet see what far-reaching
+effects it will have on government.</p>
+
+<p>If I could make the English and Scotch over, I could
+greatly improve them. I'd cut out the Englishman's
+arrogance and key him up to a quicker gait. Lord! he's
+a slow beast. But he's worked out the germ and the
+beginning of all real freedom, and he has character. He
+knows how to conserve and to use wealth. He's a great
+John Bull, after all. And as for commanding the sea, for
+war or trade, you may properly bow down to him and
+pay him homage. The war will, I think, quicken him
+up. It will lessen his arrogance&mdash;to <i>us</i>, at least. I think
+it will make him stronger and humbler. And, whatever
+his virtues and his faults, he's the only Great Power we
+can go hand in hand with....</p>
+
+<p>These kinds of things have been going on now nearly
+two years, and not till these ten days down here have I
+had time or chance or a free mind to think them over;
+and now there's nothing in particular to think&mdash;nothing
+but just to go on, doing these 40,000 things (and they take
+a new turn every day) the best I can, without the slightest
+regard to consequences. I've long ago passed the place
+where, having acted squarely according to my best judgment,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-138" id="page2-138"></a>[pg II-138]</span>
+I can afford to pay the slightest attention to what
+anybody thinks. I see men thrown on the scrap heap
+every day. Many of them deserve it, but a good many
+do not. In the abnormal state of mind that everybody
+has, there are inevitable innocent misunderstandings,
+which are as fatal as criminal mistakes. The diplomatic
+service is peculiarly exposed to misunderstandings: and,
+take the whole diplomatic service of all nations as shown
+up by this great strain, it hasn't stood the test very well.
+I haven't the respect for it that I had when I started.
+Yet, God knows, I have a keen sympathy for it. I've
+seen some of 'em displaced; some of 'em lie down; some
+of 'em die.</p>
+
+<p>As I've got closer and closer to big men, as a rule they
+shrink up. They are very much like the rest of us&mdash;many
+of 'em more so. Human nature is stripped in these
+times of most of its disguises, and men have to stand and
+be judged as a rule by their real qualities. Among all
+the men in high place here, Sir Edward Grey stands out
+in my mind bigger, not smaller, than he stood in the
+beginning. He's a square, honourable gentleman, if there
+is one in this world. And it is he, of course, with whom
+I have had all my troubles. It's been a truly great
+experience to work and to quarrel with such a man. We've
+kept the best friendship&mdash;a constantly ripening one.
+There are others like him&mdash;only smaller.</p>
+
+<p>Yet they are all in turn set upon by the press or public
+opinion and hounded like criminals. They try (somebody
+tries) to drive 'em out of office every once in a while.
+If there's anything I'm afraid of, it's the newspapers.
+The correspondents are as thick as flies in summer&mdash;all
+hunting sensations&mdash;especially the yellow American press.
+I play the game with these fellows always squarely, sometimes
+I fear indiscreetly. But what is discretion? That's
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-139" id="page2-139"></a>[pg II-139]</span>
+the hardest question of all. We have regular meetings.
+I tell 'em everything I can&mdash;always on the condition that
+I'm kept out of the papers. If they'll never mention
+me, I'll do everything possible for them. Absolute
+silence of the newspapers (as far as I can affect it) is the
+first rule of safety. So far as I know, we've done fairly
+well; but always in proportion to silence. I don't want
+any publicity. I don't want any glory. I don't want
+any office. I don't want nothin'&mdash;but to do this job
+squarely, to get out of this scrape, to go off somewhere in
+the sunshine and to see if I can slip back into my old self
+and see the world sane again. Yet I'm immensely proud
+that I have had the chance to do some good&mdash;to keep our
+record straight&mdash;as far as I can, and to be of what service
+I can to these heroic people.</p>
+
+<p>Out of it all, one conviction and one purpose grows and
+becomes clearer. The world isn't yet half-organized. In
+the United States we've lived in a good deal of a fool's
+paradise. The world isn't half so safe a place as we supposed.
+Until steamships and telegraphs brought the
+nations all close together, of course we could enjoy our
+isolation. We can't do so any longer. One mad fool in
+Berlin has turned the whole earth topsy-turvy. We'd
+forgotten what our forefathers learned&mdash;the deadly dangers
+of real monarchs and of castes and classes. There
+are a lot of 'em left in the world yet. We've grown rich
+and-weak; we've let cranks and old women shape our
+ideas. We've let our politicians remain provincial and
+ignorant.</p>
+
+<p>And believe me, dear D.P. &amp; Co. with affectionate
+greeting to every one of you and to every one of yours,
+collectively and singly,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours heartily,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-140" id="page2-140"></a>[pg II-140]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Memorandum written after attending the service at
+St. Paul's in memory of Lord Kitchener</i><a name="FNanchor_34_34" id="FNanchor_34_34" /><a href="#Footnote_34_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>American Embassy, London.</p>
+
+<p>There were two Kitcheners, as every informed person
+knows&mdash;(1) the popular hero and (2) the Cabinet Minister
+with whom it was impossible for his associates to get along.
+He made his administrative career as an autocrat dealing
+with dependent and inferior peoples. This experience
+fixed his habits and made it impossible for him to do team
+work or to delegate work or even to inform his associates
+of what he had done or was doing. While, therefore, his
+name raised a great army, he was in many ways a hindrance
+in the Cabinet. First one thing and then another
+was taken out of his hands&mdash;ordnance, munitions, war
+plans. When he went to Gallipoli, some persons predicted
+that he would never come back. There was a hot
+meeting of the Cabinet at which he was asked to go to
+Russia, to make a sort of return visit for the visit that important
+Russians had made here, and to link up Russia's
+military plans with the plans of the Western Allies. He
+is said to have remarked that he was going only because he
+had been ordered to go. There was a hope and a feeling
+again that he might not come back till after the war.</p>
+
+<p>Now just how much truth there is in all this, one has
+to guess; but undoubtedly a good deal. He did much in
+raising the army, but his name did more. What an
+extraordinary situation! The great hero of the Nation an
+impossible man to work with. The Cabinet could not
+tell the truth about him: the people would not believe it
+and would make the Cabinet suffer. Moreover, such a
+row would have given comfort to the enemy. Kitchener,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-141" id="page2-141"></a>[pg II-141]</span>
+on his part, could not afford to have an open quarrel.
+The only solution was to induce him to go away for a long
+time. Both sides saw that. Such thoughts were in
+everybody's mind while the impressive funeral service was
+said and sung in St. Paul's. The Great Hero, who had
+failed, was celebrated of course as a Great Hero&mdash;quite
+truly and yet far from true. For him his death came at
+a lucky time: his work was done.</p>
+
+<p>There is even a rumour, which I don't for a moment
+believe, that he is alive on the Orkney Islands and prefers
+to disappear there till the war ends. This is fantastic,
+and it was doubtless suggested by the story that
+he did disappear for several years while he was a young
+officer.</p>
+
+<p>I could not help noticing, when I saw all the Cabinet
+together at the Cathedral, how much older many of them
+look than they looked two years ago. Sir Edward Grey,
+Mr. Asquith, Mr. Balfour, who is really an old man,
+Lloyd George&mdash;each of these seems ten years older. And
+so does the King. The men in responsible places who are
+not broken by the war will be bent. General French,
+since his retirement to command of the forces in England,
+seems much older. So common is this quick aging that
+Lady Jellicoe, who went to Scotland to see her husband
+after the big naval battle, wrote to Mrs. Page in a sort of
+rhapsody and with evident surprise that the Admiral
+really did not seem older! The weight of this thing is so
+prodigious that it is changing all men who have to do with
+it. Men and women (who do not wear mourning) mention
+the death of their sons in a way that a stranger might
+mistake for indifference. And it has a curious effect on
+marriages. Apparently every young fellow who gets a
+week's leave from the trenches comes home and marries
+and, of course, goes straight back&mdash;especially the young
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-142" id="page2-142"></a>[pg II-142]</span>
+officers. You see weddings all day as you pass the favourite
+churches; and already the land is full of young widows.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edwin A. Alderman</i><a name="FNanchor_35_35" id="FNanchor_35_35" /><a href="#Footnote_35_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a><br />
+<br />
+Embassy of the U.S.A., London,<br />
+<br />
+June 22, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR ED ALDERMAN:</p>
+
+<p>I shall not forget how good you were to take time to
+write me a word about the meeting of the Board&mdash;<i>the</i>
+Board: there's no other one in that class&mdash;at Hampton<a name="FNanchor_36_36" id="FNanchor_36_36" /><a href="#Footnote_36_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>,
+and I did most heartily appreciate the knowledge that you
+all remembered me. Alas! it's a long, long time ago when
+we all met&mdash;so long ago that to me it seems a part of a
+former incarnation. These three years&mdash;especially these
+two years of the war&mdash;have changed my whole outlook on
+life and foreshortened all that came before. I know I
+shall never link back to many things (and alas! too, to
+many people) that once seemed important and surely
+were interesting. Life in these trenches (five warring or
+quarrelling governments mining and sapping under me
+and shooting over me)&mdash;two years of universal ambassadorship
+in this hell are enough&mdash;enough I say, even for
+a man who doesn't run away from responsibilities or
+weary of toil. And God knows how it has changed me
+and is changing me: I sometimes wonder, as a merely intellectual
+and quite impersonal curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough I keep pretty well&mdash;very well, in fact.
+Perhaps I've learned how to live more wisely than I knew
+in the old days; perhaps again, I owe it to my old grandfather
+who lived (and enjoyed) ninety-four years. I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-143" id="page2-143"></a>[pg II-143]</span>
+have walked ten miles to-day and I sit down as the clock
+strikes eleven (P.M.) to write this letter.</p>
+
+<p>You will recall more clearly than I certain horrible,
+catastrophic, universal-ruin passages in Revelation&mdash;monsters
+swallowing the universe, blood and fire and clouds
+and an eternal crash, rolling ruin enveloping all things&mdash;well,
+all that's come. There are, perhaps, ten million men
+dead of this war and, perhaps, one hundred million persons
+to whom death would be a blessing. Add to these as
+many millions more whose views of life are so distorted that
+blank idiocy would be a better mental outlook, and you'll
+get a hint (and only a hint) of what the continent has
+already become&mdash;a bankrupt slaughter-house inhabited
+by unmated women. We have talked of &quot;problems&quot; in
+our day. We never had a problem; for the worst task we
+ever saw was a mere blithe pastime compared with what
+these women and the few men that will remain here must
+face. The hills about Verdun are not blown to pieces
+worse than the whole social structure and intellectual and
+spiritual life of Europe. I wonder that anybody is sane.</p>
+
+<p>Now we have swung into a period and a state of mind
+wherein all this seems normal. A lady said to me at a
+dinner party (think of a dinner party at all!), &quot;Oh, how
+I shall miss the war when it ends! Life without it will
+surely be dull and tame. What can we talk about?
+Will the old subjects ever interest us again?&quot; I said,
+&quot;Let's you and me try and see.&quot; So we talked about
+books&mdash;not war books&mdash;old country houses that we both
+knew, gardens and gold and what not; and in fifteen
+minutes we swung back to the war before we were aware.</p>
+
+<p>I get out of it, as the days rush by, certain fundamental
+convictions, which seem to me not only true&mdash;true beyond
+any possible cavil&mdash;truer than any other political things
+are true&mdash;and far more important than any other contemporary
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-144" id="page2-144"></a>[pg II-144]</span>
+facts whatsoever in any branch of endeavour,
+but better worth while than anything else that men now
+living may try to further:</p>
+
+<p>1. The cure for democracy is more democracy. The
+danger to the world lies in autocrats and autocracies and
+privileged classes; and these things have everywhere been
+dangerous and always will be. There's no security in
+any part of the world where people cannot think of a
+government without a king, and there never will be. You
+cannot conceive of a democracy that will unprovoked set
+out on a career of conquest. If all our religious missionary
+zeal and cash could be turned into convincing
+Europe of this simple and obvious fact, the longest step
+would be taken for human advancement that has been
+taken since 1776. If Carnegie, or, after he is gone, his
+Peace People could see this, his Trust might possibly do
+some good.</p>
+
+<p>2. As the world stands, the United States and Great
+Britain must work together and stand together to keep
+the predatory nations in order. A League to Enforce
+Peace and the President's idea of disentangling alliances
+are all in the right direction, but vague and general and
+cumbersome, a sort of bastard children of Neutrality.
+<i>The</i> thing, the <i>only</i> thing is&mdash;a perfect understanding
+between the English-speaking peoples. That's necessary,
+and that's all that's necessary. We must boldly take the
+lead in that. I frankly tell my friends here that the
+English have got to throw away their damned arrogance
+and their insularity and that we Americans have got to
+throw away our provincial ignorance (&quot;What is abroad
+to us?&quot;), hang our Irish agitators and shoot our hyphenates
+and bring up our children with reverence for English
+history and in the awe of English literature. This is the
+only job now in the world worth the whole zeal and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-145" id="page2-145"></a>[pg II-145]</span>
+energy of all first-class, thoroughbred English-speaking
+men. <i>We</i> must lead. We are natural leaders. The
+English must be driven to lead. Item: We must get
+their lads into our universities, ours into theirs. They
+don't know how to do it, except the little driblet of
+Rhodes men. Think this out, remembering what fools
+we've been about exchange professors with Germany!
+How much good could Fons Smith<a name="FNanchor_37_37" id="FNanchor_37_37" /><a href="#Footnote_37_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> do in a thousand
+years, on such an errand as he went on to Berlin? And
+the English don't know <i>how</i> to do it. They are childish
+(in some things) beyond belief. An Oxford or Cambridge
+man never thinks of going back to his university except
+about twice a lifetime when his college formally asks him
+to come and dine. Then he dines as docilely as a scared
+Freshman. I am a D.C.L. of Oxford. I know a lot of
+their faculty. They are hospitality itself. But I've
+never yet found out one important fact about the university.
+They never tell me. I've been down at Cambridge
+time and again and stayed with the Master of one
+of the colleges. I can no more get at what they do and
+how they do it than I could get at the real meaning of a
+service in a Buddhist Temple. I have spent a good deal
+of time with Lord Rayleigh, who is the Chancellor of
+Cambridge University. He never goes there. If he were
+to enter the town, all the men in the university would
+have to stop their work, get on their parade-day gowns,
+line-up by precedent and rank and go to meet him and go
+through days of ceremony and incantations. I think the
+old man has been there once in five years. Now this
+medi&aelig;valism must go&mdash;or be modified. You fellers who
+have universities must work a real alliance&mdash;a big job
+here. But to go on.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-146" id="page2-146"></a>[pg II-146]</span>
+<p>The best informed English opinion is ripe for a complete
+working understanding with us. We've got to
+work up our end&mdash;get rid of our ignorance of foreign
+affairs, our shirt-sleeve, complaining kind of diplomacy,
+our sport of twisting the lion's tail and such things and
+fall to and bring the English out. It's the <i>one</i> race in
+this world that's got the guts.</p>
+
+<p>Hear this in confirmation: I suppose 1,000 English
+women have been to see me&mdash;as a last hope&mdash;to ask me to
+have inquiries made in Germany about their &quot;missing&quot;
+sons or husbands, generally sons. They are of every
+class and rank and kind, from marchioness to scrubwoman.
+Every one tells her story with the same dignity
+of grief, the same marvellous self-restraint, the same
+courtesy and deference and sorrowful pride. Not one
+has whimpered&mdash;but one. And it turned out that she was
+a Belgian. It's the breed. Spartan mothers were theatrical
+and pinchbeck compared to these women.</p>
+
+<p>I know a lady of title, very well to do, who for a year
+got up at 5:30 and drove herself in her own automobile
+from her home in London to Woolwich where she worked
+all day long in a shell factory as a volunteer and got home
+at 8 o'clock at night. At the end of a year they wanted
+her to work in a London place where they keep the records
+of the Woolwich work. &quot;Think of it,&quot; said she, as she
+shook her enormous diamond ear-rings as I sat next to
+her at dinner one Sunday night not long ago, &quot;think of
+it&mdash;what an easy time I now have. I don't have to
+start till half-past seven and I get home at half-past
+six!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I could fill forty pages with stories like these. This
+very Sunday I went to see a bedridden old lady who
+sent me word that she had something to tell me. Here
+it was: An English flying man's machine got out of order
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-147" id="page2-147"></a>[pg II-147]</span>
+and he had to descend in German territory. The Germans
+captured him and his machine. They ordered him
+to take two of their flying men in his machine to show
+them a particular place in the English lines. He declined.
+&quot;Very well, we'll shoot you, then.&quot; At last he
+consented. The three started. The Englishman quietly
+strapped himself in. There were no straps for the two
+Germans. The Englishman looped-the-loop. The Germans
+fell out. The Englishman flew back home. &quot;My
+son has been to see me from France. He told me that.
+He knows the man&quot;&mdash;thus said the old lady and thanked
+me for coming to hear it! She didn't know that the
+story has been printed.</p>
+
+<p>But the real question is, &quot;How are you?&quot; Do you
+keep strong? Able, without weariness, to keep up your
+good work? I heartily hope so, old man. Take good
+care of yourself&mdash;very.</p>
+
+<p>My love to Mrs. Alderman. Please don't quote me&mdash;yet.
+I have to be very silent publicly about everything.
+After March 4th, I shall again be free.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours always faithfully,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_33_33" id="Footnote_33_33" /><a href="#FNanchor_33_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> A playful reference to the Ambassador's infant grandson,
+Walter H. Page, Jr.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_34_34" id="Footnote_34_34" /><a href="#FNanchor_34_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> Drowned on the Hampshire, June 5, 1916, off the coast of
+Scotland.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_35_35" id="Footnote_35_35" /><a href="#FNanchor_35_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> President of the University of Virginia.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_36_36" id="Footnote_36_36" /><a href="#FNanchor_36_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> Hampton Institute, at Hampton, Va.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_37_37" id="Footnote_37_37" /><a href="#FNanchor_37_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> C. Alphonso Smith, Professor of English, U.S. Naval
+Academy; Roosevelt Professor at Berlin, 1910-11.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-148" id="page2-148"></a>[pg II-148]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX" />CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<h3>WASHINGTON IN THE SUMMER OF 1916</h3>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>In July Page received a cablegram summoning him to
+Washington. This message did not explain why his
+presence was desired, nor on this point was Page ever
+definitely enlightened, though there were more or less
+vague statements that a &quot;change of atmosphere&quot; might
+better enable the Ambassador to understand the problems
+which were then engrossing the State Department.</p>
+
+<p>The President had now only a single aim in view. From
+the date of the so-called <i>Sussex</i> &quot;pledge,&quot; May 4, 1916,
+until the resumption of submarine warfare on February 1,
+1917, Mr. Wilson devoted all his energies to bringing the
+warring powers together and establishing peace. More
+than one motive was inspiring the president in this determination.
+That this policy accorded with his own
+idealistic tendencies is true, and that he aspired to a
+position in history as the great &quot;peace maker&quot; is probably
+the fact, but he had also more immediate and practical
+purposes in mind. Above all, Mr. Wilson was bent on
+keeping the United States out of the war; he knew that
+there was only one certain way of preserving peace in
+this country, and that was by bringing the war itself to
+an end. &quot;An early peace is all that can prevent the Germans
+from driving us at last into the war,&quot; Page wrote
+at about this time; and this single sentence gives the key
+to the President's activities for the succeeding nine
+months. The negotiations over the <i>Sussex</i> had taught
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-149" id="page2-149"></a>[pg II-149]</span>
+Mr. Wilson this truth. He understood that the pledge
+which the German Government had made was only a
+conditional one; that the submarine campaign had been
+suspended only for the purpose of giving the United
+States a breathing spell during which it could persuade
+Great Britain and France to make peace.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I repeat my proposal,&quot; Bernstorff cabled his government
+on April 26,<a name="FNanchor_38_38" id="FNanchor_38_38" /><a href="#Footnote_38_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> &quot;to suspend the submarine war at
+least for the period of negotiations. This would remove
+all danger of a breach [with the United States] and also
+enable Wilson to continue his labours in his great plan of
+bringing about a peace based upon the freedom of the
+seas&mdash;i.e., that for the future trade shall be free from all
+interference in time of war. According to the assurances
+which Wilson, through House, has given me, he would in
+that case take in hand measures directly against England.
+He is, however, of the opinion that it would be easier to
+bring about peace than to cause England to abandon the
+blockade. This last could only be brought about by
+war and it is well known that the means of war are lacking
+here. A prohibition of exports as a weapon against
+the blockade is not possible as the prevailing prosperity
+would suffer by it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The inquiries made by House have led Wilson to believe
+that our enemies would not be unwilling to consider
+peace. In view of the present condition of affairs, I
+repeat that there is only one possible course, namely,
+that Your Excellency [Von Jagow] empower me to declare
+that we will enter into negotiations with the United
+States touching the conduct of the submarine war while
+the negotiations are proceeding. This would give us
+the advantage that the submarine war, being over Mr.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-150" id="page2-150"></a>[pg II-150]</span>
+Wilson's head, like the sword of Damocles, would compel
+him at once to take in hand the task of mediation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This dispatch seems sufficiently to explain all the
+happenings of the summer and winter of 1916-1917. It
+was sent to Berlin on April 26th; the German Government
+gave the <i>Sussex</i> &quot;pledge&quot; on May 4th, eight days afterward.
+In this reply Germany declared that she would now expect
+Mr. Wilson to bring pressure upon Great Britain
+to secure a mitigation or suspension of the British blockade,
+and to this Mr. Wilson promptly and energetically
+replied that he regarded the German promise as an unconditional
+one and that the Government of the United
+States &quot;cannot for a moment entertain, much less discuss,
+a suggestion that respect by German naval authorities
+for the rights of citizens of the United States upon
+the high seas should in any way or in the slightest degree
+be made contingent upon the conduct of any other government
+affecting the rights of neutrals and non-combatants.
+Responsibility in such matters is single not joint;
+absolute not relative.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This reply gave satisfaction to both the United States
+and the countries of the Allies, and Page himself regarded
+it as a master stroke. &quot;The more I think of it,&quot; he wrote
+on May 17th, &quot;the better the strategy of the President
+appears, in his latest (and last) note to Germany. They
+laid a trap for him and he caught them in their own trap.
+The Germans had tried to 'put it up' to the President to
+commit the first unfriendly act. He now 'puts it up' to
+them. And this is at last bound to end the controversy
+if they sink another ship unlawfully. The French see
+this clearly and so do the best English, and it has produced
+a most favourable impression. The future? The
+German angling for peace will prove futile. They'll have
+another fit of fury. Whether they will again become
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-151" id="page2-151"></a>[pg II-151]</span>
+reckless or commit 'mistakes' with their submarines will
+depend partly on their fury, partly on their fear to make
+a breach with the United States, but mainly on the state
+of their submarine fleet. How many have the English
+caught and destroyed? That's the main question, after
+all. The English view may not be fair to them. But
+nobody here believes that they will long abstain from the
+luxury of crime.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It is thus apparent that when the Germans practically
+demanded, as a price of their abstention from indiscriminate
+submarine warfare, that Mr. Wilson should
+move against Great Britain in the matter of the blockade,
+they realized the futility of any such step, and that what
+they really expected to obtain was the presidential
+mediation for peace. President Wilson at once began to
+move in this direction. On May 27th, three weeks after
+the Sussex &quot;pledge,&quot; he made an address in Washington
+before the League to Enforce Peace, which was intended to
+lay the basis for his approaching negotiations. It was in
+this speech that he made the statement that the United
+States was &quot;not concerned with the causes and the objects&quot;
+of the war. &quot;The obscure fountains from which
+its stupendous flood has burst forth we are not interested
+to search for or to explain.&quot; This was another of those
+unfortunate sentences which made the President such an
+unsympathetic figure in the estimation of the Allies and
+seemed to indicate to them that he had no appreciation
+of the nature of the struggle. Though this attitude of
+non-partisanship, of equal balance between the accusations
+of the Allies and Germany, was intended to make
+the President acceptable as a mediator, the practical result
+was exactly the reverse, for Allied statesmen turned
+from Wilson as soon as those sentences appeared in print.
+The fact that this same oration specified the &quot;freedom of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-152" id="page2-152"></a>[pg II-152]</span>
+the seas&quot; as one of the foundation rocks of the proposed
+new settlement only accentuated this unfavourable attitude.</p>
+
+<p>This then was clearly the &quot;atmosphere&quot; which prevailed
+in Washington at the time that Page was summoned
+home. But Page's letters of this period indicate
+how little sympathy he entertained for such negotiations.
+&quot;It is quite apparent,&quot; he had recently written to Colonel
+House, &quot;that nobody in Washington understands the
+war. Come over and find out.&quot; Extracts from a letter
+which he wrote to his brother, Mr. Henry A. Page, of
+Aberdeen, North Carolina, are especially interesting when
+placed side by side with the President's statements of
+this particular time. These passages show that a two
+years' close observation of the Prussians in action had not
+changed Page's opinion of their motives or of their
+methods; in 1916, as in 1914, Page could see in this
+struggle nothing but a colossal buccaneering expedition
+on the part of Germany. &quot;As I look at it,&quot; he wrote,
+&quot;our dilly-dallying is likely to get us into war. The
+Germans want somebody to rob&mdash;to pay their great
+military bills. They've robbed Belgium and are still
+robbing it of every penny they can lay their hands
+on. They robbed Poland and Serbia&mdash;two very poor
+countries which didn't have much. They set out to
+rob France and have so far been stopped from getting
+to Paris. If they got to Paris there wouldn't be
+thirty cents' worth of movable property there in a week,
+and they'd levy fines of millions of francs a day. Their
+military scheme and teaching and open purpose is to make
+somebody pay for their vast military outlay of the last
+forty years. They must do that or go bankrupt. Now it
+looks as if they would go bankrupt. But in a little while
+they may be able to bombard New York and demand
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-153" id="page2-153"></a>[pg II-153]</span>
+billions of dollars to refrain from destroying the city.
+That's the richest place left to spoil.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now they say that&mdash;quite openly and quite frankly.
+Now if we keep 'neutral' to a highwayman&mdash;what do we
+get for our pains? That's the mistake we are making.
+If we had sent Bernstorff home the day after the <i>Lusitania</i>
+was sunk and recalled Gerard and begun to train an army
+we'd have had no more trouble with them. But since
+they have found out that they can keep us discussing
+things forever and a day, they will keep us discussing
+things till they are ready. We are very simple; and we'll
+get shot for it yet....</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The prestige and fear of the United States has gone
+down, down, down-disappeared; and we are regarded as
+'discussors,' incapable of action, scared to death of war.
+That's all the invitation that robbers, whose chief business
+is war, want&mdash;all the invitation they need. These
+devils are out for robbery&mdash;and you don't seem to believe
+it in the United States: that's the queer thing. This
+neutrality business makes us an easy mark. As soon as
+they took a town in Belgium, they asked for all the money
+in the town, all the food, all the movable property; and
+they've levied a tax every month since on every town and
+made the town government borrow the money to pay it.
+If a child in a town makes a disrespectful remark, they fine
+the town an extra $1,000. They haven't got enough so
+far to keep them going flush; and they won't unless they
+get Paris&mdash;which they can't do now. If they got London,
+they'd be rich; they wouldn't leave a shilling and they'd
+make all the rich English get all the money they own
+abroad. This is the reason that Frenchmen and Englishmen
+prefer to be killed by the 100,000. In the country
+over which their army has passed a crow would die of
+starvation and no human being has ten cents of real
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-154" id="page2-154"></a>[pg II-154]</span>
+money. The Belgian Commission is spending more than
+100 million dollars a year to keep the Belgians alive&mdash;only
+because they are robbed every day. They have a rich
+country and could support themselves but for these robbers.
+That's the meaning of the whole thing. And yet
+we treat them as if they were honourable people. It's
+only a question of time and of power when they will attack
+us, or the Canal, or South America. Everybody on this
+side the world knows that. And they are 'yielding' to
+keep us out of this war so that England will not
+help us when they (the Germans) get ready to attack
+America.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is the strangest infatuation in the United States
+with Peace&mdash;the strangest illusion about our safety without
+preparation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Several letters to Colonel House show the state of the
+British mind on the subject of the President's peace proposals:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+Royal Bath and East Cliff Hotel,<br />
+Bournemouth,<br />
+23 May, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>The motor trip that the Houses, the Wallaces, and the
+Pages took about a year ago was the last trip (three days)
+that I had had out of London; and I'd got pretty tired.
+The <i>China</i> case having been settled (and settled as we
+wanted it), I thought it a good time to try to get away
+for a week. So here Mrs. Page and I are&mdash;very much to
+my benefit. I've spent a beautiful week out of doors, on
+this seashore; and I have only about ten per cent. of the
+fatal diseases that I had a week ago. That is to say, I'm
+as sound as a dollar and feel like a fighting cock.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-155" id="page2-155"></a>[pg II-155]</span>
+<p>Sir Edward was fine about the China<a name="FNanchor_39_39" id="FNanchor_39_39" /><a href="#Footnote_39_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> case. He never
+disputed the principle of the inviolability of American
+ships on the high seas; but the Admiralty maintained that
+some of these men are officers in the German Army and
+are now receiving officers' pay. I think that that is probably
+true. Nevertheless, the Admiralty had bungled the
+case badly and Sir Edward simply rode over them. They
+have a fine quarrel among themselves and we got all we
+wanted and asked for.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, I can't make out the Germans but I am afraid
+some huge deviltry is yet coming. When the English
+say that the Germans must give up their militarism, I
+doubt if the Germans yet know what they mean. They
+talk about conquered territory&mdash;Belgium, Poland, and the
+rest. It hasn't entered their heads that they've got to
+give up their armies and their military system. When
+this does get into their heads, if it ever do, I think they
+may so swell with rage at this &quot;insult&quot; that they may
+break loose in one last desperate effort, ignoring the United
+States, defying the universe, running amuck. Of course it
+would be foolhardy to predict this, but the fear of it keeps
+coming into my mind. The fear is the more persistent
+because, if the worst comes to them, the military caste and
+perhaps the dynasty itself will prefer to die in one last terrific
+onslaught rather than to make a peace on terms which
+will require the practical extinction of their supreme power.
+This, I conceive, is the really great danger that yet awaits
+the world&mdash;if the Allies hold together till defeat and
+famine drive the Germans to the utmost desperation.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, the Allies still holding together as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-156" id="page2-156"></a>[pg II-156]</span>
+they are, there's no peace yet in the British and French
+minds. They're after the militarism of Prussia&mdash;not
+territory or other gains; and they seem likely to get it,
+as much by the blockade as by victories on land. Do
+you remember how in the Franco-Prussian War, Bismarck
+refused to deal with the French Emperor? He demanded
+that representatives of the French people should deal with
+him. He got what he asked for and that was the last of
+the French Emperor. Neither the French nor the English
+have forgotten that. You will recall that the Germans
+starved Paris into submission. Neither the French
+nor the English have forgotten that. These two leaves out
+of the Germans' own book of forty-five years ago&mdash;these
+two and no more&mdash;<i>may</i> be forced on the Germans themselves.
+They are both quite legitimate, too. You can
+read a recollection of both these events between the lines
+of the interviews that Sir Edward and Mr. Balfour recently
+gave to American newspapers.</p>
+
+<p>There is nothing but admiration here for the strategy
+of the President's last note to Germany. That was the
+cleverest play made by anybody since the war began&mdash;clever
+beyond praise. Now he's &quot;got 'em.&quot; But nobody
+here doubts that they will say, sooner or later, that the
+United States, not having forced the breaking of the
+British blockade, has not kept its bargain&mdash;that's what
+they'll say&mdash;and it is in order again to run amuck. This
+is what the English think&mdash;provided the Germans have
+enough submarines left to keep up real damage. By that
+time, too, it will be clear to the Germans that the President
+can't bring peace so long as only one side wishes peace.
+The Germans seem to have counted much on the Irish
+uprising, which came to pass at all only because of the
+customary English stupid bungling; and the net result has
+been only to put the mass of the Irish on their mettle to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-157" id="page2-157"></a>[pg II-157]</span>
+show that they are not Sinn Feiners. The final upshot
+will be to strengthen the British Army. God surely is
+good to this bungling British Government. Wind and
+wave and the will of High Heaven seem to work for them.
+I begin to understand their stupidity and their arrogance.
+If your enemies are such fools in psychological tactics and
+Heaven is with you, why take the trouble to be alert?
+And why be modest? Whatever the reason, these English
+are now more cocky and confident than they've been
+before since the war began. They are beginning to see
+results. The only question seems to be to hold the Allies
+together, and they seem to be doing that. In fact, the
+battle of Verdun has cemented them. They now have
+visible proof that the German Army is on the wane. And
+they have trustworthy evidence that the blockade is telling
+severely on the Germans. Nobody, I think, expects
+to thrash 'em to a frazzle; but the almost universal opinion
+here is that the hold of militarism will be shaken loose.
+And the German High Canal Navy&mdash;what's to become
+of that? Von Tirpitz is down and out, but there are
+thousands of Germans, I hear, who complain of their
+naval inactivity. But God only knows the future&mdash;I
+don't. I think that I do well if I keep track of the
+present....</p>
+
+<p>My kindest regards to Mrs. House,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours very heartily,<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+London, 25 May, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>No utterance by anybody has so stirred the people of
+this kingdom for many months as Sir Edward Grey's
+impromptu speech last night in the House of Commons
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-158" id="page2-158"></a>[pg II-158]</span>
+about Peace, when he called the German Chancellor a
+first-class liar. I sent you to-day a clipping from one of
+the morning papers. Every paper I pick up compliments
+Sir Edward. Everyone says, &quot;We must fight
+to a finish.&quot; The more sensational press intimates that
+any Englishman who uses the word &quot;peace&quot; ought
+to be shot. You have never seen such a rally as that
+which has taken place in response to Sir Edward's cry.
+In the first place, as you know, he is the most gentle of all
+the Cabinet, the last man to get on a &quot;war-rampage,&quot; the
+least belligerent and rambunctious of the whole lot. When
+he felt moved to say that there can be no peace till the
+German military despotism is broken, everybody from
+one end of the Kingdom to the other seems to have thrown
+up his hat and applauded. Except the half-dozen peace-cranks
+in the House (Bryan sort of men) you can't find
+a man, woman, child, or dog that isn't fired with the determination
+to see the war through. The continued talk
+about peace which is reported directly and indirectly from
+Germany&mdash;coming from Switzerland, from Rome, from
+Washington&mdash;has made the English and the French very
+angry: no, &quot;angry&quot; isn't quite the right word. It has
+made them very determined. They feel insulted by the
+impudence of the Germans, who, since they know they
+are bound to lose, seem to be turning heaven and
+earth to induce neutrals to take their view of peace.
+People are asking here, &quot;If they are victorious, why
+doesn't their fleet come out of the canal and take the seas,
+and again open their commerce? Why do they whimper
+about the blockade when they will not even risk a warship
+to break it?&quot; You'll recall how the talk here used to be
+that the English wouldn't wake up. You wouldn't know
+'em now. Your bulldog has got his grip and even thunder
+doesn't disturb him.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-159" id="page2-159"></a>[pg II-159]</span>
+<p>Incidentally, all the old criticism of Sir Edward Grey
+seems to have been forgotten. You hear nothing
+but praise of him now. I am told that he spoke
+his impromptu speech last night with great fire and
+at once left the House. His speech has caused a greater
+stir than the Irish rebellion, showing that every Englishman
+feels that Sir Edward said precisely what every man
+feels.</p>
+
+<p>The Germans have apparently overdone and overworked
+their premature peace efforts and have made
+things worse for them. They've overplayed their
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, I see no end of the war. The Allies are
+not going to quit prematurely. They won't even discuss
+the subject yet with one another, and the Germans,
+by their peace-talk of the sort that they inspire, simply
+postpone the day when the Allies will take the subject
+up.</p>
+
+<p>All the while, too, the Allies work closer and closer
+together. They'll soon be doing even their diplomatic
+work with neutrals, as a unit&mdash;England and France as one
+nation, and (on great subjects) Russia and Italy also
+with them.</p>
+
+<p>I've talked lately not only with Sir Edward but with
+nearly half the other members of the Cabinet, and they
+are all keyed up to the same tune. The press of both
+parties, too, are (for once) wholly agreed: Liberal and
+Conservative papers alike hold the same war-creed.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Sincerely yours,<br />
+<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Before leaving for Washington Page discussed the
+situation personally with Sir Edward Grey and Lord
+Bryce. He has left memoranda of both interviews.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-160" id="page2-160"></a>[pg II-160]</span></div>
+<p><i>Notes of a Private and Informal Conversation with
+Sir Edward Grey, at his residence, on July 27, 1916, when
+I called to say good-bye before sailing on leave to the United
+States</i></p>
+
+<p>... Sir Edward Grey went on to say quite
+frankly that two thoughts expressed in a speech by the
+President some months ago had had a very serious influence
+on British opinion. One thought was that the causes
+or objects of the war were of no concern to him, and the
+other was his (at least implied) endorsement of &quot;the freedom
+of the seas,&quot; which the President did not define.
+Concerning the first thought, he understood of course
+that a neutral President could not say that he favoured
+one side or the other: everybody understood that and nobody
+expected him to take sides. But when the President
+said that the objects of the war did not concern him,
+that was taken by British public opinion as meaning a
+condemnation of the British cause, and it produced deep
+feeling.</p>
+
+<p>Concerning the &quot;freedom of the seas,&quot; he believed that
+the first use of the phrase was made by Colonel House
+(on his return from one of his visits to Berlin)<a name="FNanchor_40_40" id="FNanchor_40_40" /><a href="#Footnote_40_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a>, but the
+public now regarded it as a German invention and it
+meant to the British mind a policy which would render
+British supremacy at sea of little value in time of war; and
+public opinion resented this. He knew perfectly well that
+at a convenient time new rules must be made governing
+the conduct of war at sea and on the land, too. But
+the German idea of &quot;the freedom of the seas&quot; (&quot;freedom&quot;
+was needed on land also) is repulsive to the British
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>He mentioned these things because they had produced
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-161" id="page2-161"></a>[pg II-161]</span>
+in many minds an unwillingness, he feared, to use the good
+offices of the President whenever any mediatorial service
+might be done by a neutral. The tendency of these
+remarks was certainly in that direction. Yet Sir Edward
+carefully abstained from expressing such an unwillingness
+on his own part, and the inference from his tone
+and manner, as well as from his habitual attitude, is that
+he feels no unwillingness to use the President's good office,
+if occasion should arise.</p>
+
+<p>I asked what he meant by &quot;mediatorial&quot;&mdash;the President's
+offering his services or good offices on his own
+initiative? He said&mdash;No, not that. But the Germans
+might express to the President their willingness or even
+their definite wish to have an armistice, on certain terms,
+to discuss conditions of peace coupled with an intimation
+that he might sound the Allies. He did not expect the
+President to act on his own initiative, but at the request or
+at least at the suggestion of the German Government, he
+might conceivably sound the Allies&mdash;especially, he added,
+&quot;since I am informed that the notion is wide-spread in
+America that the war will end inconclusively&mdash;as a draw.&quot;
+He smiled and remarked, as an aside, that he didn't think
+that this notion was held by any considerable group of
+people in any other country, certainly not in Great
+Britain.</p>
+
+<p>In further talk on this subject he said that none of the
+Allies could mention peace or discuss peace till France
+should express such a wish; for it is the very vitals of
+France that have received and are receiving the shock
+of such an assault as was never before launched against
+any nation. Unless France was ready to quit, none of
+France's Allies could mention peace, and France showed
+no mood to quit. Least of all could the English make or
+receive any such suggestion at least till her new great army
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-162" id="page2-162"></a>[pg II-162]</span>
+had done its best; for until lately the severest fighting had
+not been done by the British, whose army had practically
+been held in reserve. There had for a long time been a
+perfect understanding between Joffre and Haig&mdash;that the
+English would wait to begin their offensive till the moment
+arrived when it best suited the French.</p>
+
+<p>The impression that I got from this part of the conversation
+was that Sir Edward hoped that I might convey to
+the President (as, of course, he could not) Sir Edward's
+idea of the effect of these parts of the President's speech on
+feeling in England toward him. Nowhere in the conversation
+did he make any request of me. Any one, overhearing
+it, might have supposed it to be a conversation
+between two men, with no object beyond expressing their
+views. But, of course, he hoped and meant that I should,
+in my own way, make known to the President what he
+said. He did not say that the President's good offices,
+when the time should come, would be unwelcome to him
+or to his government; and he meant, I am sure, to convey
+only the fear that by these assertions the President had
+planted an objection to his good offices in a large section
+of British opinion.</p>
+
+<p>Among the conditions of peace that Sir Edward himself
+personally would like to see imposed (he had not yet
+discussed the subject with any of his colleagues in the
+Government) was this: that the German Government
+should agree to submit to an impartial (neutral) commission
+or court the question, Who began the war and
+who is responsible for it? The German Chancellor and
+other high German officials have put it about and continue
+to put it about that England is responsible, and doubtless
+the German people at least believe it. All the governments
+concerned must (this is his idea) submit to the
+tribunal all its documents and other evidence bearing on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-163" id="page2-163"></a>[pg II-163]</span>
+the subject; and of course the finding of the tribunal must
+be published.</p>
+
+<p>Then he talked a good deal about the idea that lies behind
+the League for Enforcing Peace&mdash;in a sympathetic
+mood. He went on to point out how such a league&mdash;with
+force behind it&mdash;would at any one of three stages
+have prevented this war&mdash;(1) When England proposed
+a conference to France, Germany, Italy, and Russia, all
+agreed to it but Germany. Germany alone prevented
+a discussion. If the League to Enforce Peace had included
+England, France, Italy, and Russia&mdash;there would
+have been no war; for Germany would have seen at once
+that they would all be against her. (2) Later, when the
+Czar sent the Kaiser a personal telegram proposing to
+submit their differences to some tribunal, a League to
+Enforce Peace would have prevented war. And (3) when
+the question of the invasion of Belgium came up, every
+signatory to the treaty guaranteeing Belgium's integrity
+gave assurance of keeping the treaty&mdash;but Germany,
+and Germany gave an evasive answer. A league would
+again have prevented a war&mdash;or put all the military force
+of all its members against Germany.</p>
+
+<p>Throughout the conversation, which lasted about an
+hour, Sir Edward said more than once, as he has often said
+to me, that he hoped we should be able to keep the friction
+between our governments at the minimum. He would
+regard it as the greatest calamity if the ill-feeling that
+various events have stirred up in sections of public opinion
+on each side should increase or should become permanent.
+His constant wish and effort were to lessen and if possible
+to remove all misunderstandings.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Lord Bryce was one of the Englishmen with whom Page
+was especially inclined to discuss pending problems.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-164" id="page2-164"></a>[pg II-164]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Notes on a conversation with Lord Bryce,
+July 31, 1916</i></p></div>
+
+<p>Lord Bryce spoke of the President's declaration that we
+were not concerned with the causes or objects of the war
+and he said that that remark had caused much talk&mdash;all,
+as he thought, on a misunderstanding of Mr. Wilson's
+meaning. &quot;He meant, I take it, only that he did not
+propose at that time to discuss the causes or the objects of
+the war; and it is a pity that his sentence was capable of
+being interpreted to mean something else; and the sentence
+was published and discussed here apart from its
+context&mdash;a most unfair proceeding. I can imagine that
+the President and his friends may be much annoyed by
+this improper interpretation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I remarked that the body of the speech in which this
+remark occurred might have been written in Downing
+Street, so friendly was it to the Allies.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite, quite,&quot; said he.</p>
+
+<p>This was at dinner, Lady Bryce and Mrs. Page and he
+and I only being present.</p>
+
+<p>When he and I went into the library he talked more
+than an hour.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what about this blacklist?&quot; he asked. I told
+him. He had been in France for a week and did not know
+just what had been done. He said that that seemed to
+him a mistake. &quot;The Government doesn't know America&mdash;neither
+does the British public. Neither does the
+American Government (no American government) know
+the British. Hence your government writes too many
+notes&mdash;all governments are likely to write too many notes.
+Everybody gets tired of seeing them and they lose their
+effect.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He mentioned the blockade and said that it had become
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-165" id="page2-165"></a>[pg II-165]</span>
+quite effective&mdash;wonderfully effective, in fact; and he
+implied that he did not see why we now failed to recognize
+it. Our refusal to recognize it had caused and
+doubtless is now causing such ill-feeling as exists in England.</p>
+
+<p>Then he talked long about peace and how it would probably
+be arranged. He judged, from letters that he receives
+from the United States as well as from Americans
+who come over here, that there was an expectation in
+America that the President would be called in at the peace
+settlement and that some persons even expected him to
+offer mediation. He did not see how that could be. He
+knew no precedent for such a proceeding. The President
+might, of course, on the definite request of either side,
+make a definite inquiry of the other side; but such a course
+would be, in effect, merely the transmission of an inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>But after peace was made and the time came to set
+up a League for Enforcing Peace, or some such machinery,
+of course the United States would be and would have
+to be a party to that if it were to succeed. He reminded
+me that a little group of men here, of whom he was one,
+early in the war sketched substantially the same plan
+that the American League to Enforce Peace has worked
+out. It had not seemed advisable to have any general
+public discussion of it in England till the war should end:
+nobody had time now to give to it.</p>
+
+<p>As he knew no precedent for belligerents to call in a
+third party when they met to end a war, so he knew no
+precedent for any outside government to protest against
+the invasion of a country by a Power that had signed
+a treaty to guarantee the integrity of the invaded country&mdash;no
+precedent, that is to say, for the United States to
+protest against the invasion of Belgium. &quot;That precedent,&quot;
+I said, &quot;was found in Hysteria.&quot;</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-166" id="page2-166"></a>[pg II-166]</span></div>
+<p>Lord Bryce, who had just returned from a visit to the
+British headquarters in France, hardly dared hope for the
+end of the war till next year; and the intervening time
+between now and the end would be a time, he feared, of
+renewed atrocities and increasing hatred. He cited the
+killing of Captain Fryatt of the <i>Brussels</i> and the forcible
+deportation of young women from Lille and other towns
+in the provinces of France occupied by the Germans.</p>
+
+<p>The most definite idea that he had touching American-British
+relations was the fear that the anti-British feeling
+in the United States would become stronger and would
+outlast the war. &quot;It is organized,&quot; he said. &quot;The disaffected
+Germans and the disaffected Irish are interested
+in keeping it up.&quot; He asked what effect I thought the
+Presidential campaign would have on this feeling. He
+seemed to have a fear that somehow the campaign would
+give an occasion for stirring it up even more.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good-bye. Give my regards to all my American
+friends; and I'm proud to say there are a good many of
+them.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>One episode that was greatly stirring both Great Britain
+and the United States at this time was the trial of Sir
+Roger Casement, the Irish leader who had left Wilhelmshaven
+for Ireland in a German submarine and who had
+been captured at Tralee in the act of landing arms and
+munitions for an Irish insurrection. Casement's subsequent
+trial and conviction on a charge of high treason had
+inspired a movement in his favour from Irish-Americans,
+the final outcome of which was that the Senate, in early
+August, passed a resolution asking the British Government
+for clemency and stipulating that this resolution
+should be presented to the Foreign Office. Page was
+then on the ocean bound for the United States and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-167" id="page2-167"></a>[pg II-167]</span>
+the delicate task of presenting this document to Sir
+Edward Grey fell upon Mr. Laughlin, who was now
+Charg&eacute; d'affaires. Mr. Laughlin is a diplomat of great
+experience, but this responsibility at first seemed to be
+something of a poser even for him. He had received explicit
+instructions from Washington to present this resolution,
+and the one thing above all which a diplomatic officer
+must do is to carry out the orders of his government, but
+Mr. Laughlin well knew that, should he present this paper
+in the usual manner, the Foreign Secretary might decline
+to receive it; he might regard it as an interference with
+matters that exclusively concerned the sovereign state.
+Mr. Laughlin, however, has a technique all his own, and,
+in accordance with this, he asked for an interview with Sir
+Edward Grey to discuss a matter of routine business.
+However, the Charg&eacute; d'affaires carried the Casement
+resolution tucked away in an inside pocket when he made
+his call.</p>
+
+<p>Like Mr. Page, Mr. Laughlin was on the friendliest terms
+with Sir Edward Grey, and, after the particular piece of
+business had been transacted, the two men, as usual, fell
+into casual conversation. Casement then loomed large
+in the daily press, and the activities of the American Senate
+had likewise caused some commotion in London. In
+round-about fashion Mr. Laughlin was able to lead Sir
+Edward to make some reference to the Casement case.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I see the Senate has passed a resolution asking clemency,&quot;
+said the Foreign Secretary&mdash;exactly the remark
+which the American wished to elicit.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; was the reply. &quot;By the way, I happen to have
+a copy of the resolution with me. May I give it to you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I should like to have it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The Foreign Secretary read it over with deliberation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is a very interesting document,&quot; he said, when he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-168" id="page2-168"></a>[pg II-168]</span>
+had finished. &quot;Would you have any objection if I
+showed it to the Prime Minister?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Of course that was precisely what Mr. Laughlin did wish,
+and he replied that this was the desire of his government.
+The purpose of his visit had been accomplished, and he
+was able to cable Washington that its instructions had
+been carried out and that the Casement resolution had
+been presented to the British Government. Simultaneously
+with his communication, however, he reported also
+that the execution of Roger Casement had taken place.
+In fact, it was being carried out at the time of the interview.
+This incident lends point to Page's memorandum of the
+last interview which he had before leaving England.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>August 1st. I lunched with Mr. Asquith. One does
+not usually bring away much from his conversations, and
+he did not say much to-day worth recording. But he
+showed a very eager interest in the Presidential campaign,
+and he confessed that he felt some anxiety about the anti-British
+feeling in the United States. This led him to tell
+me that he could not in good conscience interfere with
+Casement's execution, in spite of the shoals of telegrams
+that he was receiving from the United States. This man,
+said he, visited Irish prisoners in German camps and tried
+to seduce them to take up arms against Great Britain&mdash;their
+own country. When they refused, the Germans
+removed them to the worst places in their Empire and, as a
+result, some of them died. Then Casement came to Ireland
+in a German man-of-war (a submarine) accompanied by
+a ship loaded with guns. &quot;In all good conscience to my
+country and to my responsibilities I cannot interfere.&quot; He
+hoped that thoughtful opinion in the United States would
+see this whole matter in a fair and just way.</p>
+
+<p>I asked him about anti-American feeling in Great Britain.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-169" id="page2-169"></a>[pg II-169]</span>
+He said: &quot;Do not let that unduly disturb you. At
+bottom we understand you. At bottom the two people
+surely understand one another and have unbreakable
+bonds of sympathy. No serious breach is conceivable.&quot;
+He went on quite earnestly: &quot;Mr. Page, after any policy
+or plan is thought out on its merits my next thought always
+is how it may affect our relations with the United
+States. That is always a fundamental consideration.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I ventured to say that if he would keep our relations
+smooth on the surface, I'd guarantee their stability at the
+bottom. It's the surface that rolls high at times, and the
+danger is there. Keep the surface smooth and the bottom
+will take care of itself.</p>
+
+<p>Then he asked about Mexico, as he usually has when
+I have talked with him. I gave him as good a report as I
+could, reminding him of the great change in the attitude of
+all Latin-America caused by the President's patient policy
+with Mexico. When he said, &quot;Mexico is a bad problem,&quot;
+I couldn't resist the impulse to reply: &quot;When Mexico
+troubles you, think of&mdash;Ireland. As there are persons in
+England who concern themselves with Mexico, so there
+are persons in the United States who concern themselves
+about Ireland. Ireland and Mexico have each given
+trouble for two centuries. Yet these people talk about
+them as if they could remove all trouble in a month.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite true,&quot; he said, and smiled himself into silence.
+Then he talked about more or less frivolous subjects; and,
+as always, he asked about Mr. Bryan and Mr. Roosevelt,
+&quot;alike now, I suppose, in their present obscure plight.&quot;
+I told him I was going from his house to the House of
+Lords to see Sir Edward Grey metamorphosed into Viscount
+Grey of Fallodon.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The very stupidest of the many stupid ceremonies that
+we have,&quot; said he&mdash;very truly.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-170" id="page2-170"></a>[pg II-170]</span></div>
+<p>He spoke of my &quot;onerous duties&quot; and so on and so on&mdash;tut,
+tut! talk that gets nowhere. But he did say, quite
+sincerely, I think, that my frankness called forth frankness
+and avoided misunderstanding; for he has said that to
+other people about me.</p>
+
+<p>Such is the Prime Minister of Great Britain in this
+supreme crisis in English history, a remarkable man, of an
+abnormally quick mind, pretty nearly a great man, but
+now a spent force, at once nimble and weary. History
+may call him Great. If it do, he will owe this judgment
+to the war, with the conduct of which his name will be
+forever associated.</p>
+
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Page's homecoming was a tragedy. They
+sailed from Liverpool on August 3rd, and reached New
+York on the evening of August 11th. But sad news
+awaited them upon the dock. About two months previously
+their youngest son, Frank, had been married to
+Miss Katherine Sefton, of Auburn, N.Y., and the young
+couple had settled down in Garden City, Long Island.
+That was the summer when the epidemic of infantile
+paralysis swept over the larger part of the United States.
+The young bride was stricken; the case was unusually
+rapid and unusually severe; at the moment of the Pages'
+arrival, they were informed that there was practically no
+hope; and Mrs. Frank Page died at two o'clock on the
+afternoon of the following day. The Pages had always
+been a particularly united and happy family; this was the
+first time that they had suffered from any domestic sorrow
+of this kind, and the Ambassador was so affected that it
+was with difficulty that he could summon himself for the
+task that lay ahead.</p>
+
+<p>In a few days, however, he left for Washington. He has
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-171" id="page2-171"></a>[pg II-171]</span>
+himself described his experience at the Capital in words
+that must inevitably take their place in history. To appreciate
+properly the picture which Page gives, it must be
+remembered that the city and the officialdom which he
+portrays are the same city and the same men who six
+months afterward declared war on Germany. When
+Page reached Washington, the Presidential campaign was
+in full swing, with Mr. Wilson as the Democratic candidate
+and Mr. Charles E. Hughes as the Republican. But
+another crisis was absorbing the nation's attention: the
+railway unions, comprising practically all the 2,000,000
+railway employees in the United States, were threatening
+to strike&mdash;ostensibly for an eight-hour day, in reality
+for higher wages.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Mr. Page's memorandum of his visit to Washington
+in August, 1916</i></p></div>
+
+<p>The President was very courteous to me, in his way.
+He invited me to luncheon the day after I arrived. Present:
+the President, Mrs. Wilson, Miss Bones, Tom Bolling,
+his brother-in-law, and I. The conversation was
+general and in the main jocular. Not a word about
+England, not a word about a foreign policy or foreign
+relations.</p>
+
+<p>He explained that the threatened railway strike engaged
+his whole mind. I asked to have a talk with him
+when his mind should be free. Would I not go off and
+rest and come back?&mdash;I preferred to do my minor errands
+with the Department, but I should hold myself at his
+convenience and at his command.</p>
+
+<p>Two weeks passed. Another invitation to lunch.
+Sharp, the Ambassador to France, had arrived. He, too,
+was invited. Present: the President, Mrs. Wilson, Mrs.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-172" id="page2-172"></a>[pg II-172]</span>
+Wallace, the Misses Smith of New Orleans, Miss Bones,
+Sharp, and I. Not one word about foreign affairs.</p>
+
+<p>After luncheon, the whole party drove to the Capitol,
+where the President addressed Congress on the strike,
+proposing legislation to prevent it and to forestall similar
+strikes. It is a simple ceremony and somewhat impressive.
+The Senators occupy the front seats in the House,
+the Speaker presides and the President of the Senate sits
+on his right. An escorting committee is sent out to
+bring the President in. He walks to the clerk's or reader's
+desk below the presiding officer's, turns and shakes hands
+with them both and then proceeds to read his speech, very
+clearly and audibly. Some passages were applauded.
+When he had done, he again shook hands with the presiding
+officer and went out, preceded and followed by the
+White House escort. I sat in the Presidential (or diplomatic?)
+gallery with the White House party, higgledy-piggledy.</p>
+
+<p>The speech ended, the President drove to the White
+House with his escort in his car. The crowds in the corridors
+and about the doors waited and crowded to see Mrs.
+Wilson, quite respectful but without order or discipline.
+We had to push our way through them. Now and then a
+policeman at a distance would yell loudly, &quot;Make way
+there!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>When we reached the White House, I asked the doorman
+if the President had arrived.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Does he expect me to go in and say good-bye?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Thus he had no idea of talking with me now, if ever.
+Not at lunch nor after did he suggest a conversation about
+American-British affairs or say anything about my seeing
+him again.</p>
+
+<p>This threatened strike does hold his whole mind&mdash;bothers
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-173" id="page2-173"></a>[pg II-173]</span>
+him greatly. It seems doubtful if he can avert a
+general strike. The Republicans are trying &quot;to put him in
+a political hole,&quot; and they say he, too, is playing politics.
+Whoever be to blame for it, it is true that politics is in the
+game. Nobody seems to foresee who will make capital
+out of it. Surely I can't.</p>
+
+<p>There's no social sense at the White House. The
+President has at his table family connections only&mdash;and
+they say few or no distinguished men and women are invited,
+except the regular notables at the set dinners&mdash;the
+diplomatic, the judiciary, and the like. His table is his
+private family affair&mdash;nothing more. It is very hard to
+understand why so intellectual a man doesn't have notable
+men about him. It's the college professor's village habit,
+I dare say. But it's a great misfortune. This is one way
+in which Mr. Wilson shuts out the world and lives too
+much alone, feeding only on knowledge and subjects that
+he has already acquired and not getting new views or fresh
+suggestions from men and women.</p>
+
+<p>He sees almost nobody except members of Congress for
+whom he sends for special conferences, and he usually sees
+these in his office. The railroad presidents and men he
+met in formal conference&mdash;no social touch.</p>
+
+<p>A member of his Cabinet told me that Mr. Wilson had
+shown confidence in him, given him a wide range of action
+in his own Department and that he relies on his judgment.
+This Cabinet member of course attends the
+routine state dinners and receptions, as a matter of required
+duty. But as for any social recognition of his
+existence&mdash;he had never received a hint or nod. Nor
+does any member of the Cabinet (except, no doubt, Mr.
+McAdoo, his son-in-law). There is no social sense nor
+reason in this. In fact, it works to a very decided disadvantage
+to the President and to the Nation.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-174" id="page2-174"></a>[pg II-174]</span></div>
+<p>By the way, that a notable man in our educational
+life could form such a habit does not speak well for our
+educational life.</p>
+
+<p>What an unspeakably lamentable loss of opportunity!
+This is the more remarkable and lamentable because the
+President is a charming personality, an uncommonly
+good talker, a man who could easily make personal friends
+of all the world. He does his own thinking, untouched
+by other men's ideas. He receives nothing from the outside.
+His domestic life is spent with his own, nobody
+else, except House occasionally. His contact with his
+own Cabinet is a business man's contact with his business
+associates and kind&mdash;at his office.</p>
+
+<p>He declined to see Cameron Forbes<a name="FNanchor_41_41" id="FNanchor_41_41" /><a href="#Footnote_41_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> on his return from
+the Philippines.</p>
+
+<p>The sadness of this mistake!</p>
+
+<p>Another result is&mdash;the President doesn't hear the
+frank truth about the men about him. He gives nobody
+a chance to tell him. Hence he has several heavy encumbrances
+in his official family.</p>
+
+<p>The influence of this lone-hand way of playing the game
+extends very far. The members of the Cabinet do not
+seem to have the habit of frankness with one another.
+Each lives and works in a water-tight compartment. I
+sat at luncheon (at a hotel) with Lansing, Secretary of
+State; Lane, Secretary of the Interior; Gregory, Attorney-General;
+Baker, Secretary of War; Daniels, Secretary of
+the Navy; and Sharp, Ambassador to France; and all the
+talk was jocular or semi-jocular, and personal&mdash;mere
+cheap chaff. Not a question was asked either of the Ambassador
+to France or of the Ambassador to Great Britain
+about the war or about our foreign relations. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-175" id="page2-175"></a>[pg II-175]</span>
+war wasn't mentioned. Sharp and I might have come
+from Bungtown and Jonesville and not from France and
+England. We were not encouraged to talk&mdash;the local
+personal joke held the time and conversation. This astounding
+fact must be the result of this lone-hand, water-tight
+compartment method and&mdash;of the neutrality suppression
+of men. The Vice-President confessed to his
+neighbour at a Gridiron dinner that he had read none of
+the White Papers, or Orange Papers, etc., of the belligerent
+governments&mdash;confessed this with pride&mdash;lest he should
+form an opinion and cease to be neutral! Miss X, a
+member of the President's household, said to Mrs. Y, the
+day we lunched there, that she had made a remark privately
+to Sharp showing her admiration of the French.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was that a violation of neutrality?&quot; she asked in all
+seriousness.</p>
+
+<p>I can see it in no other way but this: the President suppressed
+free thought and free speech when he insisted upon
+personal neutrality. He held back the deliberate and
+spontaneous thought and speech of the people except the
+pro-Germans, who saw their chance and improved it!
+The mass of the American people found themselves forbidden
+to think or talk, and this forbidding had a sufficient
+effect to make them take refuge in indifference. It's the
+President's job. He's our leader. He'll attend to this
+matter. We must not embarrass him. On this easy
+cushion of non-responsibility the great masses fell back
+at their intellectual and moral ease&mdash;softened, isolated,
+lulled.</p>
+
+<p>That wasn't leadership in a democracy. Right here is
+the President's vast failure. From it there is now no escape
+unless the Germans commit more submarine crimes.
+They have kept the United States for their own exploiting
+after the war. They have thus had a real triumph of us.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-176" id="page2-176"></a>[pg II-176]</span></div>
+<p>I have talked in Washington with few men who showed
+any clear conception of the difference between the Germans
+and the British. To the minds of these people and
+high Government officials, German and English are alike
+foreign nations who are now foolishly engaged in war.
+Two of the men who look upon the thing differently are
+Houston<a name="FNanchor_42_42" id="FNanchor_42_42" /><a href="#Footnote_42_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> and Logan Waller Page<a name="FNanchor_43_43" id="FNanchor_43_43" /><a href="#Footnote_43_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>. In fact, there is no
+realization of the war in Washington. Secretary Houston
+has a proper perspective of the situation. He would have
+done precisely what I recommended&mdash;paved the way for
+claims and let the English take their course. &quot;International
+law&quot; is no strict code and it's all shot to pieces
+anyhow.</p>
+
+<p>The Secretary [of State] betrayed not the slightest curiosity
+about our relations with Great Britain. I saw
+him several times&mdash;(1) in his office; (2) at his house;
+(3) at the French Ambassador's; (4) at Wallace's; (5) at
+his office; (6) at Crozier's<a name="FNanchor_44_44" id="FNanchor_44_44" /><a href="#Footnote_44_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a>&mdash;this during my first stay in
+Washington. The only remark he made was that I'd find
+a different atmosphere in Washington from the atmosphere
+in London. Truly. All the rest of his talk was about
+&quot;cases.&quot; Would I see Senator Owen? Would I see Congressman
+Sherley? Would I take up this &quot;case&quot; and
+that? His mind ran on &quot;cases.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Well, at Y's, when I was almost in despair, I rammed
+down him a sort of general statement of the situation as
+I saw it; at least, I made a start. But soon he stopped
+me and ran off at a tangent on some historical statement I
+had made, showing that his mind was not at all on the real
+subject, the large subject. When I returned to Washington,
+and he had read my interviews with Grey, Asquith,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-177" id="page2-177"></a>[pg II-177]</span>
+and Bryce<a name="FNanchor_45_45" id="FNanchor_45_45" /><a href="#Footnote_45_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a>, and my own statement, he still said nothing,
+but he ceased to talk of &quot;cases.&quot; At my final interview
+he said that he had had difficulty in preventing
+Congress from making the retaliatory resolution mandatory.
+He had tried to keep it back till the very end of
+the session, etc.</p>
+
+<p>This does not quite correspond with what the President
+told me&mdash;that the State Department asked for this retaliatory
+resolution.</p>
+
+<p>I made specific suggestions in my statement to the
+President and to Lansing. They have (yet) said nothing
+about them. I fancy they will not. I have found nowhere
+any policy&mdash;only &quot;cases.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I proposed to Baker and Daniels that they send a General
+and an Admiral as attach&eacute;s to London. They both
+agreed. Daniels later told me that Baker mentioned it
+to the President and he &quot;stepped on the suggestion with
+both feet.&quot; I did not bring it up. In the Franco-Prussian
+War of 1870, both General McClellan (or Sheridan<a name="FNanchor_46_46" id="FNanchor_46_46" /><a href="#Footnote_46_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>?)
+and General Forsythe were sent to the German
+Army. Our military ideas have shrunk since then!</p>
+
+<p>I find at this date (a month before the Presidential
+election), the greatest tangle and uncertainty of political
+opinion that I have ever observed in our country. The
+President, in spite of his unparalleled leadership and
+authority in domestic policy, is by no means certain of
+election. He has the open hostility of the Germans&mdash;all
+very well, if he had got the fruits of a real hostility to
+them; but they have, in many ways, directed his foreign
+policy. He has lost the silent confidence of many men
+upon whose conscience this great question weighs heavily.
+If he be defeated he will owe his defeat to the loss of confidence
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-178" id="page2-178"></a>[pg II-178]</span>
+in his leadership on this great subject. His
+opponent has put forth no clear-cut opinion. He plays a
+silent game on the German &quot;issue.&quot; Yet he will command
+the support of many patriotic men merely as a lack
+of confidence in the President.</p>
+
+<p>Nor do I see any end of the results of this fundamental
+error. In the economic and political readjustment of the
+world we shall be &quot;out of the game,&quot; in any event&mdash;unless
+we are yet forced into the war by Hughes's election
+or by the renewal of the indiscriminate use of submarines
+by the Germans.</p>
+
+<p>There is a great lesson in this lamentable failure of the
+President really to lead the Nation. The United States
+stands for democracy and free opinion as it stands for
+nothing else and as no other nation stands for it. Now
+when democracy and free opinion are at stake as they have
+not before been, we take a &quot;neutral&quot; stand&mdash;we throw
+away our very birthright. We may talk of &quot;humanity&quot;
+all we like: we have missed the largest chance that ever
+came to help the large cause that brought us into being as
+a Nation....</p>
+
+<p>And the people, sitting on the comfortable seats of
+neutrality upon which the President has pushed them
+back, are grateful for Peace, not having taken the trouble
+to think out what Peace has cost us and cost the world&mdash;except
+so many as have felt the uncomfortable stirrings
+of the national conscience.</p>
+
+<p>There is not a man in our State Department or in our
+Government who has ever met any prominent statesmen
+in any European Government&mdash;except the third Assistant
+Secretary of State, who has no authority in forming policies;
+there is not a man who knows the atmosphere of Europe.
+Yet when I proposed that one of the under Secretaries
+should go to England on a visit of a few weeks for observation,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-179" id="page2-179"></a>[pg II-179]</span>
+the objection arose that such a visit would not be
+&quot;neutral.&quot;</p>
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>The extraordinary feature of this experience was that
+Page had been officially summoned home, presumably to
+discuss the European situation, and that neither the President
+nor the State Department apparently had the slightest
+interest in his visit.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The President,&quot; Page wrote to Mr. Laughlin, &quot;dominates
+the whole show in a most extraordinary way. The
+men about him (and he sees them only on 'business') are
+very nearly all very, very small fry, or worse&mdash;the narrowest
+twopenny lot I've ever come across. He has
+no real companions. Nobody talks to him freely and
+frankly. I've never known quite such a condition in
+American life.&quot; Perhaps the President had no desire to
+discuss inconvenient matters with his Ambassador to Great
+Britain, but Page was certainly determined to have an
+interview with the President. &quot;I'm not going back to
+London,&quot; he wrote Mr. Laughlin, &quot;till the President has
+said something to me or at least till I have said something
+to him. I am now going down to Garden City and New
+York till the President send for me; or, if he do not send
+for me, I'm going to his house and sit on his front steps till
+he come out!&quot; Page had brought from England one of
+the medals which the Germans had struck in honour of the
+<i>Lusitania</i> sinking, and one reason why he particularly
+wished to see the President alone was to show him this
+memento.</p>
+
+<p>Another reason was that in early September Page had received
+important news from London concerning the move
+which Germany was making for peace and the attitude
+of Great Britain in this matter. The several plans which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-180" id="page2-180"></a>[pg II-180]</span>
+Germany had had under consideration had now taken the
+form of a definite determination to ask for an armistice
+before winter set in. A letter from Mr. Laughlin, Charg&eacute;
+d'affaires in Page's absence, tells the story.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>From Irwin Laughlin</i><br />
+<br />
+Embassy of the United States of America.<br />
+London, August 30, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PAGE:</p>
+
+<p>For some little time past I have heard persistent rumours,
+which indeed are more than rumours, since they
+have come from important sources, of an approaching
+movement by Germany toward an early armistice. They
+have been so circumstantial and so closely connected&mdash;in
+prospect&mdash;with the President, that I have examined them
+with particular attention and I shall try to give you the
+results, and my conclusions, with the recommendation
+that you take the matter up directly with the President
+and the Secretary of State. I have been a little at a loss
+to decide how to communicate what I have learned to the
+Government in Washington, for the present conditions
+make it impossible to set down what I want to say in an
+official despatch, but the fortunate accident of your being
+in the United States gives me the safe opportunity I want,
+and so I send my information to you, and by the pouch,
+as time is of less importance than secrecy.</p>
+
+<p>There seems to be no doubt that Germany is casting
+about for an opportunity to effect an armistice, if possible
+before the winter closes in. She hopes it may result in
+peace&mdash;a peace more or less favourable to her, of course&mdash;but
+even if such a result should fail of accomplishment she
+would have gained a breathing space; have secured an opportunity
+to improve her strategic position in a military
+sense, perhaps by shortening her line in Flanders: have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-181" id="page2-181"></a>[pg II-181]</span>
+stiffened the resistance of her people; and probably have
+influenced a certain body of neutral opinion not only in
+her favour but against her antagonists.</p>
+
+<p>I shall not try to mention the various sources from
+which the threads that compose this fabric have been
+drawn, but I finally fastened on X of the Admiralty as a
+man with whom I could talk profitably and confidentially,
+and he told me positively that his information showed
+that Germany was looking in the direction I have indicated,
+and that she would soon approach the President on
+the subject&mdash;even if she had not already taken the first
+steps toward preparing her advance to him.</p>
+
+<p>I asked X if he thought it well for me to broach the
+subject to Lord Grey and he suggested that I first consult
+Y, which I did. The latter seemed very wary at the outset,
+but he warmed up at last and in the course of the conversation
+told me he had reliable information that when
+Bethmann-Hollweg went to Munich just before the beginning
+of the allied offensive in the west in June he told
+the King of Bavaria that he was confident the Allies would
+be obliged to begin overtures for peace next October; adding
+that if they didn't Germany would have to do so.
+The King, it appears, asked him how Germany could
+approach the Allies if it proved to be advisable and he replied:
+&quot;Through our good friend Wilson.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I asked Y if the King of Spain's good offices would not
+be enlisted jointly with those of the President in attempting
+to arrange an armistice, but he thought not, and said
+that the King of Spain was very well aware that the Allies
+would not consider anything short of definite peace proposals
+from Germany and that His Majesty knew the
+moment for them had not arrived. I then finally asked
+him point blank if he thought the Germans would approach
+the President for an armistice, and, if so, when.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-182" id="page2-182"></a>[pg II-182]</span>
+He said he was inclined to think they might do so perhaps
+about October. On my asking him if he was disposed to
+let me communicate his opinion privately to the Government
+in Washington he replied after some hesitation that
+he had no objection, but he quickly added that I must
+make it clear at the same time that the British Government
+would not listen to any such proposals.</p>
+
+<p>These conversations took place during the course of
+last week, and on Sunday&mdash;the 27th&mdash;I invited the Spanish
+Ambassador to luncheon at Tangley when I was able
+to get him to confirm what Y had said of his Sovereign's
+attitude and opinions.</p>
+
+<p>I may mention for what it is worth that on Hoover's
+last trip to Germany he was told by Bullock, of the Philadelphia
+<i>Ledger</i>, that Zimmermann of the Berlin Foreign
+Office had told him that the Germans had intended in
+June to take steps for an armistice which were prevented
+by the preparations for the allied offensive in the west.</p>
+
+<p>Y was very emphatic in what he said of the attitude of
+his government and the British people toward continuing
+the war to an absolutely conclusive end, and I was much
+impressed. He said among other things that the execution
+of Captain Fryatt had had a markedly perceptible
+effect in hardening British public opinion against Germany
+and fixing the determination to fight to a relentless finish.
+This corresponds exactly with my own observations.</p>
+
+<p>I leave this letter entirely in your hands. You will
+know what use to make of it. It is meant as an official
+communication in everything but the usual form from
+which I have departed for reasons I need not explain
+further.</p>
+
+<p>I look forward eagerly to your return,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Very sincerely yours,<br />
+<br />
+IRWIN LAUGHLIN.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-183" id="page2-183"></a>[pg II-183]</span></div>
+<p>Page waited five weeks before he succeeded in obtaining
+his interview with Mr. Wilson.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+The New Willard, Washington, D.C.<br />
+<br />
+Thursday, September 21, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>While I am waiting for a convenient time to come
+when you will see me for a conference and report, I send
+you notes on conversations with Lord Grey and Lord
+Bryce<a name="FNanchor_47_47" id="FNanchor_47_47" /><a href="#Footnote_47_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a>. They are, in effect, though of course not in form,
+messages to you.</p>
+
+<p>The situation between our government and Great
+Britain seems to me most alarming; and (let me add)
+easily removable, if I can get the ear of anybody in authority.
+But I find here only an atmosphere of suspicion&mdash;unwarranted
+by facts and easily dissipated by straight and
+simple friendly methods. I am sure of this.</p>
+
+<p>I have, besides, a most important and confidential
+message for you from the British Government which
+they prefer should be orally delivered.</p>
+
+<p>And I have written out a statement of my own study of
+the situation and of certain proposals which, I think, if
+they commend themselves to you, will go far to remove
+this dangerous tension. I hope to go over them with you
+at your convenience.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours faithfully,<br />
+<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>The situation was alarming for more reasons than the
+determination of Germany to force the peace issue. The
+State Department was especially irritated at this time
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-184" id="page2-184"></a>[pg II-184]</span>
+over the blockade. Among the &quot;trade advisers&quot; there
+was a conviction, which all Page's explanations had not
+destroyed, that Great Britain was using the blockade as
+a means of destroying American commerce and securing
+America's customers for herself. Great Britain's regulations
+on the blacklist and &quot;bunker coal&quot; had intensified
+this feeling. In both these latter questions Page regarded
+the British actions as tactless and unjust; he had had many
+sharp discussions at the Foreign Office concerning them,
+but had not made much headway in his efforts to obtain
+their abandonment. The purpose of the &quot;blacklist&quot;
+was to strike at neutral firms with German affiliations
+which were trading with Germany. The Trading with the
+Enemy Act provided that such firms could not trade with
+Great Britain; that British vessels must refuse to accept
+their cargoes, and that any neutral ship which accepted
+such cargoes would be denied bunker coal at British ports.
+Under this law the Ministry of Blockade issued a &quot;blacklist&quot;
+of more than 1,000 proscribed exporting houses in
+the United States. So great was the indignation against
+this boycott in the United States that Congress, in early
+September, had passed a retaliatory act; this gave the
+President the authority at any time to place an embargo
+upon the exports to the United States of countries which
+discriminated against American firms and also to deny
+clearance to ships which refused to accept American cargoes.
+The two countries indeed seemed to be hastening
+toward a crisis.</p>
+
+<p>Page's urgent letter to Mr. Wilson brought a telegram
+from Mr. Tumulty inviting the Ambassador to spend the
+next evening and night with the President at Shadow
+Lawn, the seaside house on the New Jersey coast in which
+Mr. Wilson was spending the summer. Mr. Wilson received
+his old friend with great courtesy and listened
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-185" id="page2-185"></a>[pg II-185]</span>
+quietly and with apparent interest to all that he had to say.
+The written statement to which Page refers in his letter
+told the story of Anglo-American relations from the time
+of the Panama tolls repeal up to the time of Page's visit
+to Shadow Lawn. Quotations have already been made
+from it in preceding chapters, and the ideas which it
+contains have abundantly appeared in letters already
+printed. The document was an eloquent plea for American
+co&ouml;peration with the Allies&mdash;for the dismissal of
+Bernstorff, for the adoption of a manly attitude toward
+Germany, and for the vindication of a high type of Americanism.</p>
+
+<p>Page showed the President the <i>Lusitania</i> medal, but
+that did not especially impress him. &quot;The President
+said to me,&quot; wrote Page in reference to this visit,
+&quot;that when the war began he and all the men he met
+were in hearty sympathy with the Allies; but that now
+the sentiment toward England had greatly changed.
+He saw no one who was not vexed and irritated by the
+arbitrary English course. That is, I fear, true&mdash;that
+he sees no one but has a complaint. So does the Secretary
+of State, and the Trade Bureau and all the rest
+in Washington. But in Boston, in New York, and in
+the South and in Auburn, N.Y., I saw no one whose
+sympathy with the Allies had undergone any fundamental
+change. I saw men who felt vexed at such an
+act as the blacklist, but that was merely vexation, not
+a fundamental change of feeling. Of course, there
+came to see me men who had 'cases.' Now these are
+the only kind of men, I fear, whom the Government at
+Washington sees&mdash;these and the members of Congress
+whom the Germans have scared or have 'put up' to
+scare the Government&mdash;who are 'twisting the lion's tail,'
+in a word.&quot;</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-186" id="page2-186"></a>[pg II-186]</span></div>
+<p>&quot;The President said,&quot; wrote Page immediately after
+coming from Shadow Lawn, &quot;Tell those gentlemen for
+me'&mdash;and then followed a homily to the effect that a damage
+done to any American citizen is a damage to him, etc.
+He described the war as a result of many causes, some
+of long origin. He spoke of England's having the earth
+and of Germany wanting it. Of course, he said, the
+German system is directly opposed to everything American.
+But I do not gather that he thought that this
+carried any very great moral reprehensibility.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He said that he wouldn't do anything with the retaliatory
+act till after election lest it might seem that
+he was playing politics. But he hinted that if there were
+continued provocation afterward (in case he were elected)
+he would. He added that one of the worst provocations
+was the long English delay in answering our Notes.
+Was this delay due to fear or shame? He evidently
+felt that such a delay showed contempt. He spoke of
+the Bryan treaty<a name="FNanchor_48_48" id="FNanchor_48_48" /><a href="#Footnote_48_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>. But on no question had the British
+'locked horns' with us&mdash;on no question had they come
+to a clear issue so that the matter might be referred to
+the Commission.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Page delivered his oral message about the German
+determination to obtain an armistice. This was to the
+effect that Great Britain would not grant it. Page intimated
+that Britain would be offended if the President
+proposed it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If an armistice, no,&quot; answered Mr. Wilson. &quot;That's
+a military matter and is none of my business. But if
+they propose an armistice looking toward peace&mdash;yes,
+I shall be glad.&quot;</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-187" id="page2-187"></a>[pg II-187]</span></div>
+<p>The experience was an exceedingly trying one for both
+men. The discussion showed how far apart were the
+President and his Ambassador on practically every issue
+connected with the crisis. Naturally the President's
+reference to the causes of the war&mdash;that there were many
+causes, some of them of long persistence, and that Great
+Britain's domination of the &quot;earth&quot; was one of them&mdash;conflicted
+with the judgment of a man who attributed
+the origin of the struggle to German aggression. The
+President's statement that American sympathy for
+the Allies had now changed to irritation, and the tolerant
+attitude toward Germany which Mr. Wilson displayed,
+affected Page with the profoundest discouragement.
+The President's intimation that he would advance Germany's
+request for an armistice, if it looked toward
+peace&mdash;this in reply to Page's message that Great Britain
+would not receive such a proposal in a kindly spirit&mdash;seemed
+to lay the basis of further misunderstandings.
+The interview was a disheartening one for Page. Many
+people whom the Ambassador met in the course of this
+visit still retain memories of his fervour in what had now
+become with him a sacred cause. With many friends and
+officials he discussed the European situation almost like a
+man inspired. The present writer recalls two long conversations
+with Page at this time: the recollection of his brilliant
+verbal portraiture, his description of the determination
+of Englishmen, his admiration for the heroic sacrifice
+of Englishwomen, remain as about the most vivid memories
+of a life-time. And now the Ambassador had brought
+this same eloquence to the President's ear at Shadow
+Lawn. It was in this interview that Page had hoped to
+show Mr. Wilson the real merits of the situation, and persuade
+him to adopt the course to which the national honour
+and safety pointed; he talked long and eloquently, painting
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-188" id="page2-188"></a>[pg II-188]</span>
+the whole European tragedy with that intensity and
+readiness of utterance and that moral conviction which
+had so moved all others with whom he had come into contact
+during this memorable visit to the United States; but
+Mr. Wilson was utterly cold, utterly unresponsive, interested
+only in ending the war. The talk lasted for a whole
+morning; its nature may be assumed from the many letters
+already printed; but Page's voice, when it attempted to fire
+the conscience of the President, proved as ineffective as
+his pen. However, there was nothing rasping or contentious
+about the interview. The two men discussed everything
+with the utmost calmness and without the slightest
+indications of ill-nature. Both men had in mind
+their long association, both inevitably recalled the hopes
+with which they had begun their official relationship
+three years before, at that time neither having the
+faintest intimation of the tremendous problems that were
+to draw them asunder. Mr. Wilson at this meeting
+did not impress his Ambassador as a perverse character,
+but as an extremely pathetic one. Page came away
+with no vexation or anger, but with a real feeling for a
+much suffering and a much perplexed statesman. The
+fact that the President's life was so solitary, and that
+he seemed to be so completely out of touch with men and
+with the living thoughts of the world, appealed strongly
+to Page's sympathies. &quot;I think he is the loneliest man
+I have ever known,&quot; Page remarked to his son Frank
+after coming away from this visit.</p>
+
+<p>Page felt this at the time, for, as he rose to say good-bye
+to the President, he put his hand upon his shoulder.
+At this Mr. Wilson's eyes filled with tears and he gave
+Page an affectionate good-bye. The two men never met
+again.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_38_38" id="Footnote_38_38" /><a href="#FNanchor_38_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> This is quoted from a hitherto unpublished despatch of
+Bernstorff's to Berlin which is found among Page's papers.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_39_39" id="Footnote_39_39" /><a href="#FNanchor_39_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> The <i>China</i> case was a kind of <i>Trent</i> case reversed. In
+1861 the American ship <i>San Jacinto</i> stopped the British vessel <i>Trent</i>
+and took off Mason and Slidell, Confederate commissioners to Great
+Britain. Similarly a British ship, in 1916, stopped an American ship,
+the <i>China</i>, and removed several German subjects. As the British quickly
+saw the analogy, and made suitable amends, the old excitement over the
+<i>Trent</i> was not duplicated in the recent war.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_40_40" id="Footnote_40_40" /><a href="#FNanchor_40_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> See Chapter XIII, page 434.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_41_41" id="Footnote_41_41" /><a href="#FNanchor_41_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> Mr. Forbes had been Governor-General of the Philippines
+from 1909 to 1913. His work had been extraordinarily successful.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_42_42" id="Footnote_42_42" /><a href="#FNanchor_42_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Secretary of Agriculture.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_43_43" id="Footnote_43_43" /><a href="#FNanchor_43_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> In charge of government road building, a distant relative
+of the Ambassador.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_44_44" id="Footnote_44_44" /><a href="#FNanchor_44_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Major General William Crozier, U.S.A., Chief of Ordnance.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_45_45" id="Footnote_45_45" /><a href="#FNanchor_45_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> See Chapter XIX, pages 160-164.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_46_46" id="Footnote_46_46" /><a href="#FNanchor_46_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> It was General Sheridan.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_47_47" id="Footnote_47_47" /><a href="#FNanchor_47_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> See Chapter XIX, pages 160 and 164.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_48_48" id="Footnote_48_48" /><a href="#FNanchor_48_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> The treaty between the United States and Great Britain,
+adopted through the urgency of Mr. Bryan, providing for the arbitration
+of disputes between the two countries.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-189" id="page2-189"></a>[pg II-189]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX" />CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<h3>&quot;PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY&quot;</h3>
+
+
+<p>&quot;Of one thing I am sure,&quot; Page wrote to his wife
+from Washington, while waiting to see President
+Wilson. &quot;We wish to come home March 4th at midnight
+and to go about our proper business. There's nothing
+here that I would for the world be mixed up with. As
+soon as I can escape with dignity I shall make my bow and
+exit.... But I am not unhappy or hopeless for the
+long run. They'll find out the truth some day, paying, I
+fear, a heavy penalty for delay. But the visit here has confirmed
+me in our previous conclusions&mdash;that if we can carry
+the load until March 4th, midnight, we shall be grateful
+that we have pulled through.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Soon after President Wilson's re&euml;lection, therefore,
+Page sent his resignation to Washington. The above
+quotation shows that he intended this to be more than a
+&quot;courtesy resignation,&quot; a term traditionally applied to the
+kind of leave-takings which Ambassadors usually send
+on the formation of a new administration, or at the beginning
+of a new Presidential term, for the purpose of giving
+the President the opportunity of reorganizing his official
+family. Page believed that his work in London had
+been finished, that he had done everything in his power
+to make Mr. Wilson see the situation in its true light and
+that he had not succeeded. He therefore wished to give
+up his post and come home. This explains the fact that
+his resignation did not consist of the half dozen perfunctory
+lines which most diplomatic officers find sufficient on
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-190" id="page2-190"></a>[pg II-190]</span>
+such an occasion, but took the form of a review of the
+reasons why the United States should align itself on the
+side of the Allies.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+London, November 24, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>We have all known for many years that the rich and
+populous and organized states in which the big cities are
+do not constitute the political United States. But, I
+confess, I hardly expected so soon to see this fact proclaimed
+at the ballot-box. To me that's the surprise of
+the election. And your popular majority as well as your
+clear majority in the Electoral College is a great personal
+triumph for you. And you have remade the ancient and
+demoralized Democratic party. Four years ago it consisted
+of a protest and of the wreck wrought by Mr.
+Bryan's long captaincy. This rebirth, with a popular
+majority, is an historical achievement&mdash;of your own.</p>
+
+<p>You have relaid the foundation and reset the pillars of
+a party that may enjoy a long supremacy for domestic
+reasons. Now, if you will permit me to say so, from my
+somewhat distant view (four years make a long period of
+absence) the big party task is to build up a clearer and
+more positive foreign policy. We are in the world and
+we've got to choose what active part we shall play in it&mdash;I
+fear rather quickly. I have the conviction, as you know,
+that this whole round globe now hangs as a ripe apple for
+our plucking, if we use the right ladder while the chance
+lasts. I do not mean that we want or could get the apple
+for ourselves, but that we can see to it that it is put to
+proper uses. What we have to do, in my judgment, is to
+go back to our political fathers for our clue. If my longtime
+memory be good, they were sure that their establishment
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-191" id="page2-191"></a>[pg II-191]</span>
+of a great free Republic would soon be imitated by
+European peoples&mdash;that democracies would take the place
+of autocracies in all so-called civilized countries; for that
+was the form that the fight took in their day against
+organized Privilege. But for one reason or another&mdash;in
+our life-time partly because we chose so completely to isolate
+ourselves&mdash;the democratic idea took root in Europe
+with disappointing slowness. It is, for instance, now
+perhaps for the first time, in a thoroughgoing way, within
+sight in this Kingdom. The dream of the American
+Fathers, therefore, is not yet come true. They fought
+against organized Privilege exerted from over the sea. In
+principle it is the same fight that we have made, in our
+domestic field, during recent decades. Now the same
+fight has come on a far larger scale than men ever dreamed
+of before.</p>
+
+<p>It isn't, therefore, for merely doctrinal reasons that we
+are concerned for the spread of democracy nor merely
+because a democracy is the only scheme of organization yet
+wrought out that keeps the door of opportunity open and
+invites all men to their fullest development. But we are
+interested in it because under no other system can the
+world be made an even reasonably safe place to live in.
+For only autocracies wage aggressive wars. Aggressive
+autocracies, especially military autocracies, must be
+softened down by peace (and they have never been so
+softened) or destroyed by war. The All-Highest doctrine
+of Germany to-day is the same as the Taxation-without-Representation
+of George III&mdash;only more virulent,
+stronger, and farther-reaching. Only by its end can the
+German people recover and build up their character and
+take the permanent place in the world that they&mdash;thus
+changed&mdash;will be entitled to. They will either reduce
+Europe to the vassalage of a military autocracy, which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-192" id="page2-192"></a>[pg II-192]</span>
+may then overrun the whole world or drench it in blood,
+or they must through stages of Liberalism work their way
+toward some approach to a democracy; and there is no
+doubt which event is impending. The Liberal idea will
+win this struggle, and Europe will be out of danger of
+a general assault on free institutions till some other autocracy
+which has a military caste try the same Napoleonic
+game. The defeat of Germany, therefore, will make for the
+spread of the doctrine of our Fathers and our doctrine yet.</p>
+
+<p>An interesting book might be made of concrete evidences
+of the natural antipathy that the present German
+autocracy has for successful democracy and hence for us.
+A new instance has just come to me. My son, Arthur,
+who succeeded to most of my activities at home, has been
+over here for a month and he has just come from a visit to
+France. In Paris he had a long conversation with Delcass&eacute;,
+who told him that the Kaiser himself once made a
+proposal to him to join in producing &quot;the complete isolation&quot;
+of the United States. What the Kaiser meant was
+that if the great Powers of Europe would hold off, he
+would put the Monroe Doctrine to the test and smash it.</p>
+
+<p>The great tide of the world will, by reason of the war,
+now flow toward democracy&mdash;at present, alas! a tide of
+blood. For a century democracies and Liberal governments
+have kept themselves too much isolated, trusting
+prematurely and too simply to international law and
+treaties and Hague conventions. These things have
+never been respected, except as springs to catch woodcock,
+where the Divine Right held sway. The outgrowing
+or the overthrow of the Divine Right is a condition
+precedent to the effectiveness of international law and
+treaties.</p>
+
+<p>It has seemed to me, looking at the subject only with
+reference to our country's duty and safety, that somehow
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-193" id="page2-193"></a>[pg II-193]</span>
+and at some early time our championship of democracy
+must lead us to redeclare our faith and to show that we
+believe in our historic creed. Then we may escape falling
+away from the Liberal forces of the Old World and escape
+the suspicion of indifference to the great scheme of government
+which was set up by our fathers' giving their
+blood for it. I see no other way for us to take the best
+and biggest opportunity that has ever come to prove true
+to our faith as well as to secure our own safety and the
+safety of the world. Only some sort of active and open
+identification with the Allies can put us in effective protest
+against the assassins of the Armenians and the assassins
+of Belgium, Poland, and Serbia, and in a friendly attitude
+to the German people themselves, as distinguished from
+their military rulers. This is the attitude surely that our
+fathers would have wished us to take&mdash;and would have
+expected us to take&mdash;and that our children will be proud
+of us for taking; for it is our proper historic attitude,
+whether looked at from the past or looked back at from the
+future. There can be no historic approval of neutrality
+for years, while the world is bleeding to death.</p>
+
+<p>The complete severance of relations, diplomatic at first
+and later possibly economic as well, with the Turks and
+the Germans, would probably not cost us a man in battle
+nor any considerable treasure; for the moral effect of
+withdrawing even our formal approval of their conduct&mdash;at
+least our passive acquiescence&mdash;would be&mdash;that the Germans
+would see that practically all the Liberal world
+stands against their system, and the war would end before
+we should need to or could put an army in the field.
+The Liberal Germans are themselves beginning to see
+that it is not they, but the German system, that is the
+object of attack because it is <i>the</i> dangerous thing in the
+world. Maximilian Harden presents this view in his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-194" id="page2-194"></a>[pg II-194]</span>
+Berlin paper. He says in effect that Germany must get
+rid of its predatory feudalism. That was all that was
+the matter with George III.</p>
+
+<p>Among the practical results of such action by us would,
+I believe, be the following:</p>
+
+<p>1. The early ending of the war and the saving of, perhaps,
+millions of lives and of incalculable treasure;</p>
+
+<p>2. The establishment in Germany of some form of
+more liberal government;</p>
+
+<p>3. A league to enforce peace, ready-made, under our
+guidance&mdash;i.e., the Allies and ourselves;</p>
+
+<p>4. The sympathetic co&ouml;peration and the moral force of
+every Allied Government in dealing with Mexico:</p>
+
+<p>5. The acceptance&mdash;and even documentary approval&mdash;of
+every Allied Government of the Monroe Doctrine;</p>
+
+<p>6. The warding off and no doubt the final prevention
+of danger from Japan, and, most of all, the impressive
+and memorable spectacle of our Great Democracy thus
+putting an end to this colossal crime, merely from the
+impulse and necessity to keep our own ideals and to lead
+the world right on. We should do for Europe on a large
+scale essentially what we did for Cuba on a small scale and
+thereby usher in a new era in human history.</p>
+
+<p>I write thus freely, Mr. President, because at no time
+can I write in any other way and because I am sure that all
+these things can quickly be brought to pass under your
+strong leadership. The United States would stand, as
+no other nation has ever stood in the world&mdash;predominant
+and unselfish&mdash;on the highest ideals ever reached in
+human government. It is a vision as splendid as the
+Holy Grael. Nor have I a shadow of doubt of the eager
+and faithful following of our people, who would thereby
+re&euml;stablish once for all our weakened nationality. We
+are made of the stuff that our Fathers were made of.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-195" id="page2-195"></a>[pg II-195]</span>
+<p>And I write this now for the additional reason that I
+am within sight of the early end of my service here. When
+you called me I answered, not only because you did me
+great honour and laid a definite patriotic duty on me, but
+because also of my personal loyalty to you and my pride
+in helping forward the great principles in which we both
+believe. But I understood then (and I am sure the subject
+lay in your mind in the same way) that my service
+would be for four years at the most. I made all my arrangements,
+professional and domestic, on this supposition.
+I shall, therefore, be ready to lay down my work
+here on March 4th or as soon thereafter as meets your
+pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>I am more than proud of the confidence that you have
+shown in me. To it I am indebted for the opportunity
+I have had to give such public service to my country as
+I could, as well as for the most profitable experience of
+my life. A proper and sympathetic understanding between
+the two English-speaking worlds seems to me the
+most important duty of far-seeing men in either country.
+It has taken such a profound hold on me that I shall, in
+whatever way I can, work for its complete realization as
+long as I can work for anything.</p>
+
+<p>I am, Mr. President, most faithfully and gratefully
+yours,</p>
+
+<p>WALTER H. PAGE.</p></div>
+
+<p>This letter was written at a time when President Wilson
+was exerting his best energies to bring about peace. The
+Presidential campaign had caused him to postpone these
+efforts, for he believed that neither Germany nor Great
+Britain could take seriously the activities of a President
+whose own political position was insecure. At the time
+Page's letter was received, the President was thinking only
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-196" id="page2-196"></a>[pg II-196]</span>
+of a peace based upon a stalemate; it was then his apparent
+conviction that both sides to the struggle were about
+equally in the wrong and that a decisive victory of either
+would not be a good thing for the world. Yet it is interesting
+to compare this letter with the famous speech
+which the President made six months afterward when
+he asked Congress to declare the existence of a state of
+war with Germany. Practically all the important reasons
+which Mr. Wilson then advanced for this declaration are
+found in Page's letter of the preceding November. That
+autocracies are a constant menace to world peace, that
+the United States owes it to its democratic tradition to
+take up arms against the enemy of free government, that
+in doing this, it was not making war upon the German
+people, but upon its imperialistic masters&mdash;these were the
+arguments which Page laid before the President in his letter
+of resignation, and these were the leading ideas in Mr.
+Wilson's address of April 2nd. There are even sentences
+in Page's communication which seem to foreshadow Mr.
+Wilson's assertion that &quot;The world must be made safe
+for democracy.&quot; This letter in itself sufficiently makes it
+clear that Page's correspondence, irritating in its later
+phases as it may have been, strongly influenced Mr. Wilson
+in his final determination on war.</p>
+
+<p>On one point, indeed, Colonel House afterward called
+the Ambassador to account. When America was preparing
+to raise armies by the millions and to spend its
+treasure by the billions, he reminded Page of his statement
+that the severance of diplomatic relations &quot;would probably
+not cost us a man in battle nor any considerable
+treasure.&quot; Page's statement in this November letter
+merely reiterated a conviction which for more than a year
+he had been forcing upon the President and Colonel
+House&mdash;that the dismissal of Bernstorff would not necessarily
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-197" id="page2-197"></a>[pg II-197]</span>
+imply war with Germany, but that it would in itself
+be enough to bring the war to an end. On this point Page
+never changed his mind, as is evident from the letter which
+he wrote to Colonel House when this matter was called to
+his attention:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+London, June 29, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>I never put any particular value on my own prophecies
+nor on anybody else's. I have therefore no pride as a
+prophet. Yet I do think that I hit it off accurately a
+year or a year and a half ago when I said that we could
+then have ended the war without any appreciable cost.
+And these are my reasons:</p>
+
+<p>If we had then come in and absolutely prevented supplies
+from reaching Germany, as we are now about to do,
+the war would then have been much sooner ended than it
+can now be ended:</p>
+
+<p>(1) Our supplies enabled her to go on.</p>
+
+<p>(2) She got time in this way to build her great submarine
+fleet. She went at it the day she promised the
+President to reform.</p>
+
+<p>(3) She got time and strength to overrun Rumania
+whence she got food and oil; and continues to get it.</p>
+
+<p>(4) During this time Russia fell down as a military
+force and gave her more time, more armies for France
+and more supplies. Russian guns have been sold to the
+Germans.</p>
+
+<p>If a year and a half ago we had starved her out, it
+would have been over before any of these things happened.
+This delay is what will cost us billions and
+billions and men and men.</p>
+
+<p>And it cost us one thing more. During the neutrality
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-198" id="page2-198"></a>[pg II-198]</span>
+period we were as eager to get goods to the little neutral
+states which were in large measure undoubtedly bound to
+Germany as we are now eager to keep them out. Grey,
+who was and is our best friend, and who was unwilling
+to quarrel with us more than he was obliged to, was thrown
+out of office and his career ended because the blockade,
+owing to his consideration for us, was not tight enough.
+Our delay caused his fall.</p>
+
+<p>But most of all, it gave the Germans time (and to some
+extent material) to build their present fleet of submarines.
+They were at work on them all the while and according to
+the best opinion here they continue to build them faster
+than the British destroy them; and the submarines are
+destroying more merchant ships than all the shipbuilding
+docks of all the world are now turning out. This is
+the most serious aspect of the war&mdash;by far the most
+serious. I am trying to get our Government to send
+over hundreds of improvised destroyers&mdash;armed tugs,
+yachts, etc., etc. Admiral Sims and the British Admiralty
+have fears that unless such help come the full fruits of the
+war may never be gathered by the Allies&mdash;that some sort
+of a compromise peace may have to be made.</p>
+
+<p>It is, therefore, true that the year and a half we waited
+after the <i>Lusitania</i> will prove to be the most costly year
+and a half in our history; and for once at least my old
+prophecy was quite a good guess. But that water has
+flowed over the dam and it is worth mentioning now only
+because you challenged me....</p></div>
+
+<p>That part of Page's letter which refers to his retirement
+had a curious history. It was practically a resignation
+and therefore called for an immediate reply, but Mr.
+Wilson did not even acknowledge its receipt. For two
+months the Ambassador was left in the dark as to the attitude
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-199" id="page2-199"></a>[pg II-199]</span>
+of Washington. Finally, in the latter part of January,
+1917, Page wrote urgently to Mr. Lansing, asking
+him to bring the matter to the President's attention. On
+February 5, 1917, Mr. Lansing's reply was received.
+&quot;The President,&quot; he said, &quot;under extreme pressure of the
+present situation, has been unable to consider your communication
+in regard to your resignation. He desires me
+to inform you that he hopes that, at the present time, you
+will not press to be relieved from service; that he realizes
+that he is asking you to make a personal sacrifice, but he
+believes that you will appreciate the importance, in the
+crisis which has developed, that no change should be made.
+I hardly need to add my personal hope that you will put
+aside any thought of resigning your post for the present.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At this time, of course, any idea of retiring was out of
+the question. The President had dismissed Bernstorff
+and there was every likelihood that the country would
+soon be at war. Page would have regarded his retirement
+at this crisis as little less than the desertion of his
+post. Moreover, since Mr. Wilson had adopted the policy
+which the Ambassador had been urging for nearly two
+years, and had sent Bernstorff home, any logical excuse
+that may have existed for his resignation existed no longer.
+Mr. Wilson had now adopted a course which Page could
+enthusiastically support.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am happy to serve here at any sacrifice&quot;&mdash;such was
+his reply to Mr. Lansing&mdash;&quot;until after the end of the war,
+and I am making my arrangements to stay for this
+period.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The months that intervened between the Presidential
+election and the declaration of war were especially difficult
+for the American Embassy in London. Page had informed
+the President, in the course of his interview of
+September 22nd, how unfavourably Great Britain regarded
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-200" id="page2-200"></a>[pg II-200]</span>
+his efforts in the direction of peace; he had in
+fact delivered a message from the Foreign Office that
+any Presidential attempt to &quot;mediate&quot; would be rejected
+by the Allies. Yet his earnest representation on this
+point had produced no effect upon Mr. Wilson. The
+pressure which Germany was bringing to bear upon Washington
+was apparently irresistible. Count Bernstorff's
+memoirs, with their accompanying documents, have revealed
+the intensity of the German efforts during this
+period; the most startling fact revealed by the German
+Ambassador is that the Kaiser, on October 9th, notified
+the President, almost in so many words, that, unless he
+promptly moved in the direction of peace, the German
+Government &quot;would be forced to regain the freedom of
+action which it has reserved to itself in the note of May
+4th last<a name="FNanchor_49_49" id="FNanchor_49_49" /><a href="#Footnote_49_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>.&quot; It is unlikely that the annals of diplomacy
+contain many documents so cool and insolent as this one.
+It was a notification from the Kaiser to the President that
+the so-called &quot;Sussex pledge&quot; was not regarded as an
+unconditional one by the Imperial Government; that it
+was given merely to furnish Mr. Wilson an opportunity to
+bring the war to an end; and that unless the Presidential
+attempt to accomplish this were successful, there would be
+a resumption of the indiscriminate submarine campaign.
+The curious developments of the next two months are
+now a familiar story. Possibly because the British Government
+had notified him, through Page, that his proffer of
+mediation would be unacceptable, Mr. Wilson moved
+cautiously and slowly, and Germany became impatient.
+The successful campaign against Rumania, resulting in the
+capture of Bucharest on December 6th, and the new vista
+which it opened to Germany of large food supplies,
+strengthened the Teutonic purpose. Perhaps Germany,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-201" id="page2-201"></a>[pg II-201]</span>
+with her characteristic lack of finesse, imagined that her
+own open efforts would lend emphasis to Mr. Wilson's
+pacific exertions. At any rate, on December 12th, just as
+Mr. Wilson was preparing to launch his own campaign for
+mediation, Germany herself approached her enemies with a
+proposal for a peace conference. A few days afterward
+Page, as the representative of Germany, called at the Foreign
+Office to deliver the large white envelope which contained
+the Kaiser's &quot;peace proposal.&quot; In delivering this to
+Lord Robert Cecil, who was acting as Foreign Secretary
+in the temporary absence of Mr. Balfour, Page emphasized
+the fact that the American Government entirely disassociated
+itself from its contents and that he was acting
+merely in his capacity of &quot;German Ambassador.&quot; Two
+communications from Lord Robert to Sir Cecil Spring
+Rice, British Ambassador at Washington, tell the story
+and also reveal that it was almost impossible for Page,
+even when engaged in an official proceeding, to conceal
+his contempt for the whole enterprise:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>Lord R. Cecil to Sir C. Spring Rice</i><br />
+<br />
+Foreign Office,<br />
+<br />
+December 18, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>SIR:</p>
+
+<p>The American Ambassador came to see me this morning
+and presented to me the German note containing what is
+called in it the &quot;offer of peace.&quot; He explained that he
+did so on instructions of his Government as representing
+the German Government, and not in any way as representing
+their own opinions. He also explained that the
+note must be regarded as coming from the four Central
+Powers, and as being addressed to all the Entente Powers
+who were represented by the United States.</p>
+
+<p>He then read to me a telegram from his Government,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-202" id="page2-202"></a>[pg II-202]</span>
+but declined to leave me a copy of it. The first part of
+the telegram explained that the Government of the United
+States would deeply appreciate a confidential intimation
+of the response to be made to the German note and that
+they would themselves have certain representations to
+make to the Entente Powers, to which they urgently
+begged the closest consideration. The telegram went on
+to explain that the Government of the United States had
+had it in mind for some time past to make such representations
+on behalf of neutral nations and humanity, and
+that it must not be thought that they were prompted by
+the Governments of the Central Powers. They wished
+us to understand that the note of the Central Powers
+created a good opportunity for making the American
+representations, but was not the cause of such representations
+being made.</p>
+
+<p>I replied that I could of course say nothing to him on
+such an important matter without consulting my colleagues.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+I am, etc.,<br />
+<br />
+ROBERT CECIL.<br />
+<br />
+<i>Lord R. Cecil to Sir C. Spring Rice</i><br />
+<br />
+Foreign Office,<br />
+<br />
+19 December, 1916.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>SIR:</p>
+
+<p>The American Ambassador came to see me this afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>I asked him whether he could tell me why his government
+were anxious to have confidential information as to
+the nature of our response to the German peace note.
+He replied that he did not know, but he imagined it
+was to enable them to frame the representations of which
+he had spoken to me.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-203" id="page2-203"></a>[pg II-203]</span>
+<p>I then told him that we had asked the French to draft
+a reply, and that it would then be considered by the Allies,
+and in all probability an identic note would be presented
+in answer to the German note. I thought it probable that
+we should express our view that it was impossible to deal
+with the German offer, since it contained no specific proposals.</p>
+
+<p>He said that he quite understood this, and that we
+should in fact reply that it was an offer &quot;to buy a pig in a
+poke&quot; which we were not prepared to accept. He added
+that he thought his Government would fully anticipate a
+reply in this sense, and he himself obviously approved it.</p>
+
+<p>Then, speaking quite seriously, he said that he had
+heard people in London treating the German offer with
+derision, but that no doubt the belligerent governments
+would treat it seriously.</p>
+
+<p>I said that it was certainly a serious thing, and no doubt
+would be treated seriously.</p>
+
+<p>I asked him if he knew what would be contained in the
+proposed representations from his government.</p>
+
+<p>He said that he did not; but as he understood that they
+were to be made to all the belligerents, he did not think
+that they could be much more than a pious aspiration for
+peace; since that was the only thing that was equally
+applicable to the Germans and to us.</p>
+
+<p>As he was leaving he suggested that the German note
+might be published in our press.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+I am, etc.,<br />
+<br />
+ROBERT CECIL.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>This so-called German &quot;peace proposal&quot; began with
+the statement that the war &quot;had been forced&quot; upon Germany,
+contained the usual reference to the military might
+of the Central Powers, and declared that the Fatherland
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-204" id="page2-204"></a>[pg II-204]</span>
+was fighting for &quot;the honour and liberty of national
+evolution.&quot; It is therefore not surprising that Lord
+Robert received it somewhat sardonically, especially as the
+communication contained no specific proposals, but
+merely a vague suggestion of &quot;negotiations.&quot; But another
+spectacular performance now drove the German
+manoeuvre out of everybody's mind. That President
+Wilson resented this German interference with his own
+plans is well known; he did not drop them, however, but
+on December 18th, he sent his long-contemplated peace
+communication to all the warring Powers. His appeal
+took the form of asking that they state the objects for
+which they were fighting, the Presidential belief evidently
+being that, if they did this, a common meeting ground
+might possibly be found. The suggestion that the Allied
+war aims were not public property, despite the fact
+that British statesmen had been broadly proclaiming
+them for three years, caused a momentary irritation
+in England, but this was not a serious matter, especially
+as the British Cabinet quickly saw that this request
+gave them a position of advantage over Germany,
+which had always refused to make public the terms on
+which it would end the war. The main substance in this
+Presidential approach, therefore, would have produced
+no ill-feeling; as usual, it was a few parenthetical phrases&mdash;phrases
+which were not essential to the main argument&mdash;which
+set the allied countries seething with indignation.
+The President, this section of his note ran, &quot;takes the
+liberty of calling attention to the fact that the objects
+which the statesmen of the belligerents on both sides have
+in mind in this war, are virtually the same, as stated in
+general terms to their own people and to the world. Each
+side desires to make the rights and privileges of weak
+peoples and small states as secure against aggression and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-205" id="page2-205"></a>[pg II-205]</span>
+denial in the future as the rights and privileges of the
+great and powerful states now at war.&quot; This idea was
+elaborated in several sentences of a similar strain, the
+general purport of the whole passage being that there was
+little to choose between the combatants, inasmuch as both
+were apparently fighting for about the same things. Mr.
+Wilson's purpose in this paragraph is not obscure; he was
+making his long expected appearance as a mediator, and
+he evidently believed that it was essential to this r&ocirc;le that
+he should not seem to be prejudiced in favour of either
+side, but should hold the balance impartially between
+them.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that a minute reading indicates that Mr.
+Wilson was merely quoting, or attempting to paraphrase,
+the statements of the leaders of both sides, but there is such
+a thing as quoting with approval, and no explanation
+could convince the British public that the ruler of the
+greatest neutral nation had not declared that the Allies
+and the Central Powers stood morally upon the same level.
+The popular indignation which this caused in Great
+Britain was so intense that it alarmed the British authorities.
+The publication of this note in the British press was
+withheld for several hours, in order to give the Government
+an opportunity to control the expression of editorial
+opinion; otherwise it was feared that this would be so unrestrained
+in its bitterness that relations with the United
+States might be imperilled. The messages which the London
+correspondents were permitted to send to the United
+States were carefully censored for the same reason. The
+dispatch sent by the Associated Press was the product of
+a long struggle between the Foreign Office and its London
+correspondent. The representatives spent half an hour
+considering whether the American correspondents could
+cable their country that the note had been received in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-206" id="page2-206"></a>[pg II-206]</span>
+England with &quot;surprise and irritation.&quot; After much
+discussion it was decided that &quot;irritation&quot; could not be
+used, and the message of the Associated Press, after undergoing
+this careful editing by the Foreign Office, was a
+weak and ridiculous description of the high state of excitement
+which prevailed in Great Britain. The fact that
+the British Foreign Office should have given all this trouble
+over the expressions sent to American newspapers and
+should even have spent half an hour debating whether a
+particular word should be used, almost pathetically illustrates
+the great care taken by the British Government not
+to influence American opinion against the Allies.</p>
+
+<p>The Government took the same precautions with its
+own press in England. When the note was finally
+released the Foreign Office explicitly directed the London
+newspapers to comment with the utmost caution
+and in no case to question the President's sincerity.
+Most of them acquiesced in these instructions by maintaining
+silence. There was only one London newspaper,
+the <i>Westminster Gazette</i>, which made even a faint-hearted
+attempt to explain away the President's statement.
+From the first day of the war the British people had
+declared that President Wilson did not understand the
+issues at stake; and they now declared that this note
+confirmed their worst forebodings. The comments of
+the man-in-the-street were unprintable, but more serious
+than these was the impression which Mr. Wilson's dubious
+remarks made upon those Englishmen who had
+always been especially friendly to the United States and
+who had even defended the President in previous crises.
+Lord Bryce, who had accepted philosophically the Presidential
+statement that the United States was not &quot;concerned
+with the causes&quot; of the war, could not regard
+so indulgently this latest judgment of Great Britain
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-207" id="page2-207"></a>[pg II-207]</span>
+and Germany. &quot;Bryce came to see me in a state of
+great depression,&quot; wrote Page. &quot;He has sent Mr. Wilson
+a personal letter on this matter.&quot; Northcliffe commanded
+his newspapers, the <i>Times</i> and the <i>Daily Mail</i>,
+to discuss the note in a judicial spirit, but he himself
+told Mr. Page that &quot;everybody is as angry as hell.&quot;
+When someone attempted to discuss the Wilson note
+with Mr. Asquith, he brushed the subject away with a
+despairing gesture. &quot;Don't talk to me about it,&quot; he
+said. &quot;It is most disheartening.&quot; But the one man in
+England who was perhaps the most affected was King
+George. A man who had attended luncheon at Buckingham
+Palace on December 21st gave Page a description
+of the royal distress. The King, expressing his
+surprise and dismay that Mr. Wilson should think that
+Englishmen were fighting for the same things in this war
+as the Germans, broke down.</p>
+
+<p>The world only now understands the dreadful prospect
+which was opening before Europe at the moment when
+this Presidential note added a new cause for general
+despondency. Rumania had collapsed, the first inkling
+of the Russian revolution had been obtained, the
+British well knew that the submarine warfare was to
+be resumed, and British finances were also in a
+desperate plight. More and more it was becoming
+evident to the British statesmen that they needed the
+intervention of the United States. This is the reason
+why they could not destroy the chances of American
+help by taking official offense even at what Page, in a
+communication to the Secretary of State, did not hesitate
+to call President Wilson's &quot;insulting words&quot;; and hence
+their determination to silence the press and to give no
+outward expression of what they felt. Page's interview
+with Lord Robert Cecil on December 26th, while the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-208" id="page2-208"></a>[pg II-208]</span>
+Presidential communication was lying on his desk,
+discloses the real emotions of Englishmen. Apparently
+Page's frank cables concerning the reception of this paragraph
+had caused a certain interest in the State Department;
+at least the Ambassador was instructed to call at the
+Foreign Office and explain that the interpretation which
+had been commonly put upon the President's words was
+not the one which he had intended. At the same time
+Page was instructed to request the British Foreign Office,
+in case its reply were &quot;favourable,&quot; not to publish it,
+but to communicate it secretly to the American Government.
+The purpose of this request is a little obscure;
+possibly it was the President's plan to use such a favourable
+reply to force Germany likewise to display an acquiescent
+mood. The object of Page's call was to present
+this disclaimer.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Robert Cecil, the son of the late Lord Salisbury,&mdash;that
+same Lord Salisbury whose combats with Secretary
+Blaine and Secretary Olney form piquant chapters
+in British-American history&mdash;is one of the most able
+and respected of British statesmen. In his earlier
+life Lord Salisbury had been somewhat overbearing
+in his attitude toward the United States; in his later
+years, however, perhaps owing to the influence of his
+nephew, Mr. Balfour, his manner had changed. In his
+attitude toward the United States Lord Robert Cecil
+reflected only the later phases of his father's career.
+To this country and to its peaceful ideals he had always
+been extremely sympathetic, and to Page especially he
+had never manifested anything but cordiality. Yet it
+was evident, as Page came into his office this morning,
+that to Lord Robert, as to every member of the Government,
+the President's note, with its equivocal phrases,
+had been a terrible shock. His manner was extremely
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-209" id="page2-209"></a>[pg II-209]</span>
+courteous, as always, but he made no attempt to conceal
+his feelings. Ordinarily Lord Robert did not wear his
+emotions on the surface; but he took occasion on this
+visit to tell Page how greatly the President's communication
+had grieved him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The President,&quot; he said, &quot;has seemed to pass judgment
+on the allied cause by putting it on the same level
+as the German. I am deeply hurt.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Page conveyed Mr. Lansing's message that no such
+inference was justified. But this was not reassuring.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Moreover,&quot; Lord Robert added, &quot;there is one sentence
+in the note&mdash;that in which the President says that
+the position of neutrals is becoming intolerable&mdash;that
+seems almost a veiled threat.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Page hastened to assure Lord Robert that no threat
+was intended.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Robert's manner became increasingly serious.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is nothing that the American Government or
+any other human power can do,&quot; he remarked slowly and
+solemnly, &quot;which will bring this war to a close before the
+Allies have spent their utmost force to secure a victory.
+A failure to secure such a victory will leave the world at
+the mercy of the most arrogant and the bloodiest tyranny
+that has ever been organized. It is far better to die in
+an effort to defeat that tyranny than to perish under its
+success.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>On any occasion Lord Robert is an impressive or at
+least a striking and unusual figure; he is tall, lank, and
+ungainly, almost Lincolnesque in the carelessness of his
+apparel and the exceeding awkwardness of his postures and
+manners. His angular features, sharp nose, pale face, and
+dark hair suggest the strain of ascetism, almost of fanaticism,
+which runs in the present generation of his family.
+And the deep sincerity and power of his words on this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-210" id="page2-210"></a>[pg II-210]</span>
+occasion made an impression which Page never forgot;
+they transformed the British statesman into an eloquent,
+almost an heroic figure. If we are to understand the full
+tragedy of this moment we must remember that, incredible
+as it now seems, there was a fear in British officialdom
+that the United States might not only not pursue a course
+favourable to the Allies, but that it might even throw its
+support to Germany. The fear, of course, was baseless;
+any suggestion of such a policy in the United States would
+have destroyed any official who had brought it forward;
+but Lord Robert knew and Page knew that there were
+insidious influences at work at that time, both in the
+United States and in Great Britain, which looked in this
+direction. A group of Americans, whom Page used to refer
+to as &quot;peace spies,&quot; were associated with English
+pacifists, for the purpose of bringing about peace on almost
+any terms. These &quot;peace spies&quot; had worked out a
+programme all their own. The purpose was to compel
+Great Britain to accept the German terms for ending the
+war. Unless she did accept them, then it was intended
+that the American Government should place an embargo
+on the shipment of foodstuffs and munitions to the Allies.
+There is little question that the United States, by taking
+such action, could have ended the war almost instantaneously.
+Should the food of her people and the great
+quantities of munitions which were coming from this
+country be suddenly cut off, there is little likelihood that
+Great Britain could have long survived. The possibility
+that an embargo might shut out these supplies had hung
+over the heads of British statesmen ever since the war began;
+they knew that the possession of this mighty power
+made the United States the potential dictator of events;
+and the fear that it might be used had never ceased to
+influence their thoughts or their actions. Even while this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-211" id="page2-211"></a>[pg II-211]</span>
+interview was taking place, certain anti-British forces in
+the United States, such as Senator Hoke Smith of Georgia,
+were urging action of this kind.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have always been almost a Pacifist,&quot; Lord Robert
+continued. &quot;No man has ever hated war worse than I.
+No man has ever had a more earnest faith that war can
+be abolished. But European civilization has been murderously
+assaulted and there is nothing now to do but to
+defeat this desperate enemy or to perish in the effort. I
+had hoped that the United States understood what is at
+stake.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Lord Robert went on:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will go so far as to say that if the United States will
+come into the war it will decide which will win, freedom or
+organized tyranny. If the United States shall help the
+Germans, civilization will perish and it will be necessary
+to build it up slowly again&mdash;if indeed it will ever appear
+again. If the United States will help the Allies, civilization
+will triumph<a name="FNanchor_50_50" id="FNanchor_50_50" /><a href="#Footnote_50_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As to the proposal that the British terms should be
+conveyed confidentially to Mr. Wilson, Lord Robert said
+that that would be a difficult thing to do. The President's
+note had been published, and it therefore seemed necessary
+that the reply should also be given to the press. This
+was the procedure that was ultimately adopted.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Startling as was the sensation caused by the President's
+December note, it was mild compared with that which was
+now to come. Page naturally sent prompt reports of all
+these conversations to the President and likewise kept
+him completely informed as to the state of public feeling,
+but his best exertions apparently did not immediately
+affect the Wilson policy. The overwhelming fact is that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-212" id="page2-212"></a>[pg II-212]</span>
+the President's mind was fixed on a determination to compel
+the warring powers to make peace and in this way to
+keep the United States out of the conflict. Even the disturbance
+caused by his note of December 18th did not
+make him pause in this peace campaign. To that note
+the British sent a manly and definite reply, drafted by
+Mr. Balfour, giving in detail precisely the terms upon
+which the Allies would compose their differences with the
+Central Powers. The Germans sent a reply consisting of
+ten or a dozen lines, which did not give their terms, but
+merely asked again for a conference. Events were now
+moving with the utmost rapidity. On January 9th, a
+council of German military chieftains was held at Pless;
+in this it was decided to resume unrestricted submarine
+warfare. On January 16th the Zimmermann-Mexico telegram
+was intercepted; this informed Bernstorff, among
+other things, that this decision had been made. On
+January 16th, at nine o'clock in the morning, the
+American Embassy in London began receiving a long
+cipher despatch from Washington. The preamble announced
+that the despatch contained a copy of an address
+which the President proposed to deliver before the Senate
+&quot;in a few days.&quot; Page was directed to have copies of
+the address &quot;secretly prepared&quot; and to hand them to the
+British Foreign Office and to newspapers of the type of the
+Nation, the Daily News, and the Manchester Guardian&mdash;all
+three newspapers well known for their Pacifist tendencies.
+As the speech approached its end, this sentence appeared:
+&quot;It must be a peace without victory.&quot; The
+words greatly puzzled the secretary in charge, for they
+seemed almost meaningless. Suspecting that an error
+had been made in transmission, the secretary directed the
+code room to cable Washington for a verification of the
+cipher groups. Very soon the answer was received; there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-213" id="page2-213"></a>[pg II-213]</span>
+had been no mistake; the Presidential words were precisely
+those which had been first received: &quot;Peace without victory.&quot;
+The slips were then taken to Page, who read the
+document, especially these fateful syllables, with a consternation
+which he made no effort to conceal. He immediately
+wrote a cable to President Wilson, telling him of
+the deplorable effect this sentence would produce and imploring
+him to cut it out of his speech&mdash;with what success
+the world now knows.</p>
+
+<p>An astonishing feature of this episode is that Page had
+recently explained to the Foreign Office, in obedience to
+instructions from Washington, that Mr. Wilson's December
+note should not be interpreted as placing the Allies and
+the Central Powers on the same moral level. Now Mr.
+Wilson, in this &quot;peace without victory&quot; phrase, had repeated
+practically the same idea in another form. On
+the day the speech was received at the Embassy, about a
+week before it was delivered in the Senate, Page made
+the following memorandum:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The President's address to the Senate, which was received
+to-day (January 16th)<a name="FNanchor_51_51" id="FNanchor_51_51" /><a href="#Footnote_51_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a>, shows that he thinks he
+can play peace-maker. He does not at all understand,
+(or, if he do, so much the worse for him) that the Entente
+Powers, especially Great Britain and France, cannot make
+&quot;peace without victory.&quot; If they do, they will become
+vassals of Germany. In a word, the President does not
+know the Germans; and he is, unconsciously, under their
+influence in his thought. His speech plays into their
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>This address will give great offense in England, since it
+puts each side in the war on the same moral level.</p>
+
+<p>I immediately saw the grave danger to our relations with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-214" id="page2-214"></a>[pg II-214]</span>
+Great Britain by the Peace-without-Victory plan; and I
+telegraphed the President, venturing to advise him to omit
+that phrase&mdash;with no result.</p></div>
+
+<p>Afterward Page added this to the above:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Compare this Senate speech with his speech in April
+calling for war: Just when and how did the President
+come to see the true nature of the German? What made
+him change from Peace-Maker to War-Maker? The
+Zimmermann telegram, or the February U-boat renewal
+of warfare? Had he been so credulous as to believe the
+German promise? This promise had been continuously
+and repeatedly broken.</p>
+
+<p>Or was it the pressure of public opinion, the growing
+impatience of the people that pushed him in?</p>
+
+<p>This distressing peace-move&mdash;utterly out of touch with
+the facts of the origin of the war or of its conduct or of the
+mood and necessities of Great Britain&mdash;a remote, academic
+deliverance, while Great Britain and France were
+fighting for their very lives&mdash;made a profoundly dejected
+feeling; and it made my place and work more uncomfortable
+than ever. &quot;Peace without victory&quot; brought us to
+the very depths of European disfavour.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_49_49" id="Footnote_49_49" /><a href="#FNanchor_49_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> &quot;My Three Years in America,&quot; by Count Bernstorff, p. 294.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_50_50" id="Footnote_50_50" /><a href="#FNanchor_50_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> This narrative is based upon memoranda made by Page.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_51_51" id="Footnote_51_51" /><a href="#FNanchor_51_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> It was delivered and published on January 22nd.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-215" id="page2-215"></a>[pg II-215]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI" />CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<h3>THE UNITED STATES AT WAR</h3>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>The United States broke off diplomatic relations with
+Germany on February 3, 1917. The occasion was
+a memorable one in the American Embassy in London,
+not unrelieved by a touch of the ridiculous. All day
+long a nervous and rather weary company had waited in
+the Ambassador's room for the decisive word from Washington.
+Mr. and Mrs. Page, Mr. and Mrs. Laughlin, Mr.
+Shoecraft, the Ambassador's secretary, sat there hour after
+hour, hardly speaking to one another in their tense excitement,
+waiting for the news that would inform them that
+Bernstorff's course had been run and that their country
+had taken its decision on the side of the Allies. Finally,
+at nine o'clock in the evening, the front door bell rang.
+Mr. Shoecraft excitedly left the room; half way downstairs
+he met Admiral William Reginald Hall, the head
+of the British Naval Intelligence, who was hurrying up to
+the Ambassador. Admiral Hall, as he spied Mr. Shoecraft,
+stopped abruptly and uttered just two words:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank God!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He then went into the Ambassador's room and read a
+secret code message which he had just received from Captain
+Gaunt, the British naval attach&eacute; at Washington.
+It was as follows:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bernstorff has just been given his passports. I shall
+probably get drunk to-night!&quot;</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-216" id="page2-216"></a>[pg II-216]</span></div>
+<p>It was in this way that Page first learned that the long
+tension had passed.</p>
+
+<p>Page well understood that the dismissal of Bernstorff
+at that time meant war with the Central Empires. Had
+this dismissal taken place in 1915, after the sinking of the
+<i>Lusitania</i>, or in 1916, after the sinking of the <i>Sussex</i>, Page
+believed that a simple break in relations would in itself
+have brought the war to an early end. But by February,
+1917, things had gone too far. For Germany had now
+decided to stake everything upon the chance of winning a
+quick victory with the submarine. Our policy had persuaded
+the Kaiser's advisers that America would not
+intervene; and the likelihood of rapidly starving Great
+Britain was so great&mdash;indeed the Germans had reduced the
+situation to a mathematical calculation of success&mdash;that
+an American declaration of war seemed to Berlin to be a
+matter of no particular importance. The American Ambassador
+in London regarded Bernstorff's dismissal much
+more seriously. It justified the interpretations of events
+which he had been sending to Mr. Wilson, Colonel House,
+and others for nearly three years. If Page had been inclined
+to take satisfaction in the fulfilment of his own prophecies,
+Germany's disregard of her promises and the
+American declaration of war would have seemed an ample
+justification of his course as ambassador.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2230" id="i2230" />
+<a href="images/2230.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2230.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>Walter H. Page, at the time of America's entry into the
+war, April, 1917</b>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2231" id="i2231" />
+<a href="images/2231.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2231.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>Resolution passed by the two Houses of Parliament,<br />
+April 18, 1917, on America's entry into the war</b>
+</div>
+
+<p>But Page had little time for such vain communings.
+&quot;All that water,&quot; as he now wrote, &quot;has flowed over the
+dam.&quot; Occasionally his mind would revert to the dreadful
+period of &quot;neutrality,&quot; but in the main his activities,
+mental and physical, were devoted to the future. A
+letter addressed to his son Arthur shows how quickly and
+how sympathetically he was adjusting himself to the
+new prospect. His mind was now occupied with ships,
+food, armies, warfare on submarines, and the approaching
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-217" id="page2-217"></a>[pg II-217]</span>
+resettlement of the world. How completely he foresaw
+the part that the United States must play in the actual
+waging of hostilities, and to what an extent he himself was
+responsible for the policies that ultimately prevailed, appears
+in this letter:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+25 March, 1917, London.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>It's very hard, not to say impossible, to write in these
+swiftly moving days. Anything written to-day is out of
+date to-morrow&mdash;even if it be not wrong to start with.
+The impression becomes stronger here every day that we
+shall go into the war &quot;with both feet&quot;&mdash;that the people
+have pushed the President over in spite of his vision of the
+Great Peacemaker, and that, being pushed over, his idea
+now will be to show how he led them into a glorious war
+in defense of democracy. That's my reading of the situation,
+and I hope I am not wrong. At any rate, ever since
+the call of Congress for April 2nd, I have been telegraphing
+tons of information and plans that can be of use only
+if we go to war. Habitually they never acknowledge the
+receipt of anything at Washington. I don't know, therefore,
+whether they like these pieces of information or not.
+I have my staff of twenty-five good men getting all sorts
+of warlike information; and I have just organized twenty-five
+or thirty more&mdash;the best business Americans in
+London&mdash;who are also at work. I am trying to get the
+Government at Washington to send over a committee of
+conference&mdash;a General, an Admiral, a Reserve Board man,
+etc., etc. If they do half the things that I recommend
+we'll be in at the final lickin' big, and will save our souls
+yet.</p>
+
+<p>There's lots of human nature in this world. A note is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-218" id="page2-218"></a>[pg II-218]</span>
+now sometimes heard here in undertone (Northcliffe strikes
+it)&mdash;that they don't want the Americans in the war.
+This means that if we come in just as the Allies finish the
+job we'll get credit, in part, for the victory, which we did
+little to win! But that's a minor note. The great mass
+of people do want us in, quick, hard, and strong&mdash;our
+money and our guns and our ships.</p>
+
+<p>A gift of a billion dollars<a name="FNanchor_52_52" id="FNanchor_52_52" /><a href="#Footnote_52_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> to France will fix Franco-American
+history all right for several centuries. Push it
+through. Such a gift could come to this Kingdom also
+but for the British stupidity about the Irish for three
+hundred years. A big loan to Great Britain at a low
+rate of interest will do the work here.</p>
+
+<p>My mind keeps constantly on the effect of the war and
+especially of our action on our own country. Of course
+that is the most important end of the thing for us. I hope
+that&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. It will break up and tear away our isolation;</p>
+
+<p>2. It will unhorse our cranks and soft-brains.</p>
+
+<p>3. It will make us less promiscuously hospitable to
+every kind of immigrant;</p>
+
+<p>4. It will re&euml;stablish in our minds and conscience and
+policy our true historic genesis, background, kindred, and
+destiny&mdash;i.e., kill the Irish and the German influence.</p>
+
+<p>5. It will revive our real manhood&mdash;put the molly-coddles
+in disgrace, as idiots and dandies are;</p>
+
+<p>6. It will make our politics frank and manly by restoring
+our true nationality;</p>
+
+<p>7. It will make us again a great sea-faring people. It
+is this that has given Great Britain its long lead in the
+world;</p>
+
+<p>8. Break up our feminized education&mdash;make a boy a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-219" id="page2-219"></a>[pg II-219]</span>
+vigorous animal and make our education rest on a wholesome
+physical basis;</p>
+
+<p>9. Bring men of a higher type into our political life.</p>
+
+<p>We need waking up and shaking up and invigorating as
+much as the Germans need taking down.</p>
+
+<p>There is no danger of &quot;militarism&quot; in any harmful sense
+among any English race or in any democracy.</p>
+
+<p>By George! all these things open an interesting outlook
+and series of tasks&mdash;don't they?</p>
+
+<p>My staff and I are asking everybody what the Americans
+can best do to help the cause along. The views are
+not startling, but they are interesting.</p>
+
+<p><i>Jellicoe</i>: More ships, merchant ships, any kind of
+ships, and take over the patrol of the American side of the
+Atlantic and release the British cruisers there.</p>
+
+<p><i>Balfour</i>: American credits in the United States big
+enough to keep up the rate of exchange.</p>
+
+<p><i>Bonar Law</i>: Same thing.</p>
+
+<p><i>The military men</i>: An expeditionary force, no matter
+how small, for the effect of the American Flag in Europe.
+If one regiment marched through London and Paris and
+took the Flag to the front, that would be worth the winning
+of a battle.</p>
+
+<p>Think of the vast increase of territory and power Great
+Britain will have&mdash;her colonies drawn closer than ever, the
+German colonies, or most of them, taken over by her, Bagdad
+hers&mdash;what a way Germany chose to lessen the British
+Empire! And these gains of territory will be made,
+as most of her gains have been, not by any prearranged, set
+plan, but as by-products of action for some other purpose.
+The only people who have made a deliberate plan to conquer
+the earth&mdash;now living&mdash;are the Germans. And from
+first to last the additions to the British Empire have been
+made because she has been a first-class maritime power.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-220" id="page2-220"></a>[pg II-220]</span>
+<p>And that's the way she has made her trade and her money,
+too.</p>
+
+<p>On top of this the President speculates about the danger
+of the white man losing his supremacy because a few million
+men get killed! The truth is every country that is
+playing a big part in the war was overpopulated. There
+will be a considerable productive loss because the killed
+men were, as a rule, the best men; but the white man's
+control of the world hasn't depended on any few million
+of males. This speculation is far up in the clouds. If
+Russia and Germany really be liberated from social and
+political and industrial autocracy, this liberation will
+bring into play far more power than all the men killed in
+the war could have had under the pre-war r&eacute;gime. I observe
+this with every year of my observation&mdash;there's no
+substitute for common-sense.</p>
+
+<p>The big results of the war will, after all, be the freedom
+and the stimulation of men in these weary Old-World
+lands&mdash;in Russia, Germany itself, and in England. In five
+or ten years (or sooner, alas!) the dead will be forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>If you wish to make a picture of the world as it will be
+when the war ends, you must conjure up such scenes as
+these&mdash;human bones along the Russian highways where
+the great retreat took place and all that such a sight denotes;
+Poland literally starved; Serbia, blasted and burned
+and starved; Armenia butchered; the horrible tragedy of
+Gallipoli, where the best soldiers in the world were sacrificed
+to politicians' policies; Austria and Germany starved and
+whipped but liberalized&mdash;perhaps no king in either country;
+Belgium&mdash;belgiumized; northern France the same
+and worse; more productive Frenchmen killed in proportion
+to the population perhaps than any other country
+will have lost; Great Britain&mdash;most of her best men gone
+or maimed; colossal debts; several Teutonic countries bankrupt;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-221" id="page2-221"></a>[pg II-221]</span>
+every atrocity conceivable committed somewhere&mdash;a
+hell-swept great continent having endured more suffering
+in three years than in the preceding three hundred.
+Then, ten years later, most of this suffering a mere memory;
+governments reorganized and liberalized; men made
+more efficient by this strenuous three years' work; the
+fields got back their bloom, and life going on much as it
+did before&mdash;with this chief difference&mdash;some kings have
+gone and many privileges have been abolished. The
+lessons are two&mdash;(1) that no government can successfully
+set out and conquer the world; and (2) that the hold that
+privilege holders acquire costs more to dislodge than any
+one could ever have guessed. That's the sum of it. Kings
+and privilege mongers, of course, have held the parts of
+the world separate from one another. They fatten on
+provincialism, which is mistaken for patriotism. As
+they lose their grip, human sympathy has its natural play
+between nations, and civilization has a chance. With any
+Emperor of Germany left the war will have been half in
+vain.</p>
+
+<p>If we (the U.S.A.) cultivate the manly qualities and
+throw off our cranks and read our own history and be true
+to our traditions and blood and get some political vigour;
+then if we emancipate ourselves from the isolation theory
+and from the landlubber theory&mdash;get into the world and
+build ships, ships, ships, ships, and run them to the ends of
+the seas, we can dominate the world in trade and in political
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>You know I have moments when it occurs to me that
+perhaps I'd better give whatever working years I may
+have to telling this story&mdash;the story of the larger meaning of
+the war. There's no bigger theme&mdash;never was one so big.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-222" id="page2-222"></a>[pg II-222]</span></div>
+<p>On April 1st, the day before President Wilson made his
+great address before Congress requesting that body to declare
+the existence of a state of war with Germany, Page
+committed to paper a few paragraphs which summed up
+his final judgment of President Wilson's foreign policy for
+the preceding two and a half years.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Embassy of the United States of America,<br />
+April 1, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>In these last days, before the United States is forced
+into war&mdash;by the people's insistence&mdash;the preceding course
+of events becomes even clearer than it was before; and it
+has been as clear all the time as the nose on a man's face.</p>
+
+<p>The President began by refusing to understand the
+meaning of the war. To him it seemed a quarrel to settle
+economic rivalries between Germany and England. He
+said to me last September<a name="FNanchor_53_53" id="FNanchor_53_53" /><a href="#Footnote_53_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> that there were many causes
+why Germany went to war. He showed a great degree
+of toleration for Germany; and he was, during the whole
+morning that I talked with him, complaining of England.
+The controversies we had with England were, of course,
+mere by-products of the conflict. But to him they
+seemed as important as the controversy we had with Germany.
+In the beginning he had made&mdash;as far as it was
+possible&mdash;neutrality a positive quality of mind. He would
+not move from that position.</p>
+
+<p>That was his first error of judgment. And by insisting
+on this he soothed the people&mdash;sat them down in comfortable
+chairs and said, &quot;Now stay there.&quot; He really
+suppressed speech and thought.</p>
+
+<p>The second error he made was in thinking that he could
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-223" id="page2-223"></a>[pg II-223]</span>
+play a great part as peacemaker&mdash;come and give a blessing
+to these erring children. This was strong in his hopes and
+ambitions. There was a condescension in this attitude
+that was offensive.</p>
+
+<p>He shut himself up with these two ideas and engaged
+in what he called &quot;thought.&quot; The air currents of the
+world never ventilated his mind.</p>
+
+<p>This inactive position he has kept as long as public sentiment
+permitted. He seems no longer to regard himself
+nor to speak as a leader&mdash;only as the mouthpiece of public
+opinion after opinion has run over him.</p>
+
+<p>He has not breathed a spirit into the people: he has
+encouraged them to supineness. He is <i>not</i> a leader, but
+rather a stubborn phrasemaker.</p>
+
+<p>And now events and the aroused people seem to have
+brought the President to the necessary point of action;
+and even now he may act timidly.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>&quot;One thing pleases me,&quot; Page wrote to his son Arthur,
+&quot;I never lost faith in the American people. It is now
+clear that I was right in feeling that they would have
+gladly come in any time after the <i>Lusitania</i> crime. Middle
+West in the front, and that the German hasn't made any
+real impression on the American nation. He was made
+a bug-a-boo and worked for all he was worth by Bernstorff;
+and that's the whole story. We are as Anglo-Saxon
+as we ever were. If Hughes had had sense and
+courage enough to say: 'I'm for war, war to save our
+honour and to save democracy,' he would now be President.
+If Wilson had said that, Hughes would have carried no
+important states in the Union. The suppressed people
+would have risen to either of them. That's God's truth as
+I believe it. The real United States is made up of you
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-224" id="page2-224"></a>[pg II-224]</span>
+and Frank and the Page boys at Aberdeen and of the
+10,000,000 other young fellows who are ready to do the
+job and who instinctively see the whole truth of the situation.
+But of course what the people would not have done
+under certain conditions&mdash;that water also has flowed over
+the dam; and I mention it only because I have resolutely
+kept my faith in the people and there has been nothing in
+recent events that has shaken it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Two letters which Page wrote on this same April 1st
+are interesting in that they outline almost completely the
+war policy that was finally carried out:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Frank N. Doubleday</i><br />
+<br />
+Embassy of the United States of America,<br />
+April 1, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR EFFENDI:</p>
+
+<p>Here's the programme:</p>
+
+<p>(1) Our navy in immediate action in whatever way a
+conference with the British shows we can best help.</p>
+
+<p>(2) A small expeditionary force to France immediately&mdash;as
+large as we can quickly make ready, if only
+10,000 men&mdash;as proof that we are ready to do some fighting.</p>
+
+<p>(3) A large expeditionary force as soon as the men can
+be organized and equipped. They can be trained into an
+effective army in France in about one fourth of the time
+that they could be trained anywhere else.</p>
+
+<p>(4) A large loan to the Allies at a low rate of interest.</p>
+
+<p>(5) Ships, ships, ships&mdash;troop ships, food ships, munition
+ships, auxiliary ships to the navy, wooden ships, steel
+ships, little ships, big ships, ships, ships, ships without
+number or end.</p>
+
+<p>(6) A clear-cut expression of the moral issue involved
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-225" id="page2-225"></a>[pg II-225]</span>
+in the war. Every social and political ideal that we
+stand for is at stake. If we value democracy in the
+world, this is the chance to further it or&mdash;to bring it into
+utter disrepute. After Russia must come Germany and
+Austria; and then the King-business will pretty nearly be
+put out of commission.</p>
+
+<p>(7) We must go to war in dead earnest. We must
+sign the Allies' agreement not to make a separate peace,
+and we must stay in to the end. Then the end will be
+very greatly hastened.</p>
+
+<p>It's been four years ago to-day since I was first asked to
+come here. God knows I've done my poor best to save
+our country and to help. It'll be four years in the middle
+of May since I sailed. I shall still do my best. I'll not be
+able to start back by May 15th, but I have a feeling, if
+we do our whole duty in the United States, that the end
+may not be very many months off. And how long off it
+may be may depend to a considerable degree on our action.</p>
+
+<p>We are faring very well on army rations. None of us
+will live to see another time when so many big things are
+at stake nor another time when our country can play so
+large or important a part in saving the world. Hold up
+your end. I'm doing my best here.</p>
+
+<p>I think of you engaged in the peaceful work of instructing
+the people, and I think of the garden and crocuses and
+the smell of early spring in the air and the earth and&mdash;push
+on; I'll be with you before we grow much older or
+get much grayer; and a great and prosperous and peaceful
+time will lie before us. Pity me and hold up your end for
+real American participation. Get together? Yes; but
+the way to get together is to get in!</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-226" id="page2-226"></a>[pg II-226]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To David F. Houston</i><a name="FNanchor_54_54" id="FNanchor_54_54" /><a href="#Footnote_54_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a><br />
+<br />
+Embassy of the United States of America,<br />
+April 1, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR HOUSTON:</p>
+
+<p>The Administration can save itself from becoming a
+black blot on American history only by vigorous action&mdash;acts
+such as these:</p>
+
+<p>Putting our navy to work&mdash;vigorous work&mdash;wherever
+and however is wisest. I have received the Government's
+promise to send an Admiral here at once for a conference.
+We must work out with the British Navy a programme
+whereby we can best help; and we must carry it without
+hesitancy or delay.</p>
+
+<p>Sending over an expeditionary military force immediately&mdash;a
+small one, but as large as we can, as an earnest
+of a larger one to come. This immediate small one will
+have a good moral effect; and we need all the moral reinstatement
+that we can get in the estimation of the world;
+our moral stock is lower than, I fear, any of you at home
+can possibly realize. As for a larger expeditionary force
+later&mdash;even that ought to be sent quite early. It can and
+must spend some time in training in France, whatever its
+training beforehand may have been. All the military men
+agree that soldiers in France back of the line can be trained
+in at least half the time that they can be trained
+anywhere else. The officers at once take their turn in the
+trenches, and the progress that they and their men make in
+close proximity to the fighting is one of the remarkable discoveries
+of the war. The British Army was so trained
+and all the colonial forces. Two or three or four hundred
+thousand Americans could be sent over as soon almost as
+they are organized and equipped-provided transports
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-227" id="page2-227"></a>[pg II-227]</span>
+and a continuous supply of food and munition ships can
+be got. They can be trained into fighting men&mdash;into an
+effective army&mdash;in about one third of the time that would
+be required at home.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose, of course, we shall make at once a large
+loan to the Allies at a low rate of interest. That is most
+important, but that alone will not save us. We must also
+<i>fight</i>.</p>
+
+<p>All the ships we can get&mdash;build, requisition, or confiscate&mdash;are
+needed immediately.</p>
+
+<p>Navy, army, money, ships&mdash;these are the first things,
+but by no means all. We must make some expression of
+a conviction that there is a moral question of right and
+wrong involved in this war&mdash;a question of humanity, a
+question of democracy. So far we have (officially) spoken
+only of the wrongs done to our ships and citizens. Deep
+wrongs have been done to all our moral ideas, to our
+ideals. We have sunk very low in European opinion because
+we do not seem to know even yet that a German
+victory would be less desirable than (say) a Zulu victory
+of the world.</p>
+
+<p>We must go in with the Allies, not begin a mere single
+fight against submarines. We must sign the pact of
+London&mdash;not make a separate peace.</p>
+
+<p>We mustn't longer spin dreams about peace, nor
+leagues to enforce peace, nor the Freedom of the Seas.
+These things are mere intellectual diversions of minds
+out of contact with realities. Every political and social
+ideal we have is at stake. If we make them secure, we'll
+save Europe from destruction and save ourselves, too.
+I pray for vigour and decision and clear-cut resolute action.</p>
+
+<p>(1) The Navy&mdash;full strength, no &quot;grapejuice&quot; action.</p>
+
+<p>(2) An immediate expeditionary force.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-228" id="page2-228"></a>[pg II-228]</span>
+<p>(3) A larger expeditionary force very soon.</p>
+
+<p>(4) A large loan at a low interest.</p>
+
+<p>(5) Ships, ships, ships.</p>
+
+<p>(6) A clear-cut expression of the moral issue. Thus
+(and only thus) can we swing into a new era, with a world
+born again.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours in strictest confidence,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>A memorandum, written on April 3rd, the day after
+President Wilson advised Congress to declare a state of
+war with Germany:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>The Day</i></p>
+
+<p>When I went to see Mr. Balfour to-day he shook my
+hand warmly and said: &quot;It's a great day for the world.&quot;
+And so has everybody said, in one way or another, that I
+have met to-day.</p>
+
+<p>The President's speech did not appear in the morning
+papers&mdash;only a very brief summary in one or two of them;
+but the meaning of it was clear. The fact that the House
+of Representatives organized itself in one day and that
+the President addressed Congress on the evening of that
+day told the story. The noon papers had the President's
+speech in full; and everybody applauds.</p>
+
+<p>My &quot;Cabinet&quot; meeting this morning was unusually
+interesting; and the whole group has never before been
+so delighted. I spoke of the suggestive, constructive
+work we have already done in making reports on various
+war preparations and activities of this kingdom. &quot;Now
+we have greater need than ever, every man to do constructive
+work&mdash;to think of plans to serve. We are in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-229" id="page2-229"></a>[pg II-229]</span>
+this excellent strategical position in the capital of the
+greatest belligerent&mdash;a position which I thank my stars,
+the President, and all the powers that be for giving us.
+We can each strive to justify our existence.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Few visitors called; but enthusiastic letters have begun
+to come in.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly the whole afternoon was spent with Mr. Balfour
+and Lord Robert Cecil. Mr. Balfour had a long list of
+subjects. Could we help in (1)&mdash;(2)&mdash;(3)?&mdash;Every once
+in a while he stopped his enumeration of subjects long
+enough to tell me how the action of the United States had
+moved him.</p>
+
+<p>To Lord Robert I said: &quot;I pray you, give the Black
+List a decent burial: It's dead now, but through no act of
+yours. It insulted every American because you did not
+see that it was insulting: that's the discouraging fact to
+me.&quot; He thanked me earnestly. He'll think about that.</p></div>
+
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>These jottings give only a faint impression of the
+change which the American action wrought in Page. The
+strain which he had undergone for twenty-nine months
+had been intense; it had had the most unfortunate effect
+upon his health; and the sudden lifting might have produced
+that reaction for the worse which is not unusual
+after critical experiences of this kind. But the gratification
+which Page felt in the fact that the American spirit
+had justified his confidence gave him almost a certain
+exuberance of contentment. Londoners who saw him at
+that time describe him as acting like a man from whose
+shoulders a tremendous weight had suddenly been removed.
+For more than two years Page had been compelled,
+officially at least, to assume a &quot;neutrality&quot; with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-230" id="page2-230"></a>[pg II-230]</span>
+which he had never had the slightest sympathy, but the
+necessity for this mask now no longer existed. A well-known
+Englishman happened to meet Page leaving his
+house in Grosvenor Square the day after the Declaration
+of War. He stopped and shook the Ambassador's hand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank God,&quot; the Englishman said, &quot;that there is one
+hypocrite less in London to-day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What do you mean?&quot; asked Page.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I mean you. Pretending all this time that you were
+neutral! That isn't necessary any longer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are right!&quot; the Ambassador answered as he
+walked on with a laugh and a wave of the hand.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after the Washington Declaration, the American
+Luncheon Club held a feast in honour of the event.
+This organization had a membership of representative
+American business men in London, but its behaviour during
+the war had not been based upon Mr. Wilson's idea of
+neutrality. Indeed its tables had so constantly rung with
+denunciations of the <i>Lusitania</i> notes that all members
+of the American Embassy, from Page down, had found
+it necessary to refrain from attending its proceedings.
+When Page arose to address his compatriots on this occasion,
+therefore, he began with the significant words, &quot;I am
+glad to be back with you again,&quot; and the mingled laughter
+and cheers with which this remark was received indicated
+that his hearers had caught the point.</p>
+
+<p>The change took place not only in Page, but in London
+and the whole of Great Britain. An England that had been
+saying harsh things of the United States for nearly two
+years now suddenly changed its attitude. Both houses
+of Parliament held commemorative sessions in honour
+of America's participation; in the Commons Mr. Lloyd
+George, Mr. Asquith, and other leaders welcomed their
+new allies, and in the Upper Chamber Lord Curzon, Lord
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-231" id="page2-231"></a>[pg II-231]</span>
+Bryce, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and others similarly
+voiced their admiration. The Stars and Stripes almost
+instantaneously broke out on private dwellings, shops,
+hotels, and theatres; street hucksters did a thriving business
+selling rosettes of the American colours, which even
+the most stodgy Englishmen did not disdain to wear in
+their buttonholes; wherever there was a band or an orchestra,
+the Star Spangled Banner acquired a sudden
+popularity; and the day even came when the American
+and the British flags flew side by side over the Houses of
+Parliament&mdash;the first occasion in history that any other
+than the British standard had received this honour. The
+editorial outgivings of the British press on America's entrance
+form a literature all their own. The theatres and
+the music halls, which had found in &quot;notes&quot; and &quot;nootrality&quot;
+an endless theme of entertainment for their patrons,
+now sounded Americanism as their most popular refrain.
+Churches and cathedrals gave special services in honour
+of American intervention, and the King and the President
+began to figure side by the side in the prayer book. The
+estimation in which President Wilson was held changed
+overnight. All the phrases that had so grieved Englishmen
+were instantaneously forgotten. The President's
+address before Congress was praised as one of the most
+eloquent and statesmanlike utterances in history. Special
+editions of this heartening document had a rapid sale; it
+was read in school houses, churches, and at public gatherings,
+and it became a most influential force in uplifting the
+hopes of the Allies and inspiring them to renewed activities.
+Americans everywhere, in the streets, at dinner
+tables, and in general social intercourse, could feel the new
+atmosphere of respect and admiration which had suddenly
+become their country's portion. The first American
+troops that passed through London&mdash;a company of engineers,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-232" id="page2-232"></a>[pg II-232]</span>
+an especially fine body of men&mdash;aroused a popular
+enthusiasm which was almost unprecedented in a
+capital not celebrated for its emotional displays. Page
+himself records one particularly touching indication of the
+feeling for Americans which was now universal. &quot;The
+increasing number of Americans who come through England,&quot;
+he wrote, &quot;most of them on their way to France,
+but some of them also to serve in England, give much
+pleasure to the British public&mdash;nurses, doctors, railway
+engineers, sawmill units, etc. The sight of every American
+uniform pleases London. The other morning a group
+of American nurses gathered with the usual crowd in front
+of Buckingham Palace while the Guards band played inside
+the gates. Man after man as they passed them and
+saw their uniforms lifted their hats.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2248" id="i2248" />
+<a href="images/2248.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2248.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>The Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George, Chancellor of
+the Exchequer, 1908-1915,<br />
+Minister of Munitions, 1915-1916,<br />
+Prime Minister of Great Britain, 1916-1922</b>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2249" id="i2249" />
+<a href="images/2249.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2249.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>The Rt. Hon. Arthur James Balfour (now the Earl of Balfour)<br />
+Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1916-1919</b>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Ambassador's mail likewise underwent a complete
+transformation. His correspondence of the preceding
+two years, enormous in its extent, had contained much
+that would have disturbed a man who could easily get
+excited over trifles, but this aspect of his work never
+caused Page the slightest unhappiness. Almost every
+crank in England who disliked the American policy had
+seemed to feel it his duty to express his opinions to the
+American Ambassador. These letters, at times sorrowful,
+at others abusive, even occasionally threatening, varying
+in their style from cultivated English to the grossest
+illiteracy, now written in red ink to emphasize their bitterness,
+now printed in large block letters to preserve their
+anonymity, aroused in Page only a temporary amusement.
+But the letters that began to pour in upon him after our
+Declaration, many of them from the highest placed men
+and women in the Kingdom, brought out more vividly
+than anything else the changed position of his country.
+Sonnets and verses rained upon the Embassy, most of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-233" id="page2-233"></a>[pg II-233]</span>
+them pretty bad as poetry, but all of them commendable
+for their admiring and friendly spirit. Of all these
+letters those that came from the steadfast friends of America
+perhaps gave Page the greatest satisfaction. &quot;You
+will have been pleased at the universal tribute paid to the
+spirit as well as to the lofty and impressive terms of the
+President's speech,&quot; wrote Lord Bryce. &quot;Nothing finer
+in our time, few things so fine.&quot; But probably the letter
+which gave Page the greatest pleasure was that which
+came from the statesman whose courtesy and broad outlook
+had eased the Ambassador's task in the old neutrality
+days. In 1916, Sir Edward Grey&mdash;now become Viscount
+Grey of Fallodon&mdash;had resigned office, forced out, Page
+says in one of his letters, mainly because he had refused to
+push the blockade to a point where it might produce a
+break with the United States. He had spent the larger
+part of the time since that event at his country place in
+Northumberland, along the streams and the forests which
+had always given him his greatest pleasure, attempting to
+recover something of the health that he had lost in the ten
+years which he had spent as head of the British Foreign
+Office and bearing with characteristic cheerfulness and
+fortitude the tragedy of a gradually failing eyesight.
+The American Declaration of War now came to Lord Grey
+as the complete justification of his policy. The mainspring
+of that policy, as already explained, had been a
+determination to keep the friendship of the United States,
+and so shape events that the support of this country
+would ultimately be cast on the side of the Allies. And
+now the great occasion for which he had prepared had
+come, and in Grey's mind this signified more than a help
+to England in soldiers and ships; it meant bringing together
+the two branches of a common race for the promotion
+of common ideals.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-234" id="page2-234"></a>[pg II-234]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>From Viscount Grey of Fallodon</i><br />
+<br />
+Rosehall Post Office,<br />
+<br />
+Sutherland,<br />
+<br />
+April 8, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PAGE:</p>
+
+<p>This is a line that needs no answer to express my congratulations
+on President Wilson's address. I can't express
+adequately all that I feel. Great gratitude and
+great hope are in my heart. I hope now that some
+great and abiding good to the world will yet be wrought
+out of all this welter of evil. Recent events in Russia, too,
+stimulate this hope: they are a good in themselves, but not
+the power for good in this war that a great and firmly
+established free country like the United States can be.
+The President's address and the way it has been followed
+up in your country is a splendid instance of great action
+finely inspired. I glow with admiration.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours sincerely,<br />
+<br />
+GREY OF FALLODON<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>One Englishman who was especially touched by the
+action of the United States was His Majesty the King.
+Few men had watched the course of America during the
+war with more intelligent interest than the head of the
+British royal house. Page had had many interviews with
+King George at Buckingham Palace and at Windsor, and
+his notes contain many appreciative remarks on the King's
+high character and conscientious devotion to his duties.
+That Page in general did not believe in kings and emperors
+as institutions his letters reveal; yet even so profound
+a Republican as he recognized sterling character, whether
+in a crowned head or in a humble citizen, and he had seen
+enough of King George to respect him. Moreover,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-235" id="page2-235"></a>[pg II-235]</span>
+the peculiar limitations of the British monarchy certainly
+gave it an unusual position and even saved it
+from much of the criticism that was fairly lavished upon
+such nations as Germany and Austria. Page especially
+admired King George's frankness in recognizing these
+limitations and his readiness to accommodate himself
+to the British Constitution. On most occasions, when
+these two men met, their intercourse was certainly friendly
+or at least not formidable. After all formalities had been
+exchanged, the King would frequently draw the Ambassador
+aside; the two would retire to the smoking room, and
+there, over their cigars, discuss a variety of matters&mdash;submarines,
+international politics, the Irish question and the
+like. His Majesty was not averse even to bringing up
+the advantages of the democratic and the monarchical
+system. The King and Ambassador would chat, as Page
+himself would say, like &quot;two human beings&quot;; King
+George is an emphatic and vivacious talker, fond of emphasizing
+his remarks by pounding the table; he has the
+liveliest sense of humour, and enjoys nothing quite so
+much as a good story. Page found that, on the subject
+of the Germans, the King entertained especially robust
+views. &quot;They are my kinsmen,&quot; he would say, &quot;but I
+am ashamed of them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Probably most Englishmen, in the early days of the war,
+preferred that the United States should not engage in
+hostilities; even after the <i>Lusitania</i>, the majority in all
+likelihood held this view. There are indications, however,
+that King George favoured American participation.
+A few days after the <i>Lusitania</i> sinking, Page had an audience
+for the purpose of presenting a medal sent by certain
+societies in New Orleans. Neither man was thinking
+much about medals that morning. The thoughts uppermost
+in their minds, as in the minds of most Americans and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-236" id="page2-236"></a>[pg II-236]</span>
+Englishmen, were the <i>Lusitania</i> and the action that the
+United States was likely to take concerning it. After the
+formalities of presentation, the King asked Page to sit
+down and talked with him for more than half an hour.
+&quot;He said that Germany was evidently trying to force the
+United States into the war; that he had no doubt we would
+soon be in it and that, for his part, he would welcome us
+heartily. The King also said he had reliable information
+from Germany, that the Emperor had wished to return
+a conciliatory answer to our <i>Lusitania</i> note, but that
+Admiral von Tirpitz had prevented it, even going so far
+as to 'threaten' the Kaiser. It appears that the Admiral
+insisted that the submarine was the only weapon the
+Germans could use with effect against England and that
+they could not afford to give it up. He was violent and
+the Kaiser finally yielded<a name="FNanchor_55_55" id="FNanchor_55_55" /><a href="#Footnote_55_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The statement from the King at that crisis, that he
+would &quot;heartily welcome the United States into the war,&quot;
+was interpreted by the Ambassador as amounting practically
+to an invitation&mdash;and certainly as expressing a wish
+that such an intervention should take place.</p>
+
+<p>That the American participation would rejoice King
+George could therefore be taken for granted. Soon after
+this event, the Ambassador and Mrs. Page were invited to
+spend the night at Windsor.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I arrived during the middle of the afternoon,&quot; writes
+Page, &quot;and he sent for me to talk with him in his office.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'I've a good story on you,' said he. 'You Americans
+have a queer use of the word &quot;some,&quot; to express mere bigness
+or emphasis. We are taking that use of the word
+from you over here. Well, an American and an Englishman
+were riding in the same railway compartment. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-237" id="page2-237"></a>[pg II-237]</span>
+American read his paper diligently&mdash;all the details of a big
+battle. When he got done, he put the paper down and said:
+&quot;Some fight!&quot; &quot;And some don't!&quot; said the Englishman.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And the King roared. 'A good one on you!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'The trouble with that joke, sir,' I ventured to reply,
+'is that it's out of date.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He was in a very gay mood, surely because of our
+entry into the war. After the dinner&mdash;there were no
+guests except Mrs. Page and me, the members of his household,
+of course, being present&mdash;he became even familiar
+in the smoking room. He talked about himself and his
+position as king. 'Knowing the difficulties of a limited
+monarch, I thank heaven I am spared being an absolute
+one.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He went on to enumerate the large number of things
+he was obliged to do, for example, to sign the death warrant
+of every condemned man&mdash;and the little real power
+that he had&mdash;not at all in a tone of complaint, but as a
+merely impersonal explanation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just how much power&mdash;perhaps 'influence' is a better
+word&mdash;the King has, depends on his personality. The
+influence of the throne&mdash;and of him on the throne, being a
+wholly thoughtful, industrious, and conscientious man&mdash;is
+very great&mdash;greatest of all in keeping the vested interests
+of the aristocratic social structure secure.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Earlier than this visit to Windsor he sent for me to go
+to Buckingham Palace very soon after we declared war.
+He went over the whole course of events&mdash;and asked me
+many questions. After I had risen and said 'good-bye'
+and was about to bow myself out the door, he ran toward
+me and waving his hand cried out, 'Ah&mdash;Ah!&mdash;we knew
+where <i>you</i> stood all the time.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When General Pershing came along on his way to
+France, the King summoned us to luncheon. The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-238" id="page2-238"></a>[pg II-238]</span>
+luncheon was eaten (here, as everywhere, strict war rations
+are observed) to a flow of general talk, with the
+Queen, Princess Mary, and one of the young Princes.
+When they had gone from the luncheon room, the King,
+General Pershing, and I stood smoking by the window; and
+the King at once launched into talk about guns, rifles,
+ammunition, and the American place in the battle line.
+Would our place be with the British or with the French or
+between the two?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;General Pershing made a diplomatic reply. So far as
+he knew the President hadn't yet made a final decision,
+but there was a feeling that, since we were helping the
+British at sea, perhaps we ought to help the French on
+land.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then the King expressed the earnest hope that our
+guns and ammunition would match either the British or
+the French. Else if we happened to run out of ammunition
+we could not borrow from anybody. He thought it
+most unfortunate that the British and French guns and
+rifles were of different calibres.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+Brighton, England,<br />
+<br />
+April 28, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>... Well, the British have given us a very good
+welcome into the war. They are not very skillful at such
+a task: they do not know how to say &quot;Welcome&quot; very
+vociferously. But they have said it to the very best of
+their ability. My speeches (which I send you, with
+some comment) were very well received indeed. Simple
+and obvious as they were, they meant a good deal of work.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot conceal nor can I express my gratification that
+we are in the war. I shall always wonder but never find
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-239" id="page2-239"></a>[pg II-239]</span>
+out what influence I had in driving the President over.
+All I know is that my letters and telegrams for nearly
+two years&mdash;especially for the last twelve months&mdash;have
+put before him every reason that anybody has expressed
+why we should come in&mdash;in season and out of season.
+And there is no new reason&mdash;only more reason of the same
+old sort&mdash;why we should have come in now than there was
+why we should have come in a year ago. I suspect that the
+pressure of the press and of public opinion really became
+too strong for him. And, of course, the Peace-Dream
+blew up&mdash;was torpedoed, mined, shot, captured, and
+killed. I trust, too, much enlightenment will be furnished
+by the two Commissions now in Washington<a name="FNanchor_56_56" id="FNanchor_56_56" /><a href="#Footnote_56_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a>. Yet it's
+comical to think of the attitude of the poor old Department
+last September and its attitude now. But thank
+God for it! Every day now brings a confession of the
+blank idiocy of its former course and its long argument!
+Never mind that, so long as we are now right.</p>
+
+<p>I have such a sense of relief that I almost feel that my
+job is now done. Yet, I dare say, my most important
+work is still to come.</p>
+
+<p>The more I try to reach some sort of rational judgment
+about the war, the more I find myself at sea. It does look
+as if the very crisis is near. And there can be no doubt
+now&mdash;not even, I hope, in the United States&mdash;about the
+necessity of a clear and decisive victory, nor about
+punishment. All the devastation of Northern France,
+which outbarbarizes barbarism, all the ships sunk, including
+hospital ships, must be paid for; that's all. There'll
+be famine in Europe whenever it end. Not only must
+these destructions be paid for, but the Hohenzollerns and
+all they stand for must go. Trust your Frenchman for
+that, if nobody else!</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-240" id="page2-240"></a>[pg II-240]</span>
+<p>If Europe had the food wasted in the United States,
+it would make the difference between sustenance and
+famine. By the way, the submarine has made every
+nation a danger zone except those few that have self-feeding
+continents, such as ours. It can bring famine
+to any other kind of a country.</p>
+
+<p>You are now out in the country again&mdash;good. Give
+Mollie my love and help her with the garden. I envy
+you the fresh green things to eat. Little Mollie, kiss
+her for granddaddy. The Ambassador, I suppose, waxes
+even sturdier, and I'm glad to hear that A.W.P., Jr., is
+picking up. Get him fed right at all costs. If Frank
+stays at home and Ralph and his family come up, you'll
+all have a fine summer. We've the very first hint of summer
+we've had, and it's cheerful to see the sky and to feel
+the sunshine.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+<br />
+<i>To Frank N. Doubleday</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy,<br />
+<br />
+London, May 3, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR EFFENDI:</p>
+
+<p>I aim this at you. It may hit a German submarine.
+But we've got to take our chances in these days of risk.
+Your letter from the tropics&mdash;a letter from you from any
+place is as scarce as peace!&mdash;gave me a pleasant thrill and
+reminder of a previous state of existence, a long way back
+in the past. I wonder if, on your side the ocean you are
+living at the rate of a century a year, as we are here?
+Here in bountiful England we are living on rations. I
+spent a night with the King a fortnight ago, and he gave
+us only so much bread, one egg apiece, and&mdash;lemonade.
+We are to begin bread tickets next week. All this is perfectly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-241" id="page2-241"></a>[pg II-241]</span>
+healthful and wholesome and as much as I ever eat.
+But the hard part of it is that it's necessary. We haven't
+more than six weeks' food supply and the submarines
+sunk eighty-eight ships&mdash;237,000 tons&mdash;last week. These
+English do not publish these harrowing facts, and nobody
+knows them but a few official people. And they are destroying
+the submarines at a most beggarly slow rate.
+They work far out at sea&mdash;100 to 200 miles&mdash;and it's as
+hard to find them as it would be to find whales. The simple
+truth is we are in a dangerous plight. If they could
+stop this submarine warfare, the war would pretty quickly
+be won, for the Germans are in a far worse plight for food
+and materials and they are getting much the worst of it
+on land. The war would be won this summer or autumn
+if the submarine could be put out of business. If it isn't,
+the Germans may use this success to keep their spirits up
+and go on till next year.</p>
+
+<p>We (the United States) have about 40 destroyers. We
+are sending over 6! I'm doing my best to persuade the
+Government at Washington to send every one we have.
+But, since the British conceal the facts from their own
+press and the people and from all the world, the full pressure
+of the situation is hard to exert on Washington. Our
+Admiral (Sims) and I are trying our best, and we are
+spending enough on cables to build a destroyer. All this,
+you must, of course, regard as a dark secret; but it's a
+devilish black secret.</p>
+
+<p>I don't mean that there's any danger of losing the war.
+Even if the British armies have to have their food cut
+down and people here go hungry, they'll win; but the
+winning may be a long time off. Nothing but their continued
+success can keep the Germans going. Their people
+are war-weary and hungry. Austria is knocked out
+and is starving. Turkey is done up but can go on living
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-242" id="page2-242"></a>[pg II-242]</span>
+on nothing, but not fighting much more. When peace
+comes, there'll be a general famine, on the continent at
+least, and no ships to haul food. This side of the world
+will have to start life all over again&mdash;with insufficient
+men to carry things on and innumerable maimed men
+who'll have (more or less) to be cared for. The horror of
+the whole thing nobody realizes. We've all got used to
+it here; and nobody clearly remembers just what the world
+was like in peace times; those times were so far away. All
+this I write not to fill you with horrors but to prove that
+I speak the literal truth when I say that it seems a hundred
+years since I had before heard from you.</p>
+
+<p>Just how all this affects a man, no man can accurately
+tell. Of how much use I'll be when I can get home, I
+don't know. Sometimes I think that I shall be of vastly
+greater use than ever. Plans and publishing ambitions
+pop up in my mind at times which look good and promising.
+I see books and series of books. I see most useful
+magazine stuff. Then, before I can think anything out
+to a clear plan or conclusion, the ever-increasing official
+duties and responsibilities here knock everything else out
+of my head, perhaps for a whole month. It's a literal
+fact that many a month I do not have an hour to do with
+as I please nor to think about what I please, from the time
+I wake up till I go to bed. In spite of twenty-four secretaries
+(the best fellows that ever were and the best staff
+that any Embassy ever had in the world) more and more
+work comes to me. I thank Heaven we no longer have
+the interests of Germany, Austria, and Turkey to look
+after; but with our coming into the war, work in general
+has increased enormously. I have to spend very much
+more time with the different departments of the British
+Government on war plans and such like things. They
+have welcomed us in very handsomely; and one form of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-243" id="page2-243"></a>[pg II-243]</span>
+their welcome is consulting with me about&mdash;navy plans,
+war plans, loans of billions, ships, censorship, secret
+service&mdash;everything you ever heard of. At first it seemed a
+little comical for the admirals and generals and the Governor
+of the Bank of England to come and ask for advice.
+But when I gave it and it worked out well, I went on
+and, after all, the thing's easier than it looks. With a
+little practice you can give these fellows several points in
+the game and play a pretty good hand. They don't know
+half as much as you might suppose they'd know. All
+these years of lecturing the State Department and the
+President got my hand in! The whole game is far easier
+than any small business. You always play with blue
+chips better than you play with white ones.</p>
+
+<p>This country and these people are not the country and
+the people they were three years ago. They are very
+different. They are much more democratic, far less
+cocksure, far less haughty, far humbler. The man at the
+head of the army rose from the ranks. The Prime Minister
+is a poor Welsh schoolteacher's son, without early
+education. The man who controls all British shipping
+began life as a shipping &quot;clark,&quot; at ten shillings a week.
+Yet the Lords and Ladies, too, have shown that they were
+made of the real stuff. This experience is making England
+over again. There never was a more interesting thing to
+watch and to be part of.</p>
+
+<p>There are about twenty American organizations here&mdash;big,
+little, rag-tag, and bobtail. When we declared war,
+every one of 'em proceeded to prepare for some sort of
+celebration. There would have been an epidemic of
+Fourth-of-July oratory all over the town&mdash;before we'd
+done anything&mdash;Americans spouting over the edges and
+killing Kruger with their mouths. I got representatives
+of 'em all together and proposed that we hold our tongues
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-244" id="page2-244"></a>[pg II-244]</span>
+till we'd won the war&mdash;then we can take London. And
+to give one occasion when we might all assemble and dedicate
+ourselves to this present grim business, I arranged for
+an American Dedicatory Service at St. Paul's Cathedral.
+The royal family came, the Government came, the Allied
+diplomats came, my Lords and Ladies came, one hundred
+wounded American (Canadian) soldiers came&mdash;the pick
+of the Kingdom; my Navy and Army staff went in full
+uniform, the Stars and Stripes hung before the altar, a
+double brass band played the Star Spangled Banner and
+the Battle Hymn of the Republic, and an American bishop
+(Brent) preached a red-hot American sermon, the Archbishop
+of Canterbury delivered the benediction; and (for
+the first time in English history) a foreign flag (the Stars
+and Stripes) flew over the Houses of Parliament. It was
+the biggest occasion, so they say, that St. Paul's ever had.
+And there's been no spilling of American oratory since!
+If you had published a shilling edition of the words and
+music of the Star Spangled Banner and the Battle Hymn
+you could have sent a cargo of 'em here and sold them.
+There isn't paper enough in this Kingdom to get out an
+edition here.</p>
+
+<p>Give my love to all the Doubledays and to all the fellows
+in the shop, and (I wonder if you will) try your hand at
+another letter. You write very legibly these days!</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Sincerely yours,<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>&quot;Curiously enough,&quot; Page wrote about this time, &quot;these
+most exciting days of the war are among the most barren
+of exciting topics for private correspondence. The 'atmosphere'
+here is unchanging&mdash;to us&mdash;and the British are
+turning their best side to us continuously. They are
+increasingly appreciative, and they see more and more
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-245" id="page2-245"></a>[pg II-245]</span>
+clearly that our coming into the war is all that saved them
+from a virtual defeat&mdash;I mean the public sees this more
+and more clearly, for, of course, the Government has
+known it from the beginning. I even find a sort of morbid
+fear lest they do not sufficiently show their appreciation.
+The Archbishop last night asked me in an apprehensive
+tone whether the American Government and
+public felt that the British did not sufficiently show their
+gratitude. I told him that we did not come into the war
+to win compliments but to whip the enemy, and that we
+wanted all the help the British can give: that's the main
+thing; and that thereafter of course we liked appreciation,
+but that expressions of appreciation had not been lacking.
+Mr. Balfour and Sir Edward Carson also spoke to me
+yesterday much in the same tone as the Archbishop of
+Canterbury.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Try to think out any line of action that one will, or
+any future sequence of events or any plan touching the
+war, one runs into the question whether the British are
+doing the best that could be done or are merely plugging
+away. They are, as a people, slow and unimaginative,
+given to over-much self-criticism; but they eternally hold
+on to a task or to a policy. Yet the question forever
+arises whether they show imagination, to say nothing of
+genius, and whether the waste of a slow, plodding policy
+is the necessary price of victory.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course such a question is easy to ask and it is easy
+to give dogmatic answers. But it isn't easy to give an
+answer based on facts. Our General Lassiter<a name="FNanchor_57_57" id="FNanchor_57_57" /><a href="#Footnote_57_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>, for
+instance&mdash;a man of sound judgment&mdash;has in general been
+less hopeful of the military situation in France than most
+of the British officers. But he is just now returned from
+the front, much cheered and encouraged. 'Lassiter,' I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-246" id="page2-246"></a>[pg II-246]</span>
+asked, 'have the British in France or has any man among
+them what we call genius, or even wide vision; or are they
+merely plodding along at a mechanical task? His
+answer was, 'We don't see genius till it has done its job.
+It is a mechanical task&mdash;yes, that's the nature of the struggle&mdash;and
+they surely do it with intelligence and spirit.
+There is waste. There is waste in all wars. But I come
+back much more encouraged.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The same sort of questions and answers are asked and
+given continuously about naval action. Every discussion
+of the possibility of attacking the German naval bases
+ends without a plan. So also with preventing the submarines
+from coming out. These subjects have been
+continuously under discussion by a long series of men who
+have studied them; and the total effect so far has been to
+leave them among the impossible tasks. So far as I can
+ascertain all naval men among the Allies agree that these
+things can't be done.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Here again&mdash;Is this a merely routine professional
+opinion&mdash;a merely traditional opinion&mdash;or is it a lack of
+imagination? The question will not down. Yet it is
+impossible to get facts to combat it. What are the limits
+of the practicable?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Balfour told me yesterday his personal conviction
+about the German colonies, which, he said, he had
+not discussed with his associates in the Cabinet. His
+firm opinion is that they ought not to be returned to the
+Germans, first for the sake of humanity. 'The natives&mdash;the
+Africans especially&mdash;have been so barbarously
+treated and so immorally that it would be inhuman
+to permit the Germans to rule and degrade them further.
+But Heaven forbid that we should still further enlarge the
+British Empire. As a practical matter I do not care to do
+that. Besides, we should incur the criticism of fighting
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-247" id="page2-247"></a>[pg II-247]</span>
+in order to get more territory, and that was not and is not
+our aim. If the United States will help us, my wish is
+that these German Colonies that we have taken, especially
+in Africa, should be &quot;internationalized.&quot; There are
+great difficulties in such a plan, but they are not insuperable
+if the great Powers of the Allies will agree upon it.'
+And much more to the same effect. The parts of Asiatic
+Turkey that the British have taken, he thought, might be
+treated in the same way.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_52_52" id="Footnote_52_52" /><a href="#FNanchor_52_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> At this time the proposal of such a gift found much
+popular favour. However, the plan was not carried through.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_53_53" id="Footnote_53_53" /><a href="#FNanchor_53_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> At the meeting of Page and the President at Shadow Lawn,
+September 22, 1916. See Chapter XIX.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_54_54" id="Footnote_54_54" /><a href="#FNanchor_54_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> Secretary of Agriculture in President Wilson's Cabinet.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_55_55" id="Footnote_55_55" /><a href="#FNanchor_55_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> The quotation is from a memorandum of the conversation
+made by one of the secretaries of the American Embassy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_56_56" id="Footnote_56_56" /><a href="#FNanchor_56_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> The British and French Commissions, headed by Mr. Balfour
+and M. Viviani.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_57_57" id="Footnote_57_57" /><a href="#FNanchor_57_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> American military attach&eacute; in London.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-248" id="page2-248"></a>[pg II-248]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII" />CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE BALFOUR MISSION TO THE UNITED STATES</h3>
+
+
+<h3>I</h3>
+
+<p>Page now took up a subject which had been near his
+heart for a long time. He believed that one of the
+most serious causes of Anglo-American misunderstanding
+was the fact that the leading statesmen of the two countries
+had never had any personal contact with one another.
+At one time, as this correspondence shows, the Ambassador
+had even hoped that President Wilson himself might
+cross the ocean and make the British people an official
+visit. The proposal, however, was made before the
+European war broke out, the occasion which Page had
+in mind being the dedication of Sulgrave Manor, the old
+English home of the Washington family, as a perpetual
+memorial to the racial bonds and common ideals uniting
+the two countries. The President found it impossible
+to act upon this suggestion and the outbreak of war made
+the likelihood of such a visit still more remote. Page had
+made one unsuccessful attempt to bring the American
+State Department and the British Foreign Office into
+personal contact. At the moment when American irritation
+had been most keen over the blockade and the
+blacklist, Page had persuaded the Foreign Office to invite
+to England Mr. Frank L. Polk, at that time Counsellor of
+the Department; the Ambassador believed that a few
+conversations between such an intelligent gentleman
+as Mr. Polk and the British statesmen would smooth
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-249" id="page2-249"></a>[pg II-249]</span>
+out all the points which were then making things so
+difficult. Unfortunately the pressure of work at Washington
+prevented Mr. Polk from accepting Sir Edward
+Grey's invitation.</p>
+
+<p>But now a greater necessity for close personal association
+had arisen. The United States had entered the war, and
+this declaration had practically made this country an ally
+of Great Britain and France. The British Government
+wished to send a distinguished commission to the United
+States, for two reasons: first, to show its appreciation of
+the stand which America had taken, and secondly, to discuss
+plans for co&ouml;peration in the common task. Great
+Britain frankly admitted that it had made many mistakes
+in the preceding three years&mdash;mistakes naval, military,
+political, and economic; it would welcome an opportunity
+to display these errors to Washington, which might naturally
+hope to profit from them. As soon as his country was
+in the war, Page took up this suggestion with the Foreign
+Office. There was of course one man who was pre&euml;minently
+fitted, by experience, position, and personal qualities,
+to head such a commission; on this point there was
+no discussion. Mr. Balfour was now in his seventieth
+year; his activities in British politics dated back to the
+times of Disraeli; his position in Great Britain had become
+as near that of an &quot;elder statesman&quot; as is tolerable under
+the Anglo-Saxon system. By this time Page had established
+the friendliest possible relations with this distinguished
+man. Mr. Balfour had become Foreign Secretary
+in December, 1916, in succession to Lord Grey. Greatly
+as Page regretted the resignation of Grey, he was much
+gratified that Mr. Balfour had been selected to succeed
+him. Mr. Balfour's record for twenty-five years had been
+one of consistent friendliness toward the United States.
+When President Cleveland's Venezuelan message, in 1896,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-250" id="page2-250"></a>[pg II-250]</span>
+had precipitated a crisis in the relations of the two countries,
+it was Mr. Balfour's influence which was especially
+potent in causing Great Britain to modify its attitude and
+to accept the American demand for arbitration. That
+action not only amicably settled the Venezuelan question;
+it marked the beginning of a better feeling between the
+English-speaking countries and laid the basis for that
+policy of benevolent neutrality which Great Britain had
+maintained toward the United States in the Spanish War.
+The excellent spirit which Mr. Balfour had shown at this
+crisis he had manifested on many occasions since. In the
+criticisms of the United States during the <i>Lusitania</i>
+troubles Mr. Balfour had never taken part. The era of
+&quot;neutrality&quot; had not ruffled the confidence which he had
+always felt in the United States. During all this time the
+most conspicuous dinner tables of London had rung with
+criticisms of American policy; the fact was well known,
+however, that Mr. Balfour had never sympathized with these
+reproaches; even when he was not in office, no unfriendly
+word concerning the United States had ever escaped his
+lips. His feeling toward this country was well shown in
+a letter which he wrote Page, in reply to one congratulating
+him on his seventieth birthday. &quot;I have now lived
+a long life,&quot; said Mr. Balfour, &quot;and most of my energies
+have been expended in political work, but if I have been
+fortunate enough to contribute, even in the smallest degree,
+to drawing closer the bonds that unite our two countries,
+I shall have done something compared with which
+all else that I may have attempted counts in my eyes as
+nothing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Page's letters and notes contain many references to Mr.
+Balfour's kindly spirit. On the day following the dismissal
+of Bernstorff the American Ambassador lunched
+with the Foreign Secretary at No. 4 Carlton Gardens.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-251" id="page2-251"></a>[pg II-251]</span></div>
+<p>&quot;Mr. Balfour,&quot; Page reported to Washington, &quot;gave
+expression to the hearty admiration which he entertained
+for the President's handling of a difficult task. He said
+that never for a moment had he doubted the President's
+wisdom in the course he was pursuing. He had the
+profoundest admiration for the manner in which he had
+promptly broken with Germany after receiving Germany's
+latest note. Nor had he ever entertained the slightest
+question of the American people's ready loyalty to their
+Government or to their high ideals. One of his intellectual
+pleasures, he added, had long been contemplation of
+the United States as it is and, even more, as its influence in
+the world will broaden. 'The world,' said Mr. Balfour,
+'will more and more turn on the Great Republic as on a
+pivot.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally Mr. Balfour's discussion of the United
+States would take a more pensive turn. A memorandum
+which Page wrote a few weeks after the above touches
+another point:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>March 27, 1917.</p>
+
+<p>I had a most interesting conversation with Mr.
+Balfour this afternoon. &quot;It's sad to me,&quot; said he, &quot;that
+we are so unpopular, so much more unpopular than the
+French, in your country. Why is it? The old school
+books?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I doubted the school-book influence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly their influence is not the main cause. It is
+the organized Irish. Then it's the effect of the very fact
+that the Irish question is not settled. You've had that
+problem at your very door for 300 years. What's the
+matter that you don't solve it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, yes,&quot;&mdash;he saw it. But the plaintive tone of
+such a man asking such a question was significant and
+interesting and&mdash;sad.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-252" id="page2-252"></a>[pg II-252]</span>
+<p>Then I told him the curious fact that a British Government
+made up of twenty individuals, every one of whom
+is most friendly to the United States, will, when they
+act together as a Government, do the most offensive
+things. I mentioned the blacklist; I mentioned certain
+complaints that I then held in my hand&mdash;of Americans
+here who are told by the British Government that they
+must turn over to the British Government's agent in New
+York their American securities which they hold in America!</p>
+
+<p>There's a sort of imperious, arrogant, Tory action that
+comes natural to the English Government, even when not
+natural to the individual Englishman.</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>On April 5th, the day before the United States formally
+declared war, Page notified Washington that the British
+Government wished Mr. Balfour to go to the United
+States as the head of a Commission to confer with our
+Government. &quot;Mr. Balfour is chosen for this mission,&quot;
+Page reported, &quot;not only because he is Secretary of State
+for Foreign Affairs, but because he is personally the most
+distinguished member of the Government.&quot; Page tells the
+story in more detail in a letter to Mr. Polk, at that time
+Counsellor of the State Department.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Frank L. Polk</i><br />
+<br />
+London, May 3, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. POLK:</p>
+
+<p>... Mr. Balfour accurately represents British
+character, British opinion, and the British attitude. Nobody
+who knows him and knows British character and the
+British attitude ever doubted that. I know his whole
+tribe, his home-life, his family connections, his friends; and,
+of course, since he became Foreign Secretary, I've come
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-253" id="page2-253"></a>[pg II-253]</span>
+to know him intimately. When the question first came
+up here of his going, of course I welcomed it enthusiastically.
+About that time during a two-hour conversation
+he asked me why the British were so unpopular in the
+United States. Among other reasons I told him that our
+official people on both sides steadfastly refused to visit
+one another and to become acquainted. Neither he nor
+Lord Grey, nor Mr. Asquith, nor Mr. Lloyd George, had
+ever been to the United States, nor any other important
+British statesman in recent times, and not a single
+member of the Administration was personally known to a
+single member of the British Government. &quot;I'll go,&quot;
+said he, &quot;if you are perfectly sure my going will be agreeable
+to the President.&quot; He himself recalled the fact,
+during one of our several conversations just before he left,
+that you had not come when he and Lord Grey had invited
+you. If you had come, by the way, this era of a better
+understanding would have begun then, and half our old
+troubles would then have been removed. Keeping away
+from one another is the best of all methods of keeping all
+old misunderstandings alive and of making new ones.</p>
+
+<p>I have no doubt that Mr. Balfour's visit will cause visits
+of many first-class British statesmen during the war or
+soon afterward. That's all we need to bring about a perfect
+understanding.</p>
+
+<p>You may remember how I tried to get an official report
+about the behaviour of the <i>Benham</i><a name="FNanchor_58_58" id="FNanchor_58_58" /><a href="#Footnote_58_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a>, and how, in the
+absence of that, Lord Beresford made a disagreeable speech
+about our Navy in the House of Lords, and how, when
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-254" id="page2-254"></a>[pg II-254]</span>
+months later you sent me Roosevelt's<a name="FNanchor_59_59" id="FNanchor_59_59" /><a href="#Footnote_59_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> letter, Lord Beresford
+expressed regret to me and said that he would explain
+in another speech. I hadn't seen the old fellow for a long
+time till a fortnight ago. He greeted me cheerily, and I
+said, &quot;I don't think I ought to shake hands with you till
+you retract what you said about our navy.&quot; He insisted
+on my dining with him. He invited Admiral Sims also,
+and those two sailors had a jolly evening of it. Sims's
+coming has straightened out all that naval misunderstanding
+and more. He is of immense help to them and
+to us. But I'm going to make old Beresford's life a burden
+till he gets up in the Lords and takes that speech back&mdash;publicly.
+He's really all right; but it's just as well to
+keep the records right. The proceedings of the House of
+Lords are handsomely bound and go into every gentleman's
+library. I have seen two centuries of them in
+many a house.</p>
+
+<p>We can now begin a distinctly New Era in the world's
+history and in its management if we rise to the occasion:
+there's not a shadow of doubt about that. And the
+United States can play a part bigger than we have yet
+dreamed of if we prove big enough to lead the British and
+the French instead of listening to Irish and Germans.
+Neither England nor France is a democracy&mdash;far from it.
+We can make them both democracies and develop their
+whole people instead of about 10 per cent. of their
+people. We have simply to conduct our affairs by a large
+national policy and not by the complaints of our really
+non-American people. See how a declaration of war has
+cleared the atmosphere!</p>
+
+<p>We're happy yet, on rations. There are no potatoes.
+We have meatless days. Good wheat meantime is sunk
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-255" id="page2-255"></a>[pg II-255]</span>
+every day. The submarine must be knocked out. Else
+the earth will be ruled by the German bayonet and natural
+living will be <i>verboten</i>. We'll all have to goose-step as the
+Crown Prince orders or&mdash;be shot. I see they now propose
+that the United States shall pay the big war indemnity
+in raw materials to the value of hundreds of billions of
+dollars! Not just yet, I guess!</p>
+
+<p>As we get reports of what you are doing, it's most cheerful.
+I assure you, God has yet made nothing or nobody
+equal to the American people; and I don't think He ever
+will or can.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Sincerely yours,<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>One of the curious developments of this Balfour Mission
+was a request from President Wilson that Great Britain
+should take some decisive step for the permanent settlement
+of the Irish question. &quot;The President,&quot; this message
+ran, &quot;wishes that, when you next meet the Prime
+Minister, you would explain to him that only one circumstance
+now appears to stand in the way of perfect
+co&ouml;peration with Great Britain. All Americans who
+are not immediately connected with Germany by blood
+ties find their one difficulty in the failure of Great Britain
+so far to establish a satisfactory form of self-government in
+Ireland. In the recent debates in Congress on the War
+Resolution, this sentiment was especially manifest. It
+came out in the speeches of those enemies of the Declaration
+who were not Irish themselves nor representatives of
+sections in which Irish voters possessed great influence&mdash;notably
+members from the Southern States.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If the American people were once convinced that there
+was a likelihood that the Irish question would soon be
+settled, great enthusiasm and satisfaction would result
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-256" id="page2-256"></a>[pg II-256]</span>
+and it would also strengthen the co&ouml;peration which we are
+now about to organize between the United States and
+Great Britain. Say this in unofficial terms to Mr. Lloyd
+George, but impress upon him its very great significance.
+If the British Government should act successfully on this
+matter, our American citizens of Irish descent and to a
+great extent the German sympathizers who have made
+common cause with the Irish, would join hands in the
+great common cause.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+London, May 4, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>... It is a remarkable commentary on the insularity
+of the British and on our studied isolation that till Mr.
+Balfour went over not a member of this Government had
+ever met a member of our Administration! Quite half
+our misunderstandings were due to this. If I had the
+making of the laws of the two governments, I'd have a
+statutory requirement that at least one visit a year by
+high official persons should be made either way. We
+should never have had a blacklist, etc., if that had been
+done. When I tried the quite humble task of getting
+Polk to come and the excuse was made that he couldn't
+be spared from his desk&mdash;Mr. President, I fear we haven't
+half enough responsible official persons in our Government.
+I should say that no man even of Polk's rank
+ought to have a desk: just as well give him a mill-stone.
+Even I try not to have a desk: else I'd never get anything
+of importance done; for I find that talks and conferences
+in my office and in the government offices and wherever
+else I can find out things take all my waking hours. The
+Foreign Office here has about five high position men to
+every one in the State Department. God sparing me,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-257" id="page2-257"></a>[pg II-257]</span>
+I'm going one of these days to prepare a paper for our
+Foreign Affairs Committee on the Waste of Having
+too Few High Grade Men in the Department of State;
+a Plea for Five Assistant Secretaries for Every One Now
+Existing and for Provision for International Visits by
+Them.</p>
+
+<p>Here's an ancient and mouldy precedent that needs
+shattering&mdash;for the coming of our country into its proper
+station and influence in the world.</p>
+
+<p>I am sure that Mr. Balfour's visit has turned out as well
+as I hoped, and my hopes were high. He is one of the
+most interesting men that I've ever had the honour
+to know intimately&mdash;he and Lord Grey. Mr. Balfour
+is a Tory, of course; and in general I don't like Tories,
+yet liberal he surely is&mdash;a sort of high-toned Scotch democrat.
+I have studied him with increasing charm and
+interest. Not infrequently when I am in his office just
+before luncheon he says, &quot;Come, walk over and we'll
+have lunch with the family.&quot; He's a bachelor. One
+sister lives with him. Another (Lady Rayleigh, the
+wife of the great chemist and Chancellor of Cambridge
+University) frequently visits him. Either of those
+ladies could rule this Empire. Then there are nieces and
+cousins always about&mdash;people of rare cultivation, every
+one of 'em. One of those girls confirmed the story that
+&quot;Uncle Arthur&quot; one day concluded that the niblick was
+something more than a humble necessity of a bad golfer&mdash;that
+it had positive virtues of its own and had suffered
+centuries of neglect. He, therefore, proceeded to play
+with the niblick only, till he proved his case and showed
+that it is a club entitled to the highest respect.</p>
+
+<p>A fierce old Liberal fighter in Parliamentary warfare,
+who entered politics about the time Mr. Balfour did,
+told me this story the other day. &quot;I've watched Balfour
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-258" id="page2-258"></a>[pg II-258]</span>
+for about forty years as a cat watches a rat. I hate his
+party. I hated him till I learned better, for I hated that
+whole Salisbury crowd. They wanted to Cecil everything.
+But I'll tell you, Sir, apropos of his visit to your
+country, that in all those years he has never spoken of the
+United States except with high respect and often with deep
+affection. I should have caught him, if he had.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I went with him to a college in London one afternoon
+where he delivered a lecture on Dryden, to prove that
+poetry can carry a certain cargo of argument but that
+argument can't raise the smallest flight of poetry. Dry
+as it sounds, it was as good a literary performance as I
+recall I ever heard.</p>
+
+<p>At his &quot;family&quot; luncheon, I've found Lord Milner or
+Lord Lansdowne, or some literary man who had come in
+to find out from Lady Rayleigh how to conduct the
+Empire or to write a great book; and the modest old
+chemical Lord sits silent most of the time and now and
+then breaks loose to confound them all with a pat joke.
+This is a vigorous family, these Balfours. There's one
+of them (a cousin of some sort, I think, of the Foreign
+Secretary) who is a Lord of much of Scotland, about as
+tall as Ben Nevis is high&mdash;a giant of a man. One of his
+sons was killed early in the war and one was missing&mdash;whether
+dead or not he did not know. Mrs. Page expressed
+her hope one day to the old man that he had had
+news from his missing son. &quot;No, no,&quot; said he simply,
+&quot;and me lady is awearying.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We've been lucky, Mr. President, in these days of
+immortal horrors and of difficulties between two governments
+that did not know one another&mdash;uncommonly lucky,
+in the large chances that politics gives for grave errors,
+to have had two such men in the Foreign Office here as
+Lord Grey and Mr. Balfour. There are men who were
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-259" id="page2-259"></a>[pg II-259]</span>
+mentioned for this post that would have driven us mad&mdash;or
+to war with them. I'm afraid I've almost outgrown
+my living hero worship. There isn't worshipful material
+enough lying around in the world to keep a vigorous reverence
+in practice. But these two gentlemen by birth
+and culture have at least sometimes seemed of heroic size
+to me. It has meant much to know them well. I shall
+always be grateful to them, for in their quiet, forceful
+way they helped me much to establish right relations
+with these people&mdash;which, pray God, I hope to retain
+through whatever new trials we may yet encounter. For
+it will fall to us yet to loose and to free the British, and a
+Briton set free is an American. That's all you can do for
+a man or for a nation of men.</p>
+
+<p>These Foreign Secretaries are not only men of much
+greater cultivation than their Prime Ministers but of
+greater moral force. But I've come to like Lloyd George
+very much. He'd never deliver a lecture on Dryden, and
+he doesn't even play a good game of golf; but he has what
+both Lord Grey and Mr. Balfour lack&mdash;a touch of genius&mdash;whatever
+that is&mdash;not the kind that takes infinite pains,
+but the kind that acts as an electric light flashed in the
+dark. He said to me the other day that experts have
+nearly been the death of him. &quot;The Government has
+experts, experts, experts, everywhere. In any department
+where things are not going well, I have found boards
+and committees and boards of experts. But in one department
+at least I've found a substitute for them. I let
+twenty experts go and I put in one Man, and things
+began to move at once. Do you know any real Men?
+When you hear of any, won't you let me know?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A little while ago he dined with me, and, after dinner, I
+took him to a corner of the drawing room and delivered
+your message to him about Ireland. &quot;God knows, I'm trying,&quot;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-260" id="page2-260"></a>[pg II-260]</span>
+he replied. &quot;Tell the President that. And tell him
+to talk to Balfour.&quot; Presently he broke out&mdash;&quot;Madmen,
+madmen&mdash;I never saw any such task,&quot; and he pointed
+across the room to Sir Edward Carson, his First Lord of
+the Admiralty&mdash;&quot;Madmen.&quot; &quot;But the President's right.
+We've got to settle it and we've got to settle it now.&quot; Carson
+and Jellicoe came across the room and sat down with
+us. &quot;I've been telling the Ambassador, Carson, that
+we've got to settle the Irish question now&mdash;in spite of
+you.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll tell you something else we've got to settle now,&quot;
+said Carson. &quot;Else it'll settle us. That's the submarines.
+The press and public are working up a calculated and
+concerted attack on Jellicoe and me, and, if they get us,
+they'll get you. It's an attack on the Government made
+on the Admiralty. Prime Minister,&quot; said this Ulster
+pirate whose civil war didn't come off only because the
+big war was begun&mdash;&quot;Prime Minister, it may be a fierce
+attack. Get ready for it.&quot; Well, it has been developing
+ever since. But I can't for the life of me guess at the
+possible results of an English Parliamentary attack on a
+government. It's like a baseball man watching a game
+of cricket. He can't see when the player is out or why, or
+what caused it. Of course, the submarine may torpedo
+Lloyd George and his Government. It looks very like
+it may overturn the Admiralty, as Gallipoli did. If this
+public finds out the whole truth, it will demand somebody's
+head. But I'm only a baseball man; cricket is
+beyond me.</p>
+
+<p>But Lloyd George will outlive the war as an active force,
+whatever happen to him in the meantime. He's too heavily
+charged with electricity to stop activity. The war
+has ended a good many careers that seemed to have long
+promise. It is ending more every day. But there is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-261" id="page2-261"></a>[pg II-261]</span>
+only one Lloyd George, and, whatever else he lack, he
+doesn't lack life.</p>
+
+<p>I heard all the speeches in both Houses on the resolution
+of appreciation of our coming into the war&mdash;Bonar Law's,
+Asquith's (one of the best), Dillon's, a Labour man's,
+and, in the Lords, Curzon's, Crewe's, the Archbishop's
+(who delivered in the course of his remarks a benediction
+on me) and Bryce's (almost the best of all). It wasn't
+&quot;oratory,&quot; but it was well said and well meant. They
+know how badly they need help and they do mean to be as
+good to us as their benignant insularity will permit. They
+are changing. I can't describe the great difference that
+the war has made in them. They'll almost become docile
+in a little more time.</p>
+
+<p>And we came in in the nick of time for them&mdash;in very
+truth. If we hadn't, their exchange would have gone
+down soon and they know it. I shall never forget the
+afternoon I spent with Mr. Balfour and Mr. Bonar Law
+on that subject. They saw blue ruin without our financial
+help. And now, if we can save them from submarines,
+those that know will know how vital our help was.
+Again, the submarine is the great and grave and perhaps
+the only danger now. If that can be scotched, I believe
+the whole Teutonic military structure would soon tumble.
+If not, the Germans may go on as long as they can
+feed their army, allowing their people to starve.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, you know, we're on rations now&mdash;yet we
+suffer no inconvenience on that score. But these queer
+people (they are the most amusing and confusing and
+contradictory of all God's creatures, these English, whose
+possibilities are infinite and whose actualities, in many
+ways, are pitiful)&mdash;these queer people are fiercely pursuing
+food-economy by discussing in the newspapers
+whether a hen consumes more food than she produces, and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-262" id="page2-262"></a>[pg II-262]</span>
+whether what dogs eat contains enough human food to
+justify the shooting of every one in the Kingdom. That's
+the way we are coming down to humble fare. But nothing
+can quite starve a people who all live near the sea
+which yields fish enough near shore to feed them wastefully.</p>
+
+<p>All along this South shore, where I am to-day<a name="FNanchor_60_60" id="FNanchor_60_60" /><a href="#Footnote_60_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a>, I see the
+Stars and Stripes; and everywhere there is a demand for
+the words and music of the Battle Hymn of the Republic
+and the Star Spangled Banner.</p>
+
+<p>This our-new-Ally business is bringing me a lot of
+amusing troubles. Theatres offer me boxes, universities
+offer me degrees, hospitals solicit visits from me, clubs
+offer me dinners&mdash;I'll have to get a new private secretary
+or two well-trained to say &quot;No&quot; politely, else I shall not
+have my work done. But all that will presently wear
+away as everything wears away (quickly, too) in the grim
+face of this bloody monster of war which is consuming
+men as a prairie fire consumes blades of grass. There's
+a family that lives around the corner from this hotel.
+One son is in the trenches, another is in a madhouse from
+shell-shock, a third coming home wounded the other day
+was barely rescued when a torpedo sunk a hospital ship
+and may lose his reason. I suppose I saw one hundred
+men this afternoon on a single mile of beach who had lost
+both legs. Through the wall from my house in London
+is a hospital. A young Texan has been there, whose
+legs are gone at the thighs and one arm at the elbow.
+God pity us for not having organized the world better
+than this! We'll do it, yet, Mr. President&mdash;<i>you'll</i> do it;
+and thank God for you. If we do not organize Europe
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-263" id="page2-263"></a>[pg II-263]</span>
+and make another such catastrophe impossible, life will
+not be worth being born into except to the few whose
+days happen to fall between recurring devastations of the
+world.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours sincerely,<br />
+<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope that the English people,&quot; Colonel House wrote
+to Page about this time, &quot;realize how successful Mr.
+Balfour's visit to America really was. There is no man
+they could have sent who could have done it better. He
+and the President got along marvellously well. The
+three of us dined and spent the evening together and it
+was delightful to see how sympathetic their minds were.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A letter from Mr. Polk also discloses the impression
+which Mr. Balfour made upon Washington:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>From Frank L. Polk</i><br />
+<br />
+Washington, May 25, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR MR. PAGE:</p>
+
+<p>I just want to get off a line to catch the pouch.</p>
+
+<p>You probably know what a wonderful success the British
+Mission has been, but I do not think you can realize
+what a deep impression they have made on all of us. Mr.
+Balfour really won the affection of us all, and I do not
+know when I was more sorry to have a man leave than I
+was to have him go last night. He expressed himself
+as having been very much impressed with his reception
+and the way he was treated. He was most fair in all discussions,
+and I think has a better understanding of our
+point of view. I had the good fortune of being present
+at the financial and the diplomatic conferences, and I
+think we all felt that we were dealing with a sympathetic
+friend.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-264" id="page2-264"></a>[pg II-264]</span>
+<p>He and the President got on tremendously. The best
+evidence of that was the fact that the President went
+up to Congress and sat in the gallery while Mr. Balfour
+addressed the House. This is without precedent.</p>
+
+<p>The difficult problem of course was the blacklist and
+bunkering agreement, but I think we are by that. The
+important thing now is for the British to make all the concessions
+possible in connection with the release of goods
+in Rotterdam and the release of goods in Prize Court,
+though the cases have not been begun. Of course I
+mean cases of merely suspicion rather than where there is
+evidence of wrongdoing.</p>
+
+<p>The sending of the destroyers and troops abroad is going
+to do a great deal toward impressing our people with the
+fact that we really are in the war. I do not think it is
+thoroughly borne home on the majority yet what a serious
+road we have chosen.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+With warm regards,<br />
+<br />
+Yours faithfully,<br />
+<br />
+FRANK L. POLK.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. Polk's reference to the blacklist recalls an episode
+which in itself illustrates the changed character of the relations
+that had now been established between the American
+and the British governments. Mr. Balfour discussed
+shipping problems for the most part with Mr. Polk, under
+whose jurisdiction these matters fell. As one of these
+conferences was approaching its end Mr. Balfour slightly
+coughed, uttered an &quot;er,&quot; and gave other indications that
+he was about to touch upon a ticklish question.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Before I go,&quot; he said, &quot;there&mdash;er&mdash;is one subject I
+would&mdash;er&mdash;like to say something about.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Polk at once grasped what was coming.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know what you have in mind,&quot; said Mr. Polk in his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-265" id="page2-265"></a>[pg II-265]</span>
+characteristically quick way. &quot;You want us to apply your
+blacklist to neutrals.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>In other words, the British hoped that the United States,
+now that it was in the war, would adopt against South
+America and other offenders those same discriminations
+which this country had so fiercely objected to, when it was
+itself a neutral.</p>
+
+<p>The British statesman gave Mr. Polk one of his most
+winning smiles and nodded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Balfour,&quot; said Mr. Polk, &quot;it took Great Britain
+three years to reach a point where it was prepared to violate
+all the laws of blockade. You will find that it will
+take us only two months to become as great criminals as
+you are!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Balfour is usually not explosive in his manifestations
+of mirth, but his laughter, in reply to this statement,
+was almost uproarious. And the State Department was
+as good as its word. It immediately forgot all the elaborate
+&quot;notes&quot; and &quot;protests&quot; which it had been addressing
+to Great Britain. It became more inexorable than
+Great Britain had ever been in keeping foodstuffs out of
+neutral countries that were contiguous to Germany. Up
+to the time the United States entered the war, Germany,
+in spite of the watchful British fleet, had been obtaining
+large supplies from the United States through Holland,
+Denmark, and the Scandinavian peninsula. But the
+United States now immediately closed these leaks. In the
+main this country adopted a policy of &quot;rationing&quot;; that
+is, it would furnish the little nations adjoining Germany
+precisely the amount of food which they needed for their
+own consumption. This policy was one of the chief influences
+in undermining the German people and forcing
+their surrender. The American Government extended
+likewise the blacklist to South America and other countries,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-266" id="page2-266"></a>[pg II-266]</span>
+and, in doing so, it bettered the instruction of Great
+Britain herself.</p>
+
+<p>Though the whole story of the blockade thus seems finally
+to have ended in a joke, the whole proceeding has its
+serious side. The United States had been posing for three
+years as the champion of neutral rights; the point of view
+of Washington had been that there was a great principle
+at stake. If such a principle were involved, it was certainly
+present in just the same degree after the United
+States became belligerent as in the days when we were
+neutrals. The lofty ideals by which the Administration
+had professed to be guided should have still controlled its
+actions; the mere fact that we, as a belligerent, could obtain
+certain advantages would hardly have justified a
+great and high-minded nation in abandoning its principles.
+Yet abandon them we did from the day that we declared
+war. We became just as remorseless in disregarding the
+rights of small states as Great Britain&mdash;according to our
+numerous blockade notes&mdash;had been. Possibly, therefore,
+Mr. Balfour's mirth was not merely sympathetic or
+humorous; it perhaps echoed his discovery that our position
+for three years had really been nothing but a sham;
+that the State Department had been forcing points in
+which it did not really believe, or in which it did not believe
+when American interests were involved. At any rate,
+this ending of our long argument with Great Britain was
+a splendid justification for Page; his contention had always
+been that the preservation of civilization was more
+important than the technicalities of the international
+lawyers. And now the Wilson Administration, by throwing
+into the waste basket all the finespun theories with
+which it had been embarrassing the Allied cause since
+August 4, 1914, accepted&mdash;and accepted joyously&mdash;his
+point of view.</p>
+
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-267" id="page2-267"></a>[pg II-267]</span></div>
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>One of the first things which Mr. Balfour did, on his
+arrival in Washington, was personally to explain to
+President Wilson about the so-called &quot;secret treaties.&quot;
+The &quot;secret treaty&quot; that especially preyed upon Mr.
+Wilson's mind, and which led to a famous episode at the
+Versailles Conference, was that which had been made with
+Italy in 1915, as consideration for Italy's participation in
+the war. Mr. Balfour, in telling the President of these
+territorial arrangements with Italy, naturally did not
+criticise his ally, but it was evident that he regarded the
+matter as something about which the United States should
+be informed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is the sort of thing you have to do when you are
+engaged in a war,&quot; he explained, and then he gave Mr.
+Wilson the details.</p>
+
+<p>Probably the most important information which Mr.
+Balfour and the French and Italian Commissions brought
+to Washington was the desperate situation of the Allied
+cause. On that point not one of the visiting statesmen
+or military and naval advisers made the slightest attempt
+at concealment. Mr. Balfour emphasized the seriousness
+of the crisis in one of his earliest talks with Mr. McAdoo,
+Secretary of the Treasury. The British statesman was
+especially interested in the financial situation and he therefore
+took up this matter at an early date with the Treasury
+Department.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Balfour,&quot; said Mr. McAdoo, &quot;before we make any
+plans of financial assistance it is absolutely necessary that
+we know precisely where we stand. The all-important
+thing is the question as to how long the war is likely to
+last. If it is only to last a few months, it is evident that
+we need to make very different arrangements than if it is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-268" id="page2-268"></a>[pg II-268]</span>
+to last several years. Just what must we make provision
+for? Let us assume that the United States goes in with
+all its men and resources&mdash;that we dedicate all our money,
+our manufacturing plants, our army, our navy, everything
+we have got, to bringing the war to an end. How long
+will it take?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Balfour replied that it would be necessary to consult
+his naval and military advisers before he answered
+that question. He said that he would return in a day or
+two and make an explicit statement. He did so and his
+answer was this: Under these circumstances&mdash;that the
+United States should make war to the full limit of its
+power, in men and resources&mdash;the war could not be ended
+until the summer or the autumn of 1919. Mr. McAdoo
+put the same question in the same form to the French
+and Italian Missions and obtained precisely the same
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>Page's papers show that Mr. Balfour, in the early stages
+of American participation, regarded the financial situation
+as the thing which chiefly threatened the success of
+the Allied cause. So much greater emphasis has been
+laid upon the submarine warfare that this may at first
+seem rather a misreading of Great Britain's peril. Yet
+the fact is that the high rate of exchange and the depredatory
+U-boat represented almost identically the same
+danger. The prospect that so darkened the horizon in
+the spring of 1917 was the possible isolation of Great
+Britain. England's weakness, as always, consisted in the
+fact that she was an island, that she could not feed herself
+with her own resources and that she had only about six
+weeks' supply of food ahead of her at any one time. If
+Germany could cut the lines of communication and so
+prevent essential supplies from reaching British ports,
+the population of Great Britain could be starved into
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-269" id="page2-269"></a>[pg II-269]</span>
+surrender in a very brief time, France would be overwhelmed,
+and the triumph of the Prussian cause would
+be complete. That the success of the German submarine
+campaign would accomplish this result was a fact that the
+popular mind readily grasped. What it did not so clearly
+see, however, was that the financial collapse of Great
+Britain would cut these lines of communication quite as
+effectually as the submarine itself. The British were
+practically dependent for their existence upon the food
+brought from the United States, just as the Allied armies
+were largely dependent upon the steel which came from
+the great industrial plants of this country. If Great
+Britain could not find the money with which to purchase
+these supplies, it is quite apparent that they could not be
+shipped. The collapse of British credit therefore would
+have produced the isolation of the British Isles and led to
+a British surrender, just as effectively as would the success
+of the German submarine campaign.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as Bernstorff was sent home, therefore, and the
+participation of this country in the war became extremely
+probable, Mr. Balfour took up the financial question with
+Page.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+March 5, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The inquiries which I have made here about financial
+conditions disclose an international situation which is
+most alarming to the financial and industrial outlook of
+the United States. England has not only to pay her own
+war bills, but is obliged to finance her Allies as well. Up
+to the present time she has done these tasks out of her
+own capital. But she cannot continue her present extensive
+purchases in the United States without shipping gold
+as payment for them, and there are two reasons why she
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-270" id="page2-270"></a>[pg II-270]</span>
+cannot make large shipments of gold. In the first place,
+both England and France must keep the larger part of the
+gold they have to maintain issues of their paper at par;
+and, in the second place, the German U-boat has made the
+shipping of gold a dangerous procedure even if they had
+it to ship. There is therefore a pressing danger that the
+Franco-American and Anglo-American exchange will be
+greatly disturbed; the inevitable consequence will be that
+orders by all the Allied Governments will be reduced to
+the lowest possible amount and that trans-Atlantic trade
+will practically come to an end. The result of such a
+stoppage will be a panic in the United States. The
+world will therefore be divided into two hemispheres,
+one of them, our own, will have the gold and the commodities;
+the other, Great Britain and Europe, will need these
+commodities, but it will have no money with which to
+pay for them. Moreover, it will have practically no commodities
+of its own to exchange for them. The financial
+and commercial result will be almost as bad for the United
+States as for Europe. We shall soon reach this condition
+unless we take quick action to prevent it. Great Britain
+and France must have a credit in the United States which
+will be large enough to prevent the collapse of world trade
+and the whole financial structure of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>If the United States declare war against Germany, the
+greatest help we could give Great Britain and its Allies
+would be such a credit. If we should adopt this policy,
+an excellent plan would be for our Government to make a
+large investment in a Franco-British loan. Another plan
+would be to guarantee such a loan. A great advantage
+would be that all the money would be kept in the United
+States. We could keep on with our trade and increase it,
+till the war ends, and after the war Europe would purchase
+food and an enormous supply of materials with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-271" id="page2-271"></a>[pg II-271]</span>
+which to re&euml;quip her peace industries. We should thus
+reap the profit of an uninterrupted and perhaps an enlarging
+trade over a number of years and we should hold
+their securities in payment.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, if we keep nearly all the gold and
+Europe cannot pay for re&euml;stablishing its economic life,
+there may be a world-wide panic for an indefinite period.</p>
+
+<p>Of course we cannot extend such a credit unless we go
+to war with Germany. But is there no way in which our
+Government might immediately and indirectly help the
+establishment in the United States of a large Franco-British
+credit without violating armed neutrality? I do
+not know enough about our own reserve bank law to form
+an opinion. But these banks would avert such a danger
+if they were able to establish such a credit. Danger for
+us is more real and imminent, I think, than the public on
+either side the Atlantic understands. If it be not averted
+before its manifestations become apparent, it will then be
+too late to save the day.</p>
+
+<p>The pressure of this approaching crisis, I am certain,
+has gone beyond the ability of the Morgan financial agency
+for the British and French governments. The financial
+necessities of the Allies are too great and urgent for any
+private agency to handle, for every such agency has to
+encounter business rivalries and sectional antagonisms.</p>
+
+<p>It is not improbable that the only way of maintaining
+our present pre&euml;minent trade position and averting a
+panic is by declaring war on Germany. The submarine
+has added the last item to the danger of a financial world
+crash. There is now an uncertainty about our being
+drawn into the war; no more considerable credits can be
+privately placed in the United States. In the meantime
+a collapse may come.</p>
+
+<p>PAGE.</p></div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-272" id="page2-272"></a>[pg II-272]</span></div>
+<p>Urgent as this message was, it really understated the
+desperate condition of British and Allied finances. That
+the warring powers were extremely pressed for money
+has long been known; but Page's papers reveal for the first
+time the fact that they were facing the prospect of bankruptcy
+itself. &quot;The whole Allied combination on this
+side the ocean are very much nearer the end of their
+financial resources,&quot; he wrote in July, &quot;than anybody has
+guessed or imagined. We only can save them....
+The submarines are steadily winning the war. Pershing
+and his army have bucked up the French for the moment.
+But for his coming there was more or less danger of a
+revolution in Paris and of serious defection in the army.
+Everybody here fears that the French will fail before
+another winter of the trenches. Yet&mdash;the Germans must
+be still worse off.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The matter that was chiefly pressing at the time of the
+Balfour visit was the fact that the British balances in the
+New York banks were in a serious condition. It should
+always be remembered, however, that Great Britain was
+financing not only herself, but her Allies, and that the
+difficult condition in which she now found herself was
+caused by the not too considerate demands of the nations
+with which she was allied in the war. Thus by April 6,
+1917, Great Britain had overdrawn her account with J.P.
+Morgan to the extent of $400,000,000 and had no cash
+available with which to meet this overdraft. This obligation
+had been incurred in the purchase of supplies, both
+for Great Britain and the allied governments; and securities,
+largely British owned stocks and bonds, had been
+deposited to protect the bankers. The money was now
+coming due; if the obligations were not met, the credit of
+Great Britain in this country would reach the vanishing
+point. Though at first there was a slight misunderstanding
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-273" id="page2-273"></a>[pg II-273]</span>
+about this matter, the American Government
+finally paid this over-draft out of the proceeds of the first
+Liberty Loan. This act saved the credit of the allied
+countries; it was, of course, only the beginning of the
+financial support that America brought to the allied cause;
+the advances that were afterward furnished from the
+American Treasury made possible the purchases of food
+and supplies in enormous quantities. The first danger
+that threatened, the isolation and starvation of Great
+Britain, was therefore overcome. It was the joint product
+of Page's work in London and that of the Balfour
+Commission in the United States.</p>
+
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>Until these financial arrangements had been made
+there was no certainty that the supplies which were
+so essential to victory would ever leave the United States;
+this obstruction at the source had now been removed.
+But the greater difficulty still remained. The German
+submarines were lying off the waters south and west of
+Ireland ready to sink the supply ships as soon as they entered
+the prohibited zone. Mr. Balfour and his associates
+were working also on this problem in Washington; and,
+at the same time, Page and Admiral Sims and the British
+Admiralty were bending all their energies in London to
+obtain immediate co&ouml;peration.</p>
+
+<p>A remark which Mr. Balfour afterward made to Admiral
+Sims shows the frightful nature of the problem which was
+confronting Great Britain at that time.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That was a terrible week we spent at sea in that
+voyage to the United States,&quot; Mr. Balfour said. &quot;We knew
+that the German submarine campaign was succeeding.
+Their submarines were destroying our shipping and we
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-274" id="page2-274"></a>[pg II-274]</span>
+had no means of preventing it. I could not help thinking
+that we were facing the defeat of Great Britain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Page's papers show that as early as February 25th he
+understood in a general way the disheartening proportions
+of the German success. &quot;It is a momentous crisis,&quot;
+he wrote at that time. &quot;The submarines are destroying
+shipping at an appalling rate.&quot; Yet it was not until
+Admiral Sims arrived in London, on April 9th, that the
+Ambassador learned all the details. In sending the Admiral
+to England the Navy Department had acted on an
+earnest recommendation from Page. The fact that the
+American Navy was inadequately represented in the
+British capital had long been a matter of embarrassment
+to him. The ability and personal qualifications of our
+attach&eacute;s had been unquestioned; but none of them during
+the war had been men of high rank, and this in itself
+proved to be a constant impediment to their success.
+While America was represented by Commanders, Japan,
+Italy, and France had all sent Admirals to London.
+Page's repeated requests for an American Admiral had so
+far met with no response, but the probability that this
+country would become involved in the war now gave new
+point to his representations. In the latter part of March,
+Page renewed his request in still more urgent form, and
+this time the President and the Navy Department responded
+favourably. The result was that, on April 9th,
+three days after the American declaration of war, Admiral
+Sims and his flag-lieutenant, Commander Babcock,
+presented themselves at the American Embassy. There
+was little in the appearance of these men to suggest a violent
+naval demonstration against Germany. Both wore
+civilian dress, their instructions having commanded them
+not to bring uniforms; both were travelling under assumed
+names, and both had no more definite orders than to investigate
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-275" id="page2-275"></a>[pg II-275]</span>
+the naval situation and cable the results to
+Washington. In spite of these attempts at secrecy, the
+British had learned that Admiral Sims was on the way;
+they rejoiced not only in this fact, but in the fact that
+Sims had been chosen, for there was no American naval
+officer whose professional reputation stood so high in the
+British Navy or who was so personally acceptable to
+British officialdom and the British public. The Admiralty
+therefore met Admiral Sims at Liverpool, brought him
+to London in a special train, and, a few hours after his
+arrival, gave him the innermost secrets on the submarine
+situation&mdash;secrets which were so dangerous that not all the
+members of the British Cabinet had been let into them.</p>
+
+<p>Page welcomed Admiral Sims with a cordiality which
+that experienced sea veteran still gratefully remembers.
+He at once turned over to him two rooms in the Embassy.
+&quot;You can have everything we've got,&quot; the Ambassador
+said. &quot;If necessary to give you room, we'll turn the whole
+Embassy force out into the street.&quot; The two men had
+not previously met, but in an instant they became close
+friends. A common sympathy and a common enthusiasm
+were greatly needed at that crisis. As soon as Admiral
+Sims had finished his interview with Admiral Jellicoe, he
+immediately sought out the Ambassador and laid all the
+facts before him. Germany was winning the war. Great
+Britain had only six weeks' food supply on hand, and the
+submarines were sinking the ships at a rate which, unless
+the depredations should be checked, meant an early and
+unconditional surrender of the British Empire. Only the
+help of the United States could prevent this calamity.</p>
+
+<p>Page, of course, was aghast: the facts and figures Admiral
+Sims gave him disclosed a situation which was even
+more desperate than he had imagined. He advised the
+Admiral to cable the whole story immediately to Washington.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-276" id="page2-276"></a>[pg II-276]</span>
+Admiral Sims at first had some difficulty in obtaining
+the Admiralty's consent to doing this, and the
+reason was the one with which Page had long been familiar&mdash;the
+fear, altogether too justified, that the news would
+&quot;leak&quot; out of Washington. Of course there was no suspicion
+in British naval circles of the good faith of the
+Washington officials, but important facts had been sent
+so many times under the seal of the strictest secrecy and
+had then found their way into the newspapers that there
+was a deep distrust of American discretion. Certainly
+no greater damage could have been done the allied cause
+at that time than to have the Germans learn how successfully
+their submarine campaign was progressing. The
+question was referred to the Imperial War Council and
+its consent obtained. The report, however, was sent to
+the Navy Department in the British naval code, and decoded
+in the British Embassy in Washington.</p>
+
+<p>Admiral Sims's message gave all the facts about the
+submarine situation, and concluded with the recommendation
+that the United States should assemble all floating
+craft that could be used in the anti-submarine warfare,
+destroyers, tugs, yachts, light cruisers, and similar vessels,
+and send them immediately to Queenstown, where they
+would do valuable service in convoying merchant vessels
+and destroying the U-boats. At that time the American
+Navy had between fifty and sixty destroyers that were
+patrolling the American coast; these could have been despatched,
+almost immediately, to the scene of operations;
+but, in response to this request, the Department sent six
+to Queentown.</p>
+
+<p>The next few months were very unhappy ones for
+Admiral Sims. He was the representative in London of
+one of the world's greatest naval powers, participating in
+the greatest war that had ever enlisted its energies, yet his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-277" id="page2-277"></a>[pg II-277]</span>
+constant appeals for warships elicited the most inadequate
+response, his well-reasoned recommendations for
+meeting the crisis were frequently unanswered and at other
+times were met with counter-proposals so childish that
+they seemed almost to have originated in the brains of
+newspaper amateurs, and his urgent pictures of a civilization
+rapidly going to wreck were apparently looked upon
+with suspicion as the utterances of a man who had been
+completely led astray by British guile. To give a fair
+idea of Washington's neglect during this period it is only
+necessary to point out that, for four months, Admiral
+Sims occupied the two rooms in the Embassy directly
+above Page's, with Commander Babcock as his only aid.
+Sims's repeated requests to Secretary Daniels for an
+additional staff went unheeded. Had it not been for the
+Admiral's constant daily association with Page and the
+comfort and encouragement which the Ambassador gave
+him, this experience would have been almost unbearable.
+In the latter part of April, the Admiral's appeals to Washington
+having apparently fallen on deaf ears, he asked
+Page to second his efforts. The Admiral and Commander
+Babcock wrote another message, and drove in a motor
+car to Brighton, where Page was taking a little rest. The
+Admiral did not know just how strong a statement the
+Ambassador would care to sponsor, and so he did not make
+this representation as emphatic as the judgment of both
+men would have preferred.</p>
+
+<p>The Admiral handed Page the paper, saying that he
+had prepared it with the hope that the Ambassador would
+sign it and send it directly to President Wilson.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is quite apparent,&quot; Admiral Sims said, &quot;that the
+Department doesn't believe what I have been saying.
+Or they don't believe what the British are saying. They
+think that England is exaggerating the peril for reasons
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-278" id="page2-278"></a>[pg II-278]</span>
+of its own. They think I am hopelessly pro-British and
+that I am being used. But if you'll take it up directly
+with the President, then they may be convinced.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Page put on his spectacles, took the paper, and read it
+through. Then, looking over the rim of his glasses in his
+characteristic way, he leaned toward Admiral Sims and
+said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Admiral, it isn't half strong enough! I think I can
+write a better despatch than that, myself! At least let
+me try.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He immediately took a pen and paper and in a few
+minutes he had written his own version which he gave
+the Admiral to read. The latter was delighted with it
+and in a brief time it was on its way to Washington.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+From: Ambassador Page.<br />
+To: Secretary of State.<br />
+Sent: 27 April, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Very confidential for Secretary and President</i></p>
+
+<p>There is reason for the greatest alarm about the issue
+of the war caused by the increasing success of the German
+submarines. I have it from official sources that during
+the week ending 22nd April, 88 ships of 237,000 tons, allied
+and neutral, were lost. The number of vessels unsuccessfully
+attacked indicated a great increase in the number
+of submarines in action.</p>
+
+<p>This means practically a million tons lost every month
+till the shorter days of autumn come. By that time the
+sea will be about clear of shipping. Most of the ships are
+sunk to the westward and southward of Ireland. The
+British have in that area every available anti-submarine
+craft, but their force is so insufficient that they hardly
+discourage the submarines.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-279" id="page2-279"></a>[pg II-279]</span>
+<p>The British transport of troops and supplies is already
+strained to the utmost, and the maintenance of the armies
+in the field is threatened. There is food enough here to
+last the civil population only not more than six weeks or
+two months.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever help the United States may render at any
+time in the future, or in any theatre of the war, our help
+is now more seriously needed in this submarine area for
+the sake of all the Allies than it can ever be needed again,
+or anywhere else.</p>
+
+<p>After talking over this critical situation with the Prime
+Minister and other members of the Government, I can not
+refrain from most strongly recommending the immediate
+sending over of every destroyer and all other craft that
+can be of anti-submarine use. This seems to me the
+sharpest crisis of the war, and the most dangerous situation
+for the Allies that has arisen or could arise.</p>
+
+<p>If enough submarines can be destroyed in the next two
+or three months, the war will be won, and if we can contribute
+effective help immediately, it will be won directly
+by our aid. I cannot exaggerate the pressing and increasing
+danger of this situation. Thirty or more destroyers
+and other similar craft sent by us immediately would very
+likely be decisive.</p>
+
+<p>There is no time to be lost.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+(Signed) PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>This cablegram had a certain effect. The reply came
+from Washington that &quot;eventually&quot; thirty-six destroyers
+would be sent.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Page's letters of this period are full of the same subject.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-280" id="page2-280"></a>[pg II-280]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+London, May 4, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Dear Mr. President:</p>
+
+<p>The submarines have become a very grave danger.
+The loss of British and allied tonnage increases with the
+longer and brighter days&mdash;as I telegraphed you, 237,000
+tons last week; and the worst of it is, the British are not
+destroying them. The Admiralty publishes a weekly report
+which, though true, is not the whole truth. It is
+known in official circles here that the Germans are turning
+out at least two a week&mdash;some say three; and the British
+are not destroying them as fast as new ones are turned
+out. If merely the present situation continue, the war
+will pretty soon become a contest of endurance under
+hunger, with an increasing proportion of starvation. Germany
+is yet much the worse off, but it will be easily
+possible for Great Britain to suffer to the danger point
+next winter or earlier unless some decided change be
+wrought in this situation.</p>
+
+<p>The greatest help, I hope, can come from us&mdash;our destroyers
+and similar armed craft&mdash;provided we can send
+enough of them quickly. The area to be watched is so
+big that many submarine hunters are needed. Early in
+the war the submarines worked near shore. There are very
+many more of them now and their range is one hundred
+miles, or even two hundred, at sea.</p>
+
+<p>The public is becoming very restive with its half
+information, and it is more and more loudly demanding
+all the facts. There are already angry threats to change
+the personnel of the Admiralty; there is even talk of
+turning out the Government. &quot;We must have results, we
+must have results.&quot; I hear confidentially that Jellicoe
+has threatened to resign unless the Salonica expedition is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-281" id="page2-281"></a>[pg II-281]</span>
+brought back: to feed and equip that force requires too
+many ships.</p>
+
+<p>And there are other troubles impending. Norway has
+lost so many of her ships that she dare not send what are
+left to sea. Unarmed they'll all perish. If she arms them,
+Germany will declare war against her. There is a plan
+on foot for the British to charter these Norwegian ships
+and to arm them, taking the risk of German war against
+Norway. If war comes (as it is expected) England must
+then defend Norway the best she can. And <i>then England
+may ask for our big ships to help in these waters</i>. All this
+is yet in the future, but possibly not far in the future.</p>
+
+<p>For the present the only anti-submarine help is the help
+we may be able to give to patrol the wide area off Ireland.
+If we had one hundred destroyers to send, the job there
+could, I am told, be quickly done. A third of that number
+will help mightily. At the present rate of destruction
+more than four million tons will be sunk before the summer
+is gone.</p>
+
+<p>Such is this dire submarine danger. The English
+thought that they controlled the sea; the Germans, that
+they were invincible on land. Each side is losing where
+it thought itself strongest.</p>
+
+<p>Admiral Sims is of the greatest help imaginable. Of
+course, I gave him an office in one of our Embassy buildings,
+and the Admiralty has given him an office also with
+them. He spends much of his time there, and they have
+opened all doors and all desks and drawers to him. He
+strikes me (and the English so regard him) as a man of
+admirable judgment&mdash;unexcitable and indefatigable. I
+hope we'll soon send a general over, to whom the War
+Department will act similarly. Hoover, too, must have a
+good man here as, I dare say, he has already made known.
+These will cover the Navy, the Army, Food, and Shipping.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-282" id="page2-282"></a>[pg II-282]</span>
+Perhaps a Censor and an Intelligence (Secret Service)
+group ought to come. I mean these for permanent&mdash;at
+least indefinite&mdash;service. Exchange visits by a Congressional
+Committee (such as the French and British
+make) and by high official persons such as members of
+your Cabinet (such also as the French and British make)&mdash;you
+will have got ideas about these from Mr. Balfour.</p>
+
+<p>W.H.P.</p></div>
+
+<p>In the latter part of June Admiral Sims went to Queenstown.
+Admiral Bayly, who directed the operation of the
+anti-submarine forces there, had gone away for a brief
+rest, and Admiral Sims had taken over the command of
+both the British and American forces at that point. This
+experience gave Admiral Sims a first-hand picture of a
+really deplorable situation. The crisis was so desperate
+that he made another appeal to Page.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>From Admiral William S. Sims</i><br />
+<br />
+Admiralty House, Queenstown,<br />
+June 25, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>My Dear Mr. Page:</p>
+
+<p>I enclose herewith a letter on the submarine situation<a name="FNanchor_61_61" id="FNanchor_61_61" /><a href="#Footnote_61_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>I think I have made it plain therein that the Allies are
+losing the war; that it will be already lost when the loss
+of shipping reaches the point where fully adequate supplies
+cannot be maintained on the various battle fronts.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot understand why our Government should hesitate
+to send the necessary anti-submarine craft to this side.</p>
+
+<p>There are at least seventeen more destroyers employed
+on our Atlantic coast, <i>where there is no war</i>, not to mention
+numerous other very useful anti-submarine craft, including
+sea-going tugs, etc.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-283" id="page2-283"></a>[pg II-283]</span>
+<p>Can you not do something to bring our Government to
+an understanding of how very serious the situation is?
+Would it not be well to send another telegram to Mr.
+Lansing and the President, and also send them the enclosed
+correspondence?</p>
+
+<p>I am sending this by mail because I may be somewhat
+delayed in returning to London.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Very sincerely yours,<br />
+<br />
+Wm. S. Sims.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Page immediately acted on this suggestion.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Most confidential for the Secretary of State and
+President only</i></p>
+
+<p>Sims sends me by special messenger from Queenstown
+the most alarming reports of the submarine situation
+which are confirmed by the Admiralty here. He says that
+the war will be won or lost in this submarine zone within
+a few months. Time is of the essence of the problem, and
+anti-submarine craft which cannot be assembled in the
+submarine zone almost immediately may come too late.
+There is, therefore, a possibility that this war may become
+a war between Germany and the United States alone.
+Help is far more urgently and quickly needed in this submarine
+zone than anywhere else in the whole war area.</p>
+
+<p>Page.</p></div>
+
+<p>The United States had now been in the war for three
+months and only twenty-eight of the sixty destroyers which
+were available had been sent into the field. Yet this
+latest message of Page produced no effect, and, when
+Admiral Sims returned from Queenstown, the two men,
+almost in despair, consulted as to the step which they
+should take next. What was the matter? Was it that
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-284" id="page2-284"></a>[pg II-284]</span>
+Washington did not care to get into the naval war with its
+full strength, or was it that it simply refused to believe
+the representations of its Admiral and its Ambassador?
+Admiral Sims and Page went over the whole situation
+and came to the conclusion that Washington regarded
+them both as so pro-British that their reports were subject
+to suspicion. Just as Page had found that the State
+Department, and its &quot;trade advisers,&quot; had believed that
+the British were using the blockade as a means of destroying
+American trade for the benefit of Britain, so now
+he believed that Mr. Daniels and Admiral Benson, the
+Chief of Naval Operations, evidently thought that Great
+Britain was attempting to lure American warships into
+European waters, to undergo the risk of protecting British
+commerce, while British warships were kept safely in
+harbour. Page suggested that there was now only one
+thing left to do, and that was to request the British
+Government itself to make a statement to President
+Wilson that would substantiate his own messages.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whatever else they think of the British in Washington,&quot;
+he said, &quot;they know one thing&mdash;and that is that a
+British statesman like Mr. Balfour will not lie.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Balfour by this time had returned from America.
+The fact that he had established these splendid personal
+relations with Mr. Wilson, and that he had impressed the
+American public so deeply with his sincerity and fine
+purpose, made him especially valuable for this particular
+appeal. Page and Admiral Sims therefore went to the
+Foreign Office and laid all the facts before him. Their
+own statements, Page informed the Foreign Secretary,
+were evidently regarded as hysterical and biased by
+an unreasoning friendliness to Great Britain. If Mr.
+Balfour would say the same things over his own signature,
+then they would not be disbelieved.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-285" id="page2-285"></a>[pg II-285]</span></div>
+<p>Mr. Balfour gladly consented. He called in Admiral
+Jellicoe and asked him to draft a despatch, so that all the
+technical facts would be completely accurate. He also
+consulted with Sir Edward Carson, the First Lord of the
+Admiralty. Then Mr. Balfour put the document in its
+final shape and signed it. It was as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>Mr. Balfour to the President</i><br />
+<br />
+June 30, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The forces at present at the disposal of the British Admiralty
+are not adequate to protect shipping from submarine
+attack in the danger zone round the British Islands.
+Consequently shipping is being sunk at a greater rate than
+it can be replaced by new tonnage of British origin.</p>
+
+<p>The time will come when, if the present rate of loss
+continues, the available shipping, apart from American
+contribution, will be insufficient to bring to this country
+sufficient foodstuffs and other essentials, including oil fuel.
+The situation in regard to our Allies, France, and Italy, is
+much the same.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, it is absolutely necessary to add to our
+forces as a first step, pending the adoption or completion
+of measures which will, it is hoped, eventually lead to the
+destruction of enemy submarines at a rate sufficient to
+ensure safety of our sea communications.</p>
+
+<p>The United States is the only allied country in a position
+to help. The pressing need is for armed small craft
+of every kind available in the area where commerce concentrates
+near the British and French coasts. Destroyers,
+submarines, gunboats, yachts, trawlers, and tugs
+would all give invaluable help, and if sent in sufficient
+numbers would undoubtedly save a situation which is
+manifestly critical. But they are required now and in
+as great numbers as possible. There is no time for delay.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-286" id="page2-286"></a>[pg II-286]</span>
+The present method of submarine attack is almost entirely
+by torpedo with the submarine submerged. The
+gun defense of merchant ships keeps the submarine below
+the surface but does no more; offensively against a submerged
+submarine it is useless, and the large majority of
+the ships torpedoed never see the attacking submarine
+until the torpedo has hit the ship<a name="FNanchor_62_62" id="FNanchor_62_62" /><a href="#Footnote_62_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>The present remedy is, therefore, to prevent the submarine
+from using its periscope for fear of attack by bomb
+or ram from small craft, and this method of defense for the
+shipping and offense against the submarine requires small
+craft in very large numbers.</p>
+
+<p>The introduction of the convoy system, provided there
+are sufficient destroyers to form an adequate screen to the
+convoy, will, it is hoped, minimize losses when it is working,
+and the provision of new offensive measures is progressing;
+but for the next few months there is only one
+safeguard, viz., the immediate addition to patrols of
+every small vessel that can possibly be sent to European
+waters.</p></div>
+
+<p>Page, moreover, kept up his own appeal:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+July 5th.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Strictly confidential to the President and the Secretary</i></p>
+
+<p>The British Cabinet is engaging in a threatening controversy
+about the attitude which they should take toward
+the submarine peril. There is a faction in the Admiralty
+which possesses the indisputable facts and which takes
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-287" id="page2-287"></a>[pg II-287]</span>
+a very disheartening view of the situation. This group
+insists that the Cabinet should make a confession at least
+to us of the full extent of the danger and that it should
+give more information to the public. The public does
+not feel great alarm simply because it has been kept in
+too great ignorance. But the political faction is so far the
+stronger. It attempts to minimize the facts, and, probably
+for political reasons, it refuses to give these discouraging
+facts wide publicity. The politicians urge that it is necessary
+to conceal the full facts from the Germans. They
+also see great danger in throwing the public into a panic.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lloyd George is always optimistic and he is too
+much inclined to yield his judgment to political motives.
+In his recent address in Glasgow he gave the public a
+comforting impression of the situation. But the facts do
+not warrant the impression which he gave.</p>
+
+<p>This dispute among the political factions is most unfortunate
+and it may cause an explosion of public feeling
+at any time. Changes in the Cabinet may come in consequence.
+If the British public knew all the facts or if
+the American people knew them, the present British Government
+would probably fall. It is therefore not only the
+submarine situation which is full of danger. The political
+situation is in a dangerous state also.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+PAGE.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Wilsford Manor, Salisbury,<br />
+<br />
+July 8, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>Since admirals and generals began to come from home,
+they and the war have taken my time so completely, day
+and night, that I haven't lately written you many things
+that I should like to tell you. I'll try here&mdash;a house of a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-288" id="page2-288"></a>[pg II-288]</span>
+friend of ours where the only other guest besides your
+mother and me is Edward Grey. This is the first time
+I've seen him since he left office. Let me take certain big
+subjects in order and come to smaller things later:</p>
+
+<p>1. The German submarines are succeeding to a degree
+that the public knows nothing about. These two things
+are true: (a) The Germans are building submarines faster
+than the English sink them. In this way, therefore, they
+are steadily gaining. (b) The submarines are sinking
+freight ships faster than freight ships are being built by
+the whole world. In this way, too, then, the Germans are
+succeeding. Now if this goes on long enough, the Allies'
+game is up. For instance, they have lately sunk so
+many fuel oil ships, that this country may very soon be in
+a perilous condition&mdash;even the Grand Fleet may not have
+enough fuel. Of course the chance is that oil ships will
+not continue to fall victims to the U-boats and we shall
+get enough through to replenish the stock. But this illustrates
+the danger, and it is a very grave danger.</p>
+
+<p>The best remedy so far worked out is the destroyer.
+The submarines avoid destroyers and they sink very,
+very few ships that are convoyed. If we had destroyers
+enough to patrol the whole approach (for, say, 250 miles)
+to England, the safety of the sea would be very greatly
+increased; and if we had enough to patrol and to convoy
+every ship going and coming, the damage would be reduced
+to a minimum. The Admiral and I are trying our
+best to get our Government to send over 500 improvised
+destroyers&mdash;yachts, ocean-going tugs&mdash;any kind of swift
+craft that can be armed. Five hundred such little boats
+might end the war in a few months; for the Germans are
+keeping the spirit of their people and of their army up
+by their submarine success. If that success were stopped
+they'd have no other cry half so effective. If they could
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-289" id="page2-289"></a>[pg II-289]</span>
+see this in Washington as we see it, they'd do it and do it
+not halfway but with a vengeance. If they don't do it,
+the war may be indefinitely prolonged and a wholly
+satisfactory peace may never be made. The submarine is
+the most formidable thing the war has produced&mdash;by far&mdash;and
+it gives the German the only earthly chance he has
+to win. And he <i>may</i> substantially win by it yet. That's
+what the British conceal. In fact, half of them do not see
+it or believe it. But nothing is truer, or plainer. One
+hundred thousand submarine chasers next year may be
+worth far less than 500 would be worth now, for next year
+see how few ships may be left! The mere arming of ships
+is not enough. Nearly all that are sunk are armed. The
+submarine now carries a little periscope and a big one,
+each painted the colour of the sea. You can't see a little
+periscope except in an ocean as smooth as glass. It isn't
+bigger than a coffee cup. The submarine thus sinks its
+victims without ever emerging or ever being seen. As
+things now stand, the Germans are winning the war, and
+they are winning it on the sea; that's the queer and the
+most discouraging fact. My own opinion is that all
+the facts ought to be published to all the world. Let the
+Germans get all the joy they can out of the confession.
+No matter, if the Government and the people of the
+United States knew all the facts, we'd have 1,000 improvised
+destroyers (yachts, tugs, etc., etc.) armed and over
+here very quickly. Then the tide would turn.</p>
+
+<p>Then there'd be nothing to fear in the long run. For
+the military authorities all agree that the German Army is
+inferior to the British and French and will be whipped.
+That may take a long time yet; but of the result nobody
+who knows seems to have any doubt&mdash;unless the French
+get tired and stop. They have periods of great war weariness
+and there is real danger that they may quit and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-290" id="page2-290"></a>[pg II-290]</span>
+make a separate peace. General Pershing's presence has
+made the situation safe for the moment. But in a little
+while something else spectacular and hopeful may be required
+to keep them in line.</p>
+
+<p>Such is an accurate picture of the war as it is now, and
+it is a dangerous situation.</p>
+
+<p>2. The next grave danger is financial. The European
+Allies have so bled the English for money that the English
+would by this time probably have been on a paper money
+basis (and of course all the Allies as well) if we had not
+come to their financial aid. And we've got to keep our
+financial aid going to them to prevent this disastrous result.
+That wouldn't at once end the war, if they had all
+abandoned specie payments; but it would be a frightfully
+severe blow and it might later bring defeat. That is a real
+danger. And the Government at Washington, I fear,
+does not know the full extent of the danger. They think
+that the English are disposed to lie down on them. They
+don't realize the cost of the war. This Government has
+bared all this vast skeleton to me; but I fear that Washington
+imagines that part of it is a deliberate scare. It's
+a very real danger.</p>
+
+<p>Now, certain detached items:</p>
+
+<p>Sims is the idol of the British Admiralty and he is doing
+his job just as well as any man could with the tools and
+the chance that he has. He has made the very best of the
+chance and he has completely won the confidence and
+admiration of this side of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Pershing made an admirable impression here, and in
+France he has simply set them wild with joy. His coming
+and his little army have been worth what a real army
+will be worth later. It is well he came to keep the French
+in line.</p>
+
+<p>The army of doctors and nurses have had a similar effect.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-291" id="page2-291"></a>[pg II-291]</span>
+<p>Even the New England saw-mill units have caused
+a furor of enthusiasm. They came with absolute Yankee
+completeness of organization&mdash;with duplicate parts of all
+their machinery, tents, cooks, pots, and pans, and everything
+ship-shape. The only question they asked was:
+&quot;Say, where the hell are them trees you want sawed up?&quot;
+That's the way to do a job! Yankee stock is made high
+here by such things as that.</p>
+
+<p>We're getting a crowd of Yankee lecturers on the
+United States to go up and down this Kingdom. There's
+the greatest imaginable curiosity to hear about the United
+States in all kinds of society from munition workers
+to universities. I got the British Government to write
+Buttrick<a name="FNanchor_63_63" id="FNanchor_63_63" /><a href="#Footnote_63_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> to come as its guest, and the Rockefeller Boards
+rose to the occasion. He'll probably be along presently.
+If he hasn't already sailed when you get this, see him and
+tell him to make arrangements to have pictures sent over
+to him to illustrate his lectures. Who else could come
+to do this sort of a job?</p>
+
+<p>I am myself busier than I have ever been. The kind
+of work the Embassy now has to do is very different from
+the work of the days of neutrality. It continues to
+increase&mdash;especially the work that I have to do myself.
+But it's all pleasant now. We are trying to help and no
+longer to hinder. To save my life I don't see how the
+Washington crowd can look at themselves in a mirror and
+keep their faces straight. Yesterday they were bent on
+sending everything into European neutral states. The
+foundations of civilization would give way if neutral trade
+were interfered with. Now, nothing must go in except on
+a ration basis. Yesterday it must be a peace without
+victory. Now it must be a complete victory, every man
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-292" id="page2-292"></a>[pg II-292]</span>
+and every dollar thrown in, else no peace is worth having.
+I don't complain. I only rejoice. But I'm glad that
+kind of a rapid change is not a part of my record. The
+German was the same beast yesterday that he is to-day;
+and it makes a simple-minded, straight-minded man
+like me wonder which attitude was the (or is the) attitude
+of real conviction. But this doesn't bother me now as a
+real problem&mdash;only as a speculation. What we call History
+will, I presume, in time work this out. But History
+is often a kind of lie. But never mind that. The only
+duty of mankind now is to win. Other things can wait.</p>
+
+<p>I walked over to Stonehenge and back (about six miles)
+with Lord Grey (Sir Edward, you know) and we, like everybody
+else, fell to talking about when the war may end.
+We know as well as anybody and no better than anybody
+else. I have very different moods about it&mdash;no convictions.
+It seems to me to depend, as things now are,
+more on the submarines than on anything else. If we
+could effectually discourage them so that the Germans
+would have to withdraw them and could no more keep
+up the spirit of their people by stories of the imminent
+starvation of England, I have a feeling that the hunger
+and the war weariness of the German people would lead
+them to force an end. But, the more they are called on
+to suffer the more patriotic do they think themselves and
+they <i>may</i> go on till they drop dead in their tracks.</p>
+
+<p>What I am really afraid of is that the Germans may,
+before winter, offer all that the Western Allies most want&mdash;the
+restoration of Belgium and France, the return of
+Alsace-Lorraine, etc., in the West and the surrender of
+the Colonies&mdash;provided Austria is not dismembered. That
+would virtually leave them the chance to work out their
+Middle Europe scheme and ultimately there'd probably
+have to be another war over that question. That's the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-293" id="page2-293"></a>[pg II-293]</span>
+real eventuality to be feared&mdash;a German defeat in the
+West but a German victory in the Southeast. Everybody
+in Europe is so war weary that such a plan <i>may</i> succeed.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, what Hoover and Northcliffe fear
+may come true&mdash;that the Germans are going to keep up
+the struggle for years&mdash;till their armies are practically
+obliterated, as Lee's army was. If the Allies were actually
+to kill (not merely wound, but actually kill) 5,000 Germans
+a day for 300 days a year, it would take about
+four years to obliterate the whole German Army. There
+is the bare possibility, therefore, of a long struggle yet.
+But I can't believe it. My dominant mood these days is
+an end within a very few months after the submarines are
+knocked out. Send over, therefore, 1,000 improvised
+destroyers the next two months, and I'll promise peace
+by Christmas. Otherwise I can make no promises.
+That's all that Lord Grey and I know, and surely we are
+two wise men. What, therefore, is the use in writing
+any more about this?</p>
+
+<p>The chief necessity that grows upon me is that all the
+facts must be brought out that show the kinship in blood
+and ideals of the two great English-speaking nations.
+We were actually coming to believe ourselves that we were
+part German and Slovene and Pole and What-not, instead
+of essentially being Scotch and English. Hence the unspeakable
+impudence of your German who spoke of eliminating
+the Anglo-Saxon element from American life! The
+truth should be forcibly and convincingly told and repeated
+to the end of the chapter, and our national life
+should proceed on its natural historic lines, with its
+proper historic outlook and background. We can do
+something to bring this about.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-294" id="page2-294"></a>[pg II-294]</span></div>
+<p>The labour of getting the American Navy into the war
+was evidently at first a difficult one, but the determination
+of Page and Admiral Sims triumphed, and, by August and
+September, our energies were fully engaged. And the
+American Navy made a record that will stand everlastingly
+to its glory. Without its help the German submarines
+could never have been overcome.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_58_58" id="Footnote_58_58" /><a href="#FNanchor_58_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> The reference is to the attack made in October, 1916, by
+the German Submarine U-53, off Nantucket on several British ships. An
+erroneous newspaper account said that the <i>Benham</i>, an American
+destroyer, had moved in a way that facilitated the operations of the
+German submarine. This caused great bitterness in England, until Page
+showed the Admiralty a report from the Navy Department proving that the
+story was false.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_59_59" id="Footnote_59_59" /><a href="#FNanchor_59_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> This, of course, is Franklin D. Roosevelt, Assistant
+Secretary of the Navy in 1917.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_60_60" id="Footnote_60_60" /><a href="#FNanchor_60_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> This letter is dated London and was probably begun there.
+It is evident, however, that the latter part was written at Brighton,
+where the Ambassador was taking a brief holiday.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_61_61" id="Footnote_61_61" /><a href="#FNanchor_61_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> This was a long document describing conditions in great
+detail.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_62_62" id="Footnote_62_62" /><a href="#FNanchor_62_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> The Navy Department had taken the position that arming
+merchantmen was the best protection against the submarine. This
+statement was intended to refute this belief.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_63_63" id="Footnote_63_63" /><a href="#FNanchor_63_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> Dr. Wallace Buttrick, President of the General Education
+Board, who was sent at this time to deliver lectures throughout Great
+Britain on the United States.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-295" id="page2-295"></a>[pg II-295]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII" />CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+<h3>PAGE&mdash;THE MAN</h3>
+
+
+<p>The entrance of America into the war, followed
+by the successful promotion of the Balfour visit,
+brought a period of quiet into Page's life. These events
+represented for him a personal triumph; there were many
+things still to be done, it is true, and Page, as always, was
+active in advancing the interests that were nearest his
+heart; yet the mighty relief that followed the American
+declaration was the kind that one experiences after accomplishing
+the greatest task of a lifetime. Page's letters
+have contained many references to the sense of moral
+isolation which his country's policy had forced upon him;
+he probably exaggerated his feeling that there was a
+tendency to avoid him; this was merely a reflection
+of his own inclination to keep away from all but the
+official people. He now had more leisure and certainly
+more interest in cultivating the friends that he had
+made in Great Britain. For the fact is that, during
+all these engrossing years, Page had been more than
+an Ambassador; by the time the United States entered
+the war he had attained an assured personal position
+in the life of the British capital. He had long since
+demonstrated his qualifications for a post, which, in the
+distinction of the men who have occupied it, has few
+parallels in diplomacy. The scholarly Lowell, the courtly
+Bayard, the companionable Hay, the ever-humorous
+Choate, had set a standard for American Ambassadors
+which had made the place a difficult one for their successors.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-296" id="page2-296"></a>[pg II-296]</span>
+Though Page had characteristics in common
+with all these men, his personality had its own distinctive
+tang; and it was something new to the political and
+social life of London. And the British capital, which is
+extremely exacting and even merciless in its demands upon
+its important personages, had found it vastly entertaining.
+&quot;I didn't know there could be anything so American
+as Page except Mark Twain,&quot; a British literary man
+once remarked; and it was probably this strong American
+quality, this directness and even breeziness of speech
+and of method, this absence of affectation, this almost
+openly expressed contempt for finesse and even for tradition,
+combined with those other traits which we like to
+think of as American&mdash;an upright purpose, a desire to
+serve not only his own country but mankind&mdash;which
+made the British public look upon Page as one of the
+most attractive and useful figures in a war-torn Europe.</p>
+
+<p>There was a certain ruggedness in Page's exterior which
+the British regarded as distinctly in keeping with this American
+flavour. The Ambassador was not a handsome man.
+To one who had heard much of the liveliness of his conversation
+and presence a first impression was likely to be
+disappointing. His figure at this time was tall, gaunt, and
+lean&mdash;and he steadily lost weight during his service in
+England; his head was finely shaped&mdash;it was large, with a
+high forehead, his thin gray hair rather increasing its
+intellectual aspect; and his big frank brown eyes reflected
+that keen zest for life, that unsleeping interest in everything
+about him, that ever-working intelligence and sympathy
+which were the man's predominant traits. But a very large
+nose at first rather lessened the pleasing effects of his other
+features, and a rather weather-beaten, corrugated face
+gave a preliminary suggestion of roughness. Yet Page
+had only to begin talking and the impression immediately
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-297" id="page2-297"></a>[pg II-297]</span>
+changed. &quot;He puts his mind to yours,&quot; Dr. Johnson
+said, describing the sympathetic qualities of a friend, and
+the same was true of Page. Half a dozen sentences,
+spoken in his quick, soft, and ingratiating accents,
+accompanied by the most genial smile, at once converted
+the listener into a friend. Few men have ever lived
+who more quickly responded to this human relationship.
+The Ambassador, at the simple approach of a
+human being, became as a man transformed. Tired
+though he might be, low in spirits as he not infrequently
+was, the press of a human hand at once changed him into
+an animated and radiating companion. This responsiveness
+deceived all his friends in the days of his last illness.
+His intimates who dropped in to see Page invariably
+went away much encouraged and spread optimistic reports
+about his progress. A few minutes' conversation
+with Page would deceive even his physicians. The explanation
+was a simple one: the human presence had an
+electric effect upon him, and it is a revealing sidelight on
+Page's character that almost any man or woman could
+produce this result. As an editor, the readiness with
+which he would listen to suggestions from the humblest
+source was a constant astonishment to his associates.
+The office boy had as accessible an approach to Page
+as had his partners. He never treated an idea, even a
+grotesque one, with contempt; he always had time to
+discuss it, to argue it out, and no one ever left his presence
+thinking that he had made an absurd proposal. Thus
+Page had a profound respect for a human being simply
+because he was a human being; the mere fact that a man,
+woman, or child lived and breathed, had his virtues and
+his failings, constituted in Page's imagination a tremendous
+fact. He could not wound such a living creature
+any more than he could wound a flower or a tree;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-298" id="page2-298"></a>[pg II-298]</span>
+consequently he treated every person as an important member
+of the universe. Not infrequently, indeed, he stormed
+at public men, but his thunder, after all, was not very
+terrifying; his remarks about such personages as Mr.
+Bryan merely reflected his indignation at their policies and
+their influence but did not indicate any feeling against the
+victims themselves. Page said &quot;Good morning&quot; to his
+doorman with the same deference that he showed to Sir
+Edward Grey, and there was not a little stenographer in
+the building whose joys and sorrows did not arouse in him
+the most friendly interest. Some of the most affecting
+letters written about Page, indeed, have come from these
+daily associates of more humble station. &quot;We so often
+speak of Mr. Page,&quot; writes one of the Embassy staff&mdash;&quot;Findlater,
+Short, and Frederick&quot;&mdash;these were all English
+servants at the Embassy; &quot;we all loved him equally,
+and hardly a day passes that something does not remind
+us of him, and I often fancy that I hear his laugh, so full
+of kindness and love of life.&quot; And the impression left
+on those in high position was the same. &quot;I have seen
+ladies representing all that is most worldly in Mayfair,&quot;
+writes Mr. Ellery Sedgwick, the editor of the <i>Atlantic
+Monthly</i>, &quot;start at the sudden thought of Page's illness,
+their eyes glistening with tears.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps what gave most charm to this human side was
+the fact that Page was fundamentally such a scholarly
+man. This was the aspect which especially delighted
+his English friends. He preached democracy and Americanism
+with an emphasis that almost suggested the back-woodsman&mdash;the
+many ideas on these subjects that appear
+in his letters Page never hesitated to set forth with all due
+resonance at London dinner tables&mdash;yet he phrased his
+creed in language that was little less than literary style,
+and illuminated it with illustrations and a philosophy
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-299" id="page2-299"></a>[pg II-299]</span>
+that were the product of the most exhaustive reading.
+&quot;Your Ambassador has taught us something that we did
+not know before,&quot; an English friend remarked to an
+American. &quot;That is that a man can be a democrat and a
+man of culture at the same time.&quot; The Greek and Latin
+authors had been Page's companions from the days when,
+as the holder of the Greek Fellowship at Johns Hopkins,
+he had been a favourite pupil of Basil L. Gildersleeve.
+British statesmen who had been trained at Balliol, in the
+days when Greek was the indispensable ear-mark of a
+gentleman, could thus meet their American associate on
+the most sympathetic terms. Page likewise spoke a
+brand of idiomatic English which immediately put him
+in a class by himself. He regarded words as sacred things.
+He used them, in his writing or in his speech, with the
+utmost care and discrimination; yet this did not result in
+a halting or stilted style; he spoke with the utmost ease,
+going rapidly from thought to thought, choosing invariably
+the one needful word, lighting up the whole with whimsicalities
+all his own, occasionally emphasizing a good point
+by looking downward and glancing over his eyeglasses,
+perhaps, if he knew his companion intimately, now and
+then giving him a monitory tap on the knee. Page, in
+fact, was a great and incessant talker; hardly anything
+delighted him more than a companionable exchange of
+ideas and impressions; he was seldom so busy that he
+would not push aside his papers for a chat; and he would
+talk with almost any one, on almost any subject&mdash;his
+secretaries, his stenographers, his office boys, and any
+crank who succeeded in getting by the doorman&mdash;for, in
+spite of his lively warnings against the breed, Page did
+really love cranks and took a collector's joy in uncovering
+new types. Page's voice was normally quiet; though he
+had spent all his early life in the South, the characteristic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-300" id="page2-300"></a>[pg II-300]</span>
+Southern accents were ordinarily not observable; yet his
+intonation had a certain gentleness that was probably an
+inheritance of his Southern breeding. Thus, when he
+first began talking, his words would ripple along quietly
+and rapidly; a characteristic pose was to sit calmly, with
+one knee thrown over the other, his hands folded; as his
+interest increased, however, he would get up, perhaps
+walk across the room, or stand before the fireplace, his
+hands behind his back; a large cigar, sometimes unlighted,
+at other times emitting huge clouds of smoke, would
+oscillate from one side of his mouth to the other; his talk
+would grow in earnestness, his voice grow louder, his
+words come faster and faster, until finally they would
+gush forth in a mighty torrent.</p>
+
+<p>All Page's personal traits are explained by that one
+characteristic which tempered all others, his sense of
+humour. That Page was above all a serious-minded man
+his letters show; yet his spirits were constantly alert for
+the amusing, the grotesque, and the contradictory; like
+all men who are really serious and alive to the pathos of
+existence, he loved a hearty laugh, especially as he found
+it a relief from the gloom that filled his every waking
+moment in England. Page himself regarded this ability
+to smile as an indispensable attribute to a well-rounded
+life. &quot;No man can be a gentleman,&quot; he once declared,
+&quot;who does not have a sense of humour.&quot; Only he who
+possessed this gift, Page believed, had an imaginative
+insight into the failings and the virtues of his brothers;
+only he could have a tolerant attitude toward the stupidities
+of his fellows, to say nothing of his own. And humour
+with him assumed various shades; now it would flash in
+an epigram, or smile indulgently at a passing human
+weakness; now and then it would break out into genial
+mockery; occasionally it would manifest itself as sheer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-301" id="page2-301"></a>[pg II-301]</span>
+horse-play; and less frequently it would become sardonic
+or even savage. It was in this latter spirit that he once
+described a trio of Washington statesmen, whose influence
+he abhorred as, &quot;three minds that occupy a single vacuum.&quot;
+He once convulsed a Scottish audience by describing the
+national motto of Scotland&mdash;and doing so with a broad burr
+in his voice that seemed almost to mark the speaker a native
+to the heath&mdash;as &quot;Liber-r-ty, fra-a-ternity and f-r-r-u-gality.&quot;
+The policy of his country occasioned many awkward
+moments which, thanks to his talent for amiable
+raillery, he usually succeeded in rendering harmless. Not
+infrequently Page's fellow guests at the dinner table would
+think the American attitude toward Germany a not
+inappropriate topic for small talk. &quot;Mr. Page,&quot; remarked
+an exaltedly titled lady in a conversational pause,
+&quot;when is your country going to get into the war?&quot; The
+more discreet members of the company gasped, but Page
+was not disturbed. &quot;Please give us at least ninety days,&quot;
+he answered, and an exceedingly disagreeable situation was
+thus relieved by general laughter.</p>
+
+<p>On another occasion his repudiation of this flippant
+spirit took a more solemn and even more effective form.
+The time was a few days before the United States had
+declared war. Bernstorff had been dismissed; events
+were rapidly rushing toward the great climax; yet the
+behaviour of the Washington Administration was still
+inspiring much caustic criticism. The Pages were present
+at one of the few dinners which they attended in
+the course of this crisis; certain smart and tactless guests
+did not seem to regard their presence as a bar to many
+gibes against the American policy. Page sat through it
+all impassive, never betraying the slightest resentment.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the ladies withdrew. Page found himself
+sitting next to Mr. Harold Nicolson, an important official
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-302" id="page2-302"></a>[pg II-302]</span>
+in the Foreign Office. It so happened that Mr. Nicolson
+and Page were the only two members of the company who
+were the possessors of a great secret which made ineffably
+silly all the chatter that had taken place during the dinner;
+this was that the United States had decided on war
+against Germany and would issue the declaration in a
+few days.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, Mr. Nicolson,&quot; said Page, &quot;I think that you
+and I will drink a glass of wine together.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The two men quietly lifted their glasses and drank the
+silent toast. Neither made the slightest reference to the
+forthcoming event. Perhaps the other men present were
+a little mystified, but in a few days they understood what
+it had meant, and also learned how effectively they had
+been rebuked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it any wonder,&quot; says Mr. Nicolson, telling this
+story, &quot;that I think that Mr. Page is perhaps the greatest
+gentleman I have ever known? He has only one possible
+competitor for this distinction&mdash;and that is Arthur Balfour.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The English newspapers took delight in printing Page's
+aphorisms, and several anecdotes that came from America
+afforded them especial joy. One went back to the days
+when the Ambassador was editor of the <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>.
+A woman contributor had sent him a story; like most
+literary novices she believed that editors usually rejected
+the manuscripts of unknown writers without reading them.
+She therefore set a trap for Page by pasting together certain
+sheets. The manuscript came back promptly, and,
+as the prospective contributor had hoped, these sheets
+had not been disturbed. These particular sections had
+certainly not been read. The angry author triumphantly
+wrote to Page, explaining how she had caught him and
+denouncing the whole editorial tribe as humbugs. &quot;Dear
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-303" id="page2-303"></a>[pg II-303]</span>
+Madam,&quot; Page immediately wrote in reply, &quot;when I
+break an egg at breakfast, I do not have to eat the whole
+of it to find out that it is bad.&quot; Page's treatment of
+authors, however, was by no means so acrimonious as this
+little note might imply. Indeed, the urbanity and
+consideration shown in his correspondence with writers had
+long been a tradition in American letters. The remark of
+O. Henry in this regard promises to become immortal:
+&quot;Page could reject a story with a letter that was so
+complimentary,&quot; he said, &quot;and make everybody feel so happy
+that you could take it to a bank and borrow money on it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Another anecdote reminiscent of his editorial days was
+his retort to S.S. McClure, the editor of <i>McClure's Magazine</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Page,&quot; said Mr. McClure, &quot;there are only three great
+editors in the United States.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who's the third one, Sam?&quot; asked Page.</p>
+
+<p>Plenty of stories, illustrating Page's quickness and
+aptness in retort, have gathered about his name in England.
+Many of them indicate a mere spirit of boyish
+fun. Early in his Ambassadorship he was spending a
+few days at Stratford-on-Avon, his hostess being an
+American woman who had beautifully restored an Elizabethan
+house; the garden contained a mulberry tree
+which she liked to think had been planted by Shakespeare
+himself. The dignitaries of Stratford, learning that
+the American Ambassador had reached town, asked
+permission to wait upon him; the Lord Mayor, who headed
+the procession, made an excellent speech, to which Page
+appropriately replied, and several hundred people were
+solemnly presented. After the party had left Page
+turned to his hostess:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have they all gone?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-304" id="page2-304"></a>[pg II-304]</span></div>
+<p>&quot;All?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are you sure?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then let's take hands and dance around the mulberry
+tree!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Page was as good as his word; he danced as gaily as the
+youngest member of the party, to the singing of the old
+English song.</p>
+
+<p>The great service in St. Paul's Cathedral, in commemoration
+of America's entry into the war, has already been
+described. A number of wounded Americans, boys whose
+zeal for the Allies had led them to enlist in the Canadian
+Army, were conspicuous participants in this celebration.
+After the solemn religious ceremonies, the Ambassador
+and these young men betook themselves for lunch to a
+well-known London restaurant. In an interval of the
+conversation one of the Americans turned to Page.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Ambassador, there was just one thing wrong
+with that service.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What was that?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We wanted to yell, and we couldn't.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then why don't you yell now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The boy jumped on a chair and began waving his napkin.
+&quot;The Ambassador says we may yell,&quot; he cried.
+&quot;Let's yell!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And so,&quot; said Page, telling the story, &quot;they yelled for
+five minutes and I yelled with them. We all felt better
+in consequence.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This geniality, this disposition not to take life too
+solemnly, sometimes lightened up the sombre atmosphere
+of the Foreign Office itself. &quot;Mr. Balfour went on
+a sort of mild rampage yesterday,&quot; Page records. &quot;The
+British and American navies had come to an arrangement
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-305" id="page2-305"></a>[pg II-305]</span>
+whereby the Brazilian ships that are coming over to help
+us fight should join the American unit, not the British,
+as was at first proposed. Washington telegraphed me
+that the British Minister at Rio was blocking the game
+by standing out for the first British idea&mdash;that the Brazilian
+ships should join the British. It turned out in the
+conversation that the British Minister had not been
+informed of the British-American naval arrangement.
+Mr. Balfour sent for Lord Hardinge. He called in one
+of the private secretaries. Was such a thing ever heard
+of?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you ever know,' said the indignant Mr. Balfour,
+turning to me, 'of such a thing as a minister not even being
+informed of his Government's decisions?' 'Yes,' I
+said, 'if I ransack my memory diligently, I think I could
+find such cases.' The meeting went into laughter!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Evidently the troubles which Page was having with his
+own State Department were not unfamiliar to British
+officialdom.</p>
+
+<p>Page's letters sufficiently reveal his fondness for Sir
+Edward Grey and the splendid relations that existed between
+them. The sympathetic chords which the two
+men struck upon their first meeting only grew stronger with
+time. A single episode brings out the bonds that drew
+them together. It took place at a time when the
+tension over the blockade was especially threatening.
+One afternoon Page asked for a formal interview; he had
+received another exceedingly disagreeable protest from
+Washington, with instructions to push the matter to a
+decision; the Ambassador left his Embassy with a grave
+expression upon his face; his associates were especially
+worried over the outcome. So critical did the situation
+seem that the most important secretaries gathered in the
+Ambassador's room, awaiting his return, their nerves
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-306" id="page2-306"></a>[pg II-306]</span>
+strung almost to the breaking point. An hour went by
+and nothing was heard from Page; another hour slowly
+passed and still the Ambassador did not return. The
+faces of the assembled staff lengthened as the minutes
+went by; what was the Ambassador doing at the Foreign
+Office? So protracted an interview could portend only
+evil; already, in the minds of these nervous young men,
+ultimatums were flying between the United States and
+Great Britain, and even war might be hanging in the
+balance. Another hour drew out its weary length; the
+room became dark, dinner time was approaching, and still
+Page failed to make his appearance. At last, when his
+distracted subordinates were almost prepared to go in
+search of their chief, the Ambassador walked jauntily in,
+smiling and apparently carefree. What had happened?
+What was to be done about the detained ships?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What ships?&quot; asked Page, and then suddenly he remembered.
+&quot;Oh, yes&mdash;those.&quot; That was all right; Sir
+Edward had at once promised to release them; it had all
+been settled in a few minutes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then why were you so long?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The truth came out: Sir Edward and Page had quickly
+turned from intercepted cargoes to the more congenial
+subject of Wordsworth, Tennyson, and other favourite
+poets, and the rest of the afternoon had been consumed in
+discussing this really important business.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps Page was not so great a story-teller as many
+Americans, but he excelled in a type of yarn that especially
+delights Englishmen, for it is the kind that is native to the
+American soil. He possessed an inexhaustible stock of
+Negro anecdotes, and he had the gift of bringing them
+out at precisely the right point. There was one which the
+Archbishop of York never tired of repeating. Soon after
+America entered the war, the Archbishop asked Page how
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-307" id="page2-307"></a>[pg II-307]</span>
+long his country was &quot;in for.&quot; &quot;I can best answer that
+by telling you a story,&quot; said Page. &quot;There were two
+Negroes who had just been sentenced to prison terms. As
+they were being taken away in the carriage placed at their
+disposal by the United States Government, one said to
+the other, 'Sam, how long is you in fo'?' 'I guess dat it's
+a yeah or two yeahs,' said Sam. 'How long is you in fo'?'
+'I guess it's from now on,' said the other darky.&quot; &quot;From
+now on,&quot; remarked the Archbishop, telling this story.
+&quot;What could more eloquently have described America's
+attitude toward the war?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The mention of the Archbishop suggests another of
+Page's talents&mdash;the aptness of his letters of introduction.
+In the spring of 1918 the Archbishop, at the
+earnest recommendation of Page and Mr. Balfour, came
+to the United States. Page prepared the way by letters
+to several distinguished Americans, of which this one, to
+Theodore Roosevelt, is a fair sample:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Theodore Roosevelt</i><br />
+<br />
+London, January 16, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. ROOSEVELT:</p>
+
+<p>The Archbishop of York goes to the United States to
+make some observations of us and of our ways and to
+deliver addresses&mdash;on the invitation of some one of our
+church organizations; a fortunate event for us and, I have
+ventured to tell him, for him also.</p>
+
+<p>During his brief stay in our country, I wish him to
+make your acquaintance, and I have given him a card
+of introduction to you, and thus I humbly serve you
+both.</p>
+
+<p>The Archbishop is a man and a brother, a humble,
+learned, earnest, companionable fellow, with most charming
+manners and an attractive personality, a good friend of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-308" id="page2-308"></a>[pg II-308]</span>
+mine, which argues much for him and (I think) implies also
+something in my behalf. You will enjoy him.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+I am, dear Mr. Roosevelt,<br />
+<br />
+Sincerely yours,<br />
+<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Greatly as Page loved England he never ceased to
+preach his Americanism. That he preferred his own
+country to any other and that he believed that it was its
+greatest destiny to teach its institutions to the rest of the
+world, Page's letters show; yet this was with him no cheap
+spread-eagleism; it was a definite philosophy which the
+Ambassador had completely thought out. He never
+hesitated to express his democratic opinions in any company,
+and only once or twice were there any signs that these
+ideas jarred a little in certain strongholds of conservatism.
+Even in the darkest period of American neutrality Page's
+faith in the American people remained complete. After
+this country had entered the war and the apparent slowness
+of the Washington Administration had raised certain
+questionings, Page never doubted that the people themselves,
+however irresolute and lukewarm their representatives
+might be, would force the issue to its only logical
+end. Even so friendly a man as Mr. Balfour once voiced
+a popular apprehension that the United States might
+not get into the war with all its strength or might withdraw
+prematurely. This was in the early period of our
+participation. &quot;Who is going to stop the American
+people and how?&quot; Page quickly replied. &quot;I think that
+was a good answer,&quot; he said, as he looked back at the
+episode in the summer of 1918, when hundreds of thousands
+of Americans were landing in France every month.
+A scrap of his writing records a discussion at a dinner
+party on this question: &quot;If you could have a month in any
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-309" id="page2-309"></a>[pg II-309]</span>
+time and any country, what time and what country would
+you choose?&quot; The majority voted for England in the
+time of Elizabeth, but Page's preference was for Athens
+in the days of Pericles. Then came a far more interesting
+debate: &quot;If you could spend a second lifetime when and
+where would you choose to spend it?&quot; On this Page
+had not a moment's hesitation: &quot;In the future and in the
+U.S.A.!&quot; and he upheld his point with such persuasiveness
+that he carried the whole gathering with him. His
+love of anything suggesting America came out on all
+occasions. One of his English hostesses once captivated
+him by serving corn bread at a luncheon. &quot;The American
+Ambassador and corn bread!&quot; he exclaimed with all
+the delight of a schoolboy. Again he was invited, with
+another distinguished American, to serve as godfather at
+the christening of the daughter of an American woman
+who had married an Englishman. When the ceremony
+was finished he leaned over the font toward his fellow
+godfather. &quot;Born on July 4th,&quot; he exclaimed, &quot;of
+an American mother! And we two Yankee godfathers!
+We'll see that this child is taught the Constitution of the
+United States!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>One day an American duchess came into Page's office.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am going home for a little visit and I want a passport,&quot;
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you don't get a passport here,&quot; Page replied.
+&quot;You must go to the Foreign Office.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>His visitor was indignant.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not at all,&quot; she answered. &quot;I am an American: you
+know that I am; you knew my father. I want an American
+passport.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Page patiently explained the citizenship and naturalization
+laws and finally convinced his caller that she was now
+a British subject and must have a British passport. As
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-310" id="page2-310"></a>[pg II-310]</span>
+this American duchess left the room he shook at her a
+menacing forefinger.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't tell me,&quot; was the Ambassador's parting shot,
+&quot;that you thought that you could have your Duke and
+Uncle Sam, too!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The judgments which Page passed on men and things
+were quick and they were not infrequently wise. One of
+these judgments had historic consequences the end of which
+cannot even yet be foreseen. On the outbreak of hostilities,
+as already related, an American Relief Committee
+was organized in London to look out for the interests of
+stranded Americans. Page kept a close eye on its operations,
+and soon his attention was attracted by the noiseless
+efficiency of an American engineer of whom he
+had already caught a few fleeting glimpses in the period
+of peace. After he had finished his work with the
+American Committee, Mr. Herbert C. Hoover began to
+make his arrangements to leave for the United States.
+His private affairs had been disorganized; he had already
+sent his family home, and his one ambition was
+to get on the first ship sailing for the United States.
+The idea of Belgian relief, or of feeding starving people
+anywhere, had never occurred to him. At this moment
+an American, Mr. Millard K. Shaler, came from Brussels
+and gave the most harrowing account of conditions in
+Belgium. Mr. Hoover took Mr. Shaler to Page, who
+immediately became sympathetic. The Ambassador arranged
+an interview between Mr. Hoover and Sir Edward
+Grey, who likewise showed great interest and promised
+government support. Soon afterward three Belgians
+arrived and described the situation as immediately alarming:
+Brussels had only food enough to feed the people for
+thirty-six hours; after that, unless help were forthcoming,
+the greatest distress would set in. Five men&mdash;Page, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-311" id="page2-311"></a>[pg II-311]</span>
+three Belgians, and Mr. Hoover&mdash;at once got together at
+the American Embassy. Upon the result of that meeting
+hung the fate of millions of people. Who before had ever
+undertaken a scheme for feeding an entire nation for an
+indefinite period? That there were great obstacles in the
+way all five men knew; the British Admiralty in particular
+were strongly opposed; there was a fear that the food, if
+it could be acquired and sent to Belgium, would find its
+way to the German Army. Unless the British Government
+could be persuaded that this could be prevented, the
+enterprise would fail at the start. How could it be
+done?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is only one way,&quot; said Page. &quot;Some government
+must give its guarantee that this food will get to the
+Belgian people.&quot; &quot;And, of course,&quot; he added, &quot;there
+is only one government that can do that. It must be the
+American Government.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hoover pointed out that any such guarantee involved
+the management of transportation; only by controlling
+the railroads could the American Government
+make sure that this food would reach its destination.</p>
+
+<p>And that, added Page, involved a director&mdash;some one
+man who could take charge of the whole enterprise. Who
+should it be?</p>
+
+<p>Then Page turned quickly to the young American.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hoover, you're It!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hoover made no reply; he neither accepted nor
+rejected the proposal. He merely glanced at the clock,
+then got up and silently left the room. In a few
+minutes he returned and entered again into the discussion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hoover, why did you get up and leave us so
+abruptly?&quot; asked Page, a little puzzled over this behaviour.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-312" id="page2-312"></a>[pg II-312]</span></div>
+<p>&quot;I saw by the clock,&quot; came the answer&mdash;and it was a
+story that Page was fond of telling, as illustrating the
+rapidity with which Mr. Hoover worked&mdash;&quot;that there
+was an hour left before the Exchange closed in New York.
+So I went out and cabled, buying several millions of
+bushels of wheat&mdash;for the Belgians, of course.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>For what is usually known as &quot;society&quot; Page had little
+inclination. Yet for social intercourse on a more genuine
+plane he had real gifts. Had he enjoyed better health,
+week ends in the country would have afforded him welcome
+entertainment. He also liked dinner parties but indulged
+in them very moderately. He was a member of
+many London clubs but he seldom visited any of them.
+There were a number of organizations, however, which he
+regularly attended. The Society of Dilettanti, a company
+of distinguished men interested in promoting the arts and
+improving the public taste, which has been continuously
+in existence since 1736, enrolling in each generation the
+greatest painters and writers of the time, elected Page
+to membership. He greatly enjoyed its dinners in the
+Banquet Hall of the Grafton Gallery. &quot;Last night,&quot; he
+writes, describing his initial appearance, &quot;I attended my
+first Dilettanti dinner and was inducted, much as a new
+Peer is inducted into the House of Lords. Lord Mersey
+in the chair&mdash;in a red robe. These gay old dogs have had
+a fine time of it for nearly 200 years&mdash;good wine, high
+food, fine satisfaction. The oldest dining society in the
+Kingdom. The blue blood old Briton has the art of enjoying
+himself reduced to a very fine point indeed.&quot; Another
+gathering whose meetings he seldom missed was
+that of the Kinsmen, an informal club of literary men
+who met occasionally for food and converse in the Trocadero
+Restaurant. Here Page would meet such congenial
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-313" id="page2-313"></a>[pg II-313]</span>
+souls as Sir James Barrie and Sir Arthur Pinero, all of
+whom retain lively memories of Page at these gatherings.
+&quot;He was one of the most lovable characters I have ever
+had the good fortune to encounter,&quot; says Sir Arthur
+Pinero, recalling these occasions. &quot;In what special
+quality or qualities lay the secret of his charm and influence?
+Surely in his simplicity and transparent honesty,
+and in the possession of a disposition which, without
+the smallest loss of dignity, was responsive and affectionate.
+Distinguished American Ambassadors will come and
+go, and will in their turn win esteem and admiration. But
+none, I venture to say, will efface the recollection of Walter
+Page from the minds of those who were privileged to
+gain his friendship.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>One aspect of Page that remains fixed in the memory of
+his associates is his unwearied industry with the pen.
+His official communications and his ordinary correspondence
+Page dictated; but his personal letters he wrote
+with his own hand. He himself deplored the stenographer
+as a deterrent to good writing; the habit of dictating,
+he argued, led to wordiness and general looseness of
+thought. Practically all the letters published in these
+volumes were therefore the painstaking work of Page's
+own pen. His handwriting was so beautiful and clear
+that, in his editorial days, the printers much preferred it
+as &quot;copy&quot; to typewritten matter. This habit is especially
+surprising in view of the Ambassador's enormous epistolary
+output. It must be remembered that the letters
+included in the present book are only a selection from
+the vast number that he wrote during his five years in
+England; many of these letters fill twenty and thirty
+pages of script; the labour involved in turning them out;
+day after day, seems fairly astounding. Yet with Page
+this was a labour of love. All through his Ambassadorship
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-314" id="page2-314"></a>[pg II-314]</span>
+he seemed hardly contented unless he had a pen in
+his hand. As his secretaries would glance into his room,
+there they would see the Ambassador bending over his
+desk-writing, writing, eternally writing; sometimes he
+would call them in, and read what he had written, never
+hesitating to tear up the paper if their unfavourable
+criticisms seemed to him well taken. The Ambassador
+kept a desk also in his bedroom, and here his most important
+correspondence was attended to. Page's all-night
+self-communings before his wood fire have already
+been described, and he had another nocturnal occupation
+that was similarly absorbing. Many a night, after returning
+late from his office or from dinner, he would put
+on his dressing gown, sit at his bedroom desk, and start
+pouring forth his inmost thoughts in letters to the President,
+Colonel House, or some other correspondent. His pen
+flew over the paper with the utmost rapidity and the
+Ambassador would sometimes keep at his writing until
+two or three o'clock in the morning. There is a frequently
+expressed fear that letter writing is an art of the
+past; that the intervention of the stenographer has destroyed
+its spontaneity; yet it is evident that in Page
+the present generation has a letter writer of the old-fashioned
+kind, for he did all his writing with his own hand
+and under circumstances that would assure the utmost
+freshness and vividness to the result.</p>
+
+<p>An occasional game of golf, which he played badly,
+a trip now and then to rural England&mdash;these were
+Page's only relaxations from his duties. Though he was
+not especially fond of leaving his own house, he was always
+delighted when visitors came to him. And the
+American Embassy, during the five years from 1913 to
+1918, extended a hospitality which was fittingly democratic
+in its quality but which gradually drew within its doors
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-315" id="page2-315"></a>[pg II-315]</span>
+all that was finest in the intellect and character of
+England. Page himself attributed the popularity of his
+house to his wife. Mrs. Page certainly embodied the
+traits most desirable in the Ambassadress of a great
+Republic. A woman of cultivation, a tireless reader,
+a close observer of people and events and a shrewd
+commentator upon them, she also had an unobtrusive
+dignity, a penetrating sympathy, and a capacity for
+human association, which, while more restrained and
+more placid than that of her husband, made her a helpful
+companion for a sorely burdened man. The American
+Embassy under Mr. and Mrs. Page was not one of London's
+smart houses as that word is commonly understood
+in this great capital. But No. 6 Grosvenor Square,
+in the spaciousness of its rooms, the simple beauty of its
+furnishings, and especially in its complete absence of
+ostentation, made it the worthy abiding place of an American
+Ambassador. And the people who congregated there
+were precisely the kind that appeal to the educated American.
+&quot;I didn't know I was getting into an assembly
+of immortals,&quot; exclaimed Mr. Hugh Wallace, when he
+dropped in one Thursday afternoon for tea, and found
+himself foregathered with Sir Edward Grey, Henry James,
+John Sargent, and other men of the same type. It was
+this kind of person who most naturally gravitated to the
+Page establishment, not the ultra-fashionable, the merely
+rich, or the many titled. The formal functions which the
+position demanded the Pages scrupulously gave; but the
+affairs which Page most enjoyed and which have left
+the most lasting remembrances upon his guests were the informal
+meetings with his chosen favourites, for the most
+part literary men. Here Page's sheer brilliancy of conversation
+showed at its best. Lord Bryce, Sir John Simon,
+John Morley, the inevitable companions, Henry James
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-316" id="page2-316"></a>[pg II-316]</span>
+and John Sargent&mdash;&quot;What things have I seen done at
+the Mermaid&quot;; and certainly these gatherings of wits and
+savants furnished as near an approach to its Elizabethan
+prototype as London could then present.</p>
+
+<p>Besides his official activities Page performed great services
+to the two countries by his speeches. The demands
+of this kind on an American Ambassador are always numerous,
+but Page's position was an exceptional one; it was
+his fortune to represent America at a time when his own
+country and Great Britain were allies in a great war. He
+could therefore have spent practically all his time in speaking
+had he been so disposed. Of the hundreds of invitations
+received he was able to accept only a few, but most
+of these occasions became memorable ones. In any spectacular
+sense Page was not an orator; he rather despised
+the grand manner, with its flourishes and its tricks; the
+name of public speaker probably best describes his talents
+on the platform. Here his style was earnest and conversational:
+his speech flowed with the utmost readiness;
+it was invariably quiet and restrained; he was never aiming
+at big effects, but his words always went home. Of the
+series of speeches that stand to his credit in England probably
+the one that will be longest remembered is that
+delivered at Plymouth on August 4, 1917, the third anniversary
+of the war. This not only reviewed the common
+history of the two nations for three hundred years,
+and suggested a programme for making the bonds tighter
+yet, but it brought the British public practical assurances
+as to America's intentions in the conflict. Up to
+that time there had been much vagueness and doubt; no
+official voice had spoken the clear word for the United
+States; the British public did not know what to expect
+from their kinsmen overseas. But after Page's Plymouth
+speech the people of Great Britain looked forward with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-317" id="page2-317"></a>[pg II-317]</span>
+complete confidence to the co&ouml;peration of the two countries
+and to the inevitable triumph of this co&ouml;peration.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+Knebworth House, Knebworth,<br />
+August 11, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Dear Arthur:</p>
+
+<p>First of all, these three years have made me tired. I
+suppose there's no doubt about that, if there were any
+scientific way of measuring it. While of course the strain
+now is nothing like what it was during the days of neutrality,
+there's yet some strain.</p>
+
+<p>I went down to Plymouth to make a speech on the anniversary
+of the beginning of the war&mdash;went to tell them
+in the west of England something about relations with
+the United States and something about what the United
+States is doing in the war. It turned out to be a great
+success. The Mayor met me at the train; there was a
+military company, the Star Spangled Banner and real
+American applause. All the way through the town the
+streets were lined with all the inhabitants and more&mdash;apparently
+millions of 'em. They made the most of it for
+five solid days.</p>
+
+<p>On the morning of August 4th the Mayor gave me an
+official luncheon. Thence we went to the esplanade facing
+the sea, where soldiers and sailors were lined up for
+half a mile. The American Flag was flung loose, the Star
+Spangled Banner broke forth from the band, and all the
+people in that part of the world were there gathered to see
+the show. After all this salute the Mayor took me to the
+stand and he and I made speeches, and the background
+was a group of dozens of admirals and generals and many
+smaller fry. Then I reviewed the troops; then they
+marched by me and in an hour or two the show was over.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-318" id="page2-318"></a>[pg II-318]</span>
+<p>Then the bowling club&mdash;the same club and the same
+green as when Drake left the game to sail out to meet the
+Armada.</p>
+
+<p>Then a solemn service in the big church, where the
+prayers were written and the hymns selected with reference
+to our part in the war.</p>
+
+<p>Then, of course, a dinner party. At eight o'clock at
+night, the Guildhall, an enormous town hall, was packed
+with people and I made my speech at 'em. A copy (somewhat
+less good than the version I gave them) goes to you,
+along with a leader from the <i>Times</i>. They were vociferously
+grateful for any assuring word about the United
+States. It's strange how very little the provincial Englander
+knows about what we have done and mean to do.
+They took the speech finely, and I have had good letters
+about it from all sorts of people in every part of the Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>Then followed five days of luncheons and dinners and
+garden parties&mdash;and (what I set out to say) I got back to
+London last night dead tired. To-day your mother and
+I came here&mdash;about twenty-five miles from London&mdash;for
+a fortnight.</p>
+
+<p>This is Bulwer-Lytton's house&mdash;a fine old English place
+hired this year by Lady Strafford, whom your mother is
+visiting for a fortnight or more, and they let me come
+along, too. They have given me the big library, as good
+a room as I want&mdash;with as bad pens as they can find in
+the Kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>Your mother is tired, too. Since the American Red
+Cross was organized here, she has added to her committee
+and hospitals. But she keeps well and very vigorous. A
+fortnight here will set her up. She enjoyed Plymouth
+very much in spite of the continual rush, and it was a rush.</p>
+
+<p>What the United States is doing looks good and large at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-319" id="page2-319"></a>[pg II-319]</span>
+this distance. The gratitude here is unbounded; but I
+detect a feeling here and there of wonder whether we are
+going to keep up this activity to the end.</p>
+
+<p>I sometimes feel that the German collapse <i>may</i> come
+next winter. Their internal troubles and the lack of
+sufficient food and raw materials do increase. The breaking
+point may be reached before another summer. I
+wish I could prove it or even certainly predict it. But it is
+at least conceivable. Alas, no one can <i>prove</i> anything
+about the war. The conditions have no precedents.
+The sum of human misery and suffering is simply incalculable,
+as is the loss of life; and the gradual and general
+brutalization goes on and on and on far past any preceding
+horrors.</p>
+
+<p>With all my love to you and Mollie and the trio,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>And so for five busy and devastating years Page did his
+work. The stupidities of Washington might drive him
+to desperation, ill-health might increase his periods of
+despondency, the misunderstandings that he occasionally
+had with the British Government might add to his discouragements,
+but a naturally optimistic and humorous
+temperament overcame all obstacles, and did its part in
+bringing about that united effort which ended in victory.
+And that it was a great part, the story of his Ambassadorship
+abundantly proves. Page was not the soldier working
+in the blood and slime of Flanders, nor the sea fighter
+spending day and night around the foggy coast of Ireland,
+nor the statesman bending parliaments to his will and
+manipulating nations and peoples in the mighty game
+whose stake was civilization itself. But history will indeed
+be ungrateful if it ever forgot the gaunt and pensive
+figure, clad in a dressing gown, sitting long into the morning
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-320" id="page2-320"></a>[pg II-320]</span>
+before the smouldering fire at 6 Grosvenor Square,
+seeking to find some way to persuade a reluctant and hesitating
+President to lead his country in the defense of
+liberty and determined that, so far as he could accomplish
+it, the nation should play a part in the great assize
+that was in keeping with its traditions and its instincts.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-321" id="page2-321"></a>[pg II-321]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV" />CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+<h3>A RESPITE AT ST. IVES</h3>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+Knebworth House<br />
+Sunday, September,[sic] 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>Dear House:</p>
+
+<p>... By far the most important peace plan or utterance
+is the President's extraordinary answer to the Pope<a name="FNanchor_64_64" id="FNanchor_64_64" /><a href="#Footnote_64_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>.
+His flat and convincing refusal to take the word of the present
+rulers of Germany as of any value has had more effect
+here than any other utterance and it is, so far, the best
+contribution we have made to the war. The best evidence
+that I can get shows also that it has had more effect in
+Germany than anything else that has been said by anybody.
+That hit the bull's-eye with perfect accuracy; and
+it has been accepted here as <i>the</i> war aim and <i>the</i> war
+condition. So far as I can make out it is working in Germany
+toward peace with more effect than any other deliverance
+made by anybody. And it steadied the already unshakable
+resolution here amazingly.</p>
+
+<p>I can get any information here of course without danger
+of the slightest publicity&mdash;an important point, because
+even the mention of peace now is dangerous. All the
+world, under this long strain, is more or less off the normal,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-322" id="page2-322"></a>[pg II-322]</span>
+and all my work&mdash;even routine work&mdash;is done with the
+profoundest secrecy: it has to be.</p>
+
+<p>Our energetic war preparations call forth universal admiration
+and gratitude here on all sides and nerve up the
+British and hearten them more than I know how to explain.
+There is an eager and even pathetic curiosity to
+hear all the details, to hear, in fact, anything about the
+United States; and what the British do not know about the
+United States would fill the British Museum. They do
+know, however, that they would soon have been obliged
+to make an unsatisfactory peace if we hadn't come in when
+we did and they freely say so. The little feeling of jealousy
+that we should come in and win the war at the end
+has, I think, been forgotten, swallowed up in their genuine
+gratitude.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Sincerely yours,<br />
+<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+<br />
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">London, Sept. 3, 1917.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>... The President has sent Admiral Mayo over to
+study the naval situation. So far as I can learn the feeling
+at Washington is that the British Navy has done
+nothing. Why, it hasn't attacked the German naval bases
+and destroyed the German navy and ended the war!
+Why not? I have a feeling that Mayo will supplement
+and support Sims in his report. Then gradually the naval
+men at Washington may begin to understand and they
+may get the important facts into the President's head.
+Meantime the submarine work of the Germans continues
+to win the war, although the government and the people
+here and in the United States appear not to believe it.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-323" id="page2-323"></a>[pg II-323]</span>
+They are still destroying seventy-five British ships a
+month besides an additional (smaller) number of allied
+and neutral ships. And all the world together is not
+turning out seventy-five ships a month; nor are we all
+destroying submarines as fast as the Germans are turning
+<i>them</i> out. Yet all the politicians are putting on a cheerful
+countenance about it because the Germans are not
+starving England out and are not just now sinking passenger
+ships. They may begin this again at any time. They
+have come within a few feet of torpedoing two of our
+American liners. The submarine <i>is</i> the war yet, but nobody
+seems disposed to believe it. They'll probably wake
+up with a great shock some day&mdash;or the war may possibly
+end before the destruction of ships becomes positively
+fatal.</p>
+
+<p>The President's letter to the Pope gives him the moral
+and actual leadership now. The Hohenzollerns must go.
+Somehow the subjects and governments of these Old
+World kingdoms have not hitherto laid emphasis on this.
+There's still a divinity that doth hedge a king in most
+European minds. To me this is the very queerest thing
+in the whole world. What again if Germany, Austria,
+Spain should follow Russia? Whether they do or not
+crowns will not henceforth be so popular. There is an
+unbounded enthusiasm here for the President's letter and
+for the President in general.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of certain details which it seems impossible to
+make understood on the Potomac, the whole American
+preparation and enthusiasm seem from this distance to
+be very fine. The <i>people</i> seem in earnest. When I read
+about tax bills, about the food regulation and a thousand
+other such things, I am greatly gratified. And it proves
+that we were right when we said that during the days
+of neutrality the people were held back. It all looks
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-324" id="page2-324"></a>[pg II-324]</span>
+exceedingly good from this distance, and it makes me
+homesick.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Frank N. Doubleday</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy.<br />
+<br />
+[Undated, but written about October I, 1917]<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR EFFENDI:</p>
+
+<p>... The enormous war work and war help that
+everybody seems to be doing in the United States is
+heartily appreciated here&mdash;most heartily. The English
+eat out of our hands. You can see American uniforms
+every day in London. Every ship brings them. Everybody's
+thrilled to see them. The Americans here have
+great houses opened as officers' clubs, and scrumptious
+huts for men where countesses and other high ladies hand
+out sandwiches and serve ice cream and ginger beer.
+Our two admirals are most popular with all classes, from
+royalty down. English soldiers salute our officers in the
+street and old gentlemen take off their hats when they
+meet nurses with the American Red Cross uniform. My
+Embassy now occupies four buildings for offices, more
+than half of them military and naval. And my own staff,
+proper, is the biggest in the world and keeps growing.
+When I go, in a little while, to receive the Freedom of the
+City of Edinburgh, I shall carry an Admiral or a General
+as my aide!</p>
+
+<p>That's the way we keep a stiff upper lip.</p>
+
+<p>And Good Lord! it's tiresome. Peace? We'd all give
+our lives for the right sort of peace, and never move an
+eyelid. But only the wrong sort has yet come within
+reach. The other sort is coming, however; for these present
+German contortions are the beginning of the end.
+But the weariness of it, and the tragedy and the cost.
+No human creature was ever as tired as I am. Yet I keep
+well and keep going and keep working all my waking
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-325" id="page2-325"></a>[pg II-325]</span>
+hours. When it ends, I shall collapse and go home and
+have to rest a while. So at least I feel now. And, if I
+outlive the work and the danger and the weariness, I'll
+praise God for that. And it doesn't let up a single day.
+And I'm no worse off than everybody else.</p>
+
+<p>So this over-weary world goes, dear Effendi; but the
+longest day shades at last down to twilight and rest; and
+so this will be. And poor old Europe will then not be
+worth while for the rest of our lives&mdash;a vast grave and
+ruin where unmated women will mourn and starvation
+will remain for years to come.</p>
+
+<p>God bless us.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Sincerely yours, with my love to all the boys,<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Frank N. Doubleday</i><br />
+<br />
+London, November 9, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR EFFENDI:</p>
+
+<p>... This infernal thing drags its slow length along
+so that we cannot see even a day ahead, not to say a week,
+or a year. If any man here allowed the horrors of it to
+dwell on his mind he would go mad, so we have to skip
+over these things somewhat lightly and try to keep the
+long, definite aim in our thoughts and to work away distracted
+as little as possible by the butchery and by the
+starvation that is making this side of the world a shambles
+and a wilderness. There is hardly a country on the Continent
+where people are not literally starving to death,
+and in many of them by hundreds of thousands; and this
+state of things is going to continue for a good many years
+after the war. God knows we (I mean the American
+people) are doing everything we can to alleviate it but
+there is so much more to be done than any group of forces
+can possibly do, that I have a feeling that we have hardly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-326" id="page2-326"></a>[pg II-326]</span>
+touched the borders of the great problem itself. Of course
+here in London we are away from all that. In spite of the
+rations we get quite enough to eat and it's as good as it is
+usually in England, but we have no right to complain. Of
+course we are subject to air raids, and the wise air people
+here think that early next spring we are going to be bombarded
+with thousands of aeroplanes, and with new kinds
+of bombs and gases in a well-organized effort to try actually
+to destroy London. Possibly that will come; we must
+simply take our chance, every man sticking to his job.
+Already the slate shingles on my roof have been broken,
+and bricks have been knocked down my chimney; the sky-light
+was hit and glass fell down all through the halls, and
+the nose of a shrapnel shell, weighing eight pounds, fell just
+in front of my doorway and rolled in my area. This is the
+sort of thing we incidentally get, not of course from the
+enemy directly, but from the British guns in London which
+shoot these things at German aeroplanes. What goes up
+must come down. Between our own defences and the
+enemy, God knows which will kill us first!</p>
+
+<p>In spite of all this I put my innocent head on my pillow
+every night and get a good night's sleep after the bombing
+is done, and I thank Heaven that nothing interrupts my
+sleep. This, and a little walking, which is all I get time to
+do in these foggy days, constitute my life outdoors and
+precious little of it is outdoors.</p>
+
+<p>Then on every block that I know of in London there is
+a hospital or supply place and the ambulances are bringing
+the poor fellows in all the time. We don't get any gasolene
+to ride so we have to walk. We don't get any white
+bread so we have to eat stuff made of flour and corn meal
+ground so fine that it isn't good. While everybody gets
+a little thinner, the universal opinion is that they also get
+a little better, and nobody is going to die here of hunger.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-327" id="page2-327"></a>[pg II-327]</span>
+We feel a little more cheerful about the submarines than
+we did some time ago. For some reason they are not getting
+so many ships. One reason, I am glad to believe, is
+that they are getting caught themselves. If I could remember
+all the stories that I hear of good fighting with
+the submarines I could keep you up two nights when I get
+home, but in these days one big thing after another crowds
+so in men's minds that the Lord knows if, when I get
+home, I shall remember anything.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Always heartily yours,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+<br />
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+London, December 3, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>... Some of the British military men in London
+are not hopeful of an early end of the war nor even cheerful
+about the result. They are afraid of the war-weariness
+that overcame Russia and gave Italy a setback. They
+say the military task, though long and slow and hard,
+can be done if everybody will pull together and keep at
+the job without weariness&mdash;<i>be done by our help</i>. But they
+have fits of fear of France. They are discouraged by the
+greater part of Lord Lansdowne's letter<a name="FNanchor_65_65" id="FNanchor_65_65" /><a href="#Footnote_65_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a>. I myself do not
+set great value on this military feeling in London, for the
+British generals in France do not share it. Lord French
+once said to me and General Robertson, too, that when
+they feel despondent in London, they go to the front and
+get cheered up. But it does seem to be a long job.
+Evidently the Germans mean to fight to the last man
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-328" id="page2-328"></a>[pg II-328]</span>
+unless they can succeed in inducing the Allies to meet them
+to talk it over without naming their terms in advance.
+That is what Lord Lansdowne favours, and no public outgiving
+by any prominent man in England has called forth
+such a storm of protest since the war began. I think I
+see the genesis of his thought, and it is this: there is
+nothing in his letter and there was nothing in the half dozen
+or more rather long conversations that I have had with
+him on other subjects to show that he has the slightest
+conception of democracy as a social creed or as a political
+system. He is, I think, the most complete aristocrat
+that I have ever met. He doesn't see the war at all as a
+struggle between democracy and its opposite. He sees it
+merely as a struggle between Germany and the Allies;
+and inferentially he is perfectly willing the Kaiser should
+remain in power. He is of course a patriotic man and a
+man of great cultivation. But he doesn't see the deeper
+meaning of the conflict. Add to this defect of understanding,
+a long period of bad health and a lasting depression
+because of the loss of his son, and his call to the
+war-weary ceases to be a surprise.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+I am, dear Mr. President,<br />
+Sincerely yours,<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy,<br />
+London, December 23, 1917.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>I sent you a Christmas cable yesterday for everybody.
+That's about all I can send in these days of slow mail and
+restricted shipping and enormously high prices; and you
+gave all the girls each $100 for me, for the babies and
+themselves? That'll show 'em that at least we haven't forgotten
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-329" id="page2-329"></a>[pg II-329]</span>
+them. Forgotten? Your mother and I are always
+talking of the glad day when we can go home and live
+among them. We get as homesick as small boys their
+first month at a boarding school. Do you remember the
+day I left you at Lawrenceville, a forlorn and lonely kid?&mdash;It's
+like that.</p>
+
+<p>A wave of depression hangs over the land like a London
+fog. And everybody on this tired-out side of the
+world shows a disposition to lean too heavily on us&mdash;to
+depend on us so completely that the fear arises that they
+may unconsciously relax their own utmost efforts when we
+begin to fight. Yet they can't in the least afford to relax,
+and, when the time comes, I dare say they will not. Yet
+the plain truth is, the French may give out next year for
+lack of men. I do not mean that they will quit, but that
+their fighting strength will have passed its maximum and
+that they will be able to play only a sort of second part.
+Except the British and the French, there's no nation in
+Europe worth a tinker's damn when you come to the real
+scratch. The whole continent is rotten or tyrannical or
+yellow-dog. I wouldn't give Long Island or Moore
+County for the whole of continental Europe, with its
+kings and itching palms.</p>
+
+<p>... Waves of depression and of hope&mdash;if not of
+elation&mdash;come and go. I am told, and I think truly, that
+waves of weariness come in London far oftener and more
+depressingly than anywhere else in the Kingdom. There
+is no sign nor fear that the British will give up; they'll
+hold on till the end. Winston Churchill said to me last
+night: &quot;We can hold on till next year. But after 1918, it'll
+be your fight. We'll have to depend on you.&quot; I told
+him that such a remark might well be accepted in some
+quarters as a British surrender. Then he came up to the
+scratch: &quot;Surrender? Never.&quot; But I fear we need&mdash;in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-330" id="page2-330"></a>[pg II-330]</span>
+some practical and non-ostentatious way&mdash;now and then
+to remind all these European folk that we get no particular
+encouragement by being unduly leaned on.</p>
+
+<p>It is, however, the weariest Christmas in all British
+annals, certainly since the Napoleonic wars. The untoward
+event after the British advance toward Cambrai
+caused the retirement of six British generals and deepened
+the depression here. Still I can see it now passing. Even
+a little victory will bring back a wave of cheerfulness.</p>
+
+<p>Depression or elation show equally the undue strain
+that British nerves are under. I dare say nobody is entirely
+normal. News of many sorts can now be circulated
+only by word of mouth. The queerest stories are
+whispered about and find at least temporary credence.
+For instance: The report has been going around that the
+revolution that took place in Portugal the other day was
+caused by the Germans (likely enough); that it was a
+monarchical movement and that the Germans were going
+to put the King back on the throne as soon as the war
+ended. Sensation-mongers appear at every old-woman's
+knitting circle. And all this has an effect on conduct.
+Two young wives of noble officers now in France have just
+run away with two other young noblemen&mdash;to the scandal
+of a large part of good society in London. It is universally
+said that the morals of more hitherto good people are
+wrecked by the strain put upon women by the absence of
+their husbands than was ever before heard of. Everybody
+is overworked. Fewer people are literally truthful
+than ever before. Men and women break down and fall
+out of working ranks continuously. The number of men
+in the government who have disappeared from public
+view is amazing, the number that would like to disappear
+is still greater&mdash;from sheer overstrain. The Prime Minister
+is tired. Bonar Law in a long conference that Crosby
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-331" id="page2-331"></a>[pg II-331]</span>
+and I had with him yesterday wearily ran all round a circle
+rather than hit a plain proposition with a clear decision.
+Mr. Balfour has kept his house from overwork a few days
+every recent week. I lunched with Mr. Asquith yesterday;
+even he seemed jaded; and Mrs. Asquith assured me that
+&quot;everything is going to the devil damned fast.&quot; Some conspicuous
+men who have always been sober have taken to
+drink. The very few public dinners that are held are
+served with ostentatious meagreness to escape criticism.
+I attended one last week at which there was no bread, no
+butter, no sugar served. All of which doesn't mean that
+the world here is going to the bad&mdash;only that it moves backward
+and forward by emotions; and this is normally a most
+unemotional race. Overwork and the loss of Sons and
+friends&mdash;the list of the lost grows&mdash;always make an abnormal
+strain. The churches are fuller than ever before.
+So, too, are the &quot;parlours&quot; of the fortune-tellers. So
+also the theatres&mdash;in the effort to forget one's self. There
+are afternoon dances for young officers at home on leave:
+the curtains are drawn and the music is muffled. More
+marriages take place&mdash;blind and maimed, as well as the
+young fellows just going to France&mdash;than were ever celebrated
+in any year within men's memory. Verse-writing
+is rampant. I have received enough odes and sonnets
+celebrating the Great Republic and the Great President
+to fill a folio volume. Several American Y.M.C.A.
+workers lately turned rampant Pacifists and had to be
+sent home. Colonial soldiers and now and then an
+American sailor turn up at our Y.M.C.A. huts as full as
+a goat and swear after the event that they never did such
+a thing before. Emotions and strain everywhere!</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-332" id="page2-332"></a>[pg II-332]</span></div>
+<p>In March Page, a very weary man&mdash;as these letters
+indicate&mdash;took a brief holiday at St. Ives, on the coast of
+Cornwall. As he gazed out on the Atlantic, the yearning
+for home, for the sandhills and the pine trees of North
+Carolina, again took possession of his soul. Yet it is evident,
+from a miscellaneous group of letters written at this
+time, that his mind revelled in a variety of subjects, ranging
+all the way from British food and vegetables to the
+settlement of the war and from secret diplomacy to literary
+style.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Mrs. Charles G. Loring</i><br />
+St. Ives, Cornwall, March 3, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR KITTY:</p>
+
+<p>Your mother of course needed a rest away from London
+after the influenza got done with her; and I discovered that
+I had gone stale. So she and I and the golf clubs came
+here yesterday&mdash;as near to the sunlit land of Uncle Sam
+as you can well get on this island. We look across the
+ocean&mdash;at least out into it&mdash;in your direction, but I must
+confess that Labrador is not in sight. The place is all
+right, the hotel uncommonly good, but it's Greenlandish
+in its temperature&mdash;a very cold wind blowing. The golf
+clubs lean up against the wall and curse the weather. But
+we are away from the hordes of people and will have a
+little quiet here. It's as quiet as any far-off place by the
+sea, and it's clean. London is the dirtiest town in the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>By the way that picture of Chud came (by Col.
+Honey) along with Alice Page's adorable little photograph.
+As for the wee chick, I see how you are already beginning
+to get a lot of fun with her. And you'll have more and
+more as she gets bigger. Give her my love and see what
+she'll say. You won't get so lonesome, dear Kitty, with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-333" id="page2-333"></a>[pg II-333]</span>
+little Alice; and I can't keep from thinking as well as hoping
+that the war will not go on as long as it sometimes
+seems that it must. The utter collapse of Russia has
+given Germany a vast victory on that side and it may turn
+out that this will make an earlier peace possible than would
+otherwise have come. And the Germans may be&mdash;in
+fact, <i>must</i> be, very short of some of the essentials of war
+in their metals or in cotton. They are in a worse internal
+plight than has been made known, I am sure. I can't keep
+from hoping that peace may come this year. Of course,
+my guess may be wrong; but everything I hear points in
+the direction of my timid prediction.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Bless you and little Alice,<br />
+<br />
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Page's oldest son was building a house and laying out a
+garden at Pinehurst, North Carolina, a fact which explains
+the horticultural and gastronomical suggestions
+contained in the following letter:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Ralph W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+Tregenna Castle Hotel,<br />
+St. Ives, Cornwall, England,<br />
+March 4, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<br />
+DEAR RALPH:<br />
+<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Asparagus<br />
+Celery<br />
+Tomatoes<br />
+Butter Beans<br />
+Peas<br />
+Sweet Corn<br />
+Sweet Potatoes<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-334" id="page2-334"></a>[pg II-334]</span>
+Squash&mdash;the sort you cook in the rind<br />
+Cantaloupe<br />
+Peanuts<br />
+Egg Plant<br />
+Figs<br />
+Peaches<br />
+Pecans<br />
+Scuppernongs<br />
+Peanut-bacon, in glass jars<br />
+Razor-back hams, divinely cured<br />
+Raspberries<br />
+Strawberries<br />
+etc. etc. etc. etc.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>You see, having starved here for five years, my mind, as
+soon as it gets free, runs on these things and my mouth
+waters. All the foregoing things that grow can be put up
+in pretty glass jars, too.</p>
+
+<p>Add cream, fresh butter, buttermilk, fresh eggs. Only
+one of all the things on page one grows with any flavour
+here at all&mdash;strawberries; and only one or two more
+grow at all. Darned if I don't have to confront Cabbage
+every day. I haven't yet surrendered, and I never
+shall unless the Germans get us. Cabbage and Germans
+belong together: God made 'em both the same stinking
+day.</p>
+
+<p>Now get a bang-up gardener no matter what he costs.
+Get him started. Put it up to him to start toward the
+foregoing programme, to be reached in (say) three years&mdash;two
+if possible. He must learn to grow these things
+absolutely better than they are now grown anywhere on
+earth. He must get the best seed. He must get muck
+out of the swamp, manure from somewhere, etc. etc. He
+must have the supreme flavour in each thing. Let him
+take room enough for each&mdash;plenty of room. He doesn't
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-335" id="page2-335"></a>[pg II-335]</span>
+want much room for any one thing, but good spaces between.</p>
+
+<p>This will be the making of the world. Talk about fairs?
+If he fails to get every prize he must pay a fine for every
+one that goes to anybody else.</p>
+
+<p>How we'll live! I can live on these things and nothing
+else. But (just to match this home outfit) I'll order tea
+from Japan, ripe olives from California, grape fruit and
+oranges from Florida. Then poor folks will hang around,
+hoping to be invited to dinner!</p>
+
+<p>Plant a few fig trees now; and pecans? Any good?</p>
+
+<p>The world is going to come pretty close to starvation
+not only during the war but for five or perhaps ten years
+afterward. An acre or two <i>done right</i>&mdash;divinely right&mdash;will
+save us. An acre or two on my land in Moore County&mdash;no
+king can live half so well if the ground be got ready
+this spring and such a start made as one natural-born
+gardener can make. The old Russian I had in Garden
+City was no slouch. Do you remember his little patch
+back of the house? That far, far, far excelled anything
+in all Europe. And you'll recall that we jarred 'em and
+had good things all winter.</p>
+
+<p>This St. Ives is the finest spot in England that I've ever
+seen. To-day has been as good as any March day you
+ever had in North Carolina&mdash;a fine air, clear sunshine, a
+beautiful sea&mdash;looking out toward the United States;
+and this country grows&mdash;the best golf links that I've ever
+seen in the world, and nothing else worth speaking of but&mdash;tin.
+Tin mines are all about here. Tin and golf are
+good crops in their way, but they don't feed the belly of
+man. As matters stand the only people that have fit
+things to eat now in all Europe are the American troops in
+France, and their food comes out of tins chiefly. Ach!
+Heaven! In these islands man is amphibious and carnivorous.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-336" id="page2-336"></a>[pg II-336]</span>
+It rains every day and meat, meat, meat is the
+only human idea of food. God bless us, one acre of the
+Sandhills is worth a vast estate of tin mines and golf links
+to feed the innards of</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>P.S. And cornfield peas, of just the right rankness,
+cooked with just the right dryness.</p>
+
+<p>When I become a citizen of the Sandhills I propose to
+induce some benevolent lover of good food to give substantial
+prizes to the best grower of each of these things
+and to the best cook of each and to the person who serves
+each of them most daintily.</p>
+
+<p>We can can and glass jar these things and let none be
+put on the market without the approval of an expert employed
+by the community. Then we can get a reputation
+for Sandhill Food and charge double price.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+St. Ives, Cornwall,<br />
+<br />
+England, March 8, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>Your letter, written from the University Club, is just
+come. It makes a very distinct impression on my mind
+which my own conclusions and fears have long confirmed.
+Let me put it at its worst and in very bald terms: The
+Great White Chief is at bottom pacifist, has always been
+so and is so now. Of course I do not mean a pacifist at
+any price, certainly not a cowardly pacifist. But (looked
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-337" id="page2-337"></a>[pg II-337]</span>
+at theoretically) war is, of course, an absurd way of settling
+any quarrel, an irrational way. Men and nations are
+wasteful, cruel, pigheaded fools to indulge in it. Quite
+true. But war is also the only means of adding to a
+nation's territory the territory of other nations which they
+do not wish to sell or to give up&mdash;the robbers' only way to
+get more space or to get booty. This last explains this
+war. Every Hohenzollern (except the present Emperor's
+father, who reigned only a few months) since Frederick
+the Great has added to Prussian and German area of rule.
+Every one, therefore, as he comes to the throne, feels an
+obligation to make his addition to the Empire. For this
+the wars of Prussia with Austria, with Denmark, with
+France were brought on. They succeeded and won the
+additions that old William I made to the Empire. Now
+William II must make <i>his</i> addition. He prepared for more
+than forty years; the nation prepared before he came to
+the throne and his whole reign has been given to making
+sure that he was ready. It's a robber's raid. Of course,
+the German case has been put so as to direct attention
+from this bald fact.</p>
+
+<p>Now the philosophical pacifists&mdash;I don't mean the cowardly,
+yellow-dog ones&mdash;have never quite seen the war
+in this aspect. They regard it as a dispute about something&mdash;about
+trade, about more seaboard, about this or
+that, whereas it is only a robber's adventure. They want
+other people's property. They want money, treasure,
+land, indemnities, minerals, raw materials; and they set
+out to take them.</p>
+
+<p>Now confusing this character of the war with some sort
+of rational dispute about something, the pacifists try in
+every way to stop it, so that the &quot;issue&quot; may be reasoned
+out, debated, discussed, negotiated. Surely the President
+tried to reach peace&mdash;tried as hard and as long as the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-338" id="page2-338"></a>[pg II-338]</span>
+people would allow him. The Germans argued away
+time with him while they got their submarine fleet built.
+Then they carried out the programme they had always
+had in mind and had never thought of abandoning. Now
+they wish to gain more time, to slacken the efforts of the
+Allies, if possible to separate them by asking for
+&quot;discussions&quot;&mdash;peace by &quot;negotiation.&quot; When you are about
+to kill the robber, he cries out, &quot;For God's sake,
+let's discuss the question between us. We can come to
+terms.&quot;&mdash;Now here's where the danger comes from the
+philosophical pacifist&mdash;from any man who does not clearly
+understand the nature of the war and of the enemy. To
+discuss the difference between us is so very reasonable in
+sound&mdash;so very reasonable in fact if there were a discussable
+difference. It is a programme that would always be
+in order except with a burglar or a robber.</p>
+
+<p>The yet imperfect understanding of the war and of the
+nature of the German in the United States, especially at
+Washington&mdash;more especially in the White House&mdash;herein
+lies the danger.</p>
+
+<p>... This little rest down here is a success. The
+weather is a disappointment&mdash;windy and cold. But to
+be away from London and away from folks&mdash;that's much.
+Shoecraft is very good<a name="FNanchor_66_66" id="FNanchor_66_66" /><a href="#Footnote_66_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a>. He sends us next to nothing.
+Almost all we've got is an invitation to lunch with Their
+Majesties and they've been good enough to put that off.
+It's a far-off country, very fine, I'm sure in summer, and
+with most beautiful golf links. The hill is now so windy
+that no sane man can play there.</p>
+
+<p>We're enjoying the mere quiet. And your mother is
+quite well again.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-339" id="page2-339"></a>[pg II-339]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+To Mrs. Charles G. Loring<br />
+St. Ives, Cornwall,<br />
+March 10, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR KITTY:</p>
+
+<p>A week here. No news. Shoecraft says we've missed
+nothing in London. What we came for we've got: your
+mother's quite well. She climbs these high hills quite
+spryly. We've had a remarkable week in this respect&mdash;we
+haven't carried on a conversation with any human being
+but ourselves. I don't think any such thing has ever
+happened before. I can stand a week, perhaps a fortnight
+of this now. But I don't care for it for any long period.
+At the bottom of this high and steep hill is the quaintest
+little town I ever saw. There are some streets so narrow
+that when a donkey cart comes along the urchins all have
+to run to the next corner or into doors. There is no sidewalk,
+of course; and the donkey cart takes the whole
+room between the houses. Artists take to the town, and
+they have funny little studios down by the water front in
+tiny houses built of stone in pieces big enough to construct
+a tidewater front. Imagine stone walls made of stone,
+each weighing tons, built into little houses about as big as
+your little back garden! There's one fellow here (an
+artist) whom I used to know in New York, so small has
+the world become!</p>
+
+<p>On another hill behind us is a triangular stone monument
+to John Knill. He was once mayor of the town.
+When he died in 1782, he left money to the town. If the
+town is to keep the money (as it has) the Mayor must once
+in every five years form a procession and march up to this
+monument. There ten girls, natives of the town, and
+two widows must dance around the monument to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-340" id="page2-340"></a>[pg II-340]</span>
+playing of a fiddle and a drum, the girls dressed in white.
+This ceremony has gone on, once in five years, all this
+time and the town has old Knill's money!</p>
+
+<p>Your mother and I&mdash;though we are neither girls nor
+widows&mdash;danced around it this morning, wondering what
+sort of curmudgeon old John Knill was.</p>
+
+<p>Don't you see how easily we fall into an idle mood?
+Well, here's a photograph of little Alice looking up at
+me from the table where I write&mdash;a good, sweet face she
+has.</p>
+
+<p>And you'll never get another letter from me in a time
+and from a place whereof there is so little to tell.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately, dear Kitty,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+To Ralph W. Page<br />
+Tregenna Castle Hotel,<br />
+St. Ives, Cornwall,<br />
+March 12, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR RALPH:</p>
+
+<p>Arthur has sent me Gardiner's 37-page sketch of
+American-British Concords and Discords&mdash;a remarkable
+sketch; and he has reminded me that your summer plan
+is to elaborate (into a popular style) your sketch of the
+same subject. You and Gardiner went over the same
+ground, each in a very good fashion. That's a fascinating
+task, and it opens up a wholly new vista of our History
+and of Anglo-Saxon, democratic history. Much lies
+ahead of that. And all this puts it in my mind to write
+you a little discourse on <i>style</i>. Gardiner has no style.
+He put his facts down much as he would have noted on a
+blue print the facts about an engineering project that he
+sketched. The style of your article, which has much to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-341" id="page2-341"></a>[pg II-341]</span>
+be said for it as a magazine article, is not the best style
+for a book.</p>
+
+<p>Now, this whole question of style&mdash;well, it's the gist
+of good writing. There's no really effective writing without
+it. Especially is this true of historical writing. Look
+at X Y Z's writings. He knows his American history
+and has written much on it. He's written it as an Ohio
+blacksmith shoes a horse&mdash;not a touch of literary value
+in it all; all dry as dust&mdash;as dry as old Bancroft.</p>
+
+<p>Style is good breeding&mdash;and art&mdash;in writing. It consists
+of the arrangement of your matter, first; then, more,
+of the gait; the manner and the manners of your expressing
+it. Work every group of facts, naturally and logically
+grouped to begin with, into a climax. Work every group
+up as a sculptor works out his idea or a painter, each
+group complete in itself. Throw out any superfluous
+facts or any merely minor facts that prevent the orderly
+working up of the group&mdash;that prevent or mar the effect
+you wish to present.</p>
+
+<p>Then, when you've got a group thus presented, go over
+what you've made of it, to make sure you've used your
+material and its arrangement to the best effect, taking
+away merely extraneous or superfluous or distracting facts,
+here and there adding concrete illustrations&mdash;putting in
+a convincing detail here, and there a touch of colour.</p>
+
+<p>Then go over it for your vocabulary. See that you use
+no word in a different meaning than it was used 100 years
+ago and will be used 100 years hence. You wish to use
+only the permanent words&mdash;words, too, that will be understood
+to carry the same meaning to English readers in
+every part of the world. Your vocabulary must be chosen
+from the permanent, solid, stable parts of the language.</p>
+
+<p>Then see that no sentence contains a hint of obscurity.</p>
+
+<p>Then go over the words you use to see if they be the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-342" id="page2-342"></a>[pg II-342]</span>
+best. Don't fall into merely current phrases. If you
+have a long word, see if a native short one can be put in
+its place which will be more natural and stronger. Avoid
+a Latin vocabulary and use a plain English one&mdash;short
+words instead of long ones.</p>
+
+<p>Most of all, use <i>idioms</i>&mdash;English idioms of force. Say
+an agreement was &quot;come to.&quot; Don't say it was &quot;consummated.&quot;
+For the difference between idioms and a
+Latin style, compare Lincoln with George Washington.
+One's always interesting and convincing. The other is
+dull in spite of all his good sense. How most folk do
+misuse and waste words!</p>
+
+<p>Freeman went too far in his use of one-syllable words.
+It became an affectation. But he is the only man I can
+think of that ever did go too far in that direction. X&mdash;would
+have written a great history if he had had the
+natural use of idioms. As it is, he has good sense and no
+style; and his book isn't half so interesting as it would
+have been if he had some style&mdash;some proper value of
+short, clear-cut words that mean only one thing and that
+leave no vagueness.</p>
+
+<p>You'll get a good style if you practice it. It is in your
+blood and temperament and way of saying things. But
+it's a high art and must be laboriously cultivated.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours affectionately,<br />
+<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>This glimpse of a changing and chastened England
+appears in a letter of this period:</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The disposition shown by an endless number of such
+incidents is something more than a disposition of gratitude
+of a people helped when they are hard pressed. All these
+things show the changed and changing Englishman. It
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-343" id="page2-343"></a>[pg II-343]</span>
+has already come to him that he may be weaker than he
+had thought himself and that he may need friends more
+than he had once imagined; and, if he must have helpers
+and friends, he'd rather have his own kinsmen. He's a
+queer &quot;cuss,&quot; this Englishman. But he isn't a liar nor
+a coward nor any sort of &quot;a yellow dog.&quot; He's true, and
+he never runs&mdash;a possible hero any day, and, when heroic,
+modest and quiet and graceful. The trouble with him
+has been that he got great world power too easily. In the
+times when he exploited the world for his own enrichment,
+there were no other successful exploiters. It became an
+easy game to him. He organized sea traffic and sea
+power. Of course he became rich&mdash;far, far richer than
+anybody else, and, therefore, content with himself. He
+has, therefore, kept much of his medi&aelig;val impedimenta,
+his dukes and marquesses and all that they imply&mdash;his
+outworn ceremonies and his medi&aelig;val disregard of his
+social inferiors. Nothing is well done in this Kingdom
+for the big public, but only for the classes. The railway
+stations have no warm waiting rooms. The people pace
+the platform till the train comes, and milord sits snugly
+wrapt up in his carriage till his footman announces the
+approach of the train. And occasional discontent is relieved
+by emigration to the Colonies. If any man becomes
+weary of his restrictions he may go to Australia
+and become a gentleman. The remarkable loyalty of
+the Colonies has in it something of a servant's devotion
+to his old master.</p>
+
+<p>Now this trying time of war and the threat and danger
+of extinction are bringing&mdash;have in fact already brought&mdash;the
+conviction that many changes must come. The
+first sensible talk about popular education ever heard here
+is just now beginning. Many a gentleman has made up
+his mind to try to do with less than seventeen servants
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-344" id="page2-344"></a>[pg II-344]</span>
+for the rest of his life since he now <i>has</i> to do with less.
+Privilege, on which so large a part of life here rests, is already
+pretty well shot to pieces. A lot of old baggage
+will never be recovered after this war: that's certain.
+During a little after-dinner speech in a club not long ago
+I indulged in a pleasantry about excessive impedimenta.
+Lord Derby, Minister of War and a bluff and honest
+aristocrat, sat near me and he whispered to me&mdash;&quot;That's
+me.&quot; &quot;Yes,&quot; I said, &quot;that's you,&quot; and the group about
+us made merry at the jest. The meaning of this is, they
+now joke about what was the most solemn thing in life
+three years ago.</p>
+
+<p>None of this conveys the idea I am trying to explain&mdash;the
+change in the English point of view and outlook&mdash;a
+half century's change in less than three years, radical and
+fundamental change, too. The mother of the Duke of X
+came to see me this afternoon, hobbling on her sticks and
+feeble, to tell me of a radiant letter she had received from
+her granddaughter who has been in Washington visiting the
+Spring Rices. &quot;It's all very wonderful,&quot; said the venerable
+lady, &quot;and my granddaughter actually heard the President
+make a speech!&quot; Now, knowing this lady and
+knowing her son, the Duke, and knowing how this girl,
+his daughter, has been brought up, I dare swear that three
+years ago not one of them would have crossed the street
+to hear any President that ever lived. They've simply
+become different people. They were very genuine before.
+They are very genuine now.</p>
+
+<p>It is this steadfastness in them that gives me sound hope
+for the future. They don't forget sympathy or help or
+friendship. Our going into the war has eliminated the
+Japanese question. It has shifted the virtual control of
+the world to English-speaking peoples. It will bring into
+the best European minds the American ideal of service.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-345" id="page2-345"></a>[pg II-345]</span>
+It will, in fact, give us the lead and make the English in
+the long run our willing followers and allies. I don't
+mean that we shall always have plain sailing. But I do
+mean that the direction of events for the next fifty or
+one hundred years has now been determined.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2362" id="i2362" />
+<a href="images/2362.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2362.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>Lord Robert Cecil, Minister of Blockade, 1916-18,<br />
+Assistant Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1918</b>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2363" id="i2363" />
+<a href="images/2363.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2363.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>General John J. Pershing,<br />
+Commander-in-Chief of the American
+Expeditionary Force in the Great War</b>
+</div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Yet Page found one stolid opposition to his attempts
+to establish the friendliest relations between the two peoples.
+That offish attitude of the Washington Administration,
+to which reference has already been made, did not
+soften with the progress of events. Another experience
+now again brought out President Wilson's coldness toward
+his allies. About this time many rather queer Americans&mdash;some
+of the &quot;international&quot; breed&mdash;were coming to England
+on more or less official missions. Page was somewhat
+humiliated by these excursions; he knew that his country
+possessed an almost unlimited supply of vivid speakers,
+filled with zeal for the allied cause, whose influence, if
+they could be induced to cross the Atlantic, would put
+new spirit into the British. The idea of having a number
+of distinguished Americans come to England and tell the
+British public about the United States and especially
+about the American preparations for war, was one that
+now occupied his thoughts. In June, 1917, he wrote his
+old friend Dr. Wallace Buttrick, extending an invitation
+to visit Great Britain as a guest of the British Government.
+Dr. Buttrick made a great success; his speeches drew
+large crowds and proved a source of inspiration to the
+British masses. So successful were they, indeed, that the
+British Government desired that other Americans of
+similar type should come and spread the message. In
+November, therefore, Dr. Buttrick returned to the
+United States for the purpose of organizing such a committee.
+Among the eminent Americans whom he persuaded
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-346" id="page2-346"></a>[pg II-346]</span>
+to give several months of their time to this work
+of heartening our British allies were Mr. George E. Vincent,
+President of the Rockefeller Foundation, Mr. Harry Pratt
+Judson, President of Chicago University, Mr. Charles
+H. Van Hise, President of the University of Wisconsin,
+Mr. Edwin A. Alderman, President of the University of
+Virginia, Mr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, and Bishop Lawrence
+of Massachusetts. It was certainly a distinguished
+group, but it was the gentleman selected to be its head
+that gave it almost transcendent importance in the eyes
+of the British Government. This was ex-President William
+H. Taft. The British lay greater emphasis upon
+official rank than do Americans, and the fact that an ex-President
+of the United States was to head this delegation
+made it almost an historic event. Mr. Taft was exceedingly
+busy, but he expressed his willingness to give up all
+his engagements for several months and to devote his
+energies to enlightening the British public about America
+and its purposes in the war. An official invitation was
+sent him from London and accepted.</p>
+
+<p>Inasmuch as Mr. Taft was an ex-President and a
+representative of the political party opposed to the one
+in power, he thought it only courteous that he call upon
+Mr. Wilson, explain the purpose of his mission, and obtain
+his approval. He therefore had an interview with the
+President at the White House; the date was December 12,
+1917. As soon as Mr. Wilson heard of the proposed visit
+to Great Britain he showed signs of irritation. He at
+once declared that it met with his strongest disapproval.
+When Mr. Taft remarked that the result of such an enterprise
+would be to draw Great Britain and the United States
+more closely together, Mr. Wilson replied that he seriously
+questioned the desirability of drawing the two countries
+any more closely together than they already were. He
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-347" id="page2-347"></a>[pg II-347]</span>
+was opposed to putting the United States in a position of
+seeming in any way to be involved with British policy.
+There were divergencies of purpose, he said, and there were
+features of the British policy in this war of which he heartily
+disapproved. The motives of the United States in this
+war, the President continued, &quot;were unselfish, but the
+motives of Great Britain seemed to him to be of a less
+unselfish character.&quot; Mr. Wilson cited the treaty between
+Great Britain and Italy as a sample of British
+statesmanship which he regarded as proving this contention.
+The President's reference to this Italian treaty
+has considerable historic value; there has been much discussion
+as to when the President first learned of its
+existence, but it is apparent from this conversation with
+ex-President Taft that he must have known about it
+on December 12, 1917, for President Wilson based his
+criticism of British policy largely upon this Italian
+convention<a name="FNanchor_67_67" id="FNanchor_67_67" /><a href="#Footnote_67_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>The President showed more and more feeling about the
+matter as the discussion continued. &quot;There are too many
+Englishmen,&quot; he said, &quot;in this country and in Washington
+now and I have asked the British Ambassador to have
+some of them sent home.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wilson referred to the jealousy of France at the
+close relations which were apparently developing between
+Great Britain and the United States. This was another
+reason, he thought, why it was unwise to make the bonds
+between them any tighter. He also called Mr. Taft's
+attention to the fact that there were certain elements in
+the United States which were opposed to Great Britain&mdash;this
+evidently being a reference to the Germans and the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-348" id="page2-348"></a>[pg II-348]</span>
+Irish&mdash;and he therefore believed that any conspicuous
+attempts to increase the friendliness of the two countries
+for each other would arouse antagonism and resentment.</p>
+
+<p>As Mr. Taft was leaving he informed Mr. Wilson that
+the plan for his visit and that of the other speakers had
+originated with the American Ambassador to Great Britain.
+This, however, did not improve the President's
+temper.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Page,&quot; said the President, &quot;is really an Englishman
+and I have to discount whatever he says about the situation
+in Great Britain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And then he added, &quot;I think you ought not to go, and
+the same applies to the other members of the party. I
+would like you to make my attitude on this question known
+to those having the matter in charge.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Despite this rebuff Dr. Buttrick and Mr. Taft were
+reluctant to give up the plan. An appeal was therefore
+made to Colonel House. Colonel House at once said
+that the proposed visit was an excellent thing and that
+he would make a personal appeal to Mr. Wilson in the
+hope of changing his mind. A few days afterward Colonel
+House called up Dr. Buttrick and informed him that
+he had not succeeded. &quot;I am sorry,&quot; wrote Colonel
+House to Page, &quot;that the Buttrick speaking programme
+has turned out as it has. The President was decidedly
+opposed to it and referred to it with some feeling.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_64_64" id="Footnote_64_64" /><a href="#FNanchor_64_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> August 1, 1917, Pope Benedict XV sent a letter to the
+Powers urging them to bring the war to an end and outlining possible
+terms of settlement. On August 29th President Wilson sent his historic
+reply. This declared, in memorable language, that the Hohenzollern
+dynasty was unworthy of confidence and that the United States would have
+no negotiations with its representatives. It inferentially took the
+stand that the Kaiser must abdicate, or be deposed, and the German
+autocracy destroyed, as part of the conditions of peace.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_65_65" id="Footnote_65_65" /><a href="#FNanchor_65_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> On November 29, 1917, the London <i>Daily Telegraph</i>
+published a letter from the Marquis of Lansdowne, which declared that
+the war had lasted too long and suggested that the British restate their
+war aims. This letter was severely condemned by the British press and by
+practically all representative British statesmen. It produced a most
+lamentable impression in the United States also.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_66_66" id="Footnote_66_66" /><a href="#FNanchor_66_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Eugene C. Shoecraft, the Ambassador's secretary.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_67_67" id="Footnote_67_67" /><a href="#FNanchor_67_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> As related in Chapter XXII, page 267, President Wilson was
+informed of the so-called &quot;secret treaties&quot; by Mr. Balfour, in the
+course of his memorable visit to the White House.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-349" id="page2-349"></a>[pg II-349]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV" />CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+<h3>GETTING THE AMERICAN TROOPS TO FRANCE</h3>
+
+
+<p>A group of letters, written at this time, touch upon
+a variety of topics which were then engaging the
+interest of all countries:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+London, January 19, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>While your letter is still fresh in my mind I dictate
+the following in answer to your question about Palestine.</p>
+
+<p>It has not been settled&mdash;and cannot be, I fancy, until
+the Peace Conference&mdash;precisely what the British will do
+with Palestine, but I have what I think is a correct idea
+of their general attitude on the subject. First, of course,
+they do not propose to allow it to go back into Turkish
+hands; and the same can be said also of Armenia and possibly
+of Mesopotamia. Their idea of the future of Palestine
+is that whoever shall manage the country, or however
+it shall be managed, the Jews shall have the same chance
+as anybody else. Of course that's quite an advance for
+the Jews there, but their idea is not that the Jews should
+have command of other populations there or control over
+them&mdash;not in the least. My guess at the English wish,
+which I have every reason to believe is the right guess,
+is that they would wish to have Palestine internationalized,
+whatever that means. That is to say, that it
+should have control of its own local affairs and be a free
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-350" id="page2-350"></a>[pg II-350]</span>
+country but that some great Power, or number of Powers,
+should see to it that none of the races that live there should
+be allowed to impose upon the other races. I don't know
+just how such a guarantee can be given by the great
+Powers or such a responsibility assumed except by an
+agreement among two or three of them, or barely possibly
+by the English keeping control themselves; but the control
+by the English after the war of the former German
+colonies will put such a large task on them that they will
+not be particularly eager to extend the area of their
+responsibility elsewhere. Of course a difficult problem will
+come up also about Constantinople and the Dardanelles.
+The Dardanelles must be internationalized.</p>
+
+<p>I have never been able to consider the Zionist movement
+seriously. It is a mere religious sentiment which
+will express itself in action by very few people. I have
+asked a number of Jews at various times who are in favour
+of the Zionist movement if they themselves are going
+there. They always say no. The movement, therefore,
+has fixed itself in my mind as a Jewish movement in which
+no Jew that you can lay your hands on will ever take part
+but who wants other Jews to take part in it. Of course
+there might be a flocking to Palestine of Jews from Russia
+and the adjoining countries where they are not happy,
+but I think the thing is chiefly a sentiment and nothing
+else. Morgenthau<a name="FNanchor_68_68" id="FNanchor_68_68" /><a href="#Footnote_68_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> is dead right. I agree with him <i>in
+toto</i>. I do not think anybody in the United States need
+be the least concerned about the Zionist movement because
+there isn't a single Jew in our country such a fool
+as to go to Palestine when he can stay in the United States.
+The whole thing is a sentimental, religious, more or less
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-351" id="page2-351"></a>[pg II-351]</span>
+unnatural and fantastic idea and I don't think will ever
+trouble so practical a people as we and our Jews are.</p></div>
+
+<p>The following memorandum is dated February 10, 1918:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>General Bliss<a name="FNanchor_69_69" id="FNanchor_69_69" /><a href="#Footnote_69_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> has made a profound and the best possible
+impression here by his wisdom and his tact. The
+British have a deep respect for him and for his opinions,
+and in inspiring and keeping high confidence in us he is
+worth an army in himself. I have seen much of him and
+found out a good deal about his methods. He is simplicity
+and directness itself. Although he is as active and
+energetic as a boy, he spends some time by himself to
+think things out and even to say them to himself to see
+how his conclusions strike the ear as well as the mind.
+He has been staying here at the house of one of our resident
+officers. At times he goes to his room and sits long
+by the fire and argues his point&mdash;out loud&mdash;oblivious to
+everything else. More than once when he was so engaged
+one of his officers has knocked at the door and gone
+in and laid telegrams on the table beside him and gone out
+without his having known of the officer's entrance. Then
+he comes out and tries his conclusion on someone who
+enjoys his confidence. And then he stands by it and when
+the time comes delivers it slowly and with precision; and
+there he is; and those who hear him see that he has thought
+the matter out on all sides and finally.</p>
+
+<p>Our various establishments in London have now become
+big&mdash;the Embassy proper, the Naval and Army Headquarters,
+the Red Cross, the War Trade Board's representatives,
+and now (forthwith) the Shipping Board, besides
+Mr. Crosby of the Treasury. The volume of work is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-352" id="page2-352"></a>[pg II-352]</span>
+enormous and it goes smoothly, except for the somewhat
+halting Army Headquarters, the high personnel of which
+is now undergoing a change; and that will now be all right.
+I regularly make the rounds of all the Government Departments
+with which we deal to learn if they find our men
+and methods effective, and the rounds of all our centres
+of activity to find whether there be any friction with
+the British The whole machine moves very well. For
+neither side hesitates to come to me whenever they strike
+even small snags. All our people are at work on serious
+tasks and (so far as I know) there are now none of those
+despicable creatures here who used during our neutrality
+days to come from the United States on peace errands
+and what-not to spy on the Embassy and me (their inquiries
+and their correspondence were catalogued by the
+police). I have been amazed at the activity of some of
+them whose doings I have since been informed of.</p>
+
+<p>We now pay this tribute to the submarines&mdash;that we
+have entered the period of compulsory rations. There is
+enough to eat in spite of the food that has gone to feed
+the fishes. But no machinery of distribution to a whole
+population can be uniformly effective. The British
+worker with his hands is a greedy feeder and a sturdy
+growler and there will be trouble. But I know no reason
+to apprehend serious trouble.</p>
+
+<p>The utter break-up of Russia and the German present
+occupation of so much of the Empire as she wants have
+had a contrary effect on two sections of opinion here, as I
+interpret the British mind. On the undoubtedly enormously
+dominant section of opinion these events have
+only stiffened resolution. They say that Germany now
+must be whipped to a finish. Else she will have doubled
+her empire and will hold the peoples of her new territory
+as vassals without regard to their wishes and the war lord
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-353" id="page2-353"></a>[pg II-353]</span>
+caste will be more firmly seated than ever before. If her
+armies be literally whipped she'll have to submit to the
+Allies' terms, which will dislodge her from overlordship over
+these new unwilling subjects&mdash;and she can be dislodged
+in no other way. This probably means a long war, now
+that after a time she can get raw materials for war later
+and food from Rumania and the Ukraine, etc. This will
+mean a fight in France and Belgium till a decisive victory
+is won and the present exultant German will is broken.</p>
+
+<p>The minority section of public opinion&mdash;as I judge a
+small minority&mdash;has the feeling that such an out-and-out
+military victory cannot be won or is not worth the price;
+and that the enemies of Germany, allowing her to keep her
+Eastern accretions, must make the best terms they can
+in the East; that there's no use in running the risk of
+Italy's defeat and defection before some sort of bargain
+could be made about Belgium, Alsace-Lorraine, and Serbia.
+Of course this plan would leave the German warlordship
+intact and would bring no sort of assurance of a prolonged
+peace. It would, too, leave European Russia at least to
+German mercy, and would leave the Baltic and the Black
+Seas practically wholly under German influence. As for
+the people of Russia, there seems small chance for them
+in this second contingency. The only way to save them
+is to win a decisive victory.</p>
+
+<p>As matters stand to-day Lord Lansdowne and his
+friends (how numerous they are nobody knows) are the
+loudest spokesmen for such a peace as can be made. But
+it is talked much of in Asquith circles that the time may
+come when this policy will be led by Mr. Asquith, in a
+form somewhat modified from the Lansdowne formula.
+Mr. Asquith has up to this time patriotically supported
+the government and he himself has said nothing in public
+which could warrant linking his name with an early peace-seeking
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-354" id="page2-354"></a>[pg II-354]</span>
+policy. But his friends openly and incessantly
+predict that he will, at a favourable moment, take this
+cue. I myself can hardly believe it. Political victory
+in Great Britain doesn't now lie in that direction.</p>
+
+<p>The dominant section of opinion is much grieved at
+Russia's surrender, but they refuse to be discouraged by it.
+They recall how Napoleon overran most of Europe, and the
+French held practically none of his conquests after his fall.</p>
+
+<p>Such real political danger as exists here&mdash;if any exists,
+of which I am not quite sure&mdash;comes not only now mainly
+of this split in public opinion but also and to a greater
+degree from the personal enemies of the present government.
+Lloyd George is kept in power because he is the
+most energetic man in sight&mdash;by far. Many who support
+him do not like him nor trust him-except that nobody
+doubts his supreme earnestness to win the war. On all
+other subjects he has enemies of old and he makes new
+ones. His intense and superb energy has saved him in
+two notable crises. His dismissal of Sir William Robertson<a name="FNanchor_70_70" id="FNanchor_70_70" /><a href="#Footnote_70_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a>
+has been accepted in the interest of greater unity of
+military control, but it was a dangerous rapids that he
+shot, for he didn't do it tactfully. Yet there's a certain
+danger to the present powers in the feeling that some
+of them are wearing out. Parliament itself&mdash;an old one
+now&mdash;is thought to have gone stale. Bonar Law is over-worked
+and tired; Balfour is often said to be too philosophical
+and languid; but, when this feeling seems in danger
+of taking definite shape, he makes a clearer statement than
+anybody else and catches on his feet. The man of new
+energy, not yet fagged, is Geddes<a name="FNanchor_71_71" id="FNanchor_71_71" /><a href="#Footnote_71_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a>, whose frankness carries
+conviction.</p></div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-355" id="page2-355"></a>[pg II-355]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+London, March 17, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>The rather impatient and unappreciative remarks made
+by the Prime Minister before a large meeting of preachers
+of the &quot;free&quot; churches about a League of Nations reminds
+me to write you about the state of British opinion on that
+subject. What Lloyd George said to these preachers is
+regrettable because it showed a certain impatience of
+mind from which he sometimes suffers; but it is only fair
+to him to say that his remarks that day did not express a
+settled opinion. For on more than one previous occasion
+he has spoken of the subject in a wholly different tone&mdash;much
+more appreciatively. On that particular day he had
+in mind only the overwhelming necessity to win the war&mdash;other
+things, <i>all</i> other things must wait. In a way this is
+his constant mood&mdash;the mood to make everybody feel
+that the only present duty is to win the war. He has
+been accused of almost every defect in the calendar except
+of slackness about the war. Nobody has ever doubted
+his earnestness nor his energy about <i>that</i>. And the universal
+confidence in his energy and earnestness is what
+keeps him in office. Nobody sees any other man who can
+push and inspire as well as he does. It would be a mistake,
+therefore, to pay too much heed to any particular
+utterance of this electrical creature of moods, on any subject.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he hasn't thought out the project of a
+league to enforce peace further than to see the difficulties.
+He sees that such a league might mean, in theory
+at least, the giving over in some possible crisis the command
+of the British Fleet to an officer of some other nationality.
+That's unthinkable to any red-blooded son of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-356" id="page2-356"></a>[pg II-356]</span>
+these islands. Seeing a theoretical possibility even of
+raising such a question, the British mind stops and refuses
+to go further&mdash;refuses in most cases even to inquire seriously
+whether any such contingency is ever likely to come.</p>
+
+<p>The British Grand Fleet, in fact, is a subject that stands
+alone in power and value and in difficulties. It classifies
+itself with nothing else. Since over and over again it has
+saved these islands from invasion when nothing else could
+have saved them and since during this war in particular
+it has saved the world from German conquest&mdash;as every
+Englishman believes&mdash;it lies in their reverence and their
+gratitude and their abiding convictions as a necessary
+and perpetual shield so long as Great Britain shall endure.
+If the Germans are thrashed to a frazzle (and we haven't
+altogether done that yet) and we set about putting the
+world in order, when we come to discuss Disarmament,
+the British Fleet will be the most difficult item in the world
+to dispose of. It is not only a Fact, with a great and saving
+history, it is also a sacred Tradition and an Article of Faith.</p>
+
+<p>The first reason, therefore, why the British general mind
+has not firmly got hold on a league is the instinctive fear
+that the formation of any league may in some conceivable
+way affect the Grand Fleet. Another reason is the general
+inability of a somewhat slow public opinion to take hold
+on more than one subject at a time or more than one
+urgent part of one subject. The One Subject, of course,
+is winning the war. Since everything else depends on that,
+everything else must wait on that.</p>
+
+<p>The League, therefore, has not taken hold on the public
+imagination here as it has in the United States. The
+large mass of the people have not thought seriously about
+it: it has not been strongly and persistently presented to
+the mass of the people. There is no popular or general
+organization to promote it. There is even, here and there,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-357" id="page2-357"></a>[pg II-357]</span>
+condemnation of the idea. The (London) <i>Morning Post</i>,
+for example, goes out of its way once in a while to show
+the wickedness of the idea because, so it argues, it will involve
+the sacrifice, more or less, of nationality. But the
+<i>Morning Post</i> is impervious to new ideas and is above all
+things critical in its activities and very seldom constructive.
+The typical Tory mind in general sees no good in the
+idea. The typical Tory mind is the insular mind.</p>
+
+<p>On the other hand, the League idea is understood as a
+necessity and heartily approved by two powerful sections
+of public opinion&mdash;(1) the group of public men who have
+given attention to it, such as Bryce, Lord Robert Cecil,
+and the like, and (2) some of the best and strongest leaders
+of Labour. There is good reason to hope that whenever
+a fight and an agitation is made for a League these two
+sections of public opinion will win; but an agitation and a
+fight must come. Lord Bryce, in the intervals of his work
+as chairman of a committee to make a plan for the
+reorganization of the House of Lords, which, he remarked to
+me the other day, &quot;involves as much labour as a Government
+Department,&quot; has fits of impatience about pushing
+a campaign for a league, and so have a few other men.
+They ask me if it be not possible to have good American
+public speakers come here&mdash;privately, of course, and in
+no way connected with our Government nor speaking for
+it&mdash;to explain the American movement for a League in
+order to arouse a public sentiment on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>Thus the case stands at present.</p>
+
+<p>Truth and error alike and odd admixtures of them come
+in waves over this censored land where one can seldom
+determine what is true, before the event, from the
+newspapers. &quot;News&quot; travels by word of mouth, and
+information that one can depend on is got by personal
+inquiry from sources that can be trusted.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-358" id="page2-358"></a>[pg II-358]</span>
+<p>There is a curious wave of fear just now about what
+Labour may do, and the common gossip has it that there
+is grave danger in the situation. I can find no basis for
+such a fear. I have talked with labour leaders and I
+have talked with members of the government who know
+most about the subject. There is not a satisfactory
+situation&mdash;there has not been since the war began. There has
+been a continuous series of labour &quot;crises,&quot; and there have
+been a good many embarrassing strikes, all of which have
+first been hushed up and settled&mdash;at least postponed.
+One cause of continuous trouble has been the notion held
+by the Unions, sometimes right and sometimes wrong,
+that the employers were making abnormal profits and
+that they were not getting their due share. There have
+been and are also other causes of trouble. It was a continuous
+quarrel even in peace times. But I can find no
+especial cause of fear now. Many of the Unions have had
+such advances of wages that the Government has been
+severely criticized for giving in. Just lately a large wing
+of the Labour Party put forth its war aims which&mdash;with
+relatively unimportant exceptions&mdash;coincide with the best
+declarations made by the Government's own spokesmen.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, no prudent man would venture to make
+dogmatic predictions. There have been times when for
+brief intervals any one would have been tempted to fear
+that these quarrels might cause an unsatisfactory conclusion
+of the war. But the undoubted patriotism of the
+British workman has every time saved the situation.
+While a danger point does lie here, there is no reason to be
+more fearful now than at any preceding time when no
+especial trouble was brewing. This wave of gossip and
+fear has no right to sweep over the country now.</p>
+
+<p>Labour hopes and expects and is preparing to win the
+next General Election&mdash;whether with good reason or not
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-359" id="page2-359"></a>[pg II-359]</span>
+I cannot guess. But most men expect it to win the
+Government at some time&mdash;most of them <i>after</i> the war.
+I recall that Lord Grey once said to me, before the war
+began, that a general political success of the Labour Party
+was soon to be expected.</p>
+
+<p>Another wave which, I hear, has swept over Rome as
+well as London is a wave of early peace expectation. The
+British newspapers have lately been encouraging this by
+mysterious phrases. Some men here of good sense and
+sound judgment think that this is the result of the so-called
+German &quot;peace offensive,&quot; which makes the present
+the most dangerous period of the war.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+W.H.P.<br />
+<br />
+<i>To David F. Houston</i><a name="FNanchor_72_72" id="FNanchor_72_72" /><a href="#Footnote_72_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a><br />
+<br />
+London, March 23, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR HOUSTON:</p>
+
+<p>It is very kind of you indeed to write so generously
+about the British visitors who are invading our sacred
+premises, such as the Archbishop of York, and it is good
+to hear from you anyhow about any subject and I needn't
+say that it is quite a rare experience also. I wish you
+would take a little of your abundant leisure and devote it
+to good letters to me.</p>
+
+<p>And in some one of your letters tell me this.&mdash;The
+British send over men of this class that you have written
+about to see us, but they invite over here&mdash;and we permit
+to come&mdash;cranks on prohibition, experts in the investigation
+of crime, short-haired women who wish to see how
+British babies are reared, peace cranks and freaks of other
+kinds<a name="FNanchor_73_73" id="FNanchor_73_73" /><a href="#Footnote_73_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a>. Our Government apparently won't let plain,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-360" id="page2-360"></a>[pg II-360]</span>
+honest, normal civilians come over, but if a fellow comes
+along who wants to investigate some monstrosity then
+one half of the Senate, one half of the House of Representatives,
+and a number of the executive offices of the Government
+give him the most cordial letters. Now there are
+many things, of course, that I don't know, but it has been
+my fate to have a pretty extensive acquaintance with
+cranks of every description in the United States. I
+don't think there is any breed of them that didn't haunt
+my office while I was an editor. Now I am surely punished
+for all my past sins by having those fellows descend
+on me here. I know them, nearly all, from past experience
+and now just for the sake of keeping the world as
+quiet as possible I have to give them time here far out of
+proportion to their value.</p>
+
+<p>Now, out of your great wisdom, I wish you would explain
+to me why the deuce we let all this crew come over
+here instead of sending a shipload of perfectly normal,
+dignified, and right-minded gentlemen. These thug reformers!&mdash;Baker
+will be here in a day or two and if I can
+remember it I am going to suggest to him that he round
+them all up and put them in the trenches in France where
+those of them who have so far escaped the gallows ought
+to be put.</p>
+
+<p>I am much obliged to have the illuminating statement
+about our crops. I am going to show it to certain gentlemen
+here who will be much cheered by it. By gracious,
+you ought to hear their appreciation of what we are doing!
+We are not doing it for the sake of their appreciation, but
+if we were out to win it we could not do it better. Down
+at bottom the Englishman is a good fellow. He has his
+faults but he doesn't get tired and he doesn't suffer spasms
+of emotion.</p>
+
+<p>Give my love to Mrs. Houston, and do sit down and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-361" id="page2-361"></a>[pg II-361]</span>
+write me a good long letter&mdash;a whole series of them, in
+fact.</p>
+
+<p>Believe me, always most heartily yours,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+WALTER HINES PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2380" id="i2380" />
+<a href="images/2380.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2380.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>Lord Robert Cecil, Minister of Blockade, 1916-18,<br />
+Assistant Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1918</b>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<a name="i2381" id="i2381" />
+<a href="images/2381.jpg"><img src=
+"images/2381.jpg" width="50%" alt="" title="" /></a><br />
+<b>A silver model of the <i>Mayflower</i>,<br />
+the farewell gift of the Plymouth Council to Mr. Page</b>
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Frank L. Polk</i><br />
+<br />
+London, March 22, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. POLK:</p>
+
+<p>You are good enough to mention the fact that the Embassy
+has some sort of grievance against the Department.
+Of course it has, and you are, possibly, the only man that
+can remove it. It is this: You don't come here to see the
+war and this government and these people who are again
+saving the world as we are now saving them. I thank
+Heaven and the Administration for Secretary Baker's
+visit. It is a dramatic moment in the history of the race,
+of democracy, and of the world. The State Department
+has the duty to deal with foreign affairs&mdash;the especial
+duty&mdash;and yet no man in the State Department has been
+here since the war began. This doesn't look pretty and
+it won't look pretty when the much over-worked &quot;future
+historian&quot; writes it down in a book. Remove that
+grievance.</p>
+
+<p>The most interesting thing going on in the world to-day&mdash;a
+thing that in History will transcend the war and be
+reckoned its greatest gain&mdash;is the high leadership of
+the President in formulating the struggle, in putting
+its aims high, and in taking the democratic lead in the
+world, a lead that will make the world over&mdash;and in
+taking the democratic lead of the English-speaking folk.
+Next most impressive to that is to watch the British
+response to that lead. Already they have doubled the
+number of their voters, and even more important definite
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-362" id="page2-362"></a>[pg II-362]</span>
+steps in Democracy will be taken. My aim&mdash;and it's
+the only way to save the world&mdash;is to lead the British
+in this direction. They are the most easily teachable
+people in our way of thinking and of doing. Of
+course everybody who works toward such an aim
+provokes the cry from a lot of fools among us who
+accuse him of toadying to the English and of &quot;accepting
+the conventional English conclusion.&quot; They had as
+well talk of missionaries to India accepting Confucius
+or Buddha. Their fleet has saved us four or five times.
+It's about time we were saving them from this bloods
+Thing that we call Europe, for our sake and for
+theirs.</p>
+
+<p>The bloody Thing will get us all if we don't fight our
+level best; and it's only by <i>our</i> help that we'll be saved.
+That clearly gives us the leadership. Everybody sees
+that. Everybody acknowledges it. The President authoritatively
+speaks it&mdash;speaks leadership on a higher level
+than it was ever spoken before to the whole world. As
+soon as we get this fighting job over, the world procession
+toward freedom&mdash;our kind of freedom&mdash;will begin under
+our lead. This being so, can't you delegate the writing of
+telegrams about &quot;facilitating the license to ship poppy
+seed to McKesson and Robbins,&quot; and come over and see
+big world-forces at work?</p>
+
+<p>I cannot express my satisfaction at Secretary Baker's
+visit. It was historic&mdash;the first member of the Cabinet,
+I think, who ever came here while he held office. He
+made a great impression and received a hearty welcome.</p>
+
+<p>That's the only grievance I can at the moment unload
+on you. We're passing out of our old era of isolation.
+These benighted heathen on this island whom we'll yet
+save (since they are well worth saving) will be with us as
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-363" id="page2-363"></a>[pg II-363]</span>
+we need them in future years and centuries. Come, help
+us heighten this fine spirit.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Always heartily yours,<br />
+<br />
+WALTER HINES PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>P.S. You'd see how big our country looks from a distance.
+It's gigantic, I assure you.</p></div>
+
+<p>The above letter was written on what was perhaps the
+darkest day of the whole war. The German attack on
+the Western Front, which had been long expected, had
+now been launched, and, at the moment that Page was
+penning this cheery note to Mr. Polk, the German armies
+had broken through the British defenses, had pushed their
+lines forty miles ahead, and, in the judgment of many
+military men, had Paris almost certainly within their
+grasp. A great German gun, placed about seventy miles
+from the French capital, was dropping shells upon the
+apparently doomed city. This attack had been regarded
+as inevitable since the collapse of Russia, which had enabled
+the Germans to concentrate practically all their
+armies on the Western Front.</p>
+
+<p>The world does not yet fully comprehend the devastating
+effect of this apparently successful attack upon
+the allied morale. British statesmen and British soldiers
+made no attempt to conceal from official Americans the
+desperate state of affairs. It was the expectation that
+the Germans might reach Calais and thence invade England.
+The War Office discussed these probabilities most
+freely with Colonel Slocum, the American military attach&eacute;.
+The simple fact was that both the French and the British
+armies were practically bled white.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For God's sake, get your men over!&quot; they urged General
+Slocum. &quot;You have got to finish it.&quot;</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-364" id="page2-364"></a>[pg II-364]</span></div>
+<p>Page was writing urgently to President Wilson to the
+same purpose. Send the men and send them at once.
+&quot;I pray God,&quot; were his solemn words to Mr. Wilson,
+&quot;that you will not be too late!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>One propitious event had taken place at the same time as
+the opening of the great German offensive. Mr. Newton
+D. Baker, the American Secretary of War, had left
+quietly for France in late February, 1918, and had reached
+the Western Front in time to obtain a first-hand sight of
+the great March drive. No visit in history has ever been
+better timed, and no event could have better played into
+Page's hands. He had been urging Washington to send
+all available forces to France at the earliest possible date;
+he knew, as probably few other men knew, the extent to
+which the Allies were depending upon American troops to
+give the final blow to Germany; and the arrival of Secretary
+Baker at the scene of action gave him the opportunity
+to make a personal appeal. Page immediately
+communicated with the Secretary and persuaded him to
+come at once to London for a consultation with British
+military and political leaders. The Secretary spent only
+three days in London, but the visit, brief as it was, had
+historic consequences. He had many consultations with
+the British military men; he entered into their plans with
+enthusiasm; he himself received many ideas that afterward
+took shape in action, and the British Government
+obtained from him first-hand information as to the progress
+of the American Army and the American determination
+to cooperate to the last man and the last dollar.
+&quot;Baker went straight back to France,&quot; Page wrote to his
+son Arthur, &quot;and our whole co&ouml;peration began.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Page gave a dinner to Mr. Baker at the Embassy on
+March 23rd&mdash;two days after the great March drive had
+begun. This occasion gave the visitor a memorable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-365" id="page2-365"></a>[pg II-365]</span>
+glimpse of the British temperament. Mr. Lloyd George,
+Mr. Balfour, Lord Derby, the War Secretary, General
+Biddle, of the United States Army, and Admiral Sims were
+the Ambassador's guests. Though the mighty issues then
+overhanging the world were not ignored in the conversation
+the atmosphere hardly suggested that the existence of the
+British Empire, indeed that of civilization itself, was that
+very night hanging in the balance. Possibly it was the
+general sombreness of events that caused these British
+statesmen to find a certain relief in jocular small talk and
+reminiscence. For the larger part of the evening not
+a word was said about the progress of the German armies
+in France. Mr. Lloyd George and Mr. Balfour, seated on
+opposite sides of the table, apparently found relaxation in
+reviewing their political careers and especially their old-time
+political battles. They would laughingly recall occasions
+when, in American parlance, they had put each other
+&quot;in a hole&quot;; the exigencies of war had now made these two
+men colleagues in the same government, but the twenty
+years preceding 1914 they had spent in political antagonism.
+Page's guests on this occasion learned much political
+history of the early twentieth century, and the mutual
+confessions of Mr. Lloyd George and Mr. Balfour gave
+these two men an insight into each others' motives and
+manoeuvres which was almost as revealing. &quot;Yes, you
+caught me that time,&quot; Mr. Lloyd George would say, and
+then he would counter with an episode of a political battle
+in which he had got the better of Mr. Balfour. The whole
+talk was lively and bantering, and accompanied with
+much laughter; and all this time shells from that long-distance
+gun were dropping at fifteen minute intervals
+upon the devoted women and children of Paris and the
+Germans were every hour driving the British back in disorder.
+At times the conversation took a more philosophic
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-366" id="page2-366"></a>[pg II-366]</span>
+turn. Would the men present like to go back twenty-five
+years and live their lives all over again? The practically
+unanimous decision of every man was that he would
+not wish to do so.</p>
+
+<p>All this, of course, was merely on the surface; despite
+the laughter and the banter, there was only one thing which
+engrossed the Ambassador's guests, although there were
+not many references to it. That was the struggle which
+was then taking place in France. At intervals Mr. Lloyd
+George would send one of the guests, evidently a secretary,
+from the room. The latter, on his return, would
+whisper something in the Prime Minister's ear, but more
+frequently he would merely shake his head. Evidently
+he had been sent to obtain the latest news of the
+battle.</p>
+
+<p>At one point the Prime Minister did refer to the great
+things taking place in France.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This battle means one thing,&quot; he said. &quot;That is a
+generalissimo.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why couldn't you have taken this step long ago?&quot;
+Admiral Sims asked Mr. Lloyd George.</p>
+
+<p>The answer came like a flash.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If the cabinet two weeks ago had suggested placing
+the British Army under a foreign general, it would have
+fallen. Every cabinet in Europe would also have fallen,
+had it suggested such a thing.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>Memorandum on Secretary Baker's visit</i></p>
+
+<p>Secretary Baker's visit here, brief as it was, gave the
+heartiest satisfaction. So far as I know, he is the first
+member of an American Cabinet who ever came to England
+while he held office, as Mr. Balfour was the first
+member of a British Cabinet who ever went to the United
+States while he held office. The great governments of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-367" id="page2-367"></a>[pg II-367]</span>
+the English-speaking folk have surely dealt with one another
+with mighty elongated tongs. Governments of
+democracies are not exactly instruments of precision. But
+they are at least human. But personal and human neglect
+of one another by these two governments over so long a
+period is an astonishing fact in our history. The wonder
+is that we haven't had more than two wars. And it is no
+wonder that the ignorance of Englishmen about America
+and the American ignorance of England are monumental,
+stupendous, amazing, passing understanding. I have
+on my mantelpiece a statuette of Benjamin Franklin,
+an excellent and unmistakable likeness which was made
+here during his lifetime; and the inscription burnt on its
+base is <i>Geo. Washington</i>. It serves me many a good turn
+with my English friends. I use it as a measure of their
+ignorance of us. Of course this is a mere little error of a
+statuette-maker, an error, moreover, of a hundred years
+ago. But it tells the story of to-day also. If I had to
+name the largest and most indelible impression that
+has been made on me during my five years' work
+here, I should say the ignorance and aloofness of the
+two peoples&mdash;not an ignorance of big essential facts
+but of personalities and temperaments&mdash;such as never
+occur except between men who had never seen one
+another.</p>
+
+<p>But I was writing about Mr. Baker's visit and I've
+got a long way from that. I doubt if he knows himself
+what gratification it gave; for these men here have
+spoken to me about it as they could not speak to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>Here is an odd fact: For sixty years, so far as I know,
+members of the Administration have had personal acquaintance
+with some of the men in power in Salvador,
+Costa Rica, Venezuela, Peru, etc., etc., and members of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-368" id="page2-368"></a>[pg II-368]</span>
+the British Government have had personal acquaintance
+with some men in authority in Portugal, Serbia, Montenegro
+and Monte Carlo; but during this time (with the
+single exception of John Hay) I think no member of any
+Administration had a real personal acquaintance while he
+held office with any member of the British Government
+while he held office, and vice versa&mdash;till Mr. Balfour's
+visit. Suspicion grows out of ignorance. The longer I
+live here the more astonished I become at the fundamental
+ignorance of the British about us and of our fundamental
+ignorance about them. So colossal is this ignorance that
+every American sent here is supposed to be taken in, to
+become Anglophile; and often when one undertakes to
+enlighten Englishmen about the United States one becomes
+aware of a feeling inside the English of unbelief, as
+if he said, &quot;Oh, well! you are one of those queer people
+who believe in republican government.&quot; All this is simply
+amazing. Poor Admiral Sims sometimes has a sort
+of mania, a delusion that nobody at Washington trusts
+his judgment because he said seven or eight years ago
+that he liked the English. Yet every naval officer who
+comes here, I understand, shares his views about practically
+every important naval problem or question. I don't
+deserve the compliment (it's a very high one) that some of
+my secretaries sometimes pay me when they say that I
+am the only man they know who tries to tell the whole
+truth to our Government in favour of the Englishman as
+well as against him. It is certain that American public
+opinion is universally supposed to suspect any American
+who tries to do anything with the British lion except to
+twist his tail&mdash;a supposition that I never believed to be
+true.&mdash;But it is true that the mutual ignorance is as
+high as the Andes and as deep as the ocean. Personal
+acquaintance removes it and nothing else will.</p></div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-369" id="page2-369"></a>[pg II-369]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy,<br />
+London, April 7, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>I daresay you remember this epic:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Old Morgan's wife made butter and cheese;<br />
+Old Morgan drank the whey.<br />
+There came a wind from West to East<br />
+ And blew Old Morgan away.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>I'm Old Morgan and your mother got ashamed of my
+wheyness and made the doctor prescribe cream for me.
+There's never been such a luxury, and anybody who supposes
+that I am now going to get fat and have my cream
+stopped simply doesn't know me. So, you see why I'm
+intent on shredded wheat biscuits. That's about the best
+form of real wheat that will keep. And there's no getting
+real wheat-stuff, pure and simple, in any other form.</p>
+
+<p>There's no use in talking about starving people&mdash;except
+perhaps in India and China. White men can live on anything.
+The English could fight a century on cabbage and
+Brussels sprouts. I've given up hope of starving the
+Germans. A gut of dogmeat or horse flesh and a potato
+will keep them in fighting trim forever. I've read daily
+for two years of impending starvation across the Rhine;
+but I never even now hear of any dead ones from hunger.
+Cold steel or lead is the only fatal dose for them.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore I know that shredded wheat will carry me
+through.</p>
+
+<p>You'll see, I hope, from the clippings that I enclose
+that I'm not done for yet anyhow. Two speeches a day
+is no small stunt; and I did it again yesterday&mdash;hand
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-370" id="page2-370"></a>[pg II-370]</span>
+running; and I went out to dinner afterward. It was a
+notable occasion&mdash;this celebration of the anniversary of
+our coming into the war<a name="FNanchor_74_74" id="FNanchor_74_74" /><a href="#Footnote_74_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a>.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody here knows definitely just what to fear from
+the big battle; but everybody fears more or less. It's a
+critical time&mdash;very. I am told that that long-range
+gunning of Paris is the worst form of frightfulness yet
+tried. The shells do not kill a great many people. But
+their falling every fifteen minutes gets on people's nerves
+and they can't sleep. I hear they are leaving Paris in
+great numbers. Since the big battle began and the Germans
+have needed all their planes and more in France,
+they've let London alone. But nobody knows when they
+will begin again.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody knows any future thing about the war, and
+everybody faces a fear.</p>
+
+<p>Secretary Baker stayed with me the two days and three
+nights he was here. He made a good impression but he
+received a better one. He now knows something about
+the war. I had at dinner to meet him:</p>
+
+<p>Lloyd George, Prime Minister.</p>
+
+<p>Balfour, Foreign Secretary.</p>
+
+<p>The Chief of Staff.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Derby, War Secretary.</p>
+
+<p>General Biddle, U.S.A., in command in London.</p>
+
+<p>Admiral Sims, U.S.N.</p>
+
+<p>The talk was to the point&mdash;good and earnest. Baker went
+straight back to France and our <i>whole</i> co&ouml;peration began.
+With the first group of four he had conferences besides
+for two days. His coming was an admirable move.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours affectionately,<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-371" id="page2-371"></a>[pg II-371]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Ralph W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+London, April 13, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR RALPH:</p>
+
+<p>Your cheery letters about entertaining governors,
+planting trees and shrubbery and your mother's little
+orchard give us much pleasure. The Southern Pines
+paper brings news of very great damage to the peach crop.
+I hope it is much exaggerated. Is it?</p>
+
+<p>We haven't any news here, and I send you my weekly
+note only to keep my record clear. The great battle&mdash;no
+one talks or thinks of anything else. We have suffered
+and still suffer a good deal of fear and anxiety, with real
+reason, too. But the military men are reassuring. Yet
+I don't know just how far to trust their judgment or to
+share their hopes. Certainly this is the most dangerous
+situation that modern civilization was ever put in.
+If we can keep them from winning any <i>great</i> objective,
+like Paris or a channel port, we ought to end the war
+this year. If not, either they win or at the least prolong
+the war indefinitely. It's a hazardous and trying
+time.</p>
+
+<p>There were never such casualties on either side as now.
+Such a bloody business cannot keep up all summer. But before
+everybody is killed or a decisive conclusion is reached,
+the armies will, no doubt, dig themselves in and take a
+period of comparative rest. People here see and feel the
+great danger. But the extra effort now <i>may</i> come too
+late. Still we keep up good hope. The British are hard
+to whip. They never give up. And as for the French
+army, I always remember Verdun and keep my courage
+up.</p>
+
+<p>The wounded are coming over by the thousand. We
+are incomparably busy and in great anxiety about the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-372" id="page2-372"></a>[pg II-372]</span>
+result (though still pretty firm in the belief that the Germans
+will lose), and luckily we keep very well.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Ralph W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+London, April 7, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR RALPH:</p>
+
+<p>There used to be a country parson down in Wake
+County who, when other subjects were talked out, always
+took up the pleasing topic of saving your soul. That's
+the way your mother and I do&mdash;with the subject of going
+home. We talk over the battle, we talk over the boys, we
+talk over military and naval problems, we discuss the
+weather and all the babies, and then take up politics, and
+talk over the gossip of the wiseacres; but we seldom finish
+a conversation without discussing going home. And we
+reach just about as clear a conclusion on our topic as the
+country parson reached on his. I've had the doctors
+going over me (or rather your mother has) as an expert
+accountant goes over your books; and I tried to bribe
+them to say that I oughtn't to continue my arduous
+duties here longer. They wouldn't say any such thing.
+Thus that device failed&mdash;dead. It looks as if I were
+destined for a green old age and no <i>martyr</i> business at
+all.</p>
+
+<p>All this is disappointing; and I don't see what to do but
+to go on. I can't keep from hoping that the big battle
+may throw some light on the subject; but there's no telling
+when the big battle will end. Nothing ends&mdash;that's the
+trouble. I sometimes feel that the war may never end,
+that it may last as the Napoleonic Wars did, for 20 years;
+and before that time we'll all have guns that shoot 100
+miles. We can stay at home and indefinitely bombard
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-373" id="page2-373"></a>[pg II-373]</span>
+the enemy across the Rhine&mdash;have an endless battle at
+long range.</p>
+
+<p>So, we stick to it, and give the peach trees time to grow
+up.</p>
+
+<p>We had a big day in London yesterday&mdash;the anniversary
+of our entry into the war. I send you some newspaper
+clippings about it.</p>
+
+<p>The next best news is that we have a little actual sunshine&mdash;a
+very rare thing&mdash;and some of the weather is now
+almost decent....</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_68_68" id="Footnote_68_68" /><a href="#FNanchor_68_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> Mr. Henry Morgenthau, American Ambassador to Turkey,
+1913-16, an American of Jewish origin who opposed the Zionist movement
+as un-American and deceptive.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_69_69" id="Footnote_69_69" /><a href="#FNanchor_69_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> American member of the Supreme War Council. Afterward
+member of the American Commission to Negotiate Peace.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_70_70" id="Footnote_70_70" /><a href="#FNanchor_70_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a> Sir Henry Wilson had recently succeeded Sir William
+Robertson as Chief of the Imperial General Staff.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_71_71" id="Footnote_71_71" /><a href="#FNanchor_71_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> First Lord of the Admiralty.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_72_72" id="Footnote_72_72" /><a href="#FNanchor_72_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> Secretary of Agriculture.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_73_73" id="Footnote_73_73" /><a href="#FNanchor_73_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> See Chapter XXIV.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_74_74" id="Footnote_74_74" /><a href="#FNanchor_74_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> This meeting, on April 6, 1918, was held at the Mansion
+House. Page and Mr. Balfour were the chief speakers.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-374" id="page2-374"></a>[pg II-374]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI" />CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+
+<h3>LAST DAYS IN ENGLAND</h3>
+
+
+<p>In spite of the encouraging tone of the foregoing
+letters, everything was not well with Page. All through
+the winter of 1917-1918 his associates at the Embassy had
+noticed a change for the worse in his health. He seemed
+to be growing thinner; his face was daily becoming more
+haggard; he tired easily, and, after walking the short distance
+from his house to his Embassy, he would drop listlessly
+into his chair. His general bearing was that of a
+man who was physically and nervously exhausted. It
+was hoped that the holiday at St. Ives would help him;
+that he greatly enjoyed that visit, especially the
+westward&mdash;homeward&mdash;outlook on the Atlantic which it gave him,
+his letters clearly show; there was a temporary improvement
+also in his health, but only a temporary one. The
+last great effort which he made in the interest of the common
+cause was Secretary Baker's visit; the activities which
+this entailed wearied him, but the pleasure he obtained
+from the resultant increase in the American participation
+made the experience one of the most profitable of his life.
+Indeed, Page's last few months in England, though full of
+sad memories for his friends, contained little but satisfaction
+for himself. He still spent many a lonely evening
+by his fire, but his thoughts were now far more pleasurable
+than in the old <i>Lusitania</i> days. The one absorbing subject
+of contemplation now was that America was &quot;in.&quot;
+His country had justified his deep confidence. The American
+Navy had played a determining part in defeating the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-375" id="page2-375"></a>[pg II-375]</span>
+submarine, and American shipyards were turning out
+merchant ships faster than the Germans were destroying
+them. American troops were reaching France at a rate
+which necessarily meant the early collapse of the German
+Empire. Page's own family had responded to the call
+and this in itself was a cause of great contentment to
+a sick and weary man. The Ambassador's youngest
+son, Frank, had obtained a commission and was serving
+in France; his son-in-law, Charles G. Loring, was
+also on the Western Front; while from North Carolina
+Page's youngest brother Frank and two nephews
+had sailed for the open battle line. The bravery and
+success of the American troops did not surprise the
+Ambassador but they made his last days in England very
+happy.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, every day had some delightful experience for
+Page. The performance of the Americans at Cantigny
+especially cheered him. The day after this battle he and
+Mrs. Page entertained Mr. Lloyd George and other guests
+at lunch. The Prime Minister came bounding into the
+room with his characteristic enthusiasm, rushed up to
+Mrs. Page with both hands outstretched and shook hands
+joyously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Congratulations!&quot; he exclaimed. &quot;The Americans
+have done it! They have met the Prussian guard and
+defeated them!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lloyd George was as exuberant over the achievement
+as a child.</p>
+
+<p>This was now the kind of experience that had become
+Page's daily routine. Lively as were his spirits, however,
+his physical frame was giving way. In fact Page, though
+he did not know it at the time, was suffering from a specific
+disease&mdash;nephritis; and its course, after Christmas of
+1917, became rapid. His old friend, Dr. Wallace Buttrick,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-376" id="page2-376"></a>[pg II-376]</span>
+had noted the change for the worse and had attempted to
+persuade him to go home.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quit your job, Page,&quot; he urged. &quot;You have other big
+tasks waiting you at home. Why don't you go back?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No&mdash;no&mdash;not now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But, Page,&quot; urged Dr. Buttrick, &quot;you are going to lay
+down your life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have only one life to lay down,&quot; was the reply. &quot;I
+can't quit now.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Mary E. Page</i><a name="FNanchor_75_75" id="FNanchor_75_75" /><a href="#Footnote_75_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a><br />
+<br />
+London, May 12, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MARY:</p>
+
+<p>You'll have to take this big paper and this paint brush
+pen&mdash;it's all the pen these blunt British have. This is to
+tell you how very welcome your letter to Alice is&mdash;how
+very welcome, for nobody writes us the family news and
+nothing is so much appreciated. I'll try to call the shorter
+roll of us in the same way:</p>
+
+<p>After a miserable winter we, too, are having the rare
+experience of a little sunshine in this dark, damp world of
+London. The constant confinement in the city and <i>in
+the house</i> (that's the worst of it&mdash;no outdoor life or fresh
+air) has played hob with my digestion. It's not bad, but
+it's troublesome, and for some time I've had the feeling of
+being one half well. It occurred to me the other day that
+I hadn't had leave from my work for four years, except
+my short visit home nearly two years ago. I asked for two
+months off, and I've got it. We are going down by the
+shore where there is fresh air and where I can live outdoors
+and get some exercise. We have a house that we can get
+there and be comfortable. To get away from London
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-377" id="page2-377"></a>[pg II-377]</span>
+when the weather promises to be good, and to get away
+from people seemed a joyous prospect. I can, at any time
+I must, come to London in two hours.</p>
+
+<p>The job's too important to give up at this juncture.
+This, then, is the way we can keep it going. I've no such
+hard task now as I had during the years of our neutrality,
+which, praise God! I somehow survived, though I am
+now suffering more or less from the physical effects of
+that strain. Yet, since I have had the good fortune to
+win the confidence of this Government and these people, I
+feel that I ought to keep on now until some more or less
+natural time to change comes.</p>
+
+<p>Alice keeps remarkably well&mdash;since her influenza late
+in the winter; but a rest away from London is really needed
+as much by her as by me. They work her to death. In
+a little while she is to go, by the invitation of the Government
+and the consent of the King, to christen a new British
+warship at Newcastle. It will be named the &quot;Eagle.&quot;
+Meantime I'll be trying to get outdoor life at Sandwich.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday a regiment of our National Army marched
+through the streets of London and were reviewed by the
+King and me; and the town made a great day of it. While
+there is an undercurrent of complaint in certain sections
+of English opinion because we didn't come into the war
+sooner, there is a very general and very genuine appreciation
+of everything we have done and of all that we do.
+Nothing could be heartier than the welcome given our
+men here yesterday. Nor could any men have made
+a braver or better showing than they made. They made
+us all swell with pride.</p>
+
+<p>They are coming over now, as you know, in great
+quantities. There were about 8,000 landed here last week
+and about 30,000 more are expected this week. I think
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-378" id="page2-378"></a>[pg II-378]</span>
+that many more go direct to France than come through
+England. On their way through England they do not
+come to London. Only twice have we had them here,
+yesterday and one day last summer when we had a parade
+of a regiment of engineers. For the <i>army</i> London is on a
+sidetrack&mdash;is an out of the way place. For our navy, of
+course, it's the European headquarters, since Admiral
+Sims has his headquarters here. We thus see a good
+many of our sailors who are allowed to come to London on
+leave. A few days ago I had a talk with a little bunch of
+them who came from one of our superdreadnaughts in
+the North Sea. They had just returned from a patrol
+across to the coast of Norway. &quot;Bad luck, bad luck,&quot;
+they said, &quot;on none of our long patrol trips have we seen
+a single Hun ship!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>About the war, you know as much as I know. There
+is a general confidence that the Allies will hold the Germans
+in their forthcoming effort to get to Calais or to
+Paris. Yet there is an undercurrent of fear. Nobody
+knows just how to feel about it. Probably another prodigious
+onslaught will be made before you receive this
+letter. It seems to me that we can make no intelligent
+guess until this German effort is finished in France&mdash;no
+guess about the future. If the Germans get the French
+ports (Calais, for example) the war will go on indefinitely.
+If they are held back, it <i>may</i> end next autumn or
+winter&mdash;partly because of starvation in Germany and partly
+because the Germans will have to confess that they can't
+whip our armies in France. But, even then, since they
+have all Russia to draw on, they may keep going for a long
+time. One man's guess is as good as another's.</p>
+
+<p>One sad thing is certain: we shall at once begin to have
+heavy American casualties. Our Red Cross and our
+army here are getting hospitals ready for such American
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-379" id="page2-379"></a>[pg II-379]</span>
+wounded as are brought over to England&mdash;the parts of
+our army that are fighting with the British.</p>
+
+<p>We have a lot of miserable politics here which interfere
+with the public feeling. The British politician is a worse
+yellow dog than the American&mdash;at times he is, at least;
+and we have just been going through such a time. Another
+such time will soon come about the Irish.</p>
+
+<p>Well, we have an unending quantity of work and wear&mdash;no
+very acute bothers but a continuous strain, the
+strain of actual work, of uneasiness, of seeing people, of
+uncertainty, of great expense, of doubt and fear at times,
+of inability to make any plans&mdash;all which is only the common
+lot now all over the world, except that most persons
+have up to this time suffered incomparably worse than we.
+And there's nothing to do but to go on and on and on and
+to keep going with the stoutest hearts we can keep up till
+the end do at last come. But the Germans now (as the
+rest of us) are fighting for their lives. They are desperate
+and their leaders care nothing for human life.</p>
+
+<p>The Embassy now is a good deal bigger than the whole
+State Department ever was in times of peace. I have
+three buildings for offices, and a part of our civil force occupies
+two other buildings. Even a general supervision
+of so large a force is in itself a pretty big job. The army
+and the Navy have each about the same space as the Embassy
+proper. Besides, our people have huts and inns and
+clubs and hospitals all over the town. Even though there
+be fewer vexing problems than there were while we were
+neutral, there is not less work&mdash;on the contrary, more.
+Nor will there be an end to it for a very long time&mdash;long
+after my time here. The settling of the war and the beginning
+of peace activities, whenever these come, will involve
+a great volume of work. But I've no ambition to
+have these things in hand. As soon as a natural time of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-380" id="page2-380"></a>[pg II-380]</span>
+relief shall come, I'll go and be happier in my going than
+you or anybody else can guess.</p>
+
+<p>Now we go to get my digestion stiffened up for another
+long tug&mdash;unless the Germans proceed forthwith to knock
+us out&mdash;which they cannot do.</p>
+
+<p>With my love to everybody on the Hill,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately yours,<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Mr. and Mrs. Waldorf Astor&mdash;since become Viscount
+and Viscountess Astor&mdash;had offered the Pages the use of
+their beautiful seaside house at Sandwich, Kent, and it
+was the proposed vacation here to which Page refers in
+this letter. He obtained a six weeks' leave of absence and
+almost the last letters which Page wrote from England
+are dated from this place. These letters have all the
+qualities of Page at his best: but the handwriting is a sad
+reminder of the change that was progressively taking place
+in his physical condition. It is still a clear and beautiful
+script, but there are signs of a less steady hand than the
+one that had written the vigorous papers of the preceding
+four years.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>Memorandum</i><br />
+<br />
+Sandwich, Kent, Sunday, 19 May, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>We're at Rest Harrow and it's a fine, sunny early
+spring Carolina day. The big German drive has evidently
+begun its second phase. We hear the guns distinctly.
+We see the coast-guard aeroplanes at almost any
+time o'day. What is the mood about the big battle?</p>
+
+<p>The soldiers&mdash;British and French&mdash;have confidence in
+their ability to hold the Germans back from the Channel
+and from Paris. Yet can one rely on the judgment of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-381" id="page2-381"></a>[pg II-381]</span>
+soldiers? They have the job in hand and of course they
+believe in themselves. While one does not like in the
+least to discount their judgment and their hopefulness,
+for my part I am not <i>quite</i> so sure of their ability to make
+sound judgments as I wish I were. The chances are in
+favour of their success; but&mdash;suppose they should have to
+yield and give up Calais and other Channel ports? Well,
+they've prepared for it as best they can. They have made
+provision for commandeering most of the hotels in London
+that are not yet taken over&mdash;for hospitals for the wounded
+now in France.</p>
+
+<p>And the war would take on a new phase. Whatever
+should become of the British and American armies, the
+Germans would be no nearer having England than they
+now are. They would not have command of the sea.
+The combined British and American fleets could keep
+every German ship off the ocean and continue the blockade
+by sea&mdash;indefinitely; and, if the peoples of the two countries
+hold fast, a victory would be won at last&mdash;at sea.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Ralph W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+Rest Harrow, Sandwich, Kent.<br />
+May 19, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR RALPH:</p>
+
+<p>I felt very proud yesterday when I read T.R.'s good
+word in the <i>Outlook</i> about your book<a name="FNanchor_76_76" id="FNanchor_76_76" /><a href="#Footnote_76_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a>. If I had written
+what he said myself&mdash;I mean, if I had written what I
+think of the book&mdash;I should have said this very thing.
+And there is one thing more I should have said, viz.:&mdash;All
+your life and all my life, we have cultivated the opinion
+at home that we had nothing to do with the rest of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-382" id="page2-382"></a>[pg II-382]</span>
+world, nothing to do with Europe in particular&mdash;and in
+our political life our hayseed spokesmen have said this
+over and over again till many people, perhaps most people,
+came really to believe that it was true. Now this aloofness,
+this utterly detached attitude, was a pure invention
+of the shirt-sleeve statesman at home. I have long concluded,
+for other reasons as well as for this, that these men
+are the most ignorant men in the whole world; more ignorant&mdash;because
+they are viciously ignorant&mdash;than the Negro
+boys who act as caddies at Pinehurst; more ignorant than
+the inmates of the Morganton Asylum; more ignorant
+than sheep or rabbits or idiots. They have been the
+chief hindrances of our country&mdash;worse than traitors, in
+effect. It is they, in fact, who kept our people ignorant
+of the Germans, ignorant of the English, ignorant of our
+own history, ignorant of ourselves. Now your book,
+without mentioning the subject, shows this important
+fact clearly, by showing that our aloofness has all been a
+fiction. <i>We've been in the world&mdash;and right in the middle
+of the world&mdash;the whole time</i>.</p>
+
+<p>And our public consciousness of this fact has enormously
+slipped back. Take Franklin, Madison, Monroe, Jefferson;
+take Hay, Root&mdash;and then consider some of our
+present representatives! One good result of the war and
+of our being in it will be the restoration of our foreign
+consciousness. Every one of the half million, or three million,
+soldiers who go to France will know more about foreign
+affairs than all Congress knew two years ago.</p>
+
+<p>A stay of nearly five years in London (five years ago
+to-day I was on the ship coming here) with no absence
+long enough to give any real rest, have got my digestion
+wrong. I've therefore got a real leave for two months.
+Your mother and I have a beautiful house here that has
+been lent to us, right on the Channel where there's nothing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-383" id="page2-383"></a>[pg II-383]</span>
+worth bombing and where as much sunshine and warmth
+come as come anywhere in England. We got here last
+night and to-day is as fine an early spring day as you ever
+had in the Sandhills. I shall golf and try to find me an old
+horse to ride, and I'll stay out in the sunshine and try to
+get the inside machinery going all right. We may have a
+few interruptions, but I hope not many, if the Germans
+leave us alone. Your mother has got to go to Newcastle to
+christen a new British warship&mdash;a compliment the Admiralty
+pays her &quot;to bind the two nations closer together&quot;
+etc. etc. And I've got to go to Cambridge to receive an
+LL.D. for the President. Only such things are allowed
+to interrupt us. And we are very much hoping to see
+Frank here.</p>
+
+<p>We are in sound of the battle. We hear the big guns
+whenever we go outdoors. A few miles down the beach
+is a rifle range and we hear the practice there. Almost
+any time of day we can hear aeroplanes which (I presume)
+belong to the coast guard. There's no danger of
+forgetting the war, therefore, unless we become stone
+deaf. But this decent air and sunshine are blessings of
+the highest kind. I never became so tired of anything
+since I had the measles as I've become of London.
+My Lord! it sounded last night as if we had jumped from
+the frying pan into the fire. Just as we were about to go
+to bed the big gun on the beach&mdash;just outside the fence
+around our yard&mdash;about 50 yards from the house, began
+its thundering belch&mdash;five times in quick succession,
+rattling the windows and shaking the very foundation of
+things. Then after a pause of a few minutes, another
+round of five shots. Then the other guns all along the
+beach took up the chorus&mdash;farther off&mdash;and the inland
+guns followed. They are planted all the way to London&mdash;ninety
+miles. For about two hours we had this roar
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-384" id="page2-384"></a>[pg II-384]</span>
+and racket. There was an air raid on, and there were
+supposed to be twenty-five or thirty German planes on
+their way to London. I hear that it was the worst raid
+that London has had. Two of them were brought down&mdash;that's
+the only good piece of news I've heard about it.
+Well, we are not supposed to be in danger. They fly over
+us on the way to bigger game. At any rate I'll take the
+risk for this air and sunshine. Trenches and barbed wire
+run all along the beach&mdash;I suppose to help in case of an
+invasion. But an invasion is impossible in my judgment.
+Holy Moses! what a world!&mdash;the cannon in the big battle
+in France roaring in our ears all the time, this cannon at
+our door likely to begin action any night and all the rest
+along the beach and on the way to London, and this is
+what we call rest! The world is upside down, all crazy,
+all murderous; but we've got to stop this barbaric assault,
+whatever the cost.</p>
+
+<p>Ray Stannard Baker is spending a few days with us,
+much to our pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>With love to Leila and the babies,</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours affectionately,<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+Rest Harrow, Sandwich Beach,<br />
+Sandwich, Kent, England.<br />
+May 20, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>... I can't get quite to the bottom of the anti-English
+feeling at Washington. God knows, this people
+have their faults. Their social system and much else here
+is medi&aelig;val. I could write several volumes in criticism
+of them. So I could also in criticism of anybody else.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-385" id="page2-385"></a>[pg II-385]</span>
+But Jefferson's<a name="FNanchor_77_77" id="FNanchor_77_77" /><a href="#Footnote_77_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> letter is as true to-day as it was when he
+wrote it. One may or may not have a lot of sentiment
+about it; but, without sentiment, it's mere common sense,
+mere prudence, the mere instinct of safety to keep close
+to Great Britain, to have a decent respect for the good
+qualities of these people and of this government. Certainly
+it is a mere perversity&mdash;lost time&mdash;lost motion,
+lost everything&mdash;to cherish a dislike and a distrust of them&mdash;a
+thing that I cannot wholly understand. While we are,
+I fear, going to have trade troubles and controversies, my
+feeling is, on the whole, in spite of the attitude of our official
+life, that an increasing number of our people are
+waking up to what England has done and is and may be
+depended on to do. Isn't that true?</p>
+
+<p>We've no news here. We see nobody who knows anything.
+I am far from strong&mdash;the old stomach got tired
+and I must gradually coax it back to work. That's
+practically my sole business now for a time, and it's a
+slow process. But it's coming along and relief from seeing
+hordes of people is as good as medicine.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+W.H.P.<br /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><br />
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+Sandwich, May 24, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>Your speeches have a cumulative effect in cheering up
+the British. As you see, if you look over the mass of
+newspaper clippings that I send to the Department, or
+have them looked over, the British press of all parties and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-386" id="page2-386"></a>[pg II-386]</span>
+shades of opinion constantly quote them approvingly and
+gratefully. They have a cumulative effect, too, in clearing
+the atmosphere. Take, for instance, your declaration
+in New York about standing by Russia. All the
+allied governments in Europe wish to stand by Russia,
+but their pressing business with the war, near at hand,
+causes them in a way to forget Russia; and certainly the
+British public, all intent on the German &quot;drive&quot; in France
+had in a sense forgotten Russia. You woke them up.
+And your &quot;Why set a limit to the American Army?&quot; has
+had a cheering effect. As leader and spokesman of the
+enemies of Germany&mdash;by far the best trumpet-call spokesman
+and the strongest leader&mdash;your speeches are worth
+an army in France and more, for they keep the proper
+moral elevation. All this is gratefully recognized here.
+Public opinion toward us is wholesome and you have a
+&quot;good press&quot; in this Kingdom. In this larger matter, all
+is well. The English faults are the failings of the smaller
+men&mdash;about smaller matters&mdash;not of the large men nor of
+the public, about large matters.</p>
+
+<p>In private, too, thoughtful Englishmen by their fears
+pay us high tribute. I hear more and more constantly
+such an opinion as this: &quot;You see, when the war is over,
+you Americans will have much the largest merchant fleet.
+You will have much the largest share of money, and England
+and France and all the rest of the world will owe you
+money. You will have a large share of essential raw materials.
+You will have the machinery for marine insurance
+and for foreign banking. You will have much the largest
+volume of productive labour. And you will know the
+world as you have never known it before. What then is
+going to become of British trade?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The best answer I can give is: &quot;Adopt American
+methods of manufacture, and the devil take the hindmost.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-387" id="page2-387"></a>[pg II-387]</span>
+There will be for a long time plenty for everybody
+to do; and let us make sure that we both play the game
+fairly: that's the chief matter to look out for.&quot; That's
+what I most fear in the decades following the end of the
+war&mdash;trade clashes.</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman's pride will be hurt. I recall a speech
+made to me by the friendliest of the British&mdash;Mr. Balfour
+himself: &quot;I confess that as an Englishman it hurts my
+pride to have to borrow so much even from you. But I will
+say that I'd rather be in your debt than in anybody else's.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Edward M. House</i><br />
+<br />
+May 27, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR HOUSE:</p>
+
+<p>... I can write in the same spirit of the Labour
+Group which left for home last week. Nobody has been
+here from our side who had a better influence than they.
+They emphatically stuck by their instructions and took
+pleasure, against the blandishments of certain British
+Socialists, in declaring against any meeting with anybody
+from the enemy countries to discuss &quot;peace-by-negotiation&quot;
+or anything else till the enemy is whipped. They
+made admirable speeches and proved admirable representatives
+of the bone and sinew of American manhood.
+They had dead-earnestness and good-humour and hard
+horse-sense.</p>
+
+<p>This sort of visit is all to the good. Great good they
+do, too, in the present English curiosity to see and hear
+the right sort of frank, candid Americans. Nobody who
+hasn't been here lately can form an idea of the eagerness
+of all classes to hear and learn about the United States.
+There never was, and maybe never will be again, such a
+chance to inform the British and&mdash;to help them toward a
+rights understanding of the United States and our people.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-388" id="page2-388"></a>[pg II-388]</span>
+We are not half using the opportunity. There seems to
+be a feeling on your side the ocean that we oughtn't to
+send men here to &quot;lecture&quot; the British. No typical,
+earnest, sound American who has been here has &quot;lectured&quot;
+the British. They have all simply told facts and instructed
+them and won their gratitude and removed misconceptions.
+For instance, I have twenty inquiries a
+week about Dr. Buttrick. He went about quietly during
+his visit here and talked to university audiences and to
+working-men's meetings and he captured and fascinated
+every man he met. He simply told them American facts,
+explained the American spirit and aims and left a grateful
+memory everywhere. Buttrick cost our Government
+nothing: he paid his own way. But if he had cost as much
+as a regiment it would have been well spent. The people
+who heard him, read American utterances, American history,
+American news in a new light. And most of his talk
+was with little groups of men, much of it even in private
+conversation. He did no orating or &quot;lecturing.&quot; A
+hundred such men, if we had them, would do more for a
+perfect understanding with the British people than anything
+else whatsoever could do.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours sincerely,<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Arthur W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+Sandwich, May 27, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR ARTHUR:</p>
+
+<p>... I do get tired&mdash;my Lord! how tired!&mdash;not of
+the work but of the confinement, of the useless things I
+have to spend time on, of the bad digestion that has overtaken
+me, of London, of the weather, of absence from you
+all&mdash;of the general breaking up of the world, of this mad
+slaughter of men. But, after all, this is the common lot
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-389" id="page2-389"></a>[pg II-389]</span>
+now and I am grateful for a chance to do what I can.
+That's the true way to look at it.</p>
+
+<p>... Worry? I don't worry about anything except
+the war in general and this mad world so threatened by
+these devil barbarians. And I have a feeling that, when
+we get a few thousand flying machines, we'll put an end
+to that, alas! with the loss of many of our brave boys. I
+hear the guns across the channel as I write&mdash;an unceasing
+boom! boom! boom! That's what takes the stuff out of
+me and gets my inside machinery wrong. Still, I'm gradually
+getting even that back to normal. Golf and the
+poets are fine medicine. I read Keats the other day, with
+entire forgetfulness of the guns. Here we have a comfortable
+house, our own servants (as many as we need), a
+beautiful calm sea, a perfect air and for the present ideal
+weather. There's nobody down here but Scottish soldiers.
+We've struck up a pleasant acquaintance with
+them; and some of the fellows from the Embassy come
+down week ends. Only the murderous guns keep their
+eternal roar.</p>
+
+<p>Thanks, thanks, a thousand thanks, old man. It'll all
+work out right.</p>
+
+<p>... I look at it in this way: all's well that ends well.
+We are now doing our duty. That's enough. These
+things don't bother me, because doing our duty now is
+worth a million years of past errors and shortcomings.</p>
+
+<p>Your mother's well and spry&mdash;very, and the best company
+in the world. We're having a great time.</p>
+
+<p>Bully for the kids! Kiss 'em for me and Mollie too.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Make Shoecraft tell you everything. He's one of the
+best boys and truest in the world.</p>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-390" id="page2-390"></a>[pg II-390]</span></div>
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Ralph W. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+Rest Harrow, Sandwich, Kent.<br />
+June 7, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR RALPH:</p>
+
+<p>... I have all along cherished an expectation of
+two things&mdash;(1) That when we did get an American Army
+by conscription, if it should remain at war long enough to
+learn the game, it would become the best army that the
+world ever saw, for the simple reason that its ranks would
+contain more capable men than any other country has
+ever produced. The proof of this comes at once. Even
+our new and raw troops have astonished the veterans of
+the French and British armies and (I have no doubt) of
+the German Army also. It'll be our men who will whip
+the Germans, and there are nobody else's men who could
+do it. We've already saved the Entente from collapse
+by our money. We'll save the day again by our fighting
+men. That is to say, we'll save the world, thank God; and
+I fear it couldn't have been saved in any other way. (2)
+Since the people by their mood command and compel
+efficiency, the most efficient people will at last (as recent
+events show) get at the concrete jobs, in spite of anybody's
+preferences or philosophy. And this seems at last
+to be taking place. What we have suffered and shall
+suffer is not failure but delays and delays and bunglings.
+But they've got to end by the sheer pressure of the people's
+earnestness. These two things, then, are all to the good.</p>
+
+<p>I get the morning papers here at noon. And to-day I
+am all alone. Your mother went early on her journey
+to launch a British battleship. I haven't had a soul to
+speak to all day but my servants. At noon, therefore, I
+was rather eager for the papers. I saw at a glance that
+a submarine is at work off the New Jersey coast! It's an
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-391" id="page2-391"></a>[pg II-391]</span>
+awful thing for the innocent victims, to be drowned. But
+their deaths have done us a greater service than 100 times as
+many lives lost in battle. If anybody lacked earnestness
+about the war, I venture to guess that he doesn't lack it any
+longer. If the fools would now only shell some innocent
+town on the coast, the journey to Berlin would be shortened.</p>
+
+<p>If the Germans had practised a chivalrous humanity in
+their war for conquest, they'd have won it. Nothing on
+earth can now save them; for the world isn't big enough to
+hold them and civilized people. Nor is there any room
+for pacifists till this grim business is done.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Affectionately,<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>The last piece of writing from Sandwich is the following
+memorandum:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Sandwich, Kent.<br />
+June 10, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>The Germans continue to gain ground in France&mdash;more
+slowly, but still they gain. The French and British papers
+now give space to plans for the final defense&mdash;the desperate
+defense&mdash;of Paris. The Germans are only forty
+miles away. Slocum, military attach&eacute;, thinks they will
+get it and he reports the same opinion at the War Office&mdash;because
+the Germans have taken such a large number of
+guns and so much ammunition. Some of these guns were
+meant for the American troops, and they cannot now be
+replaced in time if the German advance continues. But
+I do not know enough facts at first hand to form an opinion.
+But, if Paris be taken, the war will go on a long time&mdash;unless
+the English-speaking rulers make a compromise.
+And, then, in another form&mdash;and forms&mdash;it'll go on indefinitely.&mdash;There
+has been no more perilous or uncertain
+or anxious time than now.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-392" id="page2-392"></a>[pg II-392]</span>
+<p>The United States too late, too late, too late: what if it
+should turn out so?</p></div>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>But it did not turn out so. Even while Page was penning
+these lines great events were taking place in France
+and the American troops were having a large share in
+them. In June the Americans stopped the German
+troops at Belleau Wood&mdash;a battle which proved the mettle
+of these fresh levies not only for the benefit of the Germans
+but of the Allies as well. Thus Page had the great satisfaction
+of returning to London while the city was ringing
+with the praise of these achievements. He found that
+the atmosphere had materially changed since he had last
+been in the British capital; when he had left for Sandwich
+there had been a general expectation that the Germans
+would get Paris or the Channel ports; now, however, there
+was every confidence of victory. Greatly as Page rejoiced
+over the new prospect, however, the fight at
+Belleau Wood brought him his last great sorrow. His
+nephew, Allison M. Page, of Aberdeen, North Carolina,
+the son of his youngest brother, Frank, lost his life in that
+engagement. At first the young man was reported
+&quot;missing&quot;; the investigation set afoot by the Ambassador
+for some time brought no definite information. One of
+the most pathetic of Page's papers is a brief note addressed
+by him to Allison Page, asking him for news: &quot;It's been
+a long time since we heard from you,&quot; Page wrote his
+nephew. &quot;Write how it goes with you. Affectionately,
+Uncle Wat.&quot; After travelling over a considerable
+part of France, this note found its way back to the Embassy.
+The boy&mdash;he was only 19&mdash;had been killed in
+action near Belleau Wood, on June 25th, while leading
+his detachment in an attack on a machine gun. Citations
+and decorations for gallantry in action were given posthumously
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-393" id="page2-393"></a>[pg II-393]</span>
+by General Pershing, Marshal P&eacute;tain, Major-General
+Omar Bundy, and Major-General John A. LeJeune.</p>
+
+<p>And now the shadows began to close in rapidly on
+Page. In early July Major Frank C. Page, the Ambassador's
+youngest son, came over from France. A brief
+glance at his father convinced him that he was dying.
+By this time the Ambassador had ceased to go to the Chancery,
+but was transacting the most imperative business
+propped up in a chair at home. His mind was possessed
+by two yearnings: one was to remain in London until
+the end of the war, the other was to get back to his
+childhood home in North Carolina. Young Page urged
+his father to resign, but the weary invalid insisted on
+sticking to his post. On this point it seemed impossible
+to move him. Knowing that his brother Arthur had
+great influence with his father, Frank Page cabled, asking
+him to come to England immediately. Arthur took the
+first boat, reaching London late in July.</p>
+
+<p>The Ambassador's two sons then gently pressed upon
+their father the fact that he must resign. Weak as he
+was, the Ambassador was still obdurate.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No,&quot; he said. &quot;It's quitting on the job. I must see
+the war through. I can't quit until it's over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But Sir William Osler, Page's physician and devoted
+friend, exercised his professional authority and insisted on
+the resignation. Finally Page consented.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To the President</i><br />
+<br />
+American Embassy, London,<br />
+August 1, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:</p>
+
+<p>I have been struggling for a number of months against
+the necessity to write you this note; for my doctors now
+advise me to give up all work for a period&mdash;my London
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-394" id="page2-394"></a>[pg II-394]</span>
+doctor says for six months. I have a progressive digestive
+trouble which does not yield to the usual treatment. It's
+the war, five London winters, and the unceasing labour
+which is now the common lot. I am ashamed to say that
+these have brought me to something near a breakdown.
+I have had Sir William Osler as well as two distinguished
+London physicians for several months. The digestive
+trouble has brought other ills in its train; and I am assured
+that they will yield to freedom from responsibility and
+complete rest for a time in a dry, warm climate and that
+they are not likely to yield to anything else.</p>
+
+<p>I see nothing else to do then but to bow to the inevitable
+and to ask you to be kind enough to relieve me and to accept
+my resignation to take effect as soon as I can go to
+Washington and make a somewhat extended report on
+the work here, which, I hope, will be of some use to the
+Department; and I ought to go as soon as possible&mdash;say,
+in September. I cannot tell you how great my disappointment
+is that this request has become necessary.</p>
+
+<p>If the world and its work were so organized that we
+could do what we should like to do, I should like a leave
+of absence till winter be broken and then to take up my
+duties here again till the war end. But that, of course, is
+impracticable. And it is now a better time to change
+Ambassadors than at any time since the war began. My
+five years' service has had two main phases&mdash;the difficult
+period of our neutrality and the far easier period since we
+came into the war. But when the war ends, I fear that
+there will be again more or less troublesome tasks arising
+out of commercial difficulties.</p>
+
+<p>But for any reasonable period the Embassy's work fortunately
+can now go on perfectly well with Mr. Laughlin
+as Charg&eacute;&mdash;until my successor can get here. The Foreign
+Office like him, he is <i>persona grata</i> to all other Departments
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-395" id="page2-395"></a>[pg II-395]</span>
+of the Government, and he has had a long experience; and
+he is most conscientious and capable. And the organization
+is in excellent condition.</p>
+
+<p>I venture to ask you to have a cable message sent to me
+(to be deciphered by me alone). It will require quite a
+little time to pack up and to get away.</p>
+
+<p>I send this, Mr. President, with more regret than I can
+express and only after a struggle of more than six months
+to avoid it.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours sincerely,<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Arthur Page took his father to Banff, in Scotland,
+for a little rest in preparation for the voyage. From this
+place came Page's last letter to his wife:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>To Mrs. Page</i><br />
+<br />
+Duff House, Banff, Scotland.<br />
+Sunday, September 2, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR:</p>
+
+<p>... I've put the period of our life in London, in my
+mind, as closed. That epoch is ended. And I am glad.
+It was time it ended. My job (<i>that</i> job) is done. From
+the letters that Shoecraft has sent me and from what the
+papers say, I think I couldn't have ended it more happily&mdash;or
+at a better time. I find myself thinking of the winter
+down South&mdash;of a Thanksgiving Day dinner for the older
+folks of our family, of a Christmas tree for the kids, of
+frolics of all sorts, of Rest, of some writing (perhaps not
+much), going over my papers with Ralph&mdash;that's what he
+wants, you know; etc., etc., etc.&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>And I've got to eat more. I myself come into my thinking
+and planning in only two ways&mdash;(1) I'm going to have
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-396" id="page2-396"></a>[pg II-396]</span>
+a suit like old Lord N.'s and (2) I'm going to get all the
+good things to eat that there are!</p>
+
+<p>Meantime, my dear, how are you? Don't you let this
+getting ready wear you out. Let something go undone
+rather. Work Miss Latimer and the boys and the moving
+and packing men, and Petherick and the servants.
+Take it very easy yourself.</p>
+
+<p>Nine and a half more days here&mdash;may they speed swiftly.
+Comfortable as I am, I'm mortal tired of being away from
+you&mdash;dead tired.</p>
+
+<p>Praise God it's only 9-1/2 days. If it were 9-3/4, I should
+not stand it, but break for home prematurely.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours, dear Allie, with all my love,<br />
+W.H.P.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>On August 24th came the President's reply:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>I have received your communication of August 1st. It
+caused me great regret that the condition of your health
+makes it necessary for you to resign. Under the circumstances
+I do not feel I have the right to insist on such a
+sacrifice as your remaining in London. Your resignation
+is therefore accepted. As you request it will take effect
+when you report to Washington. Accept my congratulations
+that you have no reason to fear a permanent impairment
+of your health and that you can resign knowing
+that you have performed your difficult duties with distinguished
+success.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+WOODROW WILSON.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>The news of Page's resignation inspired tributes from
+the British press and from British public men such as have
+been bestowed upon few Americans. The London <i>Times</i>
+headed its leader &quot;A Great Ambassador&quot; and this note
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-397" id="page2-397"></a>[pg II-397]</span>
+was echoed in all sections of Great Britain. The part of
+Page's career which Englishmen chiefly recalled was his
+attitude during the period of neutrality. This, the newspapers
+declared, was Page's great contribution to the cause.
+The fact that it had had such far-reaching influences on history
+was the one especially insisted on. His conciliatory
+and skillful behaviour had kept the United States and Great
+Britain friends at a time when a less tactful ambassador
+might easily have made them enemies; the result was that,
+when the time came, the United States could join forces
+against the common enemy, with results that were then
+daily unfolding on the battlefields of France. &quot;I really
+believe,&quot; wrote the Marquess of Crewe, &quot;that there were
+several occasions when we might have made it finally impossible
+for America to join us in the war; that these
+passed by may have been partly due to some glimmering
+of common sense on our part, with Grey as its main exponent;
+but it was more largely owing to your patience and
+courtesy and to the certainty which the Foreign Office
+always enjoyed that its action would be set before the
+Secretary of State in as favourable a light as it conscientiously
+could be.&quot; That, then, was Page's contribution to
+the statesmanship of this crisis&mdash;that of holding the two
+countries together so that, when the time came, the
+United States could join the Allies. A mass of private
+letters, all breathing the same sentiment, began to pour in
+on Page. There was hardly an illustrious name in Great
+Britain that was not represented among these leave-takings.
+As illustrating the character and spirit animating
+them, the following selections are made:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>From the King</i></p>
+
+<p>The information communicated to me yesterday
+through Mr. Laughlin of Your Excellency's resignation of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-398" id="page2-398"></a>[pg II-398]</span>
+the Post of Ambassador and the cause of this step fill me
+with the keenest regret. During your term of office in
+days of peace and of war your influence has done much to
+strengthen the ties of friendship and good-will which
+unite the two English-speaking nations of the world. I
+trust your health will soon be restored and that we may
+have the pleasure of seeing you and Mrs. Page before your
+departure.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+GEORGE R.I.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>From the Prime Minister</i><br />
+<br />
+10, Downing Street, Whitehall, S.W. 1.<br />
+30th August, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR AMBASSADOR:</p>
+
+<p>It is with the deepest regret that my colleagues and I
+have received the news that you have been forced by ill
+health to resign your office and that the President has
+consented to your relinquishing your ambassadorial
+duties. We are sorry that you are leaving us, all the more
+because your tenure of office has coincided with one of the
+greatest epochs in the history of our two countries and
+of the world, and because your influence and counsel
+throughout this difficult time have been of the utmost
+value to us all.</p>
+
+<p>The power for good or evil which can be exerted by the
+occupant of your high position is at all times necessarily
+very great. That our peoples are now fighting side by
+side in the cause of human freedom and that they are
+manifesting an ever growing feeling of cordiality to one
+another is largely attributable to the exceptional wisdom
+and good-will with which you have discharged your duties.
+For the part you have played during the past five years in
+bringing about this happy result we owe you our lasting
+gratitude.</p>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-399" id="page2-399"></a>[pg II-399]</span>
+<p>May I add that while you have always firmly presented
+the point of view of your own country, you have succeeded
+in winning, not only the respect and admiration of official
+circles, but the confidence, and I can say without hesitation,
+the affection of all sections of our people? It will be
+with universal regret that they will learn that, owing to
+the strain of the great responsibilities you have borne,
+you are no longer to remain among us. I earnestly
+trust that a well-earned rest will speedily restore you to
+complete health, and that you have many years of public
+service still in store for you.</p>
+
+<p>I should like also to say how much we shall miss Mrs.
+Page. She has won a real place in all our hearts. Through
+her unfailing tact, her genuine kindliness, and her unvarying
+readiness to respond to any call upon her time and
+energy, she has greatly contributed to the success of your
+ambassadorship.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Ever sincerely,<br />
+D. LLOYD GEORGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<i>From Viscount Grey of Fallodon</i><br />
+<br />
+Glen Innerleithen, Scotland.<br />
+September 2, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>DEAR MR. PAGE:</p>
+
+<p>I have been out of touch with current events for a few
+days, but yesterday I read the two articles in the <i>Times</i>
+on your retirement. I am very grieved to think that you
+are going. There was not a word of eulogy in the <i>Times</i>
+articles that was not under rather than over-stated, and
+reflecting thus I thought how rare it is in public life to have
+an occasion that justifies the best that can be said. But it
+is so now, and I am filled with deep regret that you are
+going and with deep gratitude that you came to us and
+were here when the war broke out and subsequently. If
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-400" id="page2-400"></a>[pg II-400]</span>
+the United States had been represented here by any one
+less decided as to the right and wrong of the war and less
+firm and courageous than yourself, the whole of the relations
+between your country and ours would have been
+in peril. And if the two countries had gone apart instead
+of coming together the whole fate of the world would be
+very different from what I hope it will now be.</p>
+
+<p>I have often thought that the forces behind public
+affairs are so tremendous that individuals have little real,
+even when much apparent, influence upon the course of
+events. But in the early years of the war I think everything
+might have gone wrong if it had not been that certain
+men of strong moral conviction were in certain places.
+And you were pre&euml;minently one of these. President
+Wilson I am sure was another, though I know him only
+through you and Colonel House and his own public utterances.
+Even so your influence must have counted in his
+action, by your friendship with him as well as by the fact
+of your being the channel through which communications
+passed between him and us.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot adequately express what it was to me personally
+in the dark days of 1914, 1915, and 1916 to know
+how you felt about the great issues involved in the war.</p>
+
+<p>I go to Fallodon at the end of this week and come to
+London the first week of September&mdash;if you and Mrs.
+Page have not left by then I hope I may see you. I long
+to do so before you go. I wish you may recover perfect
+health. My eyesight continues to fail and I shall soon
+be absolutely dependent upon other eyes for reading
+print. Otherwise I feel as well as a schoolboy, but it is
+depressing to be so well and yet so crippled in sight.</p>
+
+<p>Please do not trouble to answer this letter&mdash;you must
+have too many letters of the kind to be able to reply to
+them separately&mdash;but if there is a chance of my seeing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-401" id="page2-401"></a>[pg II-401]</span>
+you before you go please let me have a message to say
+when and where.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Yours sincerely,<br />
+GREY OF F.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>A few months before his resignation Page had received
+a letter from Theodore Roosevelt, who was more familiar
+than most Americans with Page's work in London. This
+summed up what will be probably the judgment of history
+upon his ambassadorship. The letter was in reply to one
+written to the Ex-President, asking him to show hospitality
+to the Archbishop of York<a name="FNanchor_78_78" id="FNanchor_78_78" /><a href="#Footnote_78_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a>, who was about to visit the
+United States.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+(Office of the Metropolitan Magazine)<br />
+342 Fourth Ave., New York,<br />
+March 1st, 1918.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MY DEAR MR. AMBASSADOR:</p>
+
+<p>I am very much pleased with your letter, and as soon
+as the Archbishop arrives, he will be addressed by me
+with all his titles, and I will get him to lunch with me or
+dine with me, or do anything else he wishes! I shall do it
+for his own sake, and still more, my dear fellow, I shall do
+it for the sake of the Ambassador who has represented
+America in London during these trying years as no other
+Ambassador in London has ever represented us, with the
+exception of Charles Francis Adams, during the Civil
+War.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Faithfully yours,<br />
+THEODORE ROOSEVELT.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>The seriousness of Page's condition was not understood
+in London; consequently there were many attempts to do
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-402" id="page2-402"></a>[pg II-402]</span>
+him honour in which he was unable to participate. Custom
+demands that a retiring Ambassador shall go to
+Windsor Castle to dine and to sleep; but King George,
+who was very solicitous about Page's health, offered to
+spare the Ambassador this trip and to come himself to
+London for this leave-taking. However, Page insisted on
+carrying out the usual programme; but the visit greatly
+tired him and he found it impossible personally to take
+part in any further official farewells. The last ceremony
+was a visit from the Lord Mayor and Council of Plymouth,
+who came to the Ambassador's house in September to present
+the freedom of the city. Ever since Page's speech of
+August 4, 1917, Plymouth had been planning to do him this
+honour; when the Council heard that the Ambassador's
+health would make it impossible for him to visit Plymouth,
+they asked if they might not come to London. The proceeding
+was most impressive and touching and the Ambassador's
+five-minute speech, the last one which he made in
+England, had all his old earnestness and mental power,
+though the physical weakness of the man saddened everybody
+present. The Lord Mayor presented the freedom
+of the ancient borough in a temporary holder, explaining
+that a more permanent receptacle would follow the Ambassador
+to America. When this arrived, it proved to be
+a beautiful silver model of the <i>Mayflower</i>. Certainly
+there could have been no more appropriate farewell gift
+to Page from the English town whose name so closely
+links the old country with the United States.</p>
+
+<p>The last scene took place at Waterloo Station. Sir
+Arthur Walsh came representing the King, while Mr.
+Balfour, Lord Robert Cecil, and other ministers represented
+the cabinet. The Government had provided a
+special railway carriage, and this was stationed at a convenient
+place as Page's motor drew up. So weak was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-403" id="page2-403"></a>[pg II-403]</span>
+the Ambassador that it was with difficulty that his companions,
+the ever devoted Mr. Laughlin, on one side, and
+Page's secretary, Mr. Shoecraft, on the other, succeeded
+in supporting him to his chair. Mr. Balfour, Lord Robert
+Cecil and the others then entered the carriage, and,
+with all that sympathetic dignity in which Englishmen
+of this type excel, said a few gracious and affectionate
+words of good-bye. They all stood, with uncovered heads,
+as the train slowly pulled out of the station, and caught
+their final glimpse of Page as he smiled at them and
+faintly waved his hand.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Perhaps the man most affected by this leave-taking was
+Mr. Balfour. He knew, as did the others, that that frail
+and emaciated figure had been one of the greatest friends
+that Britain had had at the most dreadful crisis in her
+history. He has many times told of this parting scene
+at Waterloo Station and always with emotion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I loved that man,&quot; he once said to an American friend,
+recalling this event. &quot;I almost wept when he left England.&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_75_75" id="Footnote_75_75" /><a href="#FNanchor_75_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> Of Aberdeen, N.C., the Ambassador's sister.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_76_76" id="Footnote_76_76" /><a href="#FNanchor_76_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> &quot;Dramatic Moments in American Diplomacy,&quot; by Ralph W.
+Page, 1918.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_77_77" id="Footnote_77_77" /><a href="#FNanchor_77_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> The reference is to a letter written in 1823 by Thomas
+Jefferson to President Monroe at the time when the Holy Alliance was
+threatening the independence of South America. &quot;With Great Britain,&quot;
+Jefferson wrote, &quot;we should most sedulously cherish a cordial friendship
+and nothing would tend more to knit our affections than to be fighting
+once more, side by side, in the same cause.&quot;</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_78_78" id="Footnote_78_78" /><a href="#FNanchor_78_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> See Vol. II, page 307.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-404" id="page2-404"></a>[pg II-404]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII" />CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+
+<h3>THE END</h3>
+
+
+<p>Page came home only to die. In fact, at one
+time it seemed improbable that he would live to
+reach the United States. The voyage of the <i>Olympic</i>, on
+which he sailed, was literally a race with death. The
+great-hearted Captain, Sir Bertram Hayes, hearing of the
+Ambassador's yearning to reach his North Carolina home,
+put the highest pressure upon his ship, which almost
+leaped through the waves. But for a considerable part of
+the trip Page was too ill to have much consciousness of his
+surroundings. At times he was delirious; once more he
+lived over the long period of &quot;neutrality&quot;; again he was
+discussing intercepted cargoes and &quot;notes&quot; with Sir
+Edward Grey; from this his mind would revert to his
+English literary friends, and then again he was a boy in
+North Carolina. The <i>Olympic</i> reached New York more
+than a day ahead of schedule; Page was carried down the
+gangplank on a stretcher, propped up with pillows; and
+since he was too weak then to be taken to his Southern
+home, he was placed temporarily in St. Luke's Hospital.
+Page arrived on a beautiful sunshiny October day; Fifth
+Avenue had changed its name in honour of the new Liberty
+Loan and had become the &quot;Avenue of the Allies&quot;; each
+block, from Forty-second Street north, was decorated with
+the colours of one of the nations engaged in the battle
+against Germany; the street was full of Red Cross workers
+and other picturesquely clad enthusiasts selling Liberty
+Bonds; in its animated beauty and in its inspiring significance
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-405" id="page2-405"></a>[pg II-405]</span>
+it formed an appropriate setting for Page's homecoming.</p>
+
+<p>The American air seemed to act like a tonic on Page;
+in a short time he showed such improvement that his recovery
+seemed not impossible. So far as his spirits and
+his mind were concerned, he became his old familiar self.
+He was able to see several of his old friends, he read
+the newspapers and discussed the international situation
+with his customary liveliness. With the assistance of
+his daughter, Mrs. Loring, he even kept track of his
+correspondence. Evidently the serious nature of his
+illness was not understood, for invitations to speak
+poured in from all quarters. Most of these letters Mrs.
+Loring answered, but there was one that Page insisted
+on attending to himself. The City of Cleveland was
+organizing some kind of a meeting dedicated to closer relations
+with Great Britain, and the Mayor wrote Page asking
+him to speak. The last thing which Page wrote with
+his own hand was his reply to this invitation; and it is an
+impressive fact that his final written word should have dealt
+with the subject that had been so close to his heart for the
+preceding five years.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><i>To Harry L. Davis, Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio</i></p>
+
+<p>I deeply regret my health will not permit me to attend
+any public function for some time to come; for I deeply
+appreciate your invitation on behalf of the City of Cleveland
+for the meeting on December 7th, and have a profound
+sympathy with its purpose to bring the two great
+English-speaking worlds as close together as possible,
+so that each shall thoroughly understand the courage
+and sacrifice and ideals of the other. This is the greatest
+political task of the future. For such a complete and
+lasting understanding is the only basis for the continued,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-406" id="page2-406"></a>[pg II-406]</span>
+progress of civilization. I am proud to be associated in
+your thought, Mr. Mayor, with so fitting and happy an occasion,
+and only physical inability could cause absence.</p></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+Sincerely,<br />
+WALTER H. PAGE.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p>Page's improvement was only temporary; a day or two
+after this letter was written he began to sink rapidly; it
+was therefore decided to grant his strongest wish and take
+him to North Carolina. He arrived in Pinehurst on
+December 12th, so weak that his son Frank had to carry
+him in his arms from the train.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, Frank,&quot; said Page, with a slightly triumphant
+smile, &quot;I did get here after all, didn't I?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He lingered for a few days and died, at eight o'clock in
+the evening, on December 21st, in his sixty-fourth year.
+He suffered no pain. He was buried in the Page family
+plot in the Bethesda Cemetery near Aberdeen.</p>
+
+<p>He was as much of a war casualty as was his nephew
+Allison Page, who lost his life with his face to the German
+machine guns in Belleau Wood.</p>
+
+
+<p>THE END</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-407" id="page2-407"></a>[pg II-407]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="APPENDIX" id="APPENDIX" />APPENDIX</h2>
+
+<p>SCRAPS FROM UNFINISHED DIARIES</p>
+
+
+<p>Page was not methodical in keeping diaries. His
+documents, however, reveal that he took many
+praiseworthy resolutions in this direction. They include
+a large number of bulky books, each labelled &quot;Diary&quot;
+and inscribed with the year whose events were to be recorded.
+The outlook is a promising one; but when the
+books are opened they reveal only fragmentary good intentions.
+Entries are kept up for a few days, and then
+the work comes to an end. These volumes contain many
+scraps of interesting writing, however, which are worth
+preserving; some of them are herewith presented in haphazard
+fashion, with no attempt at order in subject matter.</p>
+
+
+<p>1913</p>
+
+<p>PETHERICK</p>
+
+<p>Petherick: may he be immortal; for he is a man
+who has made of a humble task a high calling; and
+without knowing it he has caused a man of a high calling
+to degrade it to a mean level. Now Petherick is a humble
+Englishman, whose father many years ago enjoyed the
+distinction of carrying the mail pouch to and from the
+post office for the American Embassy in London. As
+father, so son. Petherick succeeded Petherick. In this
+remote period (<i>the</i> Petherick must now be 60) Governments
+had &quot;despatch agents,&quot; men who distributed mail
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-408" id="page2-408"></a>[pg II-408]</span>
+and whatnot, sent it on from capital to capital&mdash;were
+a sort of general &quot;forwarding&quot; factotums. The office
+is really out of date now. Telegraph companies, express
+companies, railway companies, the excellent mail service
+and the like out-despatch any conceivable agent&mdash;except
+Petherick. Petherick has qualities that defy change,
+such as an unfailing courtesy, a genuine joy in serving
+his fellows, the very genius of helpfulness. Well, since a
+governmental office once established acquires qualities
+of perpetuity, three United States despatch agents have
+survived the development of modern communication, one
+in London, one in New York, and the third (I think) in
+San Francisco. At any rate, the London agent remains.</p>
+
+<p>Now in the beginning the London despatch agent was a
+mail messenger (as I understand) for the Embassy. He
+still takes the pouch to the post office, and brings it back.
+In ordinary times, that's all he does for the Embassy, for
+which his salary of about &mdash;&mdash; is paid by the State Department&mdash;too
+high a salary for the labour done, but none
+too high for the trustworthy qualities required. If this
+had been all that Petherick did, he would probably have
+long ago gone to the scrap heap. It is one mark of a man
+of genius that he always makes his job. So Petherick.
+The American Navy came into being and parts of it come
+to this side of the world. Naval officers need help when
+they come ashore. Petherick was always on hand with
+despatches and mail for them, and Petherick was a handy
+man. Did the Captain want a cab? Petherick had one
+waiting. Did the Captain want rooms? Such-and-such
+a hotel was the proper one for him. Rooms were engaged.
+Did the Captain's wife need a maid? Petherick had
+thought of that, too. Then a Secretary from some continental
+legation wished to know a good London tailor.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-409" id="page2-409"></a>[pg II-409]</span>
+He sought Petherick. An American Ambassador from
+the continent came to London. London yielded Petherick
+for his guidance and his wants. Petherick became omni-present,
+universally useful&mdash;an American institution in
+fact. A naval officer who had been in Asiatic waters was
+steaming westward to the Mediterranean. His wife and
+three babies came to London, where she was to meet her
+husband, who was to spend several weeks here. A telegram
+to Petherick: they needed to do nothing else. When
+the lady arrived a furnished flat, a maid and a nurse and
+a cook and toys awaited her. When her husband arrived,
+a pair of boots awaited him from the same last that his
+last pair had been made on, in London, five years before.
+At some thoughtful moment $1,000 was added
+to Petherick's salary by the Navy Department; and a
+few years ago a handsome present was made to Petherick
+by the United States Naval Officers all over the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>But Petherick, with all his virtues, is merely an Englishman,
+and it is not usual for an Englishman to hold a
+$3,000 office under appointment from the United States
+Government. The office of despatch agent, therefore,
+has been nominally held by an American citizen in
+London. This American citizen for a good many years
+has been Mr. Crane, a barrister, who simply turns over
+the salary to Petherick; and all the world, except the
+Secretary of State, knows that Petherick is Petherick and
+there is none other but him.</p>
+
+<p>Now comes the story: Mr. Bryan, looking around the
+world for offices for his henchmen, finds that one Crane
+has been despatch agent in London for many years, and
+he writes me a personal and confidential letter, asking
+if this be not a good office for some Democrat!</p>
+
+<p>I tell the story to the Naval Attach&eacute;! He becomes
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-410" id="page2-410"></a>[pg II-410]</span>
+riotous. He'll have to employ half a dozen clerks to do
+for the Navy ill what Petherick does well with ease, if he's
+removed. Life would not be worth living anyhow. I
+uncover Petherick to the Secretary and show him in his
+glory. It must be said to the Secretary's credit that he
+has said nothing more about it. Petherick, let us hope,
+will live forever. The Secretary's petty-spoils mind now
+works on grand plans for Peace, holy Peace, having unsuccessfully
+attacked poor Petherick. And Petherick
+knows nothing about it and never dreams of an enemy in
+all the world, and in all naval and diplomatic life he has
+only fast friends. If Mr. Bryan had removed him, he
+might have made a temporary friend of one Democrat
+from Oklahoma, and lasting enemies of all that Democrat's
+rivals and of the whole naval and diplomatic service.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>November, 1914.</i></p>
+
+<p>We have to get away from it&mdash;or try to&mdash;a minute at a
+time; and the comic gods sometimes help us. Squier<a name="FNanchor_79_79" id="FNanchor_79_79" /><a href="#Footnote_79_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> has
+a junior officer here to hold his desk down when he's gone.
+He's a West Point Lieutenant with a German name.
+His study is ordnance. A new kind of bomb gives him
+the same sort of joy that a new species would have given
+Darwin. He was over in France&mdash;where the armies had
+passed to and from Paris&mdash;and one day he found an unexploded
+German bomb of a new sort. The thing weighed
+half a ton or thereabouts, and it was loaded. Somehow
+he got it to London&mdash;I never did hear how. He wrapped
+it in blankets and put it under his bed. He went out of
+town to study some other infernal contraption and the
+police found this thing under his bed. The War Office
+took it and began to look for him&mdash;to shoot him, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-411" id="page2-411"></a>[pg II-411]</span>
+bomb-harbouring German! They soon discovered, of
+course, that he was one of our men and an officer in the
+United States Army. Then I heard of it for the first
+time. Here came a profuse letter of apology from the
+Government; they had not known the owner was one of
+my attach&eacute;s. Pardon, pardon&mdash;a thousand apologies.
+But while this letter was being delivered to me one of the
+under-secretaries of the Government was asking one of
+our secretaries, &quot;In Heaven's name, what's the Ambassador
+going to do about it? We have no right to molest
+the property of one of your attach&eacute;s, but this man's room
+is less than 100 yards from Westminster Abbey: it might
+blow up half of London. We can't give the thing back
+to him!&quot; They had taken it to the Duck Pond, wherever
+that is. About that time the Lieutenant came back.
+His pet bomb gone&mdash;what was I going to do about it?</p>
+
+<p>The fellow actually wanted to bring it to his office in
+the Embassy!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Look here, Lieutenant, besides the possibility of blow-up
+this building and killing every mother's son of us, consider
+the scandal of the American Embassy in London
+blown up by a German bomb. That would go down in
+the school histories of the United States. Don't you see?&quot;
+No, he didn't see instantly&mdash;he does so love a bomb! I
+had to threaten to disown him and let him be shot before
+he was content to go and tell them to unload it&mdash;he <i>would</i>
+have it, unloaded, if not loaded.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I had to write half a dozen letters before the thing
+was done for. He thinks me a chicken-livered old coward
+and I know much more about him than I knew before;
+and we are at peace. The newspapers never got the
+story, but his friends about town still laugh at him for
+trying first to blow up Westminster Abbey and then his
+own Ambassador. He was at my house at dinner the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-412" id="page2-412"></a>[pg II-412]</span>
+other night and one of the ladies asked him: &quot;Lieutenant,
+have you any darling little pet lyddite cartridges in your
+pocket?&quot; Think of a young fellow who just loves bombs!
+Has loaded bombs for pets! How I misspent my youth!</p>
+
+
+<p><i>February, 1915.</i></p>
+
+<p>This is among the day's stories: The British took a ship
+that had a cargo of 100,000 busts of Von Hindenburg&mdash;filled
+with copper.</p>
+
+<p>Another: When Frederick Watts was painting Lord
+Minto he found it hard to make the portrait please him.
+When he was told that Lord Minto liked it and Lady
+Minto didn't and that So-and-So praised it, he exclaimed:
+&quot;I don't care a d&mdash;n what anyone thinks about it&mdash;except
+a fellow named Sargent.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And the King said (about the wedding<a name="FNanchor_80_80" id="FNanchor_80_80" /><a href="#Footnote_80_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>): &quot;I have the
+regulation of the dress to be worn at all functions in the
+Chapel Royal. I, therefore, declare that the American
+Ambassador may have any dress worn that he pleases!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>E.M. House went to Paris this morning, having no
+peace message from this Kingdom whatever. This kind
+of talk here now was spoken of by the Prime Minister the
+other day &quot;as the twittering of a sparrow in a tumult
+that shakes the world.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Lady P. remarked to me to-day, as many persons do,
+that I am very fortunate to be Ambassador here at this
+particular time. Perhaps; but it isn't easy to point out
+precisely wherein the good fortune consists. This much
+is certain: it is surely a hazardous occupation now. Henry
+James remarked, too, that nobody could afford to miss
+the experience of being here&mdash;nobody who could be here.
+Perhaps true, again; but I confess to enough shock and
+horror to keep me from being so very sure of that. Yet
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-413" id="page2-413"></a>[pg II-413]</span>
+no other phenomenon is more noticeable than the wish
+of every sort of an American to be here. I sometimes
+wonder whether the really well-balanced American does.
+Most of them are of the overwrought and excitable kinds.</p>
+
+<p>A conservative lady, quite conscientious, was taken
+down to dinner by Winston Churchill. Said she, to be
+quite frank and fair: &quot;Mr. Churchill, I must tell you that
+I don't like your politics. Yet we must get on together.
+You may say, if you like, that this is merely a matter of
+personal taste with me, as I might not like your&mdash;well,
+your moustache.&quot; &quot;I see no reason, Madam, why you
+should come in contact with either.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My talk with Bonar Law: He was disposed to believe
+that if England had declared at once that she would go
+to war with Germany if France was attacked, there would
+have been no war. Well, would English opinion, before
+Belgium was attacked, have supported a government
+which made such a declaration?</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bonar Law thinks that President Wilson ought to
+have protested about Belgium.</p>
+
+<p>He didn't agree with me that much good human material
+goes to waste in this Kingdom for lack of opportunity.
+(That's the Conservative in him.)</p>
+
+
+<p><i>Friday, April 30, 1915.</i></p>
+
+<p>Sir Edward Grey came to tea to talk with Mr. House
+and me&mdash;little talk of the main subject (peace), which is
+not yet ripe by a great deal. Sir Edward said the Germans
+had poisoned wells in South Africa. They have
+lately used deadly gases in France. The key to their mind
+says Sir Edward, is this&mdash;they attribute to other folk
+what they are thinking of doing themselves.</p>
+
+<p>While Sir Edward was here John Sargent came in and
+brought Katharine the charcoal portrait of her that he
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-414" id="page2-414"></a>[pg II-414]</span>
+had made&mdash;his present to her for her and Chud to give
+to W.A.W.P.<a name="FNanchor_81_81" id="FNanchor_81_81" /><a href="#Footnote_81_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> and me. A very graceful and beautiful
+thing for him to do.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>April 30, 1915.</i></p>
+
+<p>Concerning Peace: The German civil authorities want
+peace and so does one faction of the military party.
+But how can they save their face? They have made
+their people believe that they are at once the persecuted
+and the victorious. If they stop, how can
+they explain their stopping? The people might rend
+them. The ingenious loophole discovered by House is&mdash;mere
+moonshine, viz., the freedom of the seas in war.
+That is a one-sided proposition unless they couple with
+it the freedom of the land in war also, which is nonsense.
+Nothing can be done, then, until some unfavourable military
+event brings a new mind to the Germans. Peace
+talk, therefore, is yet mere moonshine. House has been
+to Berlin, from London, thence to Paris, then back to
+London again&mdash;from Nowhere (as far as peace is concerned)
+to Nowhere again.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>May 3, 1915.</i></p>
+
+<p>Why doesn't the President make himself more accessible?
+Dismiss X and get a bigger man? Take his cabinet
+members really into his confidence? Everybody who
+comes here makes these complaints of him!</p>
+
+<p>We dined to-night at Y's. Professor M. was there, etc.
+He says we've got to have polygamy in Europe after the
+war to keep the race up.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>Friday, May 21, 1915.</i></p>
+
+<p>Last night the Italian Parliament voted to give the
+Government war-powers; and this means immediate war
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-415" id="page2-415"></a>[pg II-415]</span>
+on the side of the Allies. There are now eight nations
+fighting against Germany, Austria, and Turkey; viz.,
+Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy, Japan, Belgium,
+Serbia, Montenegro. And it looks much as if the United
+States will be forced in by Germany.</p>
+
+<p>The British Government is wrestling with a very grave
+internal disruption&mdash;to make a Coalition Government.
+The only portfolios that seem absolutely secure are the
+Prime Minister's and the Foreign Secretary's (Sir Edward
+Grey's)&mdash;for which latter, many thanks. The two-fold
+trouble is&mdash;(1) a difference between Churchill (First Lord
+of the Admiralty) and Lord Fisher&mdash;about the Dardanelles
+campaign and (I dare say) other things, and (2) Lord
+Kitchener's failure to secure ammunition&mdash;&quot;to organize
+the industries of the Kingdom.&quot; Some even declare K.
+of K. (they now say Kitchener of Kaos) is a general colossal
+failure. But the prevailing opinion is that his raising
+of the new army has been good work but that he has failed
+with the task of procuring munitions. As for Churchill,
+he's too restless and erratic and dictatorial and fussy and
+he runs about too much. I talked with him at dinner last
+night at his mother's. He slips far down in his chair and
+swears and be-dams and by-Gods his assertions. But his
+energy does interest one. An impromptu meeting in the
+Stock Exchange to-day voted confidence in K. of K. and
+burned up a copy of the <i>Daily Mail</i>, which this morning
+had a severe editorial about him.</p>
+
+<p>Washington, having sent a severe note to Germany, is
+now upbraided for not sending another to England, to
+match and pair it. That's largely German influence, but
+also the Chicago packers and the cotton men. These
+latter have easy grievances, like the Irish. The delays of
+the British Government are exasperating, but they are
+really not so bad now as they have been. Still, the President
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-416" id="page2-416"></a>[pg II-416]</span>
+can be influenced by the criticism that he must
+hit one side every time he hits the other, else he's not
+neutral! I am working by every device to help the situation
+and to prevent another note. I proposed to-day
+to Sir Edward Grey that his Government make an immediate
+advance payment on the cotton that it proposes
+to buy.</p>
+
+<p>Unless Joffre be a man of genius&mdash;of which there are
+some indications&mdash;and unless French also possibly have
+some claim to this distinction and <i>perhaps</i> the Grand
+Duke Nikolas, there doesn't yet seem to be a great man
+brought forth by the war. In civil life, Sir Edward Grey
+comes to a high measure. As we yet see it from this
+English corner of the world, no other statesman now ranks
+with him.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>March 20, 1916.</i></p>
+
+<p>I am sure I have the best secret service that could be
+got by any neutral. I am often amazed at its efficiency.
+It is good because it is not a secret&mdash;certainly not a spy
+service at all. It is all aboveboard and it is all done by
+men of high honour and good character&mdash;I mean the
+Embassy staff. Counting the attach&eacute;s there are about
+twenty good men, every one of whom moves in a somewhat
+different circle from any other one. Every one cultivates
+his group of English folk, in and out of official life,
+and his group in the diplomatic corps. There isn't a week
+but every man of them sees his particular sources of
+information&mdash;at their offices, at the Embassy, at luncheon,
+at dinner, at the clubs&mdash;everywhere. We all take every
+possible occasion to serve our friends and they serve us.
+The result is, I verily believe, that we hear more than any
+other group in London. These young fellows are all keen
+as razors. They know when to be silent, too; and they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-417" id="page2-417"></a>[pg II-417]</span>
+are trusted as they deserve to be. Of course I see them,
+singly or in pairs, every day in the regular conduct of the
+work of the Embassy; and once a week we all meet together
+and go over everything that properly comes before so
+large a &quot;cabinet&quot; meeting. Thus some of us are on
+confidential terms with somebody in every department
+of the Government, with somebody in every other Embassy
+and Legation, with all the newspapers and correspondents&mdash;even
+with the censors. And the wives of those
+that are married are abler than their husbands. They are
+most attractive young women&mdash;welcome everywhere&mdash;and
+indefatigable. Mrs. Page has them spend one afternoon
+a week with her, rolling bandages; and that regular
+meeting always yields something else. They come to my
+house Thursday afternoons, too, when people always
+drop in to tea-visitors from other countries, resident
+Americans, English&mdash;everybody&mdash;Sometimes one hundred.</p>
+
+<p>Nobody in this company is a &quot;Spy&quot;&mdash;God forbid! I
+know no more honourable or attractive group of ladies and
+gentlemen. Yet can conceive of no organization of spies
+who could find out as many things. And the loyalty of
+them all! Somebody now and then prefaces a revelation
+with the declaration, &quot;This is in strict confidence&mdash;absolutely
+nobody is to hear it.&quot; The answer is&mdash;&quot;Yes, only,
+you know, I have no secrets from the Ambassador: no
+member of his staff can ever have.&quot;&mdash;Of course, we get
+some fun along with our tragedies. If I can find time, for
+instance, I am going to write out for House's amusement
+a verbatim report of every conversation that he held in
+London. It has all come to me&mdash;from what he said to the
+King down; and it all tallies with what House himself
+told me. He went over it all himself to me the other day
+at luncheon.&mdash;I not only believe&mdash;I am sure&mdash;that in this
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-418" id="page2-418"></a>[pg II-418]</span>
+way I do get a correct judgment of public feeling and
+public opinion, from Cabinet Ministers to stock-brokers.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>December 11, 1916.</i></p>
+
+<p>The new Government is quite as friendly to us in its
+intentions as the old, and much more energetic. The old
+Government was a spent force. Mr. Balfour is an agreeable
+man to deal with, with a will to keep our sympathy,
+unless the dire need of ships forces him to unpleasantness.
+The Prime Minister is&mdash;American in his ways. Lord
+Robert has the old Cecil in him, and he's going to maintain
+the blockade at any cost that he can justify to himself
+and to public opinion, and the public opinion is with him.
+They are all eager to have American approval&mdash;much
+more eager, I think, than a large section of public opinion,
+which has almost ceased to care what Americans think
+or do. The more we talk about peace, the more they
+think about war. There is no vindictiveness in the
+English. They do not care to do hurt to the German
+people: they regard them as misguided and misled. But
+no power on earth can stop the British till the German
+military caste is broken&mdash;that leadership which attacked
+Belgium and France and would destroy England. Balfour,
+Lloyd George, the people, the army and the navy
+are at one in this matter, every labouring man, everybody,
+except a little handful of Quakers and professors and Noel
+Buxton. I think I know and see all the peace men. They
+feel that they can talk to me with safety. They send me
+their pamphlets and documents. I think that all of them
+have now become warlike but three, and one of them is a
+woman. If you meet a woman you know on the street
+and express a sympathy on the loss of her second son, she
+will say to you, &quot;Yes, he died in defence of his country.
+My third son will go next week. They all die to save
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-419" id="page2-419"></a>[pg II-419]</span>
+us.&quot; Doubtless she sheds tears in private. But her eyes
+are dry in public. She has discarded her luxuries to put
+money in the war loan. Say &quot;Peace&quot; to her? She would
+insult you.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>May 10, 1917.</i></p>
+
+<p>We dined at Lambeth Palace. There was Lord Morley,
+whom I had not seen since his long illness&mdash;much reduced
+in flesh, and quite feeble and old-looking. But his mind
+and speech were most alert. He spoke of Cobden favouring
+the Confederate States because the constitution of the
+Confederacy provided for free trade. But one day Bright
+informed Cobden that he was making the mistake of his
+life. Thereafter Cobden came over to the Union side.
+This, Morley heard direct from Bright.</p>
+
+<p>The Archbishop spoke in high praise of Charnwood's
+Lincoln&mdash;was surprised at its excellence, etc.
+Geoffrey Robinson<a name="FNanchor_82_82" id="FNanchor_82_82" /><a href="#Footnote_82_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> asked who wrote the <i>Quarterly</i>
+articles in favour of the Confederacy all through the war&mdash;was
+it Lord Salisbury? Nobody knew.</p>
+
+<p>The widow of the former Archbishop Benson was there&mdash;the
+mother of all the Bensons, Hugh, A.C., etc., etc.&mdash;a
+remarkable old lady, who talked much in admiration of
+Balfour.</p>
+
+<p>The Bishop of&mdash;Winchester(?)&mdash;was curious to know
+whether the people in the United States really understood
+the Irish question&mdash;the two-nation, two-religion aspect
+of the case. I had to say no!</p>
+
+<p>There is an orphan asylum founded by some preceding
+Archbishop, by the sea. The danger of bombardment
+raised the question of safety. The Archbishop ordered
+all the children (40) to be sent to Lambeth Palace. We
+dined in a small dining room: &quot;The children,&quot; Mrs. Davidson
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-420" id="page2-420"></a>[pg II-420]</span>
+explained, &quot;have the big dining room.&quot; Each child
+has a lady as patroness or protector who &quot;adopts&quot; her,
+i.e., sees that she is looked after, etc. Some of the ladies
+who now do this were themselves orphans!</p>
+
+<p>At prayers as usual at 10 o'clock in the chapel where
+prayers have been held every night&mdash;for how many centuries?</p>
+
+<p>At lunch to-day at Mr. Asquith's&mdash;Lord Lansdowne
+there; took much interest in the Knapp farm work while
+I briefly explained.</p>
+
+<p>Lord Morley said to Mrs. Page he had become almost a
+Tolstoyan&mdash;Human progress hasn't done much for mankind's
+happiness, etc. Look at the war&mdash;by a &quot;progressive&quot;
+nation. Now the mistake here is horn of a class-society,
+a society that rests on privilege. &quot;Progress,&quot;
+has done everything (1) in liberating men's minds and
+spirits in the United States. This is the real gain; (2)
+in arraying all the world <i>against</i> Germany.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>Tuesday, January 22, 1918.</i></p>
+
+<p>Some days bring a bunch of interesting things or men.
+Then there sometimes come relatively dull days&mdash;not
+often, however. To-day came:</p>
+
+<p>General Tasker H. Bliss, Chief-of-Staff, now 64&mdash;the
+wisest (so I judge) of our military men, a rather wonderful
+old chap. He's on his way to Paris as a member of the
+Supreme War Council at Versailles. The big question
+he has struck is: Shall American troops be put into the
+British and French lines, in small groups, to fill up the
+gaps in those armies? The British have persuaded him
+that it is a military necessity. If it were less than a
+necessity, it would, of course, be wrong&mdash;i.e., it would cut
+across our national pride, force our men under another
+flag, etc. It is not proposed to deprive Pershing of his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-421" id="page2-421"></a>[pg II-421]</span>
+command nor even of his army. The plan is to bring over
+troops that would not otherwise now come and to lend
+these to the British and French armies, and to let Pershing
+go on with his army as if this hadn't been done. Bliss is
+inclined to grant this request on condition the British
+bring these men over, equip and feed them, etc. He
+came in to ask me to send a telegram for him to-morrow
+to the President, making this recommendation. But on
+reflection he decided to wait till he had seen and heard the
+French also, who desire the same thing as the British.</p>
+
+<p>General Bliss is staying with Major Warburton; and
+Warburton gave me some interesting glimpses of him.
+A telegram came for the General. Warburton thought
+that he was out of the house and he decided to take it
+himself to the General's room. He opened the door.
+There sat the General by the fire talking to himself,
+wrapped in thought. Warburton walked to the middle
+of the room. The old man didn't see him. He decided
+not to disturb him, for he was rehearsing what he proposed
+to say to the Secretary of State for War or to the Prime
+Minister&mdash;getting his ears as well as his mind used to
+it. Warburton put the telegram on the table near the
+General, went out, and wasn't discovered.</p>
+
+<p>Several nights, he sat by the fire with Warburton and
+began to talk, again rehearsing to himself some important
+conclusions that he had reached. Every once in a while
+he'd look up at Warburton and say: &quot;Now, what do you
+think of that?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>That's an amazing good way to get your thought clear
+and your plans well laid out. I've done it myself.</p>
+
+<p>I went home and Kipling and Carrie<a name="FNanchor_83_83" id="FNanchor_83_83" /><a href="#Footnote_83_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> were at lunch with
+us. Kipling said: &quot;I'll tell you, your coming into the war
+made a new earth for me.&quot; He is on a committee to see
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-422" id="page2-422"></a>[pg II-422]</span>
+that British graves are properly marked and he talked
+much about it. I could not help thinking that in the back
+of his mind there was all the time thought of his own dead
+boy, John.</p>
+
+<p>Then in the afternoon Major Drain brought the copy of
+a contract between the United States Government and
+the British to build together 1500 tanks ($7,500,000).
+We took it to the Foreign Office and Mr. Balfour and I
+signed it. Drain thinks that the tanks are capable of
+much development and he wishes our army after the war
+to keep on studying and experimenting with and improving
+such machines of destruction. Nobody knows what
+may come of it.</p>
+
+<p>Then I dined at W.W. Astor's (Jr.) There were Balfour,
+Lord Salisbury, General and Lady Robertson, Mrs.
+Lyttleton and Philip Kerr.</p>
+
+<p>During the afternoon Captain Amundsen, Arctic explorer
+came in, on his way from Norway to France as the
+guest of our Government, whereafter he will go to the
+United States and talk to Scandinavian people there.</p>
+
+<p>That's a pretty good kind of a full day.</p>
+
+
+<p><i>April, 19, 1918.</i></p>
+
+<p>Bell<a name="FNanchor_84_84" id="FNanchor_84_84" /><a href="#Footnote_84_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a>, and Mrs. Bell during the air raid took their little
+girl (Evangeline, aged three) to the cellar. They told
+her they went to the cellar to hear the big fire crackers.
+After a bomb fell that shook all Chelsea, Evangeline
+clapped her hands in glee. &quot;Oh, mummy, what a <i>big</i>
+fire cracker!&quot;</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes"><p class="center">FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_79_79" id="Footnote_79_79" /><a href="#FNanchor_79_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> Colonel (now Major General) George O. Squier, Military
+Attach&eacute; at the American Embassy.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_80_80" id="Footnote_80_80" /><a href="#FNanchor_80_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> The wedding of Mr. Page's daughter at the Chapel Royal.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_81_81" id="Footnote_81_81" /><a href="#FNanchor_81_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> Mrs. Page.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_82_82" id="Footnote_82_82" /><a href="#FNanchor_82_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> Editor of the London <i>Times</i>.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_83_83" id="Footnote_83_83" /><a href="#FNanchor_83_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> Mrs. Kipling.</p></div>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_84_84" id="Footnote_84_84" /><a href="#FNanchor_84_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> Mr. Edward Bell, Second Secretary of the American
+Embassy.</p></div>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-423" id="page2-423"></a>[pg II-423]</span></div>
+<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX" />INDEX</h2>
+
+<div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-425" id="page2-425"></a>[pg II-425]</span></div>
+<div>
+<i>Age</i>, Louisville, connection with, I 32<br />
+<br />
+Aid to stranded Americans in Europe on outbreak of war, I 304, 307, 329<br />
+<br />
+<i>Alabama</i> claims, the framed check for, in British Foreign Office,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 390, II 78</span><br />
+<br />
+Alderman, Dr. Edwin A., early efforts in behalf of public education,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 73, 78;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">stricken with tuberculosis, but recovers health, I 120;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on committee to lecture in England, II 346.</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Letters to</i>: expressing fear and hope of Wilson, I 121;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on meeting of the Southern and the General Education Boards, I 125;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">after Wilson's inauguration, I 128;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">while enroute to port as Ambassador, I 129;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on changed world conditions, II 142</span><br />
+<br />
+Ambassador, some activities of an, I 159;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as a preventer of calamities, I 166</span><br />
+<br />
+America and Great Britain, only free countries in the world, II 121<br />
+<br />
+American Government, slight regard for by British, I 145, 152, 190, II 153;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">strong feeling against uncourteous Notes of, II 74;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on handling of <i>Lusitania</i> case, II 79;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on being under German influence, II 80, 97</span><br />
+<br />
+American Luncheon Club, could not adhere to neutrality, II 230<br />
+<br />
+American Navy, its aid in combatting the submarine, II 294<br />
+<br />
+American supremacy, a before-the-war prophecy, I 144;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">why the British will acknowledge, I 170</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Ancona</i>, torpedoed, II 79 <i>note</i><br />
+<br />
+Anderson, Chandler P., counsel for Committee for relief of stranded<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Americans, I 307;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">backs up Ambassador in neutrality letter to Wilson, I 373;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">gives reasons why unwise to demand adoption of Declaration of London,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 387</span><br />
+<br />
+Anglo-American-German &quot;pact,&quot; planned by Wilson and House, I 281<br />
+<br />
+Anglomania, charged against ambassadors, I 257<br />
+<br />
+Anti-Imperialists, protest declaration of war against Spain, I 62<br />
+<br />
+<i>Arabic</i>, sinking of, thought surely to bring on war, II 26<br />
+<br />
+Arbitration Treaty, renewal of, I 285;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">significance of Germany's refusal to sign, I 294</span><br />
+<br />
+Archbold, John D., attempts to explain Foraker letters, I 88<br />
+<br />
+Archibald, James, trapped by British secret service, II 101<br />
+<br />
+Asquith, H.H., opposition to the House of Lords, I 137;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at state dinner to King Christian, I 167;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">hint to, on Mexican situation, I 185;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conciliatory remarks at Guildhall banquet, I 210;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">explains Dardanelles preparations, I 430;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his ministry suspected of pacifist or &quot;defeatist&quot; tendencies, I 430;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">aged by the war, II 141;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conversation with, regarding Casement case, and relations between</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Great Britain and America, II 168;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">refuses to discuss Wilson's peace note, II 207;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in House of Commons speech welcomes America as ally, II 230;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">inclined toward seeking peace, II 353</span><br />
+<br />
+Astor, Mr. and Mrs. Waldorf, at the home of, II 380<br />
+<br />
+<i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, editor of, I 53<br />
+<br />
+Atlantic Ocean, a blessing to America, I 162, 170, 310; II 117<br />
+<br />
+Austrian Embassy, left in charge of American Ambassador, I 305, 321;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">difficulties incident to, I 345</span><br />
+<br />
+Aycock, Gov. Charles B., efforts in educational reform, I 85;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">commendatory letter from, I 86</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Babcock, Commander, arrival in England, II 274<br />
+<br />
+Bacon, Senator Augustus O., declared he would have blocked Page's<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ambassadorship had he known he was author of &quot;The Southerner,&quot;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 93, 226</span><br />
+<br />
+Baker, Secretary Newton D., sees the war at first-hand, II 364;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dinner at Embassy to, II 364, 370;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Page's memorandum of his visit, II 366</span><br />
+<br />
+Baker, Ray Stannard, visit at Sandwich, II 384<br />
+<br />
+Balfour, aged by the war, II 141;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">drafts reply to Wilson's peace note, II 212;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reply to question how best America could help, II 219;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the disposition of the German colonies, II 246;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">friendliness toward United States averts crisis in Venezuela dispute,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 249;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">much concerned at feeling toward British in the United States, II 251;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his home life, II 257;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conference with Bonar Law and, over financial help from America, II 261;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">satisfactory conference with Mr. Polk over blacklist and blockade,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 265;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">explains &quot;secret</span><br />
+treaties&quot; to President Wilson, II 267;<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-426" id="page2-426"></a>[pg II-426]</span>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conference with McAdoo on financial situation, II 267;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sends dispatch to President Wilson substantiating previous reports</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of Page and Sims on submarine peril which were not taken seriously,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 284;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">indignant over misunderstanding with Brazilian Navy, II 304;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at train to bid good-bye, II 402;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">most affected at leave-taking, 403</span><br />
+<br />
+Balfour Mission to the United States, II 249 <i>et seq.</i><br />
+<br />
+Barclay, Esther, Mr. Page's maternal grandmother, I 6<br />
+<br />
+Bayard, Thomas F., accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257<br />
+<br />
+Beckendorff, Count, talk with, II 82<br />
+<br />
+Belgium, violation of, the cause of Great Britain's participation in<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the war, I 315;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sending food supplies to aid starving, I 346</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Benham</i>, misunderstanding over American destroyer's action during<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">submarine operations off Nantucket, II 253</span><br />
+<br />
+Benton, William S., Englishman, murdered in Mexico, I 285<br />
+<br />
+Beresford, Lord Charles, complains of attitude of Foreign Office in<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">pacifying America, I 365;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">makes speech in House of Lords on attitude of U.S. Destroyer</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Benham</i>, II 253</span><br />
+<br />
+Bernstorff, Count von, objectionable activities of, I 335;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">efforts to secure intercession of the United States toward peace, I 403;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at the Speyer dinner, I 404;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">instructed to start propaganda for &quot;freedom of the seas,&quot; I 436;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">gives pledge that liners would not be submarined without warning,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 30 <i>note</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">thought in England to dominate our State Department, II 80;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">cable proposing suspending of submarine war, II 149;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">threatens President Wilson with resumption of submarine sinkings</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">unless he moves for peace, II 200;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">news of his dismissal received in London, II 215</span><br />
+<br />
+Bethmann-Hollweg, not seen by Colonel House, I 289;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">tells King of Bavaria peace must be secured, II 181</span><br />
+<br />
+Biddle, General, at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370<br />
+<br />
+Bingham School, studies and environment at, I 16;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">selected for honour prize by Ambassador, I 17</span><br />
+<br />
+Blacklist, feeling in America over the, II 184;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conditions change on American entry into war, II 264, 265, 266</span><br />
+<br />
+Blanquet, General, in Mexican uprising, I 175<br />
+<br />
+Bliss, General Tasker, wisdom and tact impress the Allies, II 351<br />
+<br />
+Blockade, British, compared to our blockade in Civil War, II 55 <i>et seq.</i>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the American Note protesting against, II 69</span><br />
+<br />
+Blockade, strong feeling in America against, II 184<br />
+<br />
+Bolling, Thomas, at President Wilson's luncheon, II 171<br />
+<br />
+Bones, Miss, at President Wilson's luncheon, II 171<br />
+<br />
+Boy-Ed, dismissal of, II 108<br />
+<br />
+Brazilian Navy, ships join American unit in European waters, II 304<br />
+<br />
+Breitung, E.N., makes test case with <i>Dacia</i> registry, I 393<br />
+<br />
+British Navy League, activity in keeping up the navy, I 284<br />
+<br />
+Bryan, William Jennings, uncomplimentary editorial on, in <i>World's Work</i>, I 87;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude toward concession holders in Mexico, I 181;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">refuses to consider intervention in Mexico, I 193;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">an increasing lack of confidence in, I 193;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">tirade against British, to Sir William Tyrrell, I 202,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">to Col. House, I 206;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Asquith's opinion of, 236;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Page's appeal to Colonel House that he be kept out of Europe, I 235, 236;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">regards Ambassador as un-neutral, I 362;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">insists that Great Britain adopt the Declaration of London, I 373, 377;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">interested in the Straus peace proposal, I 407;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">resignation after <i>Lusitania</i> notes, II 6;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">proposes going to England and Germany to try peace negotiations, II 12</span><br />
+<br />
+Bryan, comments on his political activity but diplomatic laxity,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 194, 225, 236;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">crank once, crank always, II 27;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">democratic party wrecked by his long captaincy, II 190</span><br />
+<br />
+Bryce, Lord, hopeless of the two countries ever understanding one<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">another, II 39;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">concern at our trivial notes, II 67;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conversation with, on misunderstandings between America and Great</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Britain, and the peace settlement, II 165;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">depressed at tenor of Wilson's note proposing peace, sends him</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">personal letter, II 207;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in House of Lords speech welcomes America as ally, II 230;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude toward a League of Nations, II 357</span><br />
+<br />
+Burns, John, resigns from British Cabinet on declaration of war, I 316<br />
+<br />
+Buttrick, Dr. Wallace, intimacy with, I 85;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">efforts in building up Southern agriculture, I 94;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in hookworm eradication, I 99;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">lectures on the United States throughout Great Britain, II 291;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his speeches a source of inspiration to British masses, II 345;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">asked to organize a committee of Americans to extend the work, II 345;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">informed by Colonel House of Wilson's disapproval, II 348;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">warns Page of breakdown if he does not at once return to America, II 375;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">beneficial effects of his lectures, II 388</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-427" id="page2-427"></a>[pg II-427]</span>
+Canterbury, Archbishop of, in House of Lords speech welcomes America as<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ally, II 231;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on gratitude shown to America, II 245</span><br />
+<br />
+Carden, Sir Lionel Edward Gresley, his being sent to Mexico, a British<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">mistake, I 187;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">anti-American propaganda in Cuba, I 196;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as British Minister to Mexico shows great hostility to the United</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">States, I 197;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">formally advises Huerta to abdicate, I 209;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Page's part in recall from Mexican post, I 215 <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+Carlyle, Thomas, new letters from, discovered in Canada, I 60<br />
+<br />
+Carnegie, Andrew, visit to, at Skibo, I 142<br />
+<br />
+Carranza, Venustiano, thought by Wilson to be a patriot, I 227, 228<br />
+<br />
+Carson, Sir Edward, resists the Home Rule Bill, I 137;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at Bonar Law dinner, II 119;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">tells Lloyd George submarines must be settled before Irish question,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 260</span><br />
+<br />
+Casement, Sir Roger, trial and conviction inspire movement from<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Irish-Americans resulting in Senate resolution, II 166</span><br />
+<br />
+Cecil, Lord Robert, incident of the &quot;Boston Tea Party,&quot; I 392;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">receives German proposal from Page as &quot;German Ambassador,&quot; II 201;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letters to Sir C. Spring Rice on Germany's peace proposal, II 201, 202;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Page's interview with to explain Wilson's peace communication, II 208;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at train to bid good-bye, II 402</span><br />
+<br />
+Chamberlain, Senator, presents petition demanding Ambassador's removal,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 259;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">demands Senate be furnished with copy of Panama tolls speech, I 260</span><br />
+<br />
+Chancery, removal of, to better quarters, I 341<br />
+<br />
+Children, crusade for education of, I 72<br />
+<br />
+China case, the, satisfactorily settled, II 154, 155<br />
+<br />
+Choate, Joseph H., understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257</span><br />
+<br />
+Christian, King, royal reception to, I 167<br />
+<br />
+Christmas in England, 1915, II 103<br />
+<br />
+Churchill, Winston, proposal for naval holiday, I 277, 278, 279, 298<br />
+<br />
+Civil War, first contact with, I 1;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his father's attitude toward, I 5;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">early recollections of Sherman's invasion, II 10;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the aftermath, I 13</span><br />
+<br />
+Clark, Champ, opponent of repeal of Panama Tolls Bill, I 264<br />
+<br />
+Cleveland, President, an influence in formation of ideals, I 40;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conversation with, I 40</span><br />
+<br />
+Cotton, the question of contraband, I 267<br />
+<br />
+Country Life Commission, appointed on, by President Roosevelt, I 89<br />
+<br />
+Court, presentations at, I 156, 172<br />
+<br />
+Courtesies in diplomatic intercourse, necessity for, I 147, 190<br />
+<br />
+Cowdray, Lord, head of British oil concessions in Mexico, I 181;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">withdraws request for Colombian oil concession, I 217;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">long talk with on intervention in Mexico, I 225;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">great monetary loss in giving up oil concessions, I 227</span><br />
+<br />
+Cradock, Admiral, does not approve American policy toward Mexico, I 230<br />
+<br />
+Crewe, Marquis of, on Page's tact as Ambassador, II 397<br />
+<br />
+Criticisms and attacks on Ambassador Page;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the &quot;knee-breeches&quot; story, I 133;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hearst papers watching for opportunity, I 149, 261;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">furor over &quot;English-led and English-ruled&quot; phrase, I 258;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">speech before Associated Chambers of Commerce, on Panama tolls, I 259</span><br />
+<br />
+Cuba, a problem, I 176<br />
+<br />
+Curzon, Lord, in House of Lords speech welcomes America as ally, II 230<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+<i>Dacia</i> incident, the, a serious crisis averted, I 392, II 4<br />
+<br />
+Daniels, Josephus, protest made against his appointment to<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Secretaryship of Navy, I 119</span><br />
+<br />
+Dardanelles:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Asquith explains preparations, I 430</span><br />
+<br />
+Daughters of the Confederacy, considered not helpful to Southern<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">regeneration, I 44</span><br />
+<br />
+Davis, Harry L., Mayor of Cleveland, letter to, expressing regret at<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">not being able to attend meeting for purpose of bringing England and</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">America closer together, II 405</span><br />
+<br />
+Davis, Jefferson, call on, I 37<br />
+<br />
+Declaration of London, Bryan insists on adoption by Great Britain,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 373, 377;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">history of the articles, I 375;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the solution of the difficulty, I 385</span><br />
+<br />
+Declaration of War, America's, and its effect in Great Britain, II 230 <i>et seq.</i><br />
+<br />
+Delcass&eacute;, Kaiser makes proposal to, to join in producing &quot;complete<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">isolation&quot; of the United States, II 192</span><br />
+<br />
+De Kalb, Courtney, congratulations from, I 59<br />
+<br />
+Dent, J.M., loses two sons in the war, II 111;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opinion of Asquith, II 116</span><br />
+<br />
+Depression in England, the dark days of the war, II 64, 81, 94<br />
+<br />
+Derby, Lord, &quot;excessive impedimenta,&quot; II 344;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, I 365, 370</span><br />
+<br />
+Dernburg, Bernhard, instructed to start propaganda for &quot;freedom of the<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">seas,&quot; I 436</span><br />
+<br />
+Desart, Earl of, formulates Declaration of London, I 375<br />
+<br />
+Diaz, Porfirio, authority maintained by genius and force, I 175<br />
+<br />
+Dilettanti, Society of, dinners at, II 312<br />
+<br />
+Doubleday, Frank N., joins in publishing venture with S.S. McClure,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 64;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">the Harper experiment, I 65;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-428" id="page2-428"></a>[pg II-428]</span>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">has &quot;business&quot; visit from a politician, I 88</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Letters to</i>: impressions of England, I 138;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">anent the Christmas holidays, etc., I 164;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Christmas letter, 1915, II 110;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">impressions of Europeans, II 132;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on America's programme after declaration of war, II 224;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on wartime conditions and duties, II 240;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the good showing of the Americans in war preparation, II 324;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">depressed at long continuation and horrors of the war, II 325</span><br />
+<br />
+Doubleday, Page &amp; Co., founding of the firm, I 66;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attains great influence and popularity, I 86</span><br />
+<br />
+Dumba, Dr. Constantin, given his passports, II 30 <i>note</i><br />
+<br />
+Duncan, Dr., president of Randolph-Macon College, I 20<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Education:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">efforts in behalf of Southern child, I 72;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">church system declared a failure, I 78;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">organization of Southern Educational Conference, I 83;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Southern Education Board organized, I 84;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">General Education Board founded by John D. Rockefeller, I 84;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the South's awakening, I 85</span><br />
+<br />
+England, why unprepared for war, II 35;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">changed and chastened, II 342</span><br />
+<br />
+Englishwoman's letter from Berlin giving Germany's intentions toward<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">England, America, and the world, I 347</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;English-led and English-ruled,&quot; furor over phrase, I 258<br />
+<br />
+&quot;Excoriators,&quot; disregarded, I 80-83<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Falkenhayn, cynical toward proposals of Colonel House, I 289<br />
+<br />
+Farming, love of, and home in South, I 115, 127, 128<br />
+<br />
+Field, Eugene, succeeds to desk of, on St. Joseph <i>Gazette</i>, I 36<br />
+<br />
+Fisher, Lord, remark that Balfour was &quot;too much of a gentleman&quot; for<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">First Lord of the Admiralty, II 101</span><br />
+<br />
+Flexner, Dr. Abraham, cites Page as greatest educational statesman, I 85<br />
+<br />
+Flexner, Dr. Simon, interested in hookworm campaign, I 100<br />
+<br />
+Foraker, Senator Joseph B., career destroyed by exposure of<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Archbold-Standard Oil letters, I 88</span><br />
+<br />
+Forbes, Cameron, fails to see President Wilson on his return from<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Philippines, II 174</span><br />
+<br />
+Ford, Henry, the venture in the peace ship, II 110 <i>note</i><br />
+<br />
+Forgotten Man, The, address at Greensboro, I 74<br />
+<br />
+<i>Forum</i>, The, made of great influence and a business success,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">under editorship, I 49</span><br />
+<br />
+Fosdick, Harry Emerson, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346<br />
+<br />
+Fowler, Harold, in London, I 134;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sent to Belgium, I 338;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">enlists in British Army, I 358</span><br />
+<br />
+France, not in favour of England reducing naval programme, I 284;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a gift of a billion dollars to, proposed, II 218</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;Freedom of the seas,&quot; Colonel House's proposed reform, I 435<br />
+<br />
+French, Field Marshal Sir John, informs Page of undiplomatic methods of<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">State Departments in peace proposals, I 425, 427;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">aged by the war, II 141</span><br />
+<br />
+Frost, W.G., writes for <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 60<br />
+<br />
+Fryatt, Captain, execution of, hardens British people to fight to<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">finish, II 182</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Garfield, President, assassination deplored throughout the South, I 39<br />
+<br />
+Gates, Dr. Frederick T., interested in hookworm campaign, I 99<br />
+<br />
+Gaunt, Captain, sends news from Washington of Bernstorff's dismissal,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 215</span><br />
+<br />
+General Education Board, organized by John D. Rockefeller, I 84;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">assists Dr. Knapp in agricultural demonstration work, I 96</span><br />
+<br />
+George V, received by, I 135;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">very likeable, I 157;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">overwrought condition in speaking with Page on declaration of war, I 309;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">much distressed at tenor of Wilson's note proposing peace, II 207;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as a &quot;human being,&quot; II 235;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">night spent with, II 236, 240;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">luncheon to General Pershing, II 237;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">telegram of regret at resignation of Mr. Page and ill-health that</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">occasioned it, II 397</span><br />
+<br />
+German Embassy, left in charge of American Ambassador, I 306;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">difficulties incident to, I 306, 345, 359</span><br />
+<br />
+Germany:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ridicules idea of naval holiday, I 279;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">would have been victorious in World War had she signed arbitration</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">treaty with United States, I 294;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attempts to embroil the United States and Great Britain, I 393, 400;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">move for peace, 1916, II 179</span><br />
+<br />
+Germany, travels in, in 1877, I 30<br />
+<br />
+Gildersleeve, Professor, Basil L., at Johns Hopkins University<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 24, 25;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Page a favourite pupil of, in Greek, II 299</span><br />
+<br />
+Gilman, Daniel Coit, constructive work as president of Johns Hopkins<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">University, I 23</span><br />
+<br />
+Godkin, E.L., writes for <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 60<br />
+<br />
+Grady, Henry, kindness of, I 34, 37<br />
+<br />
+Great Britain and the United States only free countries in the world,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 121</span><br />
+<br />
+Great Britain's participation in the war, the cause of, I 315<br />
+<br />
+Greek, proficiency in, I 21, 24, 25, 30; II 299<br />
+<br />
+Grey, Lord, ex-Governor-General of Canada, I 150<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-429" id="page2-429"></a>[pg II-429]</span>
+Grey, Sir Edward, credentials presented to, I 135;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">high regard for, I 150;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">his fairness facilitates diplomatic business, I 155;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">talks with on Mexican situation, I 184, 185, 188, 199;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">informed as to Carden's activities, I 219, 220;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">asked to meet Colonel House at luncheon, I 245;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">note to Sir C. Spring Rice on Wilson's address to Congress on</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tolls Bill, I 254;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">criticized for &quot;bowing too low to the Americans,&quot; I 261;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">depressed at extent of Anglophobia in the United States, I 266;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">evinces satisfaction at clearing up of problems, I 285;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">weeps as he informs Page of ultimatum to Germany, I 309, 315;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&quot;subservience&quot; to American interests, I 364;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">accepts Declaration of London with modifications, I 384;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">joking over serious affairs, I 390;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">welcomes Page's solution of the <i>Dacia</i> tangle, I 394;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">letter to Sir Cecil Spring Rice regarding Speyer-Straus peace</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">proposal, I 408;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">states war could be ended more quickly if America ceased protests</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">against seizure of contraband, I 421;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">talk on detained shipping and Wordsworth poems, II 103;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">&quot;a God's mercy for a man like him at his post,&quot; II 118;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">aged by the war, II 141;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">satisfactory settlement of the <i>China</i> case, II 155;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">speech in House of Commons on Peace, II 157;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">nothing but praise heard of him, II 159;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">memorandum of conversation with, on conditions of peace, II 160;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">receives Senate Resolution asking clemency for Sir Roger Casement,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">II 167;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">forced to resign, because he refused to push the blockade and risk</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">break with America, II 233;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">guest with Mr. and Mrs. Page at Wilsford Manor, II 288;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">walk to Stonehenge with, II 292;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">serious blockade questions give way to talks on poets, II 305;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">promises government support of Belgian Relief plan, II 310;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Letters from</i>: congratulations on Wilson's address to Congress</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">advising declaration of war, II 234;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">expressing grief at Page's departure and citing his great help, II 400</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Haldane, Viscount, at Thanksgiving Dinner of the American Society, I 213;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">discussion with Von Tirpitz as to relative sizes of navies, I 278;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">knew that Germany intended war, II 35</span><br />
+<br />
+Hall, Admiral William Reginald, brings news of Bernstorff's dismissal,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 215</span><br />
+<br />
+Hanning, Mrs. Robert, sister of Thomas Carlyle, I 60<br />
+<br />
+Harcourt, Right Honourable Lewis, eulogizes work of International<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Health Board, I 101</span><br />
+<br />
+Harden, Maximilian, says Germany must get rid of its predatory<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">feudalism, II 193</span><br />
+<br />
+Harper &amp; Brothers, difficulties of, I 64<br />
+<br />
+Harrow, visit to, and talk to schoolboys, I 17<br />
+<br />
+Harvey, George, succeeds Page as editor of Harper's, I 66<br />
+<br />
+Hay, John, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257</span><br />
+<br />
+Hays, Sir Bertram, captain of the <i>Olympic</i>, races ship to hasten<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Page's homecoming, II 404</span><br />
+<br />
+Hearst, William Randolph, used by Germans in their peace propaganda,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 410, 411</span><br />
+<br />
+Hearst papers, antagonism of, I 149, 256, 264, 286<br />
+<br />
+<i>Hesperian</i>, submarined in violation of Bernstorff's pledges, II 30<br />
+<br />
+Hewlett, Maurice, his son among the missing, II 115<br />
+<br />
+Home Rule Bill, Carson threatens resistance to, I 137;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&quot;division&quot; in house of Lords, I 138</span><br />
+<br />
+Hookworm eradication, efforts in, I 98<br />
+<br />
+Hoover, Charles L., war relief work while American Consul at Carlsbad,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 334</span><br />
+<br />
+Hoover, Herbert C., relief work at beginning of war, I 333;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">selected by Page for Belgian Relief post, II 310</span><br />
+<br />
+House, Colonel Edward M., wires Page to come North, expecting to offer<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Secretaryship of Interior, I 118;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">transmits offer of Ambassadorship, I 130;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Cowdray and Carden, I 218, 220;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">meets Sir Edward Grey to talk over Panama Tolls question, I 246;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">mission to the Kaiser a disappointment, I 289;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">no success in France, I 297;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">fancied security in England, thinks his mission unnecessary, I 298;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">telegrams, to and from Wilson on proffering good offices to avert</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">war, I 317, 318;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">declares bill admitting foreign ships to American registry &quot;full of</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">lurking dangers,&quot; I 392;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">declares America will declare war on Germany after <i>Lusitania</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">sinking, II 2;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">sees &quot;too proud to fight&quot; poster in London, II 6;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">recommends Page's appointment as Secretary of State, II 11;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">fails to alter Wilson's opposition to Taft Committee visiting</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">England, I 348</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Letters from</i>: reporting progress in Panama Tolls matter, I 253;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">plans to visit Kaiser and bring about naval holiday between nations,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">I 277;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">cites further plans for visiting Germany, I 281;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">respecting proposed trip to Germany, I 285, 286,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 3em;">en route, I 288;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">note from Berlin, I 296;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">from Paris, I 297;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the outbreak of the war, I 299;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">transmitting Wilson's warning to adhere more strictly to neutrality,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">I 362;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">explains the toning down of demands that Declaration of London be</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">adhered to, I 378;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on German peace proposals, and giving his ideas for a settlement,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">I 413;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">proposing that Wilson start peace parleys, I 416;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">thinks Germany ready for peace proposals, I 424, 425;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">decides to visit combatants in interests of peace, I 425, 429;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-430" id="page2-430"></a>[pg II-430]</span>
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">talks in Berlin with Zimmermann and others regarding peace parleys,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">I 432, 433, 434;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on appointment of Lansing to succeed Bryan, II 11;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Bryan's intentions of going to England and Germany to try peace</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">negotiations, II 12;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">reporting success of Balfour Mission, II 263</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Letters to</i>: comparing the Civil War with the World War, I 5;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the Mexican situation, I 189;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">asked personally to deliver memorandum to President on intervention</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">in Mexico, I 194;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on visit of Sir William Tyrrell to the United States, I 201;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">letters to Page on Mexican situation, I 205, 206;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Mexican question, I 210, 211;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Lord Cowdray and oil concessions in Mexico, etc., I 216;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">protesting publication of secret information respecting Carden, I 223;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">suggesting intervention in Mexico, I 230;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on serious disadvantage in not having suitable Embassy, I 233;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on rashness of Bryan's visit to Europe, I 235;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">appeal for attention to cables and letters by State Department, I 239;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on necessity of repeal of Panama Tolls Bill, I 247;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the prevention of wars, I 270;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">asked to further plan to have Wilson visit England, as a</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">preventative of European war, I 275;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">favouring alliance of English-speaking peoples, I 282;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on French protest against reduction of British naval programme, I 283;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">transmitting pamphlets on &quot;federation&quot; and disarmament, I 284;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">told he will have no effect on Kaiser, I 287;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">reply to note as to prevention of the war, I 300;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">describing conditions in second month of the war, I 327;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the horrors of war, and the settlement, I 340;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on difficulties of Sir Edward Grey with Army and Navy officers in</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">releasing American cargoes, I 365;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on evil of insisting on Declaration of London adoption, I 380;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">regarding the Straus peace proposal, I 410;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">explaining there can be no premature peace, I 417;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on harmlessness of Bryan on proposed peace visit and cranks in</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">general, II 13;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">commenting on slowness of Wilson in <i>Lusitania</i> matter, II 26;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on sinking of <i>Arabic</i>, II 27;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">not interested in &quot;pleasing the Allies,&quot; II 28;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Dumba's intrigues, and Wilson's &quot;watchful waiting and nothing</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">doing,&quot; II 30, 31, 37, 38;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the lawyer-like attitude of the State Department, II 54;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">the best peace programme&mdash;the British and American fleets, II 69;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on uncourteous notes from State Department, II 72;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on British adherence to the blockade, and an English Christmas,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">1915, II 103;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the conditions of peace and the German militarism, II 134, 157;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on prophecy as to ending the war by dismissal of Bernstorff, II 197;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on the beneficial visit of the Labour Group and others, II 387</span><br />
+<br />
+Houston, David F., suggested to Wilson for Secretary of Agriculture,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 114; has proper perspective of European situation, II 176</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Letters to</i>: impressions of diplomatic life, II 151;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">suggesting vigorous action of Administration in prosecuting the war,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">II 226;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on American cranks being sent to England, others prevented, II 359</span><br />
+<br />
+Houston, Herbert S., letters to, giving impressions of England, I 139<br />
+<br />
+Huerta, General Victoriano, seizes presidency of Mexico, I 175;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude of Great Britain and the United States toward recognition,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 180;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">an epochal figure, I 183;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">rejects proposals submitted by Lind, I 193;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">proclaims himself dictator, I 197</span><br />
+<br />
+Huxley, Thomas H., delivers address at opening of Johns Hopkins<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">University, I 25</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+International Health Commission, endowed by John D. Rockefeller, I 100;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">co&ouml;peration by British Government, I 101</span><br />
+<br />
+Irish Question, the, British difficulties with, I 159;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">cause of feeling against British in the United States, II 251;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson requests Great Britain to settle, II 255;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lloyd George striving for solution, II 259</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+James, Henry, frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315<br />
+<br />
+Jeanes Board, appointment to, I 89<br />
+<br />
+Jellicoe, Admiral Sir John, vigilance in war time, I 335;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">after battle of Jutland, II 141;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reply to question how best America could help, II 219;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">drafts dispatch explaining seriousness of submarine situation which</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Balfour sends to President Wilson, II 285</span><br />
+<br />
+Johns Hopkins University, teaching on new lines, I 23<br />
+<br />
+Johnston, Miss Mary, noted serial of, in <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 56, 61<br />
+<br />
+Judson, Harry Pratt, on proposed Committee to lecture in England, II 346<br />
+<br />
+Jusserand, opinion of the Straus peace proposal, I 407<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Keller, Helen, persuaded to write &quot;Story of My Life,&quot; I 90<br />
+<br />
+Kent, Mr., forms American Citizens Relief Committee in London at<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">outbreak of war, I 304, 307</span><br />
+<br />
+Kerr, Philip, conversation with on future relations of the United<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">States and Great Britain, II 84</span><br />
+<br />
+Kipling, Rudyard, loses his son in the war, II 115<br />
+<br />
+Kitchener, Lord, speech in House of Lords a disappointment, II 96;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">criticism of, II 120;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-431" id="page2-431"></a>[pg II-431]</span>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Memorandum after attending service in memory of, II 140</span><br />
+<br />
+Knapp, Dr. Seaman A., his &quot;Demonstration Work&quot; in Southern agriculture,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 95;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his funeral, I 96</span><br />
+<br />
+Kropotkin, Prince Peter, writes Memoirs for <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 61<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Lane, Secretary Franklin, comment on feeling against British for<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conduct in Huerta affair, I 198</span><br />
+<br />
+Lansdowne, Marquis of, letter favouring premature peace severely<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">criticized, II 327, 353</span><br />
+<br />
+Lansing, Robert, regards Ambassador as un-neutral, I 362;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a lawyer, not a statesman, I 369;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">insistence that Great Britain adopt Declaration of London, I 378 <i>et seq.</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude of lawyer, not statesman, II 53;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">arguments against British blockade, II 62;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">mind running on &quot;cases&quot;, not diplomacy, II 176;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">answers Page's letter of resignation, transmitting President Wilson's</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">request to reconsider and stay at his post, II 199</span><br />
+<br />
+Lassiter, General, encouraged on trip to the front, II 245<br />
+<br />
+Laughlin, Irwin, First Secretary of the Embassy, I 133;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">requested to ascertain Great Britain's attitude toward recognition of</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Huerta, I 180;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">tells Colonel House he will have no success with Kaiser, I 285;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Germany's intentions toward America, I 351 <i>note</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as to depressing effect of the war on Page, I 357;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">backs up Ambassador in neutrality letter to Wilson, I 373;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">gives opinion that persistence is unwise in demanding acceptance of</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Declaration of London, I 387;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson's comment to, on Page's letters, II 22;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">diplomatically presents to Sir Edward Grey the Senate Resolution</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">asking clemency' for Casement, II 167;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letters from, on occasion of Germany's 1916 peace movement, II 180;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">commended to President Wilson in letter of resignation, II 394</span><br />
+<br />
+Law, Ponar, gives depressing news from the Balkans, II 104;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">dinner with, II 119;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reply to question how best America could help, II 219;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conference with Balfour and, over financial help from America, II 261</span><br />
+<br />
+Lawrence, Bishop, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346<br />
+<br />
+Leadership of the world, American, II 105, 110, 145, 254<br />
+<br />
+League to Enforce Peace, Page's opinion of, II 144;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sir Edward Grey in sympathy with objects of, II 163;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lord Bryce, remarks as to favourable time for setting up such a</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">league, II 165</span><br />
+<br />
+Leaks in diplomatic correspondence, gravity of,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 147, 148, 151, 222, 223, 224, 235, II 7, 276</span><br />
+<br />
+Lichnowsky, German Ambassador at London, almost demented at breaking<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">out of the war, I 306, 309, 315;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">places blame for war on Germany, I 322</span><br />
+<br />
+Lincoln, Abraham, monument to, erected at Westminster, I 274<br />
+<br />
+Lind, John, failure of mission to Mexico, I 193<br />
+<br />
+Literary style and good writing, advice on, II 341<br />
+<br />
+Lloyd George, his taxing of the aristocracy, I 137;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">landowners fear of, I 158;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at state dinner to King Christian, I 167;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the necessity of reducing navy programme, I 283;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">holding up under strain of war, II 83;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">aged by the war, II 141;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in House of Commons speech welcomes America as ally, II 230;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">has the touch of genius in making things move, II 259;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">working for solution of Irish question, II 259;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">too optimistic regarding submarine situation, II 287;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his energy keeps him in power, II 354;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">congratulates Mr. and Mrs. Page on American success at Cantigny, II 375;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter expressing sorrow at Mr. and Mrs. Page's departure and</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reviewing their good work, II 398</span><br />
+<br />
+Loring, Charles G., marries Miss Katharine Page, II 87;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in service on western front, II 375</span><br />
+<br />
+Loring, Mrs. Charles G., letters to, on travelling-and staying at home,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 88;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">autumn, gardens, family, and war news, II 92;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Christmas letter, 1915, II 117;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">from St. Ives, II 332, 339</span><br />
+<br />
+Lowell, James Russell, accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257<br />
+<br />
+<i>Lusitania</i>, torpedoed, I 436;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">bulletins of the tragedy received at the dinner given in honour of</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Colonel and Mrs. House, II 1;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">distress and disillusionment of the Wilson notes, II 6</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Madero, Francisco, overthrown as president of Mexico, and assassinated,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 175</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Mayflower</i> Pilgrims, dedication of monument to, at Southampton, I 258<br />
+<br />
+Mayo, Admiral, sent to Europe to study naval situation, II 322<br />
+<br />
+McAdoo, Secretary, conference with Balfour Mission on financial<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">situation, II 267</span><br />
+<br />
+McClure, S.S., joins forces with F.N. Doubleday, I 64;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the Harper experiment, I 65;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">anecdote of, II 303</span><br />
+<br />
+McCrary, Lieut.-Commander, on Committee for relief of stranded<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Americans, 307</span><br />
+<br />
+McIver, Dr. Charles D., educational statesman, I 73, 74, 78;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as the character, Professor Billy Bain, in &quot;The Southerner,&quot; I 93</span><br />
+<br />
+McKinley Administration endorsed on measures against Spain, by<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 63</span><br />
+<br />
+Mary, Queen, received by, I 136<br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-432" id="page2-432"></a>[pg II-432]</span>
+Mensdorf, Austrian Ambassador, marooned in London, at outbreak of war.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 305, 309;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the war a tragedy to, I 321</span><br />
+<br />
+Mersey, Lord, comments on the tariff, I 150;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at dinner of Dilettanti Society, II 312</span><br />
+<br />
+Mexico, &quot;policy and principle&quot; in, I 175 <i>et seq.</i>;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">difficulties of self-government, II 177;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">progress due to foreign enterprise, I 178;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the problem of oil concessions, I 179, 181;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">intervention believed by Page the only solution,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 188, 193, 194, 200, 230, 273</span><br />
+<br />
+Mims, Professor Edwin, letter to, on attacks of Southern theologians, I 80<br />
+<br />
+Monroe Doctrine, the Kaiser's proposal to smash it, II 192<br />
+<br />
+Moore, John Bassett, suggestion that he be put in charge of<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">American-British affairs, I 239</span><br />
+<br />
+Morley, John, at state dinner to King Christian, I 167;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">resigns from British cabinet on declaration of war, I 316;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">visitor at the Embassy, II 315</span><br />
+<br />
+Morley, Lord, on reforms, I 141<br />
+<br />
+Morgan, J.P., account of Allies with, greatly overdrawn at time of<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">America's entrance into war, II 272;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">this paid by proceeds of Liberty Loans, II 273</span><br />
+<br />
+Morgan, J.P. &amp; Co., in control of Harper &amp; Brothers, I 64<br />
+<br />
+&quot;Mummy&quot; theme applied to the unawakened South, I 45, 75<br />
+<br />
+Munitions, American, importance of to the Allies, I 368<br />
+<br />
+Munsterberg, Prof. Hugo, pro-German activities of, I 335<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Navy Department, ignores urgent recommendations of Admiral Sims that<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">destroyers be sent, II 276, 284</span><br />
+<br />
+Negro, the, the invisible &quot;freedom&quot;, I 12;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">wrong leadership after the Civil War, I 14;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">fails to take advantage of university education during</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reconstruction, I 18</span><br />
+<br />
+Negro education, and industrial training advocated, I 43<br />
+<br />
+Neutrality, strictly observed, I 358, 360;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the mask of, II 230</span><br />
+<br />
+New York <i>Evening Post</i>, connection with, I 48<br />
+<br />
+New York <i>World</i>, correspondent for, at Atlanta Exposition, I 34;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on editorial staff, I 35</span><br />
+<br />
+Northcliffe, Lord, illness from worry, II 66;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&quot;saving the nation from its government&quot;, II 116;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude on Wilson's peace note, II 207</span><br />
+<br />
+Norway, shipping destroyed by submarines, II 281<br />
+<br />
+Nicolson, Harold, the silent toast with, II 301<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Ogden, Robert C., organizes Southern Educational Conference, I 83;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">after twenty years of zealous service, I 126</span><br />
+<br />
+O'Gorman, Senator, active in Panama Tolls controversy, I 243, 283<br />
+<br />
+&quot;O. Henry,&quot; on Page's &quot;complimentary&quot; rejection of manuscripts, II 303<br />
+<br />
+Osler, Sir William, Page's physician, insists on the return home, II 393<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Pacifism, work of the &quot;peace spies,&quot; II 210<br />
+<br />
+Pact of London, binding the Allies not to make a separate peace, I 409 <i>note</i><br />
+<br />
+Page, Allison Francis, a builder of the commonwealth, I 4;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude toward slavery and the Civil War, I 5;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ruined by the war, I 13</span><br />
+<br />
+Page, Allison M., falls at Belleau Wood, II 392, 406<br />
+<br />
+Page, Anderson, settles in Wake County, N.C., I 4<br />
+<br />
+Page, Arthur W., Delcass&eacute; in conversation with tells of Kaiser's<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">proposal to join in producing &quot;complete isolation&quot; of the United</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">States, II 192;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">called to London in hopes of influencing his father to resign and</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">return home before too late, II 393</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Letters to</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the motor trip to Scotland, I 142;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on conditions in second month of the war, I 335;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a national depression and the horrors of war, I 344;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">emotions after <i>Lusitania</i> sinking, II 5;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the tendency toward fads and coddling, II 10;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the future relations of the United States and Great Britain, II 84;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the vicissitudes of the &quot;German Ambassador to Great Britain,&quot; 1190;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Christmas letter, 1915, II 121;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the attitude in the United States toward Germany, II 129;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the effect of the war on future of America, and the world, II 217;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">never lost faith in American people, II 223;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on America's entrance into the war, II 238;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on grave conditions, submarine and financial, II 287;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the occasion of the Plymouth speech, and the receptions, II 317;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the Administration's lack of confidence in British Navy, Wilson's</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reply to Pope, etc., II 322;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Christmas letter, 1917, depicting a war-weary world, II 328;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on pacifists-from the President down, II 337;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">views on Palestine, II 350;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on personal diet, and the benefit of Secretary Baker's visit, II 369;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the anti-English feeling at Washington, II 385;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">while resting at Sandwich, II 388</span><br />
+<br />
+Page, Mrs. Catherine, mother and close companion, I 7;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Christmas letter to, I 8</span><br />
+<br />
+Page, Frank C. in London, I 134;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">with his father in Rowsley when news of <i>Arabic</i> sinking was</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">received, II 26;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in service with American troops, II 375;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">realizes his father is failing fast and insists on his returning home,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 393</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Letters to</i>: on building up the home farm, and the stress of war, I 353;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Christmas letter, 1915, II 121</span><br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-433" id="page2-433"></a>[pg II-433]</span>
+Page, Henry A., letters to, stating a government might be neutral, but<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">no <i>man</i> could be, I 361;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on illusions as to neutrality and the peace proposals, II 152</span><br />
+<br />
+Page, Miss Katharine A., arrival in London, I 134;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">married in the chapel Royal, II 87;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>see also</i>, Loring, Mrs. Charles G.</span><br />
+<br />
+Page, Lewis, leaves Virginia to settle in North Carolina, I 3<br />
+<br />
+Page, Logan Waller, has proper perspective of European situation, II 176<br />
+<br />
+Page, Mary E., letter to, II 376<br />
+<br />
+Page, Ralph W., letters to;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">impressions of London life, I 161;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on wartime conditions, I 352;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Christmas letter, 1915, II 121;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on longings for fresh Southern vegetables and fruits and farm life,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 335;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on style and good writing, II 340;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the big battle, etc., II 371, 372;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in praise of book on American Diplomacy, II 381;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on success of our Army and Navy, II 390</span><br />
+<br />
+Page, Mrs. Ralph W., Christmas letter to, 163<br />
+<br />
+Page, Robert N., letters to, impressions of social London, I 153<br />
+<br />
+Page, Thomas Nelson, Colonel House confers with in regard to peace<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">parleys, I 434</span><br />
+<br />
+Page, Walter Hines, impressions of his early life, 1;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">family an old one in Virginia and North Carolina, 3;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">maternal ancestry, 6;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">close sympathy between mother and son, 8, 11;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">birthplace, and date of birth, 9;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">recollections of the Civil War, 10;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">finds a market for peaches among Northern soldiers, 14;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">boyhood and early studies, 16;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">intense ambition, 20;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Greek Fellowship at Johns Hopkins University, 24;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">renewed for the next year, 27;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">early prejudices against Yankees, 28;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">travels in Germany, 1877, 30;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">lectures on Shakespeare, 30;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">teacher of English at Louisville, Ky., 32;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">enters journalism, 32;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">experience with Louisville <i>Age</i>, 32;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reporter on, then editor of, <i>Gazette</i>, at St. Joseph, Mo., 33;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a free lance, 34;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">correspondent for N.Y. <i>World</i> at Atlanta Exposition, 34;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the staff of N.Y. <i>World</i>, 35;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">married, 37;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">first acquaintance with Woodrow Wilson, 37;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Americanism fully developed, 40;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">regard for President Cleveland, 40;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">founds <i>State Chronicle</i> at Raleigh, 42;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a breaker of images&mdash;of the South, 44;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the &quot;mummy letters,&quot; 45;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">instrumental in establishment of State College, Raleigh, 47;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">with N.Y. <i>Evening Post</i>, 48;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">makes the <i>Forum</i> of great influence and a business success, 49;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">a new type of editor, 50;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">editor of <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, 53;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">discovers unpublished letters of Thomas Carlyle, 60;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude toward Spanish American War, 62;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the Harper experiment, 65;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">joins in founding Doubleday, Page &amp; Co., 66;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his policy for the <i>World's Work</i>, 66;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">public activities, 72;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in behalf of education, 72;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his address, &quot;The Forgotten Man,&quot; 74;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his Creed of Democracy, 78;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">work with General Education Board, 85;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">independence as an editor, 87;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">severely criticizes John D. Archbold for Foraker bribery, 88;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">appointed by Roosevelt on Country Life Commission, 89;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">other public services, 89;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">author of &quot;the Southerner&quot; 90;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">activities in behalf of Southern agriculture and Hookworm</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">eradication, 94;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his interest in Wilson's candidacy and election, 102, <i>et seq.</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">discourages efforts to have him named for Cabinet position, 113;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">why he was not named, 118;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">protests against appointment of Daniels, 119;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">love for farming, 127, 128;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">offered Ambassadorship, 130;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">impressions of London and the Embassy, 132, 144;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">impressions of Scotland, 142;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">handling of the Mexican situation, 183;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">belief in intervention in Mexico, 193, 194;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">complimented by President Wilson, Bryan, and Sir William Tyrrell, 208;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his part in the removal of Sir Lionel Carden from Mexican post, 215;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">commended by Wilson, 219, 221;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">suggested for Secretary of Agriculture, 232, 286;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">why he wished to remain in London, 240;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">work in behalf of Panama Tolls Bill repeal, 244;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">assailed for certain speeches, 258, 259;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opposed to including Germany in international alliance, favouring</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">understanding between English-speaking peoples, 282;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">difficulties at outbreak of the war, 301 <i>et seq.</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">asked to take over Austrian Embassy, 305, German Embassy, 306;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">varied duties of war time, 337;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">difficulties in charge of German and Austrian and Turkish embassies, 345;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">relief work in starving Belgium, 346;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">ageing under the strain and the depressing environment, 357;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">difficulties of maintaining neutrality, 358;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">warned from Washington, 362;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">tactful handling of the demands that Declaration of London be</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">adopted, 370, 373;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">writes Colonel House that he will resign if demands are insisted on, 383;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">memorandum of the affair, 385;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his solution of the <i>Dacia</i> puzzle, 394;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude toward a premature peace, 417;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">learns through General French of the undiplomatic methods of State</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Department in peace proposals, 425, 427</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">VOL. II</span><br />
+<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Humiliations from Washington's failure to meet the situation, 5;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">remarks on Bryan's resignation, 10;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">considered for appointment as Secretary of State, 11;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his feeling toward policies of Wilson, 18;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">boldness of his criticism, 21;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson and Lansing express anxiety that he may resign, 24;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">describes Zeppelin attack on London, 34, 38;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Christmas in England, 1915, 103;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">perplexed at attitude of the United States, 128;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-434" id="page2-434"></a>[pg II-434]</span>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his impressions of Europeans, 132;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">summoned to Washington, 148;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">memorandum of his visit to Washington, 171;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Impressions of President Wilson, 172;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">waits five weeks before obtaining interview, 183;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">disappointing interview at Shadow Lawn, 184;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter of resignation seat to Wilson, 189;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and the reply, 199;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">delivers Germany's peace proposal to Lord Robert Cecil, 201;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">comments to Secretary of State on &quot;insulting words&quot; of President</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson's peace proposal, 207;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">implores Wilson to leave out the &quot;peace without victory&quot; phrase</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">from his speech, 213;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">learns of Bernstorff's dismissal, 215;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">memorandum of his final judgment of Wilson's foreign policy to</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">April 1, 1917, 222;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">memorandum written on April 3, the day after Wilson advised Congress</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">to declare war, 228;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on friendly footing with King George, 234;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">joins with Admiral Sims in trying to waken the Navy Department to</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">seriousness of the submarine situation, 278;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Page&mdash;the man, 295-320;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">moves for relief of Belgium, 310,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">and delegates Hoover, 311;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Speech at Plymouth, 316;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">goes to St. Ives for brief rest, 332;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">heatedly referred to as &quot;really an Englishman&quot; by President Wilson, 348;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">memorandum on Secretary Baker's visit, 366;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">failing health, 374;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">resignation in obedience to physicians orders, 393;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">representatives from King, and Cabinet at train to bid good-bye, 402;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">rallies somewhat on arrival in America, 405;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the end&mdash;at home, 406</span><br />
+<br />
+Page, Walter H. Jr., Christmas letter from his &quot;granddaddy,&quot; II 124<br />
+<br />
+Page, Mrs. Walter H., arrival in London, I 134;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">plays part in diplomacy, I 215, 224, 226;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">her great help to the Ambassador, II 315;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the last letter, II 395</span><br />
+<br />
+Palestine and Zionism, views on, II 351<br />
+<br />
+Panama Tolls, a wrong policy, I 190;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Sir William Tyrrell's talk with President Wilson, I 207, 209</span><br />
+<br />
+Panama Tolls Bill, Wilson writes of hopes for repeal, I 222;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">repeal of, I 232 <i>et seq.</i>, the bill a violation of solemn treaties, I 242;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the contest before Congress, I 255</span><br />
+<br />
+Paris, capture of city thought inevitable, I 401<br />
+<br />
+Parliament, holds commemorative sessions in honour of America's<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">participation in the war, II 230</span><br />
+<br />
+Pasha, Tewfik, leaves Turkish Embassy in charge of American<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ambassador, I 345</span><br />
+<br />
+Peace, Germany's overtures, I 389;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">her first peace drives, I 398;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson's note to warring powers, received with surprise and</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">irritation, II 205</span><br />
+<br />
+&quot;Peace without Victory&quot; speech, of President Wilson, and its<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reception in Great Britain, II 212</span><br />
+<br />
+Peace Centennial, plans being formed for, I 236, 274<br />
+<br />
+Pershing, General, at luncheon with King George, II 237;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his presence of moral benefit to French Army, II 290</span><br />
+<br />
+Philippines, a problem, I 176<br />
+<br />
+Pinero, Sir Arthur, reminiscences of Page at Dilettante gatherings, II 313<br />
+<br />
+Plymouth, Mayor and Council, present the freedom of the city, II 402<br />
+<br />
+Plymouth Speech, inspires confidence in American co&ouml;peration, II 316<br />
+<br />
+Polk, Frank L., invited by British Foreign Office to consultation in<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">England, II 248;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&quot;could not be spared from his desk,&quot; II 256</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>Letter from</i>: on wonderful success of Balfour Mission, II 263</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>Letters to</i>: on Balfour and his Mission to the United States, II 252;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;">on Secretary Baker's visit, II 361</span><br />
+<br />
+Price, Thomas R., noted professor at Randolph-Macon, I 22<br />
+<br />
+Probyn, Sir Dighton, calls at Embassy, I 339<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Raboteau, John Samuel, Mr. Page's maternal grandfather, I 6<br />
+<br />
+Randolph-Macon College, studies at, I 20<br />
+<br />
+Rawnsley, Rev. Hardwicke Drummond, a subject of conversation, I 149<br />
+<br />
+Rayleigh, Lady, political ability, II 257, 258<br />
+<br />
+Rayleigh, Lord Chancellor of Cambridge University, II 145<br />
+<br />
+Reconstruction, more agonizing than war, I 14;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">effects of, upon State University, I 18</span><br />
+<br />
+Reed, John, account of Mexican conditions influences Wilson's policy, I 228<br />
+<br />
+Religion, deepest reverence for, I 80<br />
+<br />
+R&uuml;s, Jacob, writes for <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 60<br />
+<br />
+Rockefeller, John D., organizes General Education Board, I 84;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">publication of Reminiscences, I 88;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">founds Hookworm Commission and International Health Commission, I 100</span><br />
+<br />
+Roosevelt, Theodore, writes for <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 60;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">appoints Country Life Commission, I 89</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>Letter to</i>: introducing the Archbishop of York, II 307</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>Letter from</i>: praising the Ambassador's services, II 401</span><br />
+<br />
+Root, Elihu, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242<br />
+<br />
+Rose, Dr. Wickliffe, dinner to, in London, as head of International<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Health Board, I 101;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">hookworm work, I 127</span><br />
+<br />
+Round Table, The, organization for study of political subjects, II 84;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;"><i>Round Table, The</i>, organ of above, a quarterly publication, II 84, 105</span><br />
+<br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-435" id="page2-435"></a>[pg II-435]</span>
+Royal Institution of Great Britain, address before, I 191<br />
+<br />
+Royce, Josiah, associate at Johns Hopkins, I 25<br />
+<br />
+Russian Collapse, effect on the Allies, II 353<br />
+<br />
+Rustem Bey, Turkish Ambassador, given passports, II 49 <i>note</i><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+St. Ives, Cornwall, seeking rest at, II 332<br />
+<br />
+St. Joseph <i>Gazelle</i>, connection with, I 33, 37,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">succeeds to Eugene Field's desk, on I 36</span><br />
+<br />
+Sackville-West, Sir Lionel, handed his passports by Cleveland, II 33 <i>note</i><br />
+<br />
+Sargent, John, frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315<br />
+<br />
+Saw-mill units, favourable reception of, II 291<br />
+<br />
+Sayre, Mr. and Mrs., hearty reception in London, I 213, 222, 275<br />
+<br />
+Schrippenfest, celebration of, in Berlin, I 291<br />
+<br />
+Schwab, Charles M., supplying war material to Allies, I 341<br />
+<br />
+Scotland, impressions of, I 142<br />
+<br />
+Scudder, Horace E., succeeded as editor of <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 53<br />
+<br />
+Secret treaties, explained to President Wilson by Mr. Balfour, II 267<br />
+<br />
+Sedgwick, Ellery, recollections of Mr. Page, as editor of <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 55;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the high regard in which Page was held, II 298</span><br />
+<br />
+Shakespeare, lectures on, I 30<br />
+<br />
+Sharp, Ambassador, his mention of peace resented by the French, I 389;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at President Wilson's luncheon, II 171</span><br />
+<br />
+Sherman's army, cavalry troop camp at Page home, ransack, and destroy<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">contents, I 10</span><br />
+<br />
+Shoecraft, Mr., receives news of Bernstorff's dismissal, II 215<br />
+<br />
+Sihler, Prof. E.G., reminiscences of Page at Johns Hopkins, I 27<br />
+<br />
+Simon, Sir John, frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315<br />
+<br />
+Sims, Admiral, with Ambassador Page, dines with Lord Beresford, II 254;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">advised of terrible submarine situation, II 273, 275;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">arrival and welcome in England, II 274;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">recommendations ignored by Washington, II 276;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">backed up by Page in strong dispatch, II 278;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">praised in letter to Wilson, II 281;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in command of both English and American naval forces at Queenstown,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 282;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letters from, on submarine situation, II 282;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in high regard with British Admiralty, II 290;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370</span><br />
+<br />
+Shaler, Millard, reports on destitution in Belgium, II 310<br />
+<br />
+Skinner, Consul-General, on Committee for relief of stranded<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Americans, I 307</span><br />
+<br />
+Slocum, Colonel, urged to hasten arrival of American troops, II 363<br />
+<br />
+Smith, C. Alphonso, an exchange professor to Germany, II 145<br />
+<br />
+Smith, Senator Hoke, &quot;friendly deportation&quot; of, suggested, II 17;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">campaign against British Blockade, II 56, 61, 63;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">urging embargo on shipments to Allies, II 211</span><br />
+<br />
+South, the, efforts in behalf of, I 38, 43, 74;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">three &quot;ghosts&quot; which prevent progress, I 91</span><br />
+<br />
+Southampton speech, press comments on, I 41<br />
+<br />
+Southern Education Board, active work with, I 84<br />
+<br />
+Southern Educational Conference, organization of, I 83<br />
+<br />
+&quot;Southerner, The,&quot; only effort at novel writing, I 90<br />
+<br />
+Spanish-American War, attitude toward, I 62<br />
+<br />
+Speyer, James, connected with German peace move, I 403<br />
+<br />
+Spring Rice, Sir Cecil, notifies Washington of British change of<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude toward recognition of Huerta, I 181;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">confidentially consulted by Cot. House regarding demands that</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Declaration of London be adopted, I 379;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">notifies Washington that <i>Dacia</i> would be seized, I 393;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">opinion of Straus peace proposal, I 407;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letters from Lord Robert Cecil on Germany's peace proposal, II 201, 202</span><br />
+<br />
+Squier, Colonel, American military attach&eacute; in London at outbreak of the<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">war, I 301</span><br />
+<br />
+Standard Oil Co., editorial against, in Archbold-Foraker scandal,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 88</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>State Chronicle</i>, connection with, I 42;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">editorially a success, I 48</span><br />
+<br />
+State College, Raleigh, N.C., instrumental in establishment of,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 47, 48</span><br />
+<br />
+State Department, leaks of diplomatic correspondence through,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 147, 148, 151, 223, 224</span><br />
+<br />
+State Dept., ignores official correspondence,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 94, 213, 219, 224, 225, 232, 238, 239, II 7, 55, 217, 253;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">not properly organized and conducted, II 8;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">trivial demands and protests, II 54, 68;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">uncourteous form of Notes, I 72</span><br />
+<br />
+Stiles, Dr. Charles W., discovers hookworm, I 98;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">work in combatting, I 127</span><br />
+<br />
+Stone, Senator William J., spokesman of pro-German cause, I 380<br />
+<br />
+Stovall, Pleasant A., Colonel House confers with, regarding peace<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">parleys, I 434</span><br />
+<br />
+Straus, Oscar S., used as a tool in German peace propaganda,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 389, 403 <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+Submarine sinkings, Germany threatens to resume, unless Wilson moves<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">for peace, II 200;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">German military chieftains at Pless conference decide to resume</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">unrestricted warfare, II 212;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the most serious problem at time of American entry into war,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 273, 275, <i>et seq.</i></span><br />
+<br />
+Sulgrave Manor, ancestral home of the Washingtons, restoration and<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">preservation, I 274;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-436" id="page2-436"></a>[pg II-436]</span>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">plan to have President Wilson at dedication of, I 274, 275, II 248</span><br />
+<br />
+<i>Sussex</i> &quot;pledge&quot;, a peace move of Germany, II 150<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Taft, William H., fails in having Carden removed from Cuba,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 196, 215, 219;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">accepts British invitation to head delegation explaining America's</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">purposes in the war, II 346;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wilson's strong disapproval interferes with the project, II 347</span><br />
+<br />
+Tariff Commission, travelling with, for N.Y. <i>World</i>, I 35<br />
+<br />
+Teaching democracy to the British Government, I 187, 211<br />
+<br />
+<i>Tennessee</i>, sent to England on outbreak of war with gold for<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">relief of stranded Americans, I 307</span><br />
+<br />
+Thayer, William Roscoe, disappointed in policy of the <i>World's Work</i>, I 66;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter to, in explanation, I 67</span><br />
+<br />
+Tillett, Wilbur Fisk, friend at Randolph-Macon College, I 20<br />
+<br />
+Towers, Lieutenant, shown remnant of torpedo from <i>Hesperian</i>, II 40<br />
+<br />
+Trinity College, studies at, I 19<br />
+<br />
+Turkish Embassy left in charge of American Ambassador, I 346<br />
+<br />
+Tyrrell, Sir William, significance of his visit to the United States,<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 201;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">unsatisfactory consultation with Bryan, I 202;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">explains to President Wilson the British policy toward Mexico,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 204, 207;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">conversation with Colonel House, I 206;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Colonel House informs him of plan to visit Kaiser in behalf of</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">naval holiday plan, I 277;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">advises House not to stop in England on way to Germany, I 289;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">expresses relief on withdrawal of demands that Declaration of</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">London be adopted, I 387;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">comment on Dumba's dismissal, and Bernstorff, II 101</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Underwood Tariff Bill, impressions of in Great Britain, 150, 172<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Van Hise, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346<br />
+<br />
+Vanderlip, Frank A., at the Speyer &quot;peace dinner&quot;, I 404<br />
+<br />
+Villa, Pancho, thought by Wilson to be a patriot, I 227, 228<br />
+<br />
+Vincent, George, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346<br />
+<br />
+Von Jagow, offers no encouragement to Colonel House's proposals, I 289<br />
+<br />
+Von Papen, dismissal of, II 108<br />
+<br />
+Von Tirpitz, discussion with Viscount Haldane as to relative sizes of<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">navies, I 278;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">hostile to Colonel House's proposals, I 289</span><br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Waechter, Sir Max, efforts for &quot;federation&quot; and disarmament, I 284<br />
+<br />
+&quot;Waging neutrality&quot;, policy of, I 362<br />
+<br />
+Wallace, Henry, letters to:<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on Wilson's candidacy, I 105;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on backing up new Secretary of Agriculture, etc., I 115</span><br />
+<br />
+Wallace, Hugh C., accompanies Colonel House to Europe, I 288;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">joins &quot;assemblage of immortals&quot; at Embassy, II 315</span><br />
+<br />
+Walsh, Sir Arthur, Master of the Ceremonies, I 135;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">at train to bid good-bye, II 402</span><br />
+<br />
+Walsh, Senator Thomas, anti-English attitude, II 61<br />
+<br />
+War, American efforts to prevent the, I 270 <i>et seq.</i><br />
+<br />
+War, memorandum at outbreak of the, I 301<br />
+<br />
+Washington, Booker T., writes for <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 60;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">induced to write &quot;Up From Slavery&quot;, I 90</span><br />
+<br />
+Wantauga Club, activities of the, I 47;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">crusade for education of Southern child, 73</span><br />
+<br />
+Wheeler, Benjamin Ide, gives Colonel House information of conditions<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in Germany, I 281</span><br />
+<br />
+White, Henry, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242<br />
+<br />
+White, William Allen, writes for <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 60<br />
+<br />
+Whitlock, Brand, eulogized, I 334<br />
+<br />
+Willard, Joseph E., Colonel House confers with, in regard to peace<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">parleys, I 434</span><br />
+<br />
+Williams, Senator John Sharp, demonstrates blockade against Germany<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">not an injury to cotton-producing states, II 63</span><br />
+<br />
+Wilhelm II, nullifies Hague Conferences, I 280;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Colonel House disappointed in mission to, I 289;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">derides American arbitration treaty, I 294;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Colonel House's impressions of, I 295;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">asks President Wilson to transmit peace offer to Great Britain, I 426;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">makes proposal to Delcass&eacute; to join in producing &quot;complete isolation&quot;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of the United States, II 192</span><br />
+<br />
+Wilson, Miss Willia Alice, married to Page, I 37<br />
+<br />
+Wilson, Dr. William, father of Mrs. Page, I 37<br />
+<br />
+Wilson, Sir Henry, succeeds Sir William Robertson as Chief of Imperial<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">General Staff, II 354 <i>note</i></span><br />
+<br />
+Wilson, Woodrow, first acquaintance with, I 37;<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">writes for <i>Atlantic Monthly</i>, I 60;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Page greatly interested in his candidacy and election, I 102, <i>et seq.</i>;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Colonel House introduced to, I 107;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">memorandum of interview with, soon after election, I 110;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">offers Ambassadorship, I 130;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attitude toward recognition of Huerta, I 180;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">formulates new principle for dealing with Latin American republics,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 182;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">refuses to consider intervention in Mexico, I 193;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">suggestion that he officially visit Sulgrave Manor, the ancestral</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">home of the Washingtons, I 195;</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="page2-437" id="page2-437"></a>[pg II-437]</span>
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">explains attitude on Panama Toll question to Sir William Tyrrell, I 207;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">expresses gratification in way Page has handled Mexican situation, I 208;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter giving credit for Carden's recall from Mexico, and for</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">constructive work, I 221;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">addresses Congress asking repeal of Panama Tolls Bill, I 253;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">plan to visit England on occasion of restoration of Sulgrave Manor,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">1274, 275, II 248;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">requested by resolution of the Senate to proffer his good offices</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">for mediation between Austria and Serbia, I 317;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">telegrams to and from Colonel House on proffering good offices to</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">avert war, I 317, 318;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">message to King George proffering good offices to avert war, I 320;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">neutrality letter to the Senate, I 360;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">desires to start peace parleys, I 416;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">insists on pressing the issue, I 423;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the &quot;Too proud to fight&quot; speech derided and denounced in England, II 6;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the <i>Lusitania</i> notes, II 6;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Page's feeling toward policies of, II 8;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">appreciation of Page letters, II 22;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">peace activities after Sussex &quot;pledge&quot;, II 148;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his reply to the German note concerning the submarine cessation,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">II 150, 156;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reluctant to speak on foreign matters with his ambassadors, II 171, 172;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">lived too much alone, no social touch, II 173;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">addresses Congress on threatened railroad strike, II 172;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">refuses to send high ranking officers as military attach&eacute;s, II 177;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">interview with Ambassador Page at Shadow Lawn, II 185;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">sends peace communication to all the warring Powers, II 204;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reception in Great Britain of the &quot;Peace without Victory&quot; speech, II 212;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">answer to the Pope's peace proposal, II 321, 323;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">coldness toward the Allies, II 345;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">his strong disapproval of closer relations with Great Britain,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">prevents visit of Taft and noted committee, II 346</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;"><i>Letters from</i>:</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on &quot;mistaken&quot; opinion of British critics of Carranza and Villa,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">I 227, 228;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">expressing gratitude and regard of and hopes for repeal of Toll</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bill, I 254;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">regarding the criticized speeches, I 262, 265;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">reply to proposal to visit England, I 276;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">acceptance of Page's resignation, II 396</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;"><i>Letters to</i>:</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">congratulations and suggestions on Election Day, I 108;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">as to best man for Secretary of Agriculture, I 114;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">impressions of the British people, I 144;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on royal reception to King Christian of Denmark, I 167;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the Mexican situation, I 184, 185, 188;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">memorandum sent through Colonel House on intervention in Mexico, I 194;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on feeling in England toward Panama Tolls question, I 248;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">recapitulating events bringing the two countries more in unity, I 251;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">explanation of speech before Associated Chambers of Commerce, I 260, 263;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">suggests speech attacking Anglophobia, I 264;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the outbreak of war, I 303;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on German atrocities, I 325;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on agreement of nations not to make peace separately, etc., I 338;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">attempts to enlighten on the real nature of the war, I 370;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">&quot;Rough notes toward an explanation of the British feeling toward the</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">United States,&quot; I 373;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on liability of Paris being captured and German peace drive being</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">launched, I 401;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on feeling of English toward American inaction after <i>Lusitania</i></span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">notes, II 40, 41, 43, 44, 45;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">told that if he broke diplomatic relations with Germany he would end</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the war, II 51;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the military situation, fall of 1915, and the loss of American</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">prestige, II 94;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">while waiting for interview sends notes of conversations with Lord</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Grey and Lord Bryce, II 183;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter of resignation&mdash;with some great truths, II 190;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">regarding success of Balfour Mission, etc., II 256;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on financial situation among the Allies and the necessity of</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">American assistance, II 269;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on seriousness of submarine situation, II 280, 283, 286;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on slow progress of war and comments on Lord Lansdowne's peace</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">letter, II 327;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on British opinion on subject of League of Nations, II 355;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on the cheering effect of his war speeches and letters, II 385;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">the resignation in obedience to physician's orders, II 393</span><br />
+<br />
+Wilson Doctrine, the, I 217<br />
+<br />
+Wood, Gen. Leonard, methods in Cuba an object lesson, I 177<br />
+<br />
+<i>World's Work</i>, founding of, I 66<br />
+<br />
+Worth, Nicholas, nom de plume in writing &quot;The Southerner&quot;, I 90<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+York, Archbishop of, letter commending him to Roosevelt, II 401<br />
+<br />
+<br />
+Zeppelin attack on London, II 34, 38<br />
+<br />
+Zionism, view of, II 350<br />
+<br />
+Zimmermann, German under Foreign Secretary in communication with<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Colonel House regarding peace proposals to Great Britain, I 426;</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">talk with House on peace terms, I 432</span><br />
+<br />
+Zimmermann, says Germany must apply for armistice, II 182<br />
+<br />
+Zimmermann-Mexico telegram influence on the United States declaration<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of war, II 214.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Letters of Walter H.
+Page, Volume II, by Burton J. Hendrick
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF ***
+
+***** This file should be named 17018-h.htm or 17018-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/7/0/1/17018/
+
+Produced by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+*** END: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2001.jpg b/17018-h/images/2001.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2dd781d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2001.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2002.png b/17018-h/images/2002.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7133dbe
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2002.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2098.jpg b/17018-h/images/2098.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a2bc6dd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2098.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2099.jpg b/17018-h/images/2099.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..375a475
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2099.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2116.jpg b/17018-h/images/2116.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..4e4cde0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2116.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2117.jpg b/17018-h/images/2117.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9765d77
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2117.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2230.jpg b/17018-h/images/2230.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3466563
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2230.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2231.jpg b/17018-h/images/2231.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..623c2fd
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2231.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2248.jpg b/17018-h/images/2248.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d33e267
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2248.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2249.jpg b/17018-h/images/2249.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f00d28c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2249.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2362.jpg b/17018-h/images/2362.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..77cd47f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2362.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2363.jpg b/17018-h/images/2363.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..0f8b8d8
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2363.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2380.jpg b/17018-h/images/2380.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..96efcec
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2380.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018-h/images/2381.jpg b/17018-h/images/2381.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..74806a1
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018-h/images/2381.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/17018.txt b/17018.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a75ff65
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,15701 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page,
+Volume II, by Burton J. Hendrick
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume II
+
+Author: Burton J. Hendrick
+
+Release Date: November 6, 2005 [EBook #17018]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Sir Edward Grey (now Viscount Grey of Fallodon),
+Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1905-1916]
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ LIFE AND LETTERS OF
+ WALTER H. PAGE
+
+ BY
+
+ BURTON J. HENDRICK
+
+ VOLUME
+ II
+
+ GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
+ DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
+ 1924
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES
+ AT
+ THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N.Y.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+VOLUME II
+
+
+ CHAPTER PAGE
+ XIV. THE "LUSITANIA" AND AFTER 1
+ XV. THE AMBASSADOR AND THE LAWYERS 53
+ XVI. DARK DAYS FOR THE ALLIES 81
+ XVII. CHRISTMAS IN ENGLAND, 1915 103
+ XVIII. A PERPLEXED AMBASSADOR 128
+ XIX. WASHINGTON IN THE SUMMER OF 1916 148
+ XX. "PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY" 189
+ XXI. THE UNITED STATES AT WAR 215
+ XXII. THE BALFOUR MISSION TO THE UNITED STATES 248
+ XXIII. PAGE--THE MAN 295
+ XXIV. A RESPITE AT ST. IVES 321
+ XXV. GETTING THE AMERICAN TROOPS TO FRANCE 349
+ XXVI. LAST DAYS IN ENGLAND 374
+ XXVII. THE END 404
+ APPENDIX 407
+ INDEX 425
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ Sir Edward Grey _Frontispiece_
+
+ FACING PAGE
+
+ Col. Edward M. House. From a painting by P.A.
+ Laszlo 88
+
+ The Rt. Hon. Herbert Henry Asquith, Prime Minister
+ of Great Britain, 1908-1916 89
+
+ Herbert C. Hoover, in 1914 104
+
+ A facsimile page from the Ambassador's letter of
+ November 24, 1916, resigning his Ambassadorship 105
+
+ Walter H. Page, at the time of America's entry into
+ the war, April, 1917 216
+
+ Resolution passed by the two Houses of Parliament,
+ April 18, 1917, on America's entry into the war 217
+
+ The Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George, Prime Minister
+ of Great Britain, 1916-- 232
+
+ The Rt. Hon. Arthur James Balfour (now the Earl of
+ Balfour), Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,
+ 1916-1919 233
+
+ Lord Robert Cecil, Minister of Blockade, 1916-1918,
+ Assistant Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs,
+ 1918 344
+
+ General John J. Pershing, Commander-in-Chief of
+ the American Expeditionary Force in the Great
+ War 345
+
+ Admiral William Sowden Sims, Commander of
+ American Naval Forces operating in European
+ waters during the Great War 360
+
+ A silver model of the _Mayflower_, the farewell gift
+ of the Plymouth Council to Mr. Page 361
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+LIFE AND LETTERS
+
+OF
+
+WALTER H. PAGE
+
+
+
+
+THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF
+
+WALTER H. PAGE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE "LUSITANIA"--AND AFTER
+
+
+I
+
+The news of the _Lusitania_ was received at the American Embassy at four
+o'clock on the afternoon of May 7, 1915. At that time preparations were
+under way for a dinner in honour of Colonel and Mrs. House; the first
+_Lusitania_ announcement declared that only the ship itself had been
+destroyed and that all the passengers and members of the crew had been
+saved; there was, therefore, no good reason for abandoning this dinner.
+
+At about seven o'clock, the Ambassador came home; his manner showed that
+something extraordinary had taken place; there were no outward signs of
+emotion, but he was very serious. The first news, he now informed Mrs.
+Page, had been a mistake; more than one thousand men, women, and
+children had lost their lives, and more than one hundred of these were
+American citizens. It was too late to postpone the dinner but that
+affair was one of the most tragic in the social history of London. The
+Ambassador was constantly receiving bulletins from his Chancery, and
+these, as quickly as they were received, he read to his guests. His
+voice was quiet and subdued; there were no indications of excitement in
+his manner or in that of his friends, and hardly of suppressed emotion.
+The atmosphere was rather that of dumb stupefaction. The news seemed to
+have dulled everyone's capacity for thought and even for feeling. If any
+one spoke, it was in whispers. Afterward, in the drawing room, this same
+mental state was the prevailing one; there was little denunciation of
+Germany and practically no discussion as to the consequences of the
+crime; everyone's thought was engrossed by the harrowing and
+unbelievable facts which the Ambassador was reading from the little
+yellow slips that were periodically brought in. An irresistible
+fascination evidently kept everybody in the room; the guests stayed
+late, eager for every new item. When they finally left, one after
+another, their manner was still abstracted and they said their
+good-nights in low voices. There were two reasons for this behaviour.
+The first was that the Ambassador and his guests had received the
+details of the greatest infamy which any supposedly civilized state had
+perpetrated since the massacre of Saint Bartholomew. The second was the
+conviction that the United States would at once declare war on Germany.
+
+On this latter point several of the guests expressed their ideas and one
+of the most shocked and outspoken was Colonel House. For a month the
+President's personal representative had been discussing with British
+statesmen possible openings for mediation, but all his hopes in this
+direction now vanished. That President Wilson would act with the utmost
+energy Colonel House took for granted. This act, he evidently believed,
+left the United States no option. "We shall be at war with Germany
+within a month," he declared.
+
+The feeling that prevailed in the Embassy this evening was the one that
+existed everywhere in London for several days. Emotionally the event
+acted like an anaesthetic. This was certainly the condition of all
+Americans associated with the American Embassy, especially Page
+himself. A day or two after the sinking the Ambassador went to Euston
+Station, at an early hour in the morning, to receive the American
+survivors. The hundred or more men and women who shambled from the train
+made a listless and bedraggled gathering. Their grotesque clothes, torn
+and unkempt--for practically none had had the opportunity of obtaining a
+change of dress--their expressionless faces, their lustreless eyes,
+their uncertain and bewildered walk, faintly reflected an experience
+such as comes to few people in this world. The most noticeable thing
+about these unfortunates was their lack of interest in their
+surroundings; everything had apparently been reduced to a blank; the
+fact that practically none made any reference to their ordeal, or could
+be induced to discuss it, was a matter of common talk in London. And
+something of this disposition now became noticeable in Page himself. He
+wrote his dispatches to Washington in an abstracted mood; he went
+through his duties almost with the detachment of a sleep-walker; like
+the _Lusitania_ survivors, he could not talk much at that time about the
+scenes that had taken place off the coast of Ireland. Yet there were
+many indications that he was thinking about them, and his thoughts, as
+his letters reveal, were concerned with more things than the tragedy
+itself. He believed that his country was now face to face with its
+destiny. What would Washington do?
+
+Page had a characteristic way of thinking out his problems. He performed
+his routine work at the Chancery in the daytime, but his really serious
+thinking he did in his own room at night. The picture is still a vivid
+one in the recollection of his family and his other intimates. Even at
+this time Page's health was not good, yet he frequently spent the
+evening at his office in Grosvenor Gardens, and when the long day's
+labours were finished, he would walk rather wearily to his home at No. 6
+Grosvenor Square. He would enter the house slowly--and his walk became
+slower and more tired as the months went by--go up to his room and cross
+to the fireplace, so apparently wrapped up in his own thoughts that he
+hardly greeted members of his own family. A wood fire was kept burning
+for him, winter and summer alike; Page would put on his dressing gown,
+drop into a friendly chair, and sit there, doing nothing, reading
+nothing, saying nothing--only thinking. Sometimes he would stay for an
+hour; not infrequently he would remain till two, three, or four o'clock
+in the morning; occasions were not unknown when his almost motionless
+figure would be in this same place at daybreak. He never slept through
+these nights, and he never even dozed; he was wide awake, and his mind
+was silently working upon the particular problem that was uppermost in
+his thoughts. He never rose until he had solved it or at least until he
+had decided upon a course of action. He would then get up abruptly, go
+to bed, and sleep like a child. The one thing that made it possible for
+a man of his delicate frame, racked as it was by anxiety and over work,
+to keep steadily at his task, was the wonderful gift which he possessed
+of sleeping.
+
+Page had thought out many problems in this way. The tension caused by
+the sailing of the _Dacia_, in January, 1915, and the deftness with
+which the issue had been avoided by substituting a French for a British
+cruiser, has already been described. Page discovered this solution on
+one of these all-night self-communings. It was almost two o'clock in the
+morning that he rose, said to himself, "I've got it!" and then went
+contentedly to bed. And during the anxious months that followed the
+_Lusitania_, the _Arabic_, and those other outrages which have now
+taken their place in history, he spent night after night turning the
+matter over in his mind. But he found no way out of the humiliations
+presented by the policy of Washington.
+
+"Here we are swung loose in time," he wrote to his son Arthur, a few
+days after the first _Lusitania_ note had been sent to Germany, "nobody
+knows the day or the week or the month or the year--and we are caught on
+this island, with no chance of escape, while the vast slaughter goes on
+and seems just beginning, and the degradation of war goes on week by
+week; and we live in hope that the United States will come in, as the
+only chance to give us standing and influence when the reorganization of
+the world must begin. (Beware of betraying the word 'hope'!) It has all
+passed far beyond anybody's power to describe. I simply go on day by day
+into unknown experiences and emotions, seeing nothing before me very
+clearly and remembering only dimly what lies behind. I can see only one
+proper thing: that all the world should fall to and hunt this wild beast
+down.
+
+"Two photographs of little Mollie[1] on my mantelpiece recall persons
+and scenes and hopes unconnected with the war: few other things can.
+Bless the baby, she couldn't guess what a sweet purpose she serves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sensations of most Americans in London during this crisis are almost
+indescribable. Washington's failure promptly to meet the situation
+affected them with astonishment and humiliation. Colonel House was
+confident that war was impending, and for this reason he hurried his
+preparations to leave England; he wished to be in the United States, at
+the President's side, when the declaration was made. With this feeling
+about Mr. Wilson, Colonel House received a fearful shock a day or two
+after the _Lusitania_ had gone down: while walking in Piccadilly, he
+caught a glimpse of one of the famous sandwich men, bearing a poster of
+an afternoon newspaper. This glaring broadside bore the following
+legend: "We are too proud to fight--Woodrow Wilson." The sight of that
+placard was Colonel House's first intimation that the President might
+not act vigorously. He made no attempt to conceal from Page and other
+important men at the American Embassy the shock which it had given him.
+Soon the whole of England was ringing with these six words; the
+newspapers were filled with stinging editorials and cartoons, and the
+music halls found in the Wilsonian phrase materials for their choicest
+jibes. Even in more serious quarters America was the subject of the most
+severe denunciation. No one felt these strictures more poignantly than
+President Wilson's closest confidant. A day or two before sailing home
+he came into the Embassy greatly depressed at the prevailing revulsion
+against the United States. "I feel," Colonel House said to Page, "as
+though I had been given a kick at every lamp post coming down
+Constitution Hill." A day or two afterward Colonel House sailed for
+America.
+
+
+II
+
+And now came the period of distress and of disillusionment. Three
+_Lusitania_ notes were sent and were evasively answered, and Washington
+still seemed to be marking time. The one event in this exciting period
+which gave Page satisfaction was Mr. Bryan's resignation as Secretary of
+State. For Mr. Bryan personally Page had a certain fondness, but as head
+of the State Department the Nebraska orator had been a cause of endless
+vexation. Many of Page's letters, already printed, bear evidence of the
+utter demoralization which existed in this branch of the Administration
+and this demoralization became especially glaring during the _Lusitania_
+crisis. No attempt was made even at this momentous period to keep the
+London Embassy informed as to what was taking place in Washington;
+Page's letters and cablegrams were, for the most part, unacknowledged
+and unanswered, and the American Ambassador was frequently obliged to
+obtain his information about the state of feeling in Washington from Sir
+Edward Grey. It must be said, in justice to Mr. Bryan, that this
+carelessness was nothing particularly new, for it had worried many
+ambassadors before Page. Readers of Charles Francis Adams's
+correspondence meet with the same complaints during the Civil War; even
+at the time of the _Trent_ crisis, when for a fortnight Great Britain
+and the United States were living on the brink of war, Adams was kept
+entirely in the dark about the plans of Washington[2]. The letters of
+John Hay show a similar condition during his brief ambassadorship to
+Great Britain in 1897-1898[3].
+
+But Mr. Bryan's incumbency was guilty of diplomatic vices which were
+peculiarly its own. The "leaks" in the State Department, to which Page
+has already referred, were constantly taking place; the Ambassador would
+send the most confidential cipher dispatches to his superior, cautioning
+the Department that they must be held inviolably secret, and then he
+would pick up the London newspapers the next morning and find that
+everything had been cabled from Washington. To most readers, the
+informal method of conducting foreign business, as it is disclosed in
+these letters, probably comes as something of a shock. Page is here
+discovered discussing state matters, not in correspondence with the
+Secretary of State, but in private unofficial communications to the
+President, and especially to Colonel House--the latter at that time not
+an official person at all. All this, of course, was extremely irregular
+and, in any properly organized State Department, it would have been even
+reprehensible. But the point is that there was no properly organized
+State Department at that time, and the impossibility of conducting
+business through the regular channels compelled Page to adopt other
+means. "There is only one way to reform the State Department," he
+informed Colonel House at this time. "That is to raze the whole
+building, with its archives and papers, to the ground, and begin all
+over again."
+
+This state of affairs in Washington explains the curious fact that the
+real diplomatic history of the United States and Great Britain during
+this great crisis is not to be found in the archives of the State
+Department, for the official documents on file there consist of the most
+routine telegrams, which are not particularly informing, but in the
+Ambassador's personal correspondence with the President, Colonel House,
+and a few other intimates. The State Department did not have the first
+requisite of a properly organized foreign office, for it could not be
+trusted with confidential information. The Department did not tell Page
+what it was doing, but it apparently told the whole world what Page was
+doing. It is an astonishing fact that Page could not write and cable the
+most important details, for he was afraid that they would promptly be
+given to the reporters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I shall not send another confidential message to the State Department,"
+Page wrote to Colonel House, September 15, 1914; "it's too dangerous.
+Time and time again now the Department has leaked. Last week, I sent a
+dispatch and I said in the body of it, '_this is confidential and under
+no condition to be given out or made public, but to be regarded as
+inviolably secret_.' The very next morning it was telegraphed from
+Washington to the London newspapers. Bryan telegraphed me that he was
+sure it didn't get out from the Department and that he now had so fixed
+it that there could be no leak. He's said that at least four times
+before. The Department swarms with newspaper men, I hear. But whether it
+does or not the leak continues. I have to go with my tail between my
+legs and apologize to Sir Edward Grey and to do myself that shame and to
+do my very best to keep his confidence--against these unnecessary odds.
+The only way to be safe is to do the job perfunctorily, to answer the
+questions the Department sends and to do nothing on your own account.
+That's the reason so many of our men do their jobs in that way--or _one_
+reason and a strong one. We can never have an alert and energetic and
+powerful service until men can trust the Department and until they can
+get necessary information from it. I wrote the President that of course
+I'd go on till the war ended and all the questions growing out of it
+were settled, and that then he must excuse me, if I must continue to be
+exposed to this danger and humiliation. In the meantime, I shall send
+all my confidential matter in private letters to him."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Page did not regard Mr. Bryan's opinions and attitudes as a joke: to him
+they were a serious matter and, in his eyes, Bryan was most interesting
+as a national menace. He regarded the Secretary as the extreme
+expression of an irrational sentimentalism that was in danger of
+undermining the American character, especially as the kind of thought
+he represented was manifest in many phases of American life. In a moment
+of exasperation, Page gave expression to this feeling in a letter to his
+son:
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ London, June 6, 1915.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... We're in danger of being feminized and fad-ridden--grape juice
+ (God knows water's good enough: why grape juice?); pensions;
+ Christian Science; peace cranks; efficiency-correspondence schools;
+ aid-your-memory; women's clubs; co-this and co-t'other and coddling
+ in general; Billy Sunday; petticoats where breeches ought to be and
+ breeches where petticoats ought to be; white livers and soft heads
+ and milk-and-water;--I don't want war: nobody knows its horrors or
+ its degradations or its cost. But to get rid of hyphenated
+ degenerates perhaps it's worth while, and to free us from 'isms and
+ soft folk. That's the domestic view of it. As for being kicked by a
+ sauerkraut caste--O Lord, give us backbone!
+
+ Heartily yours,
+ W.H.P.
+
+In the bottom of this note, Page has cut a notch in the paper and
+against it he has written: "This notch is the place to apply a match to
+this letter."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Again and ever I am reminded," Page also wrote in reference to Bryan's
+resignation, "of the danger of having to do with cranks. A certain
+orderliness of mind and conduct seems essential for safety in this short
+life. Spiritualists, bone-rubbers, anti-vivisectionists, all sort of
+anti's in fact, those who have fads about education or fads against it,
+Perfectionists, Daughters of the Dove of Peace, Sons of the Roaring
+Torrent, itinerant peace-mongers--all these may have a real genius
+among them once in forty years; but to look for an exception to the
+common run of yellow dogs and damfools among them is like opening
+oysters with the hope of finding pearls. It's the common man we want and
+the uncommon common man when we can find him--never the crank. This is
+the lesson of Bryan."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At one time, however, Mr. Bryan's departure seemed likely to have
+important consequences for Page. Colonel House and others strongly urged
+the President to call him home from London and make him Secretary of
+State. This was the third position in President Wilson's Cabinet for
+which Page had been considered. The early plans to make him Secretary of
+the Interior or Secretary of Agriculture have already been described. Of
+all cabinet posts, however, the one that would have especially attracted
+him would have been the Department of State. But President Wilson
+believed that the appointment of an Ambassador at one of the belligerent
+capitals, especially of an Ambassador whose sympathies for the Allies
+were so pronounced as were Page's, would have been an "un-neutral" act,
+and, therefore, Colonel House's recommendation was not approved.
+
+ _From Edward M. House_
+
+ Roslyn, Long Island,
+ June 25th, 1915.
+
+ DEAR PAGE:
+
+ The President finally decided to appoint Lansing to succeed Mr.
+ Bryan. In my opinion, he did wisely, though I would have preferred
+ his appointing you.
+
+ The argument against your appointment was the fact that you are an
+ Ambassador at one of the belligerent capitals. The President did
+ not think it would do, and from what I read, when your name was
+ suggested I take it there would have been much criticism. I am
+ sorry--sorrier than I can tell you, for it would have worked
+ admirably in the general scheme of things.
+
+ However, I feel sure that Lansing will do the job, and that you
+ will find your relations with him in every way satisfactory.
+
+ The President spent yesterday with me and we talked much of you. He
+ is looking well and feeling so. I read the President your letter
+ and he enjoyed it as much as I did.
+
+ I am writing hastily, for I am leaving for Manchester,
+ Massachusetts, where I shall be during July and August.
+
+ Your sincere friend,
+ E.M. HOUSE.
+
+
+III
+
+But, in addition to the _Lusitania_ crisis, a new terror now loomed on
+the horizon. Page's correspondence reveals that Bryan had more reasons
+than one for his resignation; he was now planning to undertake a
+self-appointed mission to Europe for the purpose of opening peace
+negotiations entirely on his own account.
+
+ _From Edward M. House_
+
+ Manchester, Massachusetts,
+ August 12th, 1915.
+
+ DEAR PAGE:
+
+ The Bryans have been stopping with the X's. X writes me that Bryan
+ told him that he intended to go to Europe soon and try peace
+ negotiations. He has Lloyd George in mind in England, and it is
+ then his purpose to go to Germany.
+
+ I take it he will want credentials from the President which, of
+ course, he will not want to give, but just what he will feel
+ obliged to give is another story. I anticipated this when he
+ resigned. I knew it was merely a matter of time when he would take
+ this step.
+
+ He may find encouragement in Germany, for he is in high favour now
+ in that quarter. It is his purpose to oppose the President upon the
+ matter of "preparedness," and, from what we can learn, it will not
+ be long before there will be open antagonism between the
+ Administration and himself.
+
+ It might be a good thing to encourage his going to Europe. He would
+ probably come back a sadder and wiser man. I take it that no one in
+ authority in England would discuss the matter seriously with him,
+ and, in France, I do not believe he could even get a hearing.
+
+ Please let me have your impressions upon this subject.
+
+ I wish I could be near you to-day for there are so many things I
+ could tell that I cannot write.
+
+ Your friend,
+ E.M. House.
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ American Embassy, London [Undated].
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ Never mind about Bryan. Send him over here if you wish to get rid
+ of him. He'll cut no more figure than a tar-baby at a Negro
+ camp-meeting. If he had come while he was Secretary, I should have
+ jumped off London Bridge and the country would have had one
+ ambassador less. But I shall enjoy him now. You see some peace
+ crank from the United States comes along every week--some crank or
+ some gang of cranks. There've been two this week. Ever since the
+ Daughters of the Dove of Peace met at The Hague, the game has
+ become popular in America; and I haven't yet heard that a single
+ one has been shot--so far. I think that some of them are likely
+ soon to be hanged, however, because there are signs that they may
+ come also from Germany. The same crowd that supplies money to buy
+ labour-leaders and the press and to blow up factories in the United
+ States keeps a good supply of peace-liars on tap. It'll be fun to
+ watch Bryan perform and never suspect that anybody is lying to him
+ or laughing at him; and he'll go home convinced that he's done the
+ job and he'll let loose doves all over the land till they are as
+ thick as English sparrows. Not even the President could teach him
+ anything permanently. He can do no harm on this side the world.
+ It's only your side that's in any possible danger; and, if I read
+ the signs right, there's a diminishing danger there.
+
+ No, there's never yet come a moment when there was the slightest
+ chance of peace. Did the Emperor not say last year that peace would
+ come in October, and again this year in October? Since he said it,
+ how can it come?
+
+ The ambitions and the actions of men, my friend, are determined by
+ their antecedents, their surroundings, and their opportunities--the
+ great deeds of men before them whom consciously or unconsciously
+ they take for models, the codes they are reared by, and the chances
+ that they think they see. These influences shaped Alexander and
+ Caesar, and they shaped you and me. Now every monarch on the
+ Continent has behind him the Napoleonic example. "Can I do that?"
+ crosses the mind of every one. Of course every one thinks of
+ himself as doing it beneficently--for the good of the world.
+ Napoleon, himself, persuaded himself of his benevolent intentions,
+ and the devil of it was he persuaded other people also. Now the
+ only monarch in Europe in our time who thought he had a chance is
+ your friend in Berlin. When he told you last year (1914) that of
+ course he didn't want war, but that he was "ready," that's what he
+ meant. A similar ambition, of course, comes into the mind of every
+ professional soldier of the continent who rises to eminence. In
+ Berlin you have both--the absolute monarch and the military class
+ of ambitious soldiers and their fighting machine. Behind these men
+ walks the Napoleonic ambition all the time, just as in the United
+ States we lie down every night in George Washington's feather-bed
+ of no entangling alliances.
+
+ Then remember, too, that the German monarchy is a cross between the
+ Napoleonic ambition and its inheritance from Frederick the Great
+ and Bismarck. I suppose the three damnedest liars that were ever
+ born are these three--old Frederick, Napoleon, and Bismarck--not, I
+ take it, because they naturally loved lying, but because the game
+ they played constantly called for lying. There was no other way to
+ play it: they _had_ to fool people all the time. You have abundant
+ leisure--do this: Read the whole career of Napoleon and write down
+ the startling and exact parallels that you will find there to what
+ is happening to-day. The French were united and patriotic, just as
+ the Germans now are. When they invaded other people's territory,
+ they said they were attacked and that the other people had brought
+ on war. They had their lying diplomats, their corruption funds;
+ they levied money on cities and states; they took booty; and they
+ were God's elect. It's a wonderful parallel--not strangely, because
+ the game is the same and the moral methods are the same. Only the
+ tools are somewhat different--the submarine, for example. Hence the
+ _Lusitania_ disaster (not disavowed, you will observe), the
+ _Arabic_ disaster, the propaganda, underground and above, in the
+ United States. And there'll be more. The Napoleonic Wars were
+ about eleven years long. I fancy that we shall have war and wars
+ from this attempt to dominate Europe, for perhaps as long a period.
+ The Balkans can't be quieted by this war only, nor Russia and Italy
+ perhaps. And Germany may have a series of earthquakes
+ herself--internal explosions. Then Poland and perhaps some of the
+ Scandinavian States. Nobody can tell.
+
+ I cannot express my admiration of the President's management, so
+ far at least, of his colossal task of leading us right. He has
+ shown his supreme wisdom up to this point and I have the
+ profoundest confidence in his judgment. But I hope he doesn't fool
+ himself about the future; I'm sure he doesn't. I see no possible
+ way for us to keep out, because I know the ignorance and falseness
+ of the German leaders. They'll drown or kill more Americans--on the
+ sea and in America. They _may_ at last even attack one of our own
+ passenger ships, or do something that will dramatically reveal them
+ to the whole American people. Then, of course, the tune will be
+ called. It's only a question of time; and I am afraid the war will
+ last long enough to give them time. An early peace is all that can
+ prevent them from driving us at last into war; and I can see no
+ chance of an early peace. You had as well prepare as fast as the
+ condition of public opinion will permit.
+
+ There could be no better measure of the immeasurable moral advance
+ that the United States has made over Europe than the incredulity of
+ our people. They simply can't comprehend what the Napoleonic legend
+ can do, nor the low political morality of the Continent--of Berlin
+ in particular. Hence they don't believe it. We have gone on for 100
+ years working might and main to better our condition and the
+ condition of people about us--the greatest effort made by the
+ largest number of people since the world began to further the mood
+ and the arts of peace. There is no other such chapter in human
+ history as our work for a hundred years. Yet just a hundred years
+ ago the Capitol at Washington was burned by--a political oligarchy
+ in the freest country of Europe--as damnable an atrocity as you
+ will find in history. The Germans are a hundred years behind the
+ English in political development and political morality.
+
+ So, let Willum J. come. He can't hurt Europe--nor help it; and you
+ can spare him. Let all the Peace-gang come. You can spare _them_,
+ too; and they can do no harm here. Let somebody induce Hoke Smith
+ to come, too. You have hit on a great scheme--friendly deportation.
+
+ And Bryan won't be alone. Daughters of the Dove of Peace and Sons
+ of the Olive Branch come every week. The latest Son came to see me
+ to-day. He said that the German Chancellor told him that he wanted
+ peace--wants it now and wants it bad, and that only one thing stood
+ in the way--if England would agree not to take Belgium, Germany
+ would at once make peace! This otherwise sensible American wanted
+ me to take him to see Sir Edward to tell him this, and to suggest
+ to him to go over to Holland next week to meet the German
+ Chancellor and fix it up. A few days ago a pious preacher chap
+ (American) who had come over to "fix it all up," came back from
+ France and called on me. He had seen something in France--he was
+ excited and he didn't quite make it clear what he had seen; but he
+ said that if they'd only let him go home safely and quickly he'd
+ promise not to mention peace any more--did I think the American
+ boats _entirely_ safe?--So, you see, I do have some fun even in
+ these dark days.
+
+ Yours heartily,
+ W.H. PAGE.
+
+
+IV
+
+This letter discloses that Page was pinning his faith in President
+Wilson, and that he still had confidence in the President's
+determination to uphold the national honour. Page was not one of those
+who thought that the United States should declare war immediately after
+the _Lusitania_. The President's course, in giving Germany a chance to
+make amends, and to disavow the act, met with his approval, and he
+found, also, much to admire in Mr. Wilson's first _Lusitania_ note. His
+judgment in this matter was based first of all upon the merits of the
+case; besides this, his admiration for Mr. Wilson as a public man was
+strong. To think otherwise of the President would have been a great
+grief to the Ambassador and to differ with his chief on the tremendous
+issue of the war would have meant for Page the severance of one of the
+most cherished associations of his life. The interest which he had shown
+in advocating Wilson's presidential candidacy has already been set
+forth; and many phases of the Wilson administration had aroused his
+admiration. The President's handling of domestic problems Page regarded
+as a masterpiece in reconciling statesmanship with practical politics,
+and his energetic attitude on the Panama Tolls had introduced new
+standards into American foreign relations. Page could not sympathize
+with all the details of the Wilsonian Mexican policy, yet he saw in it a
+high-minded purpose and a genuine humanitarianism. But the outbreak of
+war presented new aspects of Mr. Wilson's mind. The President's attitude
+toward the European struggle, his conception of "neutrality," and his
+failure to grasp the meaning of the conflict, seemed to Page to show a
+lack of fundamental statesmanship; still his faith in Wilson was
+deep-seated, and he did not abandon hope that the President could be
+brought to see things as they really were. Page even believed that he
+might be instrumental in his conversion.
+
+But in the summer and autumn of 1915 one agony followed another. The
+"too proud to fight" speech was in Page's mind nothing less than a
+tragedy. The president's first _Lusitania_ note for a time restored the
+Ambassador's confidence; it seemed to show that the President intended
+to hold Germany to that "strict accountability" which he had threatened.
+But Mr. Wilson's course now presented new difficulties to his
+Ambassador. Still Page believed that the President, in his own way and
+in his own time, would find a path out of his dilemma that would protect
+the honour and the safety of the United States. If any of the Embassy
+subordinates became impatient over the procedure of Washington, he did
+not find a sympathetic listener in the Ambassador. The whole of London
+and of Europe might be resounding with denunciations of the White House,
+but Page would tolerate no manifestations of hostility in his presence.
+"The problem appears different to Washington than it does to us," he
+would say to his confidants. "We see only one side of it; the President
+sees all sides. If we give him all the facts, he will decide the thing
+wisely." Englishmen with whom the Ambassador came into contact soon
+learned that they could not become flippant or critical about Mr. Wilson
+in his presence; he would resent the slightest hostile remark, and he
+had a way of phrasing his rebukes that usually discouraged a second
+attempt. About this time Page began to keep closely to himself, and to
+decline invitations to dinners and to country houses, even those with
+which he was most friendly. The reason was that he could not meet
+Englishmen and Englishwomen, or even Americans who were resident in
+England, on his old easy familiar terms; he knew the ideas which
+everybody entertained about his country, and he knew also what they were
+saying, when he was not among them; the restraint which his presence
+necessarily put upon his friends produced an uncongenial atmosphere, and
+the Ambassador therefore gave up, for a time, those distractions which
+had ordinarily proved such a delightful relief from his duties. For the
+first time since he had come to England he found himself a solitary man.
+He even refused to attend the American Luncheon Club in London because,
+in speeches and in conversation, the members did not hesitate to assail
+the Wilson policies.
+
+Events, however, eventually proved too strong for the most devoted
+supporter of President Wilson. After the _Arabic_ and the _Hesperian_,
+Page's official intimates saw signs that the Ambassador was losing
+confidence in his old friend. He would discuss Mr. Wilson occasionally,
+with those secretaries, such as Mr. Laughlin, in whom his confidence was
+strongest; his expressions, however, were never flippant or violent.
+That Page could be biting as well as brilliant in his comments on public
+personages his letters abundantly reveal, yet he never exercised his
+talent for sarcasm or invective at the expense of the White House. He
+never forgot that Mr. Wilson was President and that he was Ambassador;
+he would still defend the Administration; and he even now continued to
+find consolation in the reflection that Mr. Wilson was living in a
+different atmosphere and that he had difficulties to confront of which a
+man in London could know nothing. The Ambassador's emotion was rather
+one of disappointment and sorrow, mingled with anxiety as to the plight
+into which his country was being led. As to his duty in this situation,
+however, Page never hesitated. In his relations with his Embassy and
+with the British world he maintained this non-critical attitude; but in
+his letters to President Wilson and Colonel House, he was describing the
+situation, and expressing his convictions, with the utmost freedom and
+frankness. In both these attitudes Page was consistent and absolutely
+loyal. It was his duty to carry out the Wilson instructions and he had
+too high a conception of the Ambassadorial office to show to the world
+any unfavourable opinions he may have held about his country's course.
+His duty to his post made it just as imperative that he set forth to the
+President the facts exactly as they were. And this the Ambassador now
+proceeded to do. For the mere ornamental dignities of an Ambassadorship
+Page cared nothing; he was wasting his health in his duties and
+exhausting his private resources; much as he loved the English and
+congenial as were his surroundings, the fear of being recalled for
+"disloyalty" or insubordination never influenced him. The letters which
+he now wrote to Colonel House and to President Wilson himself are
+probably without parallel in the diplomatic annals of this or of any
+other country. In them he told the President precisely what Englishmen
+thought of him and of the extent to which the United States was
+suffering in European estimation from the Wilson policy. His boldness
+sometimes astounded his associates. One day a friend and adviser of
+President Wilson's came into the Ambassador's office just as Page had
+finished one of his communications to Washington.
+
+"Read that!" the Ambassador said, handing over the manuscript to his
+visitor.
+
+As the caller read, his countenance displayed the progressive stages of
+his amazement. When he had finished, his hands dropped helplessly upon
+his knees.
+
+"Is that the way you write to the President?" he gasped.
+
+"Of course," Page replied, quietly. "Why not? Why shouldn't I tell him
+the truth? That is what I am here for."
+
+"There is no other person in the world who dare talk to him like that!"
+was the reply.
+
+This is unquestionably the fact. That President Wilson did not like
+people about him whose views were opposed to his own is now no secret,
+and during the period when his policy was one of the great issues of the
+world there was probably no one except Page who intruded upon his
+solitude with ideas that so abruptly disagreed with the opinions of the
+White House. The letters which Page wrote Colonel House were intended,
+of course, for the President himself, and practically all of them
+Colonel House read aloud to the head of the nation. The two men would
+closet themselves in the old cabinet room on the second floor of the
+White House--that same room in which Lincoln had met his advisers during
+Civil War days; and here Colonel House would quietly read the letters in
+which Page so mercilessly portrayed the situation as it appeared in
+English and European eyes. The President listened impassively, giving no
+sign of approval or disapproval, and hardly, at times, of much interest.
+In the earlier days, when Page's letters consisted of pictures of
+English life and English men, and colourful descriptions of England
+under the stress of war, the President was vastly entertained; he would
+laugh loudly at Page's wit, express his delight at his graphic and
+pungent style and feel deeply the horrors of war as his Ambassador
+unfolded them. "I always found Page compelling on paper," Mr. Wilson
+remarked to Mr. Laughlin, during one of the latter's visits to
+Washington. "I could never resist him--I get more information from his
+letters than from any other single source. Tell him to keep it up." It
+was during this period that the President used occasionally to read
+Page's letters to the Cabinet, expressing his great appreciation of
+their charm and historical importance. "The President quoted from one of
+the Ambassador's letters to the Cabinet to-day," a member of the Cabinet
+wrote to Mrs. Page in February, 1915. "'Some day,' the President said,
+'I hope that Walter Page's letters will be published. They are the best
+letters I have ever read. They make you feel the atmosphere in England,
+understand the people, and see into the motives of the great actors.'"
+The President repeated this statement many times, and his letters to
+Page show how greatly he enjoyed and profited from this correspondence.
+But after the sinking of the _Lusitania_ and the _Arabic_ his attitude
+toward Page and his letters changed.
+
+He now found little pleasure or satisfaction in the Page communications.
+When Mr. Wilson found that one of his former confidants had turned out
+to be a critic, that man instantaneously passed out of his life. And
+this was now Page's fate; the friendship and associations of forty years
+were as though they had never been. Just why Mr. Wilson did not recall
+his Ambassador is a question that has puzzled Page's friends. He would
+sometimes refer to him as a man who was "more British than the British,"
+as one who had been taken completely captive by British blandishments,
+but he never came to the point of dismissing him. Perhaps he did not
+care to face the public scandal that such an act would have caused; but
+a more plausible reason is that Page, despite the causes which he had
+given for irritation, was indispensable to him. Page's early letters had
+furnished the President ideas which had taken shape in Wilson's
+policies, and, disagreeable as the communications now became, there are
+evidences that they influenced the solitary statesman in the White
+House, and that they had much to do in finally forcing Mr. Wilson into
+the war. The alternative question, as to why Page did not retire when he
+found himself so out of sympathy with the President, will be
+sufficiently answered in subsequent chapters; at present it may be said
+that he did resign and only consented to remain at the urgent request of
+Washington. In fact, all during 1915 and 1916, there seemed to be a fear
+in Washington that Page would definitely abandon the London post. On one
+occasion, when the newspapers published rumours to this effect, Page
+received an urgent despatch from Mr. Lansing. The message came at a
+time--the date was October 26, 1915--when Page was especially
+discouraged over the Washington policy. "Representatives of the press,"
+said Mr. Lansing, "have repeated rumours that you are planning to
+resign. These have been brought to the President's attention, and both
+he and I have denied them. Still these rumours persist, and they cause
+both the President and me great anxiety. We cannot believe that they are
+well founded.
+
+"In view of the fact that they are so persistent, we have thought it
+well to inform you of them and to tell you how earnestly we hope that
+they are baseless. We trust that you will set both our minds at rest."
+
+If Page had ever had any compunction about addressing the President in
+blunt phrases these expressions certainly convinced him that he was a
+free agent.
+
+Yet Page himself at times had his doubts as to the value of this
+correspondence. He would frequently discuss the matter with Mr.
+Laughlin. "That's a pretty harsh letter," he would say. "I don't like to
+talk that way to the President, yet it doesn't express half what I
+feel."
+
+"It's your duty to tell the President the real state of affairs," Mr.
+Laughlin would urge.
+
+"But do you suppose it does any good?" Page would ask.
+
+"Yes, it's bound to, and whether it does or not, it's your business to
+keep him informed."
+
+If in these letters Page seems to lay great stress on the judgment of
+Great Britain and Europe on American policy, it must be remembered that
+that was his particular province. One of an Ambassador's most important
+duties is to transmit to his country the public opinion of the country
+to which he is accredited. It was Page's place to tell Washington what
+Great Britain thought of it; it was Washington's business to formulate
+policy, after giving due consideration to this and other matters.
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ July 21, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I enclose a pamphlet in ridicule of the President. I don't know who
+ wrote it, for my inquiries so far have brought no real information.
+ I don't feel like sending it to him. I send it to you--to do with
+ as you think best. This thing alone is, of course, of no
+ consequence. But it is symptomatic. There is much feeling about the
+ slowness with which he acts. One hundred and twenty people
+ (Americans) were drowned on the _Lusitania_ and we are still
+ writing notes about it--to the damnedest pirates that ever blew up
+ a ship. Anybody who knows the Germans knows, of course, that they
+ are simply playing for time, that they are not going to "come
+ down," that Von Tirpitz is on deck, that they'd just as lief have
+ war with us as not--perhaps had rather--because they don't want any
+ large nation left fresh when the war ends. They'd like to have the
+ whole world bankrupt. There is a fast growing feeling here,
+ therefore, that the American Government is pusillanimous--dallies
+ with 'em, is affected by the German propaganda, etc., etc. Of
+ course, such a judgment is not fair. It is formed without knowing
+ the conditions in the United States. But I think you ought to
+ realize the strength of this sentiment. No doubt before you receive
+ this, the President will send something to Germany that will amount
+ to an ultimatum and there will be at least a momentary change of
+ sentiment here. But looking at the thing in a long-range way, we're
+ bound to get into the war. For the Germans will blow up more
+ American travellers without notice. And by dallying with them we do
+ not change the ultimate result, but we take away from ourselves the
+ spunk and credit of getting in instead of being kicked and cursed
+ in. We've got to get in: they won't play the game in any other way.
+ I have news direct from a high German source in Berlin which
+ strongly confirms this....
+
+ It's a curious thing to say. But the only solution that I see is
+ another _Lusitania_ outrage, which would force war.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. The London papers every day say that the President will send a
+ strong note, etc. And the people here say, "Damn notes: hasn't he
+ written enough?" Writing notes hurts nobody--changes nothing. The
+ Washington correspondents to the London papers say that Burleson,
+ the Attorney-General, and Daniels are Bryan men and are holding the
+ President back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The prophecy contained in this letter was quickly fulfilled. A week or
+two after Colonel House had received it, the _Arabic_ was sunk with loss
+of American life.
+
+Page was taking a brief holiday with his son Frank in Rowsley,
+Derbyshire, when this news came. It was telegraphed from the Embassy.
+
+"That settles it," he said to his son. "They have sunk the _Arabic_.
+That means that we shall break with Germany and I've got to go back to
+London."
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ American Embassy, London, August 23, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ The sinking of the _Arabic_ is the answer to the President and to
+ your letter to me. And there'll be more such answers. You said to
+ me one day after you had got back from your last visit to Berlin:
+ "They are impossible." I think you told the truth, and surely you
+ know your German and you know your Berlin--or you did know them
+ when you were here.
+
+ The question is not what we have done for the Allies, not what any
+ other neutral country has done or has failed to do--such
+ comparisons, I think, are far from the point. The question is when
+ the right moment arrives for us to save our self-respect, our
+ honour, and the esteem and fear (or the contempt) in which the
+ world will hold us.
+
+ Berlin has the Napoleonic disease. If you follow Napoleon's
+ career--his excuses, his evasions, his inventions, the wild French
+ enthusiasm and how he kept it up--you will find an exact parallel.
+ That becomes plainer every day. Europe may not be wholly at peace
+ in five years--may be ten.
+
+ Hastily and heartily,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ I have your note about Willum J.... Crank once, crank always. My
+ son, never tie up with a crank.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, September 2nd, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ You write me about pleasing the Allies, the big Ally in particular.
+ That doesn't particularly appeal to me. We don't owe them
+ anything. There's no obligation. I'd never confess for a moment
+ that we are under any obligation to any of them nor to anybody. I'm
+ not out to "please" anybody, as a primary purpose: that's not my
+ game nor my idea--nor yours either. As for England in particular,
+ the account was squared when she twice sent an army against us--in
+ her folly--especially the last time when she burnt our Capitol.
+ There's been no obligation since. The obligation is on the other
+ foot. We've set her an example of what democracy will do for men,
+ an example of efficiency, an example of freedom of opportunity. The
+ future is ours, and she may follow us and profit by it. Already we
+ have three white English-speaking men to every two in the British
+ Empire: we are sixty per cent. of the Anglo-Saxons in the world. If
+ there be any obligation to please, the obligation is on her to
+ please us. And she feels and sees it now.
+
+ My point is not that, nor is it what we or any other neutral nation
+ has done or may do--Holland or any other. This war is the direct
+ result of the over-polite, diplomatic, standing-aloof,
+ bowing-to-one-another in gold lace, which all European nations are
+ guilty of in times of peace--castes and classes and uniforms and
+ orders and such folderol, instead of the proper business of the
+ day. Every nation in Europe knew that Germany was preparing for
+ war. If they had really got together--not mere Hague Sunday-school
+ talk and resolutions--but had really got together for business and
+ had said to Germany, "The moment you fire a shot, we'll all fight
+ against you; we have so many millions of men, so many men-of-war,
+ so many billions of money; and we'll increase all these if you do
+ not change your system and your building-up of armies"--then there
+ would have been no war.
+
+ My point is not sentimental. It is:
+
+ (1) We must maintain our own self-respect and safety. If we submit
+ to too many insults, _that_ will in time bring Germany against us.
+ We've got to show at some time that we don't believe, either, in
+ the efficacy of Sunday-School resolves for peace--that we are
+ neither Daughters of the Dove of Peace nor Sons of the Olive
+ Branch, and
+
+ (2) About nagging and forever presenting technical legal points as
+ lawyers do to confuse juries--the point is the point of efficiency.
+ If we do that, we can't carry our main points. I find it harder and
+ harder to get answers now to important questions because we ask so
+ many unimportant and nagging ones.
+
+ I've no sentiment--perhaps not enough. My gushing days are gone, if
+ I ever had 'em. The cutting-out of the "100 years of peace"
+ oratory, etc., etc., was one of the blessings of the war. But we
+ must be just and firm and preserve our own self-respect and keep
+ alive the fear that other nations have of us; and we ought to have
+ the courage to make the Department of State more than a bureau of
+ complaints. We must learn to say "No" even to a Gawdamighty
+ independent American citizen when he asks an improper or
+ impracticable question. Public Opinion in the United States
+ consists of something more than the threats of Congressmen and the
+ bleating of newspapers; it consists of the judgment of honourable
+ men on courageous and frank actions--a judgment that cannot be made
+ up till action is taken.
+
+ Heartily yours,
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ American Embassy, London, Sept. 8, 1915.
+
+ (This is not prudent. It is only true--nothing more.)
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I take it for granted that Dumba[4] is going, of course. But I must
+ tell you that the President is being laughed at by our best friends
+ for his slowness in action. I hardly ever pick up a paper without
+ seeing some sarcastic remark. I don't mean they expect us to come
+ into the war. They only hoped we would be as good as our
+ word--would regard another submarine attack on a ship carrying
+ Americans as an unfriendly act and would send Bernstorff home. Yet
+ the _Arabic_ and now the _Hesperian_ have had no effect in action.
+ Bernstorff's personal _note to Lansing[5], even as far as it goes,
+ does not bind his Government_.
+
+ The upshot of all this is that the President is fast losing in the
+ minds of our best friends here all that he gained by his courageous
+ stand on the Panama tolls. They feel that if he takes another
+ insult--keeps taking them--and is satisfied with Bernstorff's
+ personal word, which is proved false in four days--he'll take
+ anything. And the British will pay less attention to what we say.
+ That's inevitable. If the American people and the President accept
+ the _Arabic_ and the _Hesperian_ and do nothing to Dumba till the
+ Government here gave out his letter, which the State Department had
+ (and silently held) for several days--then nobody on this side the
+ world will pay much heed to anything we say hereafter.
+
+ This, as I say, doesn't mean that these (thoughtful) people wish or
+ expect us to go to war. They wish only that we'd prove ourselves as
+ good as the President's word. That's the conservative truth; we're
+ losing influence more rapidly than I supposed it were possible.
+
+ Dumba's tardy dismissal will not touch the main matter, which is
+ the rights of neutrals at sea, and keeping our word in action.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. They say it's Mexico over again--watchful waiting and nothing
+ doing. And the feeling grows that Bryan has really conquered, since
+ his programme seems to prevail.
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, Tuesday night, Sept. 8, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ The Germans seem to think it a good time to try to feel about for
+ peace. They have more to offer now than they may have again. That's
+ all. A man who seriously talks peace now in Paris or in London on
+ any terms that the Germans will consider, would float dead that
+ very night in the Seine or in the Thames. The Germans have for the
+ time being "done-up" the Russians; but the French have shells
+ enough to plough the German trenches day and night (they've been at
+ it for a fortnight now); Joffre has been to see the Italian
+ generalissimo; and the English destroy German submarines now almost
+ as fast as the Germans send them out. I am credibly told that
+ several weeks ago a group of Admiralty men who are in the secret
+ had a little dinner to celebrate the destruction of the 50th
+ submarine.
+
+ While this is going on, you are talking on your side of the water
+ about a change in German policy! The only change is that the number
+ of submarines available becomes smaller and smaller, and that they
+ wish to use Uncle Sam's broad, fat back to crawl down on when they
+ have failed.
+
+ Consequently, they are laughing at Uncle Sam here--it comes near to
+ being ridicule, in fact, for seeming to jump at Bernstorff's
+ unfrank assurances. And, as I have telegraphed the President,
+ English opinion is--well, it is very nearly disrespectful. Men say
+ here (I mean our old friends) that with no disavowal of the
+ _Lusitania_, the _Falaba_, the _Gulflight_, or the _Arabic_ or of
+ the _Hesperian_, the Germans are "stuffing" Uncle Sam, that Uncle
+ Sam is in the clutches of the peace-at-any-price public opinion,
+ that the United States will suffer any insult and do nothing. I
+ hardly pick up a paper that does not have a sarcastic paragraph or
+ cartoon. We are on the brink of convincing the English that we'll
+ not act, whatever the provocation. By the English, I do not mean
+ the lighter, transitory public opinion, but I mean the thoughtful
+ men who do not wish us or expect us to fire a gun. They say that
+ the American democracy, since Cleveland's day, has become a mere
+ agglomeration of different races, without national unity, national
+ aims, and without courage or moral qualities. And (I deeply regret
+ to say) the President is losing here the high esteem he won by his
+ Panama tolls repeal. They ask, why on earth did he raise the issue
+ if under repeated provocation he is unable to recall Gerard or to
+ send Bernstorff home? The _Hesperian_ follows the _Arabic_; other
+ "liners" will follow the _Hesperian_, if the Germans have
+ submarines. And, when Sackville-West[6] was promptly sent home for
+ answering a private citizen's inquiry about the two political
+ parties, Dumba is (yet awhile) retained in spite of a far graver
+ piece of business. There is a tone of sad disappointment here--not
+ because the most thoughtful men want us in the war (they don't),
+ but because for some reason, which nobody here understands, the
+ President, having taken a stand, seems unable to do anything.
+
+ All this is a moderate interpretation of sorrowful public opinion
+ here. And the result will inevitably be that they will pay far less
+ heed to anything we may hereafter say. In fact men now say here
+ every day that the American democracy has no opinion, can form no
+ opinion, has no moral quality, and that the word of its President
+ never gets as far as action even of the mildest form. The
+ atmosphere is very depressing. And this feeling has apparently got
+ beyond anybody's control. I've even heard this said: "The voice of
+ the United States is Mr. Wilson's: its actions are controlled by
+ Mr. Bryan."
+
+ So, you see, the war will go on a long long time. So far as English
+ opinion is concerned, the United States is useful to make
+ ammunition and is now thought of chiefly in this connection. Less
+ and less attention is paid to what we say. Even the American
+ telegrams to the London papers have a languid tone.
+
+ Yet recent revelations have made it clearer than ever that the same
+ qualities that the English accuse us of having are in them and that
+ these qualities are directly to blame for this war. I recall that
+ when I was in Germany a few weeks, six years ago, I became
+ convinced that Germany had prepared to fight England; I didn't
+ know when, but I did know that was what the war-machine had in
+ mind. Of course, I had no opportunities to find out anything in
+ particular. You were told practically that same thing by the
+ Kaiser, before the war began. "We are ready," said he. Of course
+ the English feared it and Sir Edward put his whole life into his
+ effort to prevent it. The day the war began, he told me with tears
+ that it seemed that his life had been wasted--that his life work
+ had gone for naught.--Nobody could keep from wondering why England
+ didn't--
+
+ (Here comes a parenthesis. Word came to me a little while ago that
+ a Zeppelin was on its way to London. Such a remark doesn't arouse
+ much attention. But just as I had finished the fifth line above
+ this, Frank and Mrs. Page came in and challenged me to play a game
+ of cards before we should go to bed. We sat down, the cards were
+ dealt, and bang! bang!--with the deep note of an explosion. A
+ third, a fourth shot. We went into the street. There the Zeppelin
+ was revealed by a searchlight--sailing along. I think it had
+ probably dropped its bombs; but the aircraft guns were cracking
+ away at it. Some of them shot explosive projectiles to find the
+ range. Now and then one such explosive would almost reach the
+ Zeppelin, but it was too high for them and it sailed away, the air
+ guns doing their ineffectual best. I couldn't see whether airplanes
+ were trying to shoot it or not. The searchlight revealed the
+ Zeppelin but nothing else.--While we were watching this battle in
+ the air, the maids came down from the top of the house and went
+ into the cellar. I think they've already gone back. You can't
+ imagine how little excitement it caused. It produces less fright
+ than any other conceivable engine of war.
+
+ We came back as soon as the Zeppelin was out of sight and the
+ firing had ceased; we played our game of cards; and here I am
+ writing you the story-all within about half an hour.--There was a
+ raid over London last night, too, wherein a dozen or two women and
+ children and a few men were killed. I haven't the slightest idea
+ what harm this raid to-night has done. For all I know it may not be
+ all done. But of all imaginable war-experiences this seems the most
+ futile. It interrupted a game of cards for twenty minutes!)
+
+ Now--to go on with my story: I have wondered ever since the war
+ began why the Allies were not better prepared--especially England
+ on land. England has just one _big_ land gun--no more. Now it has
+ turned out, as you have doubtless read, that the British Government
+ were as good as told by the German Government that Germany was
+ going to war pretty soon--this in 1912 when Lord Haldane[7] was
+ sent to make friends with Germany.
+
+ The only answer he brought back was a proposition that England
+ should in any event remain neutral--stand aside while Germany
+ whipped Russia and France. This insulting proposal was kept secret
+ till the other day. Now, why didn't the British Cabinet inform the
+ people and get ready? They were afraid the English people wouldn't
+ believe it and would accuse them of fomenting war. The English
+ people were making money and pursuing their sports. Probably they
+ wouldn't have believed it. So the Liberal Cabinet went on in
+ silence, knowing that war was coming, but not exactly when it was
+ coming, and they didn't make even a second big gun.
+
+ Now here was the same silence in this "democracy" that they now
+ complain of in ours. Rather an interesting and discouraging
+ parallel--isn't it? Public opinion has turned Lord Haldane out of
+ office because he didn't tell the public what he declares they
+ wouldn't have believed. If the English had raised an army in 1912,
+ and made a lot of big guns, Austria would not have trampled Serbia
+ in the earth. There would have been no war now; and the strong
+ European Powers might have made then the same sort of protective
+ peace-insurance combine that they will try to make after this war
+ is ended. Query: A democracy's inability to _act_--how much is this
+ apparently inherent quality of a democracy to blame for this war
+ and for--other things?
+
+ When I am asked every day "Why the United States doesn't _do_
+ something--send Dumba and Bernstorff home?"--Well, it is not the
+ easiest question in the world to answer.
+
+ Yours heartily,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. This is the most comical of all worlds: While I was writing
+ this, it seems the maids went back upstairs and lighted their
+ lights without pulling their shades down--they occupy three rooms,
+ in front. The doorbell rang furiously. Here were more than half a
+ dozen policemen and special constables--must investigate! "One
+ light would be turned on, another would go out; another one
+ on!"--etc., etc. Frank tackled them, told 'em it was only the maids
+ going to bed, forgetting to pull down the shades. Spies and
+ signalling were in the air! So, in the morning, I'll have to send
+ over to the Foreign Office and explain. The Zeppelin did more
+ "frightfulness" than I had supposed, after all. Doesn't this strike
+ you as comical?
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ Friday, September 10, 1915.
+
+ P.S. The news is just come that Dumba is dismissed. That will clear
+ the atmosphere--a little, but only a little. Dumba committed a
+ diplomatic offence. The German Government has caused the death of
+ United States citizens, has defied us, has declared it had changed
+ its policy and yet has gone on with the same old policy. Besides,
+ Bernstorff has done everything that Dumba did except employ
+ Archibald, which was a mere incident of the game. The President
+ took a strong stand: they have disregarded it--no apology nor
+ reparation for a single boat that has been sunk. Now the English
+ opinion of the Germans is hardly a calm, judicial opinion--of
+ course not. There may be facts that have not been made known. There
+ must be good reasons that nobody here can guess, why the President
+ doesn't act in the long succession of German acts against us. _But
+ I tell you with all solemnity that British opinion and the British
+ Government have absolutely lost their respect for us and their
+ former high estimate of the President. And that former respect is
+ gone for good unless he acts now very quickly_[8]. They will pay
+ nothing more than formal and polite attention to anything we may
+ hereafter say. This is not resentful. They don't particularly care
+ for us to get into the war. Their feeling (I mean among our best
+ old friends) is not resentful. It is simply sorrowful. They had the
+ highest respect for our people and our President. The Germans defy
+ us; we sit in silence. They conclude here that we'll submit to
+ anything from anybody. We'll write strong notes--nothing more.
+
+ I can't possibly exaggerate the revulsion of feeling. Members of
+ the Government say (in private, of course) that we'll submit to any
+ insult. The newspapers refuse to publish articles which attempt to
+ make the President's silence reasonable. "It isn't defensible,"
+ they say, "and they would only bring us thousands of insulting
+ letters from our readers." I can't think of a paper nor of a man
+ who has a good word to say for us--except, perhaps, a few Quaker
+ peace-at-any-price people. And our old friends are disappointed and
+ sorrowful. They feel that we have dropped out of a position of
+ influence in the world.
+
+ I needn't and can't write more. Of course there are more important
+ things than English respect. But the English think that every Power
+ has lost respect for us--the Germans most of all. And (unless the
+ President acts very rigorously and very quickly) we'll have to get
+ along a long time without British respect.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. The last Zeppelin raid--which interrupted the game of
+ cards--killed more than twenty persons and destroyed more than
+ seven million dollars' worth of private business property--all
+ non-combatants!
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ 21st of September, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ The insulting cartoon that I enclose (destroy it without showing
+ it) is typical of, I suppose, five hundred that have appeared here
+ within a month. This represents the feeling and opinion of the
+ average man. They say we wrote brave notes and made courageous
+ demands, to none of which a satisfactory reply has come, but only
+ more outrages and no guarantee for the future. Yet we will not even
+ show our displeasure by sending Bernstorff home. We've simply
+ "gone out," like a snuffed candle, in the regard and respect of the
+ vast volume of British opinion. (The last _Punch_ had six
+ ridiculing allusions to our "fall.")
+
+ It's the loneliest time I've had in England. There's a tendency to
+ avoid me.
+
+ They can't understand here the continued declaration in the United
+ States that the British Government is trying to take our trade--to
+ use its blockade and navy with the direct purpose of giving British
+ trade profit out of American detentions. Of course, the Government
+ had no such purpose and has done no such thing--with any such
+ purpose. It isn't thinking about trade but only about war.
+
+ The English think they see in this the effect on our Government and
+ on American opinion of the German propaganda. I have had this
+ trade-accusation investigated half a dozen times--the accusation
+ that this Government is using its military power for its own trade
+ advantage to our detriment: it simply isn't true. They stop our
+ cargoes, not for their advantage, but wholly to keep things from
+ the enemy. Study our own trade reports.
+
+ In a word, our importers are playing (so the English think)
+ directly into the hands of the Germans. So matters go on from bad
+ to worse.
+
+ Bryce[9] is very sad. He confessed to me yesterday the utter
+ hopelessness of the two people's ever understanding one another.
+
+ The military situation is very blue--very blue. The general feeling
+ is that the long war will begin next March and end--nobody dares
+ predict.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. There's not a moral shadow of a doubt (1) that the commander
+ of the submarine that sunk the _Arabic_ is dead--although he makes
+ reports to his government! nor (2) that the _Hesperian_ was
+ torpedoed. The State Department has a piece of the torpedo.
+
+
+V
+
+The letters which Page sent directly to the President were just as
+frank. "Incidents occur nearly every day," he wrote to President Wilson
+in the autumn of 1915, "which reveal the feeling that the Germans have
+taken us in. Last week one of our naval men, Lieutenant McBride, who has
+just been ordered home, asked the Admiralty if he might see the piece of
+metal found on the deck of the _Hesperian_. Contrary to their habit, the
+British officer refused. 'Take my word for it,' he said. 'She was
+torpedoed. Why do you wish to investigate? Your country will do
+nothing--will accept any excuse, any insult and--do nothing.' When
+McBride told me this, I went at once to the Foreign Office and made a
+formal request that this metal should be shown to our naval attache, who
+(since Symington is with the British fleet and McBride has been ordered
+home) is Lieutenant Towers. Towers was sent for and everything that the
+Admiralty knows was shown to him and I am sending that piece of metal by
+this mail. But to such a pass has the usual courtesy of a British naval
+officer come. There are many such instances of changed conduct. They are
+not hard to endure nor to answer and are of no consequence in themselves
+but only for what they denote. They're a part of war's bitterness. But
+my mind runs ahead and I wonder how Englishmen will look at this subject
+five years hence, and it runs afield and I wonder how the Germans will
+regard it. A sort of pro-German American newspaper correspondent came
+along the other day from the German headquarters; and he told me that
+one of the German generals remarked to him: 'War with America? Ach no!
+Not war. If trouble should come, we'd send over a platoon of our
+policemen to whip your little army.' (He didn't say just how he'd send
+'em.)"
+
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ American Embassy, London, Oct. 5, 1915.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ I have two letters that I have lately written to you but which I
+ have not sent because they utterly lack good cheer. After reading
+ them over, I have not liked to send them. Yet I should fail of my
+ duty if I did not tell you bad news as well as good.
+
+ The high esteem in which our Government was held when the first
+ _Lusitania_ note to Germany was sent seems all changed to
+ indifference or pity--not hatred or hostility, but a sort of
+ hopeless and sad pity. That ship was sunk just five months ago; the
+ German Government (or its Ambassador) is yet holding conversations
+ about the principle involved, making "concessions" and promises for
+ the future, and so far we have done nothing to hold the Germans to
+ accountability[10]. In the meantime their submarine fleet has been
+ so reduced that probably the future will take care of itself and we
+ shall be used as a sort of excuse for their failure. This is what
+ the English think and say; and they explain our failure to act by
+ concluding that the peace-at-any-price sentiment dominates the
+ Government and paralyzes it. They have now, I think, given up hope
+ that we will ever take any action. So deeply rooted (and, I fear,
+ permanent) is this feeling that every occurrence is made to fit
+ into and to strengthen this supposition. When Dumba was dismissed,
+ they said: "Dumba, merely the abject tool of German intrigue. Why
+ not Bernstorff?" When the Anglo-French loan[11] was oversubscribed,
+ they said: "The people's sympathy is most welcome, but their
+ Government is paralyzed." Their respect has gone--at least for the
+ time being.
+
+ It is not that they expect us to go to war: many, in fact, do not
+ wish us to. They expected that we would be as good as our word and
+ hold the Germans to accountability. Now I fear they think little of
+ our word. I shudder to think what our relations might be if Sir
+ Edward Grey were to yield to another as Foreign Minister, as, of
+ course, he must yield at some time.
+
+ The press has less to say than it had a few weeks ago. _Punch_, for
+ instance, which ridiculed and pitied us in six cartoons and
+ articles in each of two succeeding numbers, entirely forgets us
+ this week. But they've all said their say. I am, in a sense,
+ isolated--lonely in a way that I have never before been. I am not
+ exactly avoided, I hope, but I surely am not sought. They have a
+ polite feeling that they do not wish to offend me and that to make
+ sure of this the safest course is to let me alone. There is no
+ mistaking the great change in the attitude of men I know, both in
+ official and private life.
+
+ It comes down and comes back to this--that for five months after
+ the sinking of the _Lusitania_ the Germans are yet playing with us,
+ that we have not sent Bernstorff home, and hence that we will
+ submit to any rebuff or any indignity. It is under these
+ conditions--under this judgment of us--that we now work--the
+ English respect for our Government indefinitely lessened and
+ instead of the old-time respect a sad pity. I cannot write more.
+
+ Heartily yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+
+"I have authoritatively heard," Page writes to President Wilson in early
+September, "of a private conversation between a leading member of the
+Cabinet and a group of important officials all friendly to us in which
+all sorrowfully expressed the opinion that the United States will submit
+to any indignity and that no effect is now to be hoped for from its
+protests against unlawful submarine attacks or against anything else.
+The inactivity of our Government, or its delay, which they assume is the
+same as inactivity, is attributed to domestic politics or to the lack of
+national, consciousness or unity.
+
+"No explanation has appeared in the British press of our Government's
+inactivity or of any regret or promise of reparation by Germany for the
+sinking of the _Lusitania_, the _Falaba_, the _Gulflight_, the
+_Nebraskan_, the _Arabic_, or the _Hesperian_, nor any explanation of a
+week's silence about the Dumba letter; and the conclusion is drawn that,
+in the absence of action by us, all these acts have been practically
+condoned.
+
+"I venture to suggest that such explanations be made public as will
+remove, if possible, the practically unanimous conclusion here that our
+Government will permit these and similar future acts to be explained
+away. I am surprised almost every hour by some new evidence of the loss
+of respect for our Government, which, since the sinking of the _Arabic_,
+has become so great as to warrant calling it a complete revulsion of
+English feeling toward the United States. There is no general wish for
+us to enter the war, but there is genuine sorrow that we are thought to
+submit to any indignity, especially after having taken a firm stand. I
+conceive I should be lacking in duty if I did not report this rapid and
+unfortunate change in public feeling, which seems likely to become
+permanent unless facts are quickly made public which may change it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There are many expressions of such feelings in Page's letters of this
+time. They brought only the most perfunctory acknowledgment from the
+White House. On January 3, 1916, Page sent the President a mass of
+clippings from the British press, all criticizing the Wilson
+Administration in unrestrained terms. In his comment on these, he writes
+the President:
+
+"Public opinion, both official and unofficial, is expressed by these
+newspaper comments, with far greater restraint than it is expressed in
+private conversation. Ridicule of the Administration runs through the
+programmes of the theatres; it inspires hundreds of cartoons; it is a
+staple of conversation at private dinners and in the clubs. The most
+serious class of Englishmen, including the best friends of the United
+States, feel that the Administration's reliance on notes has reduced our
+Government to a third-or fourth-rate power. There is even talk of
+spheres of German influence in the United States as in China. No
+government could fall lower in English opinion than we shall fall if
+more notes are sent to Austria or to Germany. The only way to keep any
+shred of English respect is the immediate dismissal without more
+parleying of every German and Austrian official at Washington. Nobody
+here believes that such an act would provoke war.
+
+"I can do no real service by mincing matters. My previous telegrams and
+letters have been purposely restrained as this one is. We have now come
+to the parting of the ways. If English respect be worth preserving at
+all, it can be preserved only by immediate action. Any other course than
+immediate severing of diplomatic relations with both Germany and Austria
+will deepen the English opinion into a conviction that the
+Administration was insincere when it sent the _Lusitania_ notes and that
+its notes and protests need not be taken seriously on any subject. And
+English opinion is allied opinion. The Italian Ambassador[12] said to
+me, 'What has happened? The United States of to-day is not the United
+States I knew fifteen years ago, when I lived in Washington.' French
+officers and members of the Government who come here express themselves
+even more strongly than do the British. The British newspapers to-day
+publish translations of ridicule of the United States from German
+papers."
+
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London,
+ January 5, 1916.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ I wish--an impossible thing of course--that some sort of guidance
+ could be given to the American correspondents of the English
+ newspapers. Almost every day they telegraph about the visits of the
+ Austrian Charge or the German Ambassador to the State Department to
+ assure Mr. Lansing that their governments will of course make a
+ satisfactory explanation of the latest torpedo-act in the
+ Mediterranean or to "take one further step in reaching a
+ satisfactory understanding about the _Lusitania_." They usually go
+ on to say also that more notes are in preparation to Germany or to
+ Austria. The impression made upon the European mind is that the
+ German and Austrian officials in Washington are leading the
+ Administration on to endless discussion, endless notes, endless
+ hesitation. Nobody in Europe regards their pledges or promises as
+ worth anything at all: the _Arabic_ follows the _Lusitania_, the
+ _Hesperian_ follows the _Arabic_, the _Persia_ follows the
+ _Ancona_. "Still conferences and notes continue," these people say,
+ "proving that the American Government, which took so proper and
+ high a stand in the _Lusitania_ notes, is paralyzed--in a word is
+ hoodwinked and 'worked' by the Germans." And so long as these
+ diplomatic representatives are permitted to remain in the United
+ States, "to explain," "to parley" and to declare that the
+ destruction of American lives and property is disavowed by their
+ governments, atrocities on sea and land will of course continue;
+ and they feel that our Government, by keeping these German and
+ Austrian representatives in Washington, condones and encourages
+ them and their governments.
+
+ This is a temperate and even restrained statement of the English
+ feeling and (as far as I can make out) of the whole European
+ feeling.
+
+ It has been said here that every important journal published in
+ neutral or allied European countries, daily, weekly, or monthly,
+ which deals with public affairs, has expressed a loss of respect
+ for the United States Government and that most of them make
+ continuous severe criticisms (with surprise and regret) of our
+ failure by action to live up to the level of our _Lusitania_ notes.
+ I had (judiciously) two American journalists, resident here--men of
+ judgment and character--to inquire how true this declaration is.
+ After talking with neutral and allied journalists here and with men
+ whose business it is to read the journals of the Continent, they
+ reported that this declaration is substantially true--that the
+ whole European press (outside Germany and its allies) uses the same
+ tone toward our Government that the English press uses--to-day,
+ disappointment verging on contempt; and many of them explain our
+ keeping diplomatic intercourse with Germany by saying that we are
+ afraid of the German vote, or of civil war, or that the
+ peace-at-any-price people really rule the United States and have
+ paralyzed our power to act--even to cut off diplomatic relations
+ with governments that have insulted and defied us.
+
+ Another (similar) declaration is that practically all men of public
+ influence in England and in the European allied and neutral
+ countries have publicly or privately expressed themselves to the
+ same effect. The report that I have about this is less definite
+ than about the newspapers, for, of course, no one can say just what
+ proportion of men of public influence have so expressed themselves;
+ but the number who have so expressed themselves is overwhelming.
+
+ In this Kingdom, where I can myself form some opinion more or less
+ accurate, and where I can check or verify my opinion by various
+ methods--I am afraid, as I have frequently already reported, that
+ the generation now living will never wholly regain the respect for
+ our Government that it had a year ago. I will give you three little
+ indications of this feeling; it would be easy to write down
+ hundreds of them:
+
+ (One) The governing class: Mr. X [a cabinet member] told Mrs. Page
+ a few nights ago that for sentimental reasons only he would be
+ gratified to see the United States in the war along with the
+ Allies, but that merely sentimental reasons were not a sufficient
+ reason for war--by no means; that he felt most grateful for the
+ sympathetic attitude of the large mass of the American people, that
+ he had no right to expect anything from our Government, whose
+ neutral position was entirely proper. Then he added; "But what I
+ can't for the life of me understand is your Government's failure
+ to express its disapproval of the German utter disregard of its
+ _Lusitania_ notes. After eight months, it has done nothing but
+ write more notes. My love for America, I must confess, is offended
+ at this inaction and--puzzled. I can't understand it. You will
+ pardon me, I am sure."
+
+ (Two) "Middle Class" opinion: A common nickname for Americans in
+ the financial and newspaper districts of London is "Too-prouds."
+
+ (Three) The man in the street: At one of the moving picture shows
+ in a large theatre a little while ago they filled in an interval by
+ throwing on the screen the picture of the monarch, or head of
+ state, and of the flag of each of the principal nations. When the
+ American picture appeared, there was such hissing and groaning as
+ caused the managers hastily to move that picture off the screen.
+
+ Some time ago I wrote House of some such incidents and expressions
+ as these; and he wrote me that they were only part and parcel of
+ the continuous British criticism of their own Government--in other
+ words, a part of the passing hysteria of war. This remark shows how
+ House was living in an atmosphere of illusion.
+
+ As the matter stands to-day our Government has sunk lower, as
+ regards British and European opinion, than it has ever been in our
+ time, not as a part of the hysteria of war but as a result of this
+ process of reasoning, whether it be right or wrong:
+
+ We said that we should hold the Germans to strict accountability on
+ account of the _Lusitania_. We have not settled that yet and we
+ still allow the German Ambassador to discuss it after the
+ _Hesperian_ and other such acts showed that his _Arabic_ pledge was
+ worthless.
+
+ The _Lusitania_ grows larger and larger in European memory and
+ imagination. It looks as if it would become the great type of war
+ atrocities and barbarities. I have seen pictures of the drowned
+ women and children used even on Christmas cards. And there is
+ documentary proof in our hands that the warning, which was really
+ an advance announcement, of that disaster was paid for by the
+ German Ambassador and charged to his Government. It is the
+ _Lusitania_ that has caused European opinion to regard our foreign
+ policy as weak. It is not the wish for us to go to war. No such
+ general wish exists.
+
+ I do not know, Mr. President, who else, if anybody, puts these
+ facts before you with this complete frankness. But I can do no less
+ and do my duty.
+
+ No Englishman--except two who were quite intimate friends--has
+ spoken to me about our Government for months, but I detect all the
+ time a tone of pity and grief in their studied courtesy and in
+ their avoidance of the subject. And they talk with every other
+ American in this Kingdom. It is often made unpleasant for Americans
+ in the clubs and in the pursuit of their regular business and
+ occupations; and it is always our inaction about the _Lusitania_.
+ Our controversy with the British Government causes little feeling
+ and that is a sort of echo of the _Lusitania_. They feel that we
+ have not lived up to our promises and professions.
+
+ That is the whole story.
+
+ Believe me always heartily,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+This dismissal of Dumba and of the Attaches has had little more effect
+on opinion here than the dismissal of the Turkish Ambassador[13].
+Sending these was regarded as merely kicking the dogs of the man who
+had stolen our sheep.
+
+
+VI
+
+One of the reasons why Page felt so intensely about American policy at
+this time was his conviction that the severance of diplomatic relations,
+in the latter part of 1915, or the early part of 1916, in itself would
+have brought the European War to an end. This was a conviction from
+which he never departed. Count Bernstorff was industriously creating the
+impression in the United States that his dismissal would immediately
+cause war between Germany and the United States, and there is little
+doubt that the Administration accepted this point of view. But Page
+believed that this was nothing but Prussian bluff. The severance of
+diplomatic relations at that time, in Page's opinion, would have
+convinced the Germans of the hopelessness of their cause. In spite of
+the British blockade, Germany was drawing enormous quantities of food
+supplies from the United States, and without these supplies she could
+not maintain indefinitely her resistance. The severance of diplomatic
+relations would naturally have been accompanied by an embargo suspending
+trade between the United States and the Fatherland. Moreover, the
+consideration that was mainly leading Germany to hope for success was
+the belief that she could embroil the United States and Great Britain
+over the blockade. A break with Germany would of course mean an end to
+that manoeuvre. Page regarded all Mr. Wilson's attempts to make peace in
+1914 and early 1915--before the _Lusitania_--as mistakes, for reasons
+that have already been set forth. Now, however, he believed that the
+President had a real opportunity to end the war and the unparalleled
+suffering which it was causing. The mere dismissal of Bernstorff, in
+the Ambassador's opinion, would accomplish this result.
+
+In a communication sent to the President on February 15, 1916, he made
+this plain.
+
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ February 15, 7 P.M.
+
+ The Cabinet has directed the Censor to suppress, as far as he can
+ with prudence, comment which is unfavourable to the United States.
+ He has taken this action because the public feeling against the
+ Administration is constantly increasing. Because the _Lusitania_
+ controversy has been going on so long, and because the Germans are
+ using it in their renewed U-boat campaign, the opinion of this
+ country has reached a point where only prompt action can bring a
+ turn in the tide. Therefore my loyalty to you would not be complete
+ if I should refrain from sending, in the most respectful terms, the
+ solemn conviction which I hold about our opportunity and our duty.
+
+ If you immediately refuse to have further parley or to yield one
+ jot or tittle of your original _Lusitania_ notes, and if you at
+ once break diplomatic relations with the German Empire, and then
+ declare the most vigorous embargo of the Central Powers, you will
+ quickly end the war. There will be an immediate collapse in German
+ credit. If there are any Allies who are wavering, such action will
+ hold them in line. Certain European neutrals--Sweden, Rumania,
+ Greece, and others--will put up a firm resistance to Germanic
+ influences and certain of them will take part with Great Britain
+ and France. There will be an end at once to the German propaganda,
+ which is now world-wide. The moral weight of our country will be a
+ determining influence and bring an early peace. The credit you
+ will receive for such a decision will make you immortal and even
+ the people of Germany will be forever grateful.
+
+ It is my conviction that we would not be called upon to fire a gun
+ or to lose one human life.
+
+ Above all, such an action will settle the whole question of
+ permanent peace. The absolute and grateful loyalty of the whole
+ British Empire, of the British Fleet, and of all the Allied
+ countries will be ours. The great English-speaking nations will be
+ able to control the details of the peace and this without any
+ formal alliance. There will be an incalculable saving of human life
+ and of treasure. Such an act will make it possible for Germany to
+ give in honourably and with good grace because the whole world will
+ be against her. Her bankrupt and blockaded people will bring such
+ pressure to bear that the decision will be hastened.
+
+ The sympathies of the American people will be brought in line with
+ the Administration.
+
+ If we settle the _Lusitania_ question by compromising in any way
+ your original demands, or if we permit it to drag on longer,
+ America can have no part in bringing the war to an end. The current
+ of allied opinion will run so strongly against the Administration
+ that no censorship and no friendly interference by an allied
+ government can stem the distrust of our Government which is now so
+ strong in Europe.
+
+ We shall gain by any further delay only a dangerous, thankless, and
+ opulent isolation. The _Lusitania_ is the turning point in our
+ history. The time to act is now.
+
+ PAGE.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 1: The Ambassador's granddaughter.]
+
+[Footnote 2: "A Cycle of Adams Letters, 1861-1865," edited by
+Worthington Chauncey Ford. Vol. I, p. 84.]
+
+[Footnote 3: "The Life and Letters of John Hay," by William Roscoe
+Thayer. Vol. II, p. 166.]
+
+[Footnote 4: On September 6th, certain documents seriously compromising
+Dr. Constantin Dumba, Austro-Hungarian Ambassador to the United States,
+were published in the British press. They disclosed that Dr. Dumba was
+fomenting strikes in the United States and conducting other intrigues.
+The American Government gave Dr. Dumba his passports on September 17th.]
+
+[Footnote 5: August 26th, Count Bernstorff gave a pledge to the United
+States Government, that, in future, German submarines would not attack
+liners without warning. This promise was almost immediately violated.]
+
+[Footnote 6: Sir Lionel Sackville-West was British Minister to the
+United States from 1881 to 1888. In the latter year a letter was
+published which he had written to an American citizen of British origin,
+the gist of which was that the reelection of President Cleveland would
+be of advantage to British interests. For this gross interference in
+American domestic affairs, President Cleveland immediately handed Sir
+Lionel his passports. The incident ended his diplomatic career.]
+
+[Footnote 7: In this passage the Ambassador touches on one of the
+bitterest controversies of the war. In order completely to understand
+the issues involved and to obtain Lord Haldane's view, the reader should
+consult the very valuable book recently published by Lord Haldane:
+"Before the War." Chapter II tells the story of Lord Haldane's visit to
+the Kaiser, and succeeding chapters give the reasons why the creation of
+a huge British army in preparation for the war was not a simple matter.]
+
+[Footnote 8: The italics are Page's.]
+
+[Footnote 9: Viscount Bryce, author of "The American Commonwealth" and
+British Ambassador to the United States, 1907-1913.]
+
+[Footnote 10: In a communication sent February 10, 1915, President
+Wilson warned the German Government that he would hold it to a "strict
+accountability" for the loss of American lives by illegal submarine
+attack.]
+
+[Footnote 11: A reference to the Anglo-French loan for $500,000,000,
+placed in the United States in the autumn of 1915.]
+
+[Footnote 12: The Marquis Imperiali.]
+
+[Footnote 13: Rustem Bey, the Turkish Ambassador to the United States,
+was sent home early in the war, for publishing indiscreet newspaper and
+magazine articles.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+THE AMBASSADOR AND THE LAWYERS
+
+
+References in the foregoing letters show that Page was still having his
+troubles over the blockade. In the latter part of 1915, indeed, the
+negotiations with Sir Edward Grey on this subject had reached their
+second stage. The failure of Washington to force upon Great Britain an
+entirely new code of naval warfare--the Declaration of London--has
+already been described. This failure had left both the British Foreign
+Office and the American State Department in an unsatisfactory frame of
+mind. The Foreign Office regarded Washington with suspicion, for the
+American attempt to compel Great Britain to adopt a code of naval
+warfare which was exceedingly unfavourable to that country and
+exceedingly favourable to Germany, was susceptible of a sinister
+interpretation. The British rejection of these overtures, on the other
+hand, had evidently irritated the international lawyers at Washington.
+Mr. Lansing now abandoned his efforts to revolutionize maritime warfare
+and confined himself to specific protests and complaints. His
+communications to the London Embassy dealt chiefly with particular ships
+and cargoes. Yet his persistence in regarding all these problems from a
+strictly legalistic point of view Page regarded as indicating a
+restricted sense of statesmanship.
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, August 4, 1915.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ ... The lawyer-way in which the Department goes on in its dealings
+ with Great Britain is losing us the only great international
+ friendship that we have any chance of keeping or that is worth
+ having. Whatever real principle we have to uphold with Great
+ Britain--that's all right. I refer only to the continuous series of
+ nagging incidents--always criticism, criticism, criticism of small
+ points--points that we have to yield at last, and never anything
+ constructive. I'll illustrate what I mean by a few incidents that I
+ can recall from memory. If I looked up the record, I should find a
+ very, very much larger list.
+
+ (1) We insisted and insisted and insisted, not once but half a
+ dozen times, at the very beginning of the war, on England's
+ adoption of the Declaration of London entire in spite of the fact
+ that Parliament had distinctly declined to adopt it. Of course we
+ had to give in--after we had produced a distinctly unfriendly
+ atmosphere and much feeling.
+
+ (2) We denied the British right to put copper on the contraband
+ list--much to their annoyance. Of course we had at last to
+ acquiesce. They were within their rights.
+
+ (3) We protested against bringing ships into port to examine them.
+ Of course we had to give in--after producing irritation.
+
+ (4) We made a great fuss about stopped telegrams. We have no case
+ at all; but, even after acknowledging that we have no case, every
+ Pouch continues to bring telegrams with the request that I ask an
+ explanation why they were stopped. Such explanations are
+ practically refused. I have 500 telegrams. Periodically I wire the
+ state of the case and ask for more specific instructions. I never
+ get an answer to these requests. But the Department continues to
+ send the telegrams! We confessedly have no case here; and this
+ method can produce nothing but irritation.
+
+ I could extend this list to 100 examples--of mere lawyer-like
+ methods--mere useless technicalities and objections which it is
+ obvious in the beginning cannot be maintained. A similar method is
+ now going on about cotton. Now this is not the way Sir Edward Grey
+ takes up business. It's not the way I've done business all my life,
+ nor that you have, nor other frank men who mean what they say and
+ do not say things they do not mean. The constant continuation of
+ this method is throwing away the real regard and confidence of the
+ British Government and of the British public--very fast, too.
+
+ I sometimes wish there were not a lawyer in the world. I heard the
+ President say once that it took him twenty years to recover from
+ his legal habit of mind. Well, his Administration is suffering from
+ it to a degree that is pathetic and that will leave bad results for
+ 100 years.
+
+ I suspect that in spite of all the fuss we have made we shall at
+ last come to acknowledge the British blockade; for it is pretty
+ nearly parallel to the United States blockade of the South during
+ our Civil War. The only difference is--they can't make the blockade
+ of the Baltic against the traffic from the Scandinavian neutral
+ states effective. That's a good technical objection; but, since
+ practically all the traffic between those States and Germany is in
+ our products, much of the real force of it is lost.
+
+ If a protest is made against cotton being made contraband--it'll
+ amount to nothing and give only irritation. It will only play into
+ Hoke Smith[14]--German hands and accomplish nothing here. We make
+ as much fuss about points which we have silently to yield later as
+ about a real principle. Hence they all say that the State
+ Department is merely captious, and they pay less and less attention
+ to it and care less and less for American opinion--if only they can
+ continue to get munitions. We are reducing English regard to this
+ purely mercenary basis....
+
+ We are--under lawyers' quibbling--drifting apart very rapidly, to
+ our complete isolation from the sympathy of the whole world.
+
+ Yours forever sincerely,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+Page refers in this letter to the "blockade"; this was the term which
+the British Government itself used to describe its restrictive measures
+against German commerce, and it rapidly passed into common speech. Yet
+the truth is that Great Britain never declared an actual blockade
+against Germany. A realization of this fact will clear up much that is
+obscure in the naval warfare of the next two years. At the beginning of
+the Civil War, President Lincoln laid an interdict on all the ports of
+the Confederacy; the ships of all nations were forbidden entering or
+leaving them: any ship which attempted to evade this restriction, and
+was captured doing so, was confiscated, with its cargo. That was a
+blockade, as the term has always been understood. A blockade, it is well
+to keep in mind, is a procedure which aims at completely closing the
+blockaded country from all commercial intercourse with the world. A
+blockading navy, if the blockade is successful, or "effective,"
+converts the whole country into a beleaguered fortress, just as an army,
+surrounding a single town, prevents goods and people from entering or
+leaving it. Precisely as it is the purpose of a besieging army to starve
+a particular city or territory into submission, so it is the aim of a
+blockading fleet to enforce the same treatment on the nation as a whole.
+It is also essential to keep in mind that the question of contraband has
+nothing to do with a blockade, for, under this drastic method of making
+warfare, everything is contraband. Contraband is a term applied to
+cargoes, such as rifles, machine guns, and the like, which are needed in
+the prosecution of war.
+
+That a belligerent nation has the right to intercept such munitions on
+the way to its enemy has been admitted for centuries. Differences of
+opinion have raged only as to the extent to which this right could be
+carried--the particular articles, that is, that constituted contraband,
+and the methods adopted in exercising it. But the important point to be
+kept in mind is that where there is a blockade, there is no contraband
+list--for everything automatically becomes contraband. The seizure of
+contraband on the high seas is a war measure which is availed of only in
+cases in which the blockade has not been established.
+
+Great Britain, when she declared war on Germany, did not follow
+President Lincoln's example and lay the whole of the German coast under
+interdict. Perhaps one reason for this inaction was a desire not unduly
+to offend neutrals, especially the United States; but the more impelling
+motive was geographical. The fact is that a blockade of the German
+seacoast would accomplish little in the way of keeping materials out of
+Germany. A glance at the map of northwestern Europe will make this fact
+clear. In the first place the seacoast of Germany is a small affair. In
+the North Sea the German coast is a little indentation, not more than
+two hundred miles long, wedged in between the longer coastlines of
+Holland and Denmark; in the Baltic it is somewhat more extensive, but
+the entrances to this sea are so circuitous and treacherous that the
+suggestion of a blockade here is not a practicable one. The greatest
+ports of Germany are located on this little North Sea coastline or on
+its rivers--Hamburg and Bremen. It might therefore be assumed that any
+nation which successfully blockaded these North Sea ports would have
+strangled the commerce of Germany. That is far from being the case. The
+point is that the political boundaries of Germany are simply fictions,
+when economic considerations are involved. Holland, on the west, and
+Denmark, on the north, are as much a part of the German transportation
+system as though these two countries were parts of the German Empire.
+Their territories and the territories of Germany are contiguous; the
+railroad and the canal systems of Germany, Holland, and Denmark are
+practically one. Such ports as Rotterdam, Amsterdam, and Copenhagen are
+just as useful to Germany for purposes of commerce as are Hamburg and
+Bremen, and, in fact, a special commercial arrangement with Rotterdam
+has made that city practically a port of Germany since 1868. These
+considerations show how ineffective would be a blockade of the German
+coast which did not also comprehend the coast of Holland and Denmark.
+Germany could still conduct her commerce through these neighbouring
+countries. And at this point the great difficulty arose. A blockade is
+an act of war and can be applied only to a country upon which war has
+been declared. Great Britain had declared war on Germany and could
+therefore legally close her ports; she had not declared war on Holland
+and Denmark, and therefore could not use the same measure against those
+friendly countries. Consequently the blockade was useless to Great
+Britain; and so, in the first six months of the war, the Admiralty fell
+back upon the milder system of declaring certain articles contraband of
+war and seizing ships that were suspected of carrying them to Germany.
+
+A geographical accident had apparently largely destroyed the usefulness
+of the British fleet and had guaranteed Germany an unending supply of
+those foodstuffs without which she could not maintain her resistance for
+any extended period. Was Great Britain called upon to accept this
+situation and to deny herself the use of the blockade in this, the
+greatest struggle in her history? Unless the British fleet could stop
+cargoes which were really destined to Germany but which were bound for
+neutral ports, Great Britain could not win the war; if the British fleet
+could intercept such cargoes, then the chances strongly favoured
+victory. The experts of the Foreign Office searched the history of
+blockades and found something which resembled a precedent in the
+practices of the American Navy during the Civil War. In that conflict
+Nassau, in the Bahamas, and Matamoros, in Mexico, played a part not
+unlike that played by Rotterdam and Copenhagen in the recent struggle.
+These were both neutral ports and therefore outside the jurisdiction of
+the United States, just as Rotterdam and Copenhagen were outside the
+jurisdiction of Great Britain. They were the ports of powers with which
+the United States was at peace, and therefore they could not be
+blockaded, just as Amsterdam and Copenhagen were ports of powers with
+which Great Britain was now at peace.
+
+Trade from Great Britain to the Bahamas and Mexico was ostensibly trade
+from one neutral port to another neutral port in the same sense as was
+trade from the United States to Holland and Denmark. Yet the fact is
+that the "neutrality" of this trade, in the Civil War, from Great
+Britain to the Bahamas and Mexico, was the most transparent subterfuge;
+such trade was not "neutral" in the slightest degree. It consisted
+almost entirely of contraband of war and was intended for the armies of
+the Confederate States, then in arms against the Federal Government.
+What is the reason, our Government asked, that these gentle and
+unwarlike inhabitants of the Bahamas have so suddenly developed such an
+enormous appetite for percussion caps, rifles, cannon, and other
+instruments of warfare? The answer, of course, lay upon the surface; the
+cargoes were intended for reshipment into the Southern States, and they
+were, in fact, immediately so reshipped. The American Government, which
+has always regarded realities as more important than logic, brushed
+aside the consideration that this trade was conducted through neutral
+ports, unhesitatingly seized these ships and condemned both the ships
+and their cargoes. Its action was without legal precedent, but our
+American courts devised a new principle of international law to cover
+the case--that of "continuous voyage" or "ultimate destination." Under
+this new doctrine it was maintained that cargoes of contraband could be
+seized anywhere upon the high seas, even though they were going from one
+neutral port to another, if it could be demonstrated that this
+contraband was really on its way to the enemy. The mere fact that it was
+transshipped at an intermediate neutral port was not important; the
+important point was the "ultimate destination." British shippers
+naturally raged over these decisions, but they met with little sympathy
+from their own government. Great Britain filed no protest against the
+doctrine of "continuous voyage," but recognized its fundamental
+soundness, and since 1865 this doctrine has been a part of international
+law.
+
+Great Britain's good sense in acquiescing in our Civil War practices now
+met its reward; for these decisions of American courts proved a godsend
+in her hour of trial. The one neutral from which trouble was anticipated
+was the United States. What better way to meet this situation than to
+base British maritime warfare upon the decisions of American courts?
+What more ideal solution of the problem than to make Chief Justice
+Chase, of the United States Supreme Court, really the author of the
+British "blockade" against Germany? The policy of the British Foreign
+Office was to use the sea power of Great Britain to crush the enemy, but
+to do it in a way that would not alienate American sympathy and American
+support; clearly the one way in which both these ends could be attained
+was to frame these war measures upon the pronouncements of American
+prize courts. In a broad sense this is precisely what Sir Edward Grey
+now proceeded to do. There was a difference, of course, which Great
+Britain's enemies in the American Senate--such men as Senator Hoke
+Smith, of Georgia, and Senator Thomas Walsh, of Montana--proceeded to
+point out; but it was a difference of degree. Great Britain based her
+blockade measures upon the American principle of "ultimate destination,"
+but it was necessary considerably to extend that doctrine in order to
+meet the necessities of the new situation. President Lincoln had applied
+this principle to absolute contraband, such as powder, shells, rifles,
+and other munitions of war. Great Britain now proceeded to apply it to
+that nebulous class of commodities known as "conditional contraband,"
+the chief of which was foodstuffs. If the United States, while a war was
+pending, could evolve the idea of "ultimate destination" and apply it
+to absolute contraband, could not Great Britain, while another war was
+pending, carry it one degree further and make it include conditional
+contraband? Thus reasoned the British Foreign Office. To this Mr.
+Lansing replied that to stop foodstuffs on the way to Germany through a
+neutral port was simply to blockade a neutral port, and that this was
+something utterly without precedent. Seizing contraband is not an act of
+war against the nation whose ships are seized; blockading a port is an
+act of war; what right therefore had Great Britain to adopt measures
+against Holland, Denmark, and Sweden which virtually amounted to a
+blockade?
+
+This is the reason why Great Britain, in the pronouncement of March 1,
+1915, and the Order in Council of March 11, 1915, did not describe these
+measures as a "blockade." President Wilson described his attack on
+Mexico in 1914 as "measures short of war," and now someone referred to
+the British restrictions on neutral commerce as "measures short of
+blockade." The British sought another escape from their predicament by
+justifying this proceeding, not on the general principles of warfare,
+but on the ground of reprisal. Germany declared her submarine warfare on
+merchant ships on February 4, 1915; Great Britain replied with her
+announcement of March 1st, in which she declared her intention of
+preventing "commodities of any kind from reaching or leaving Germany."
+The British advanced this procedure as a retaliation for the illegal
+warfare which Germany had declared on merchant shipping, both that of
+the enemy and of neutrals. "The British and French governments will
+therefore hold themselves free to detain and take into port ships
+carrying goods of presumed enemy destination, ownership, and origin."
+This sentence accurately describes the purposes of a blockade--to cut
+the enemy off from all commercial relations with the outside world; yet
+the procedure Great Britain now proposed to follow was not that of a
+blockade. When this interdict is classically laid, any ship that
+attempts to run the lines is penalized with confiscation, along with its
+cargo; but such a penalty was not to be exacted in the present instance.
+Great Britain now proposed to purchase cargoes of conditional contraband
+discovered on seized ships and return the ships themselves to their
+owners, and this soon became the established practice. Not only did the
+Foreign Office purchase all cotton which was seized on its way to
+Germany, but it took measures to maintain the price in the markets of
+the world. In the succeeding months Southern statesmen in both Houses of
+Congress railed against the British seizure of their great staple, yet
+the fact was that cotton was all this time steadily advancing in price.
+When Senator Hoke Smith made a long speech advocating an embargo on the
+shipment of munitions as a punishment to Great Britain for stopping
+American cotton on the way to Germany, the acute John Sharp Williams, of
+Mississippi, arose in the Senate and completely annihilated the Georgia
+politician by demonstrating how the Southern planters were growing rich
+out of the war.
+
+That the so-called "blockade" situation was a tortuous one must be
+apparent from this attempt to set forth the salient facts. The basic
+point was that there could be no blockade of Germany unless the neutral
+ports of contiguous countries were also blockaded, and Great Britain
+believed that she had found a precedent for doing this in the operations
+of the American Navy in the Civil War. But it is obvious that the
+situation was one which would provide a great feast for the lawyers.
+That Page sympathized with this British determination to keep foodstuffs
+out of Germany, his correspondence shows. Day after day the "protests"
+from Washington rained upon his desk. The history of our foreign
+relations for 1915 and 1916 is largely made up of an interminable
+correspondence dealing with seized cargoes, and the routine of the
+Embassy was an unending nightmare of "demands," "complaints,"
+"precedents," "cases," "notes," "detentions" of Chicago meats, of
+Southern cotton, and the like. The American Embassy in London contains
+hundreds of volumes of correspondence which took place during Page's
+incumbency; more material has accumulated for those five years than for
+the preceding century and a quarter of the Government's existence. The
+greater part of this mass deals with intercepted cargoes.
+
+The following extract from a letter which Page wrote at this time gives
+a fair idea of the atmosphere that prevailed in London while this
+correspondence was engaging the Ambassador's mind:
+
+ The truth is, in their present depressed mood, the United States is
+ forgotten--everything's forgotten but the one great matter in hand.
+ For the moment at least, the English do not care what we do or what
+ we think or whether we exist--except those critics of
+ things-in-general who use us as a target since they must take a
+ crack at somebody. And I simply cannot describe the curious effect
+ that is produced on men here by the apparent utter lack of
+ understanding in the United States of the phase the war has now
+ entered and of the mood that this phase has brought. I pick up an
+ American paper eight days old and read solemn evidence to show that
+ the British Government is interrupting our trade in order to
+ advance its own at our expense, whereas the truth is that the
+ British Government hasn't given six seconds' thought in six months
+ to anybody's trade--not even its own. When I am asked to inquire
+ why Pfister and Schmidt's telegram from New York to Schimmelpfenig
+ and Johann in Holland was stopped (the reason is reasonably
+ obvious), I try to picture to myself the British Minister in
+ Washington making inquiry of our Government on the day after Bull
+ Run, why the sailing boat loaded with persimmon blocks to make golf
+ clubs is delayed in Hampton Roads.
+
+ I think I have neither heard nor read anything from the United
+ States in three months that didn't seem so remote as to suggest the
+ captain of the sailing ship from Hongkong who turned up at
+ Southampton in February and had not even heard that there was a
+ war. All day long I see and hear women who come to ask if I can
+ make inquiry about their sons and husbands, "dead or missing," with
+ an interval given to a description of a man half of whose body was
+ splashed against a brick wall last night on the Strand when a
+ Zeppelin bomb tore up the street and made projectiles of the
+ pavement; as I walk to and from the Embassy the Park is full of
+ wounded and their nurses; every man I see tells me of a new death;
+ every member of the Government talks about military events or of
+ Balkan venality; the man behind the counter at the cigar store
+ reads me part of a letter just come from his son, telling how he
+ advanced over a pile of dead Germans and one of them grunted and
+ turned under his feet-they (the English alone) are spending
+ $25,000,000 a day to keep this march going over dead Germans; then
+ comes a telegram predicting blue ruin for American importers and a
+ cheerless Christmas for American children if a cargo of German toys
+ be not quickly released at Rotterdam, and I dimly recall the
+ benevolent unction with which American children last Christmas sent
+ a shipload of toys to this side of the world--many of them for
+ German children--to the tune of "God bless us all"--do you wonder
+ we often have to pinch ourselves to find out if we are we; and
+ what year of the Lord is it? What is the vital thing--the killing
+ of fifty people last night by a Zeppelin within sight of St. Paul's
+ on one side and of Westminster Abbey on the other, or is it making
+ representations to Sir Edward Grey, who has hardly slept for a week
+ because his despatches from Sofia, Athens, Belgrade, and Salonika
+ come at all hours, each possibly reporting on which side a new
+ government may throw its army--to decide perhaps the fate of the
+ canal leading to Asia, the vast British Asiatic empire at stake--is
+ it making representations to Sir Edward while his mind is thus
+ occupied, that it is of the greatest importance to the United
+ States Government that a particular German who is somewhere in this
+ Kingdom shall be permitted to go to the United States because he
+ knows how to dye sealskins and our sealskins are yet undyed and the
+ winter is coming? There will be no new sealskins here, for every
+ man and woman must give half his income to keep the cigarman's son
+ marching over dead Germans, some of whom grunt and turn under his
+ feet. Dumba is at Falmouth to-day and gets just two lines in the
+ newspapers. Nothing and nobody gets three lines unless he or it in
+ some way furthers the war. Every morning the Washington despatches
+ say that Mr. Lansing is about to send a long note to England.
+ England won't read it till there comes a lull in the fighting or in
+ the breathless diplomatic struggle with the Balkans. London and the
+ Government are now in much the same mood that Washington and
+ Lincoln's administration were in after Lee had crossed the Potomac
+ on his way to Gettysburg. Northcliffe, the Lord of Yellow Journals,
+ but an uncommonly brilliant fellow, has taken to his bed from sheer
+ nervous worry. "The revelations that are imminent," says he, "will
+ shake the world--the incompetence of the Government, the losses
+ along the Dardanelles, the throwing away of British chances in the
+ Balkans, perhaps the actual defeat of the Allies." I regard Lord
+ Northcliffe less as an entity than as a symptom. But he is always
+ very friendly to us and he knows the United States better than any
+ Englishman that I know except Bryce. He and Bryce are both much
+ concerned about our Note's coming just "at this most distressing
+ time." "If it come when we are calmer, no matter; but now it cannot
+ receive attention and many will feel that the United States has hit
+ on a most unhappy moment--almost a cruel moment--to remind us of
+ our sins."--That's the substance of what they say.
+
+ Overwork, or perhaps mainly the indescribable strain on the nerves
+ and vitality of men, caused by this experience, for which in fact
+ men are not built, puts one of our staff after another in bed. None
+ has been seriously sick: the malady takes some form of "grip." On
+ the whole we've been pretty lucky in spite of this almost regular
+ temporary breakdown of one man after another. I've so far escaped.
+ But I am grieved to hear that Whitlock is abed--"no physical
+ ailment whatever--just worn out," his doctor says. I have tried to
+ induce him and his wife to come here and make me a visit; but one
+ characteristic of this war-malady is the conviction of the victim
+ that he is somehow necessary to hold the world together. About
+ twice a week I get to the golf links and take the risk of the
+ world's falling apart and thus escape both illness and its
+ illusions.
+
+"I cannot begin to express my deep anxiety and even uneasiness about the
+relations of these two great governments and peoples," Page wrote about
+this time. "The friendship of the United States and Great Britain is
+all that now holds the world together. It is the greatest asset of
+civilization left. All the cargoes of copper and oil in the world are
+not worth as much to the world. Yet when a shipper's cargo is held up he
+does not think of civilization and of the future of mankind and of free
+government; he thinks only of his cargo and of the indignity that he
+imagines has been done him; and what is the American Government for if
+not to protect his rights? Of course he's right; but there must be
+somebody somewhere who sees things in their right proportion. The man
+with an injury rushes to the Department of State--quite properly. He is
+in a mood to bring England to book. Now comes the critical stage in the
+journey of his complaint. The State Department hurries it on to me--very
+properly; every man's right must be guarded and defended--a right to get
+his cargo to market, a right to get on a steamer at Queenstown, a right
+to have his censored telegram returned, any kind of a right, if he have
+a right. Then the Department, not wittingly, I know, but humanly, almost
+inevitably, in the great rush of overwork, sends his 'demands' to me,
+catching much of his tone and apparently insisting on the removal of his
+grievance as a right, without knowing all the facts in the case. The
+telegrams that come to me are full of 'protests' and 'demands'--protest
+and demand this, protest and demand that. A man from Mars who should
+read my book of telegrams received during the last two months would find
+it difficult to explain how the two governments have kept at peace. It
+is this serious treatment of trifling grievances which makes us feel
+here that the exactions and dislocations and necessary disturbances of
+this war are not understood at home.
+
+"I assure you (and there are plenty of facts to prove it) that this
+Government (both for unselfish and selfish reasons) puts a higher value
+on our friendship than on any similar thing in the world. They will
+go--they are going--the full length to keep it. But, in proportion to
+our tendency to nag them about little things will the value set on our
+friendship diminish and will their confidence in our sincerity decline."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The note which Lord Bryce and Lord Northcliffe so dreaded reached the
+London Embassy in October, 1915. The State Department had spent nearly
+six months in preparing it; it was the American answer to the so-called
+blockade established by the Order in Council of the preceding March.
+Evidently its contents fulfilled the worst forebodings:
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, November 12, 1915.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I have a great respect for the British Navy. Admiral Jellicoe now
+ has under his command 3,000 ships of all sorts-far and away the
+ biggest fleet, I think, that was ever assembled. For the first time
+ since the ocean was poured out, one navy practically commands all
+ the seas: nothing sails except by its grace. It is this fleet of
+ course that will win the war. The beginning of the end--however far
+ off yet the end may be--is already visible by reason of the
+ economic pressure on Germany. But for this fleet, by the way,
+ London would be in ruins, all its treasure looted; every French
+ seacoast city and the Italian peninsula would be as Belgium and
+ Poland are; and thousands of English women would be violated--just
+ as dead French girls are found in many German trenches that have
+ been taken in France. Hence I greatly respect the British fleet.
+
+ We have a good navy, too, for its size, and a naval personnel as
+ good as any afloat. I hear--with much joy--that we are going to
+ make our navy bigger--as much bigger (God save the mark!) as Bryan
+ will permit.
+
+ Now, whatever the future bring, since any fighting enterprise that
+ may ever be thrust on us will be just and justified, we must see to
+ it that we win, as doubtless we shall and as hitherto we always
+ have won. We must be dead sure of winning. Well, whatever fight may
+ be thrust on us by anybody, anywhere, at any time, for any
+ reason--if it only be generally understood beforehand that our
+ fleet and the British fleet shoot the same language, there'll be no
+ fight thrust upon us. The biggest bully in the world wouldn't dare
+ kick the sorriest dog we have. Here, therefore, is a Peace
+ Programme for you--the only basis for a permanent peace in the
+ world. There's no further good in having venerable children build
+ houses of sand at The Hague; there's no further good in peace
+ organizations or protective leagues to enforce peace. We had as
+ well get down to facts. So far as ensuring peace is concerned the
+ biggest fact in the world is the British fleet. The next biggest
+ fact is the American fleet, because of itself and still more
+ because of the vast reserve power of the United States which it
+ implies. If these two fleets perfectly understand one another about
+ the undesirability of wars of aggression, there'll be no more big
+ wars as long as this understanding continues. Such an understanding
+ calls for no treaty--it calls only for courtesy.
+
+ And there is no other peace-basis worth talking about--by men who
+ know how the world is governed.
+
+ Since I have lived here I have spent my days and nights, my poor
+ brain, and my small fortune all most freely and gladly to get some
+ understanding of the men who rule this Kingdom, and of the women
+ and the customs and the traditions that rule these men--to get
+ their trick of thought, the play of their ideals, the working of
+ their imagination, the springs of their instincts. It is impossible
+ for any man to know just how well he himself does such a difficult
+ task--how accurately he is coming to understand the sources and
+ character of a people's actions. Yet, at the worst, I do know
+ something about the British: I know enough to make very sure of the
+ soundness of my conclusion that they are necessary to us and we to
+ them. Else God would have permitted the world to be peopled in some
+ other way. And when we see that the world will be saved by such an
+ artificial combination as England and Russia and France and Japan
+ and Serbia, it calls for no great wisdom to see the natural way
+ whereby it must be saved in the future.
+
+ For this reason every day that I have lived here it has been my
+ conscious aim to do what I could to bring about a condition that
+ shall make sure of this--that, whenever we may have need of the
+ British fleet to protect our shores or to prevent an aggressive war
+ anywhere, it shall he ours by a natural impulse and necessity--even
+ without the asking.
+
+ I have found out that the first step toward that end is courtesy;
+ that the second step is courtesy, and the third step--such a fine
+ and high courtesy (which includes courage) as the President showed
+ in the Panama tolls controversy. We have--we and the
+ British--common aims and character. Only a continuous and sincere
+ courtesy--over periods of strain as well as of calm--is necessary
+ for as complete an understanding as will be required for the
+ automatic guidance of the world in peaceful ways.
+
+ Now, a difference is come between us--the sort of difference that
+ handled as between friends would serve only to bind us together
+ with a sturdier respect. We send a long lawyer's Note, not
+ discourteous but wholly uncourteous, which is far worse. I am
+ writing now only of the manner of the Note, not of its matter.
+ There is not a courteous word, nor a friendly phrase, nor a kindly
+ turn in it, not an allusion even to an old acquaintance, to say
+ nothing of an old friendship, not a word of thanks for courtesies
+ or favours done us, not a hint of sympathy in the difficulties of
+ the time. There is nothing in its tone to show that it came from an
+ American to an Englishman: it might have been from a Hottentot to a
+ Fiji-Islander.
+
+ I am almost sure--I'll say quite sure--that this uncourteous manner
+ is far more important than its endless matter. It has greatly hurt
+ our friends, the real men of the Kingdom. It has made the masses
+ angry--which is of far less importance than the severe sorrow that
+ our discourtesy of manner has brought to our friends--I fear to all
+ considerate and thoughtful Englishmen.
+
+ Let me illustrate: When the Panama tolls controversy arose, Taft
+ ceased to speak the language of the natural man and lapsed into
+ lawyer's courthouse zigzagging mutterings. Knox wrote a letter to
+ the British Government that would have made an enemy of the most
+ affectionate twin brother--all mere legal twists and turns, as
+ agreeable as a pocketful of screws. Then various bovine
+ "international lawyers" wrote books about it. I read them and
+ became more and more confused the further I went: you always do. It
+ took me some time to recover from this word-drunk debauch and to
+ find my own natural intelligence again, the common sense that I was
+ born with. Then I saw that the whole thing went wrong from the
+ place where that Knox legal note came in. Congressmen in the
+ backwoods quoted cryptic passages from it, thought they were saying
+ something, and proceeded to make their audiences believe that
+ somehow England had hit us with a club--or would have hit us but
+ for Knox. That pure discourtesy kept us apart from English sympathy
+ for something like two years.
+
+ Then the President took it up. He threw the legal twaddle into the
+ gutter. He put the whole question in a ten-minutes' speech to
+ Congress, full of clearness and fairness and high courtesy. It won
+ even the rural Congressmen. It was read in every capital and the
+ men who conduct every government looked up and said, "This is a
+ real man, a brave man, a just man." You will recall what Sir Edward
+ Grey said to me: "The President has taught us all a lesson and set
+ us all a high example in the noblest courtesy."
+
+ This one act brought these two nations closer together than they
+ had ever been since we became an independent nation. It was an act
+ of courtesy....
+
+ My dear House, suppose the postman some morning were to leave at
+ your door a thing of thirty-five heads and three appendices, and
+ you discovered that it came from an old friend whom you had long
+ known and greatly valued--this vast mass of legal stuff, without a
+ word or a turn of courtesy in it--what would you do? He had a
+ grievance, your old friend had. Friends often have. But instead of
+ explaining it to you, he had gone and had his lawyers send this
+ many-headed, much-appendiced ton of stuff. It wasn't by that method
+ that you found your way from Austin, Texas, to your present
+ eminence and wisdom. Nor was that the way our friend found his way
+ from a little law-office in Atlanta, where I first saw him, to the
+ White House.
+
+ More and more I am struck with this--that governments are human.
+ They are not remote abstractions, nor impersonal institutions. Men
+ conduct them; and they do not cease to be men. A man is made up of
+ six parts of human nature and four parts of facts and other
+ things--a little reason, some prejudice, much provincialism, and of
+ the particular fur or skin that suits his habitat. When you wish to
+ win a man to do what _you_ want him to do, you take along a few
+ well-established facts, some reasoning and such-like, but you take
+ along also three or four or five parts of human nature--kindliness,
+ courtesy, and such things--sympathy and a human touch.
+
+ If a man be six parts human and four parts of other things, a
+ government, especially a democracy, is seven, or eight, or nine
+ parts human nature. It's the most human thing I know. The best way
+ to manage governments and nations--so long as they are disposed to
+ be friendly--is the way we manage one another. I have a
+ confirmation of this in the following comment which came to me
+ to-day. It was made by a friendly member of Parliament.
+
+ "The President himself dealt with Germany. Even in his severity he
+ paid the Germans the compliment of a most courteous tone in his
+ Note. But in dealing with us he seems to have called in the lawyers
+ of German importers and Chicago pork-packers. I miss the high
+ Presidential courtesy that we had come to expect from Mr. Wilson."
+
+ An American banker here has told me of the experience of an
+ American financial salesman in the city the day after our Note was
+ published. His business is to make calls on bankers and other
+ financial men, to sell them securities. He is a man of good address
+ who is popular with his clients. The first man he called on, on
+ that day, said: "I don't wish to be offensive to you. But I have
+ only one way to show my feeling of indignation toward the United
+ States, and that is, to have nothing more to do with Americans."
+
+ The next man said: "No, nothing to-day, I thank you. No--nor
+ to-morrow either; nor the next day. Good morning."
+
+ After four or five such greetings, the fellow gave it up and is now
+ doing nothing.
+
+ I don't attach much importance to such an incident as this, except
+ as it gives a hint of the general feeling. These financial men
+ probably haven't even read our Note. Few people have. But they have
+ all read the short and sharp newspaper summary which preceded it in
+ the English papers. But what such an incident does indicate is the
+ prevalence of a state of public feeling which would prevent the
+ Government from yielding any of our demands even if the Government
+ so wished. It has now been nearly a week since the Note was
+ published. I have seen most of the neutral ministers. Before the
+ Note came they expressed great eagerness to see it: it would
+ champion their cause. Since it came not one of them has mentioned
+ it to me. The Secretary of one of them remarked, after being
+ invited to express himself: "It is too--too--long!" And, although I
+ have seen most of the Cabinet this week, not a man mentioned it to
+ me. People seem studiously to avoid it, lest they give offense.
+
+ I have, however, got one little satisfaction. An American--a
+ half-expatriated loafer who talks "art"--you know the
+ intellectually affected and degenerate type--screwed his courage up
+ and told me that he felt ashamed of his country. I remarked that I
+ felt sure the feeling was mutual. That, I confess, made me feel
+ better.
+
+ As nearly as I can make out, the highwater mark of English
+ good-feeling toward us in all our history was after the President's
+ Panama tolls courtesy. The low-water mark, since the Civil War, I
+ am sure, is now. The Cleveland Venezuela message came at a time of
+ no nervous strain and did, I think, produce no long-lasting
+ effect. A part of the present feeling is due to the English
+ conviction that we have been taken in by the Germans in the
+ submarine controversy, but a large part is due to the lack of
+ courtesy in this last Note--the manner in which it was written even
+ more than its matter. As regards its matter, I have often been over
+ what I conceive to be the main points with Sir Edward Grey--very
+ frankly and without the least offense. He has said: "We may have to
+ arbitrate these things," as he might say, "We had better take a cab
+ because it is raining." It is easily possible--or it was--to
+ discuss anything with this Government without offense. I have, in
+ fact, stood up before Sir Edward's fire and accused him of stealing
+ a large part of the earth's surface, and we were just as good
+ friends afterward as before. But I never drew a lawyer's indictment
+ of him as a land-thief: that's different.
+
+ I suppose no two peoples or governments ever quite understand one
+ another. Perhaps they never will. That is too much to hope for. But
+ when one government writes to another it ought to write (as men do)
+ with some reference to the personality of the other and to their
+ previous relations, since governments are more human than men. Of
+ course I don't know who wrote the Note. Hence I can talk about it
+ freely to you without implying criticism of anybody in particular.
+ But the man who wrote it never saw the British Government and
+ wouldn't know it if he met it in the road. To him it is a mere
+ legal entity, a wicked, impersonal institution against which he has
+ the task of drawing an indictment--not the task of trying to
+ persuade it to confess the propriety of a certain course of
+ conduct. In his view, it is a wicked enemy to start with--like the
+ Louisiana lottery of a previous generation or the Standard Oil
+ Company of our time.
+
+ One would have thought, since we were six months in preparing it,
+ that a draft of the Note would have been sent to the man on the
+ ground whom our Government keeps in London to study the situation
+ at first hand and to make the best judgment he can about the most
+ effective methods of approach on delicate and difficult matters. If
+ that had been done, I should have suggested a courteous short Note
+ saying that we are obliged to set forth such and such views about
+ marine law and the rights of neutrals, to His Majesty's Government;
+ and that the contention of the United States Government was
+ herewith sent--etc., etc.--Then this identical Note (with certain
+ court-house, strong, shirt-sleeve adjectives left out) could have
+ come without arousing any feeling whatsoever. Of course I have no
+ personal vanity in saying this to you. I am sure I outgrew that
+ foible many years ago. But such a use of an ambassador--of any
+ ambassador--is obviously one of the best and most natural uses he
+ could be put to; and all governments but ours do put their
+ ambassadors to such a use: that's what they have 'em for.
+
+ _Per contra_: a telegram has just come in saying that a certain
+ Lichtenstein in New York had a lot of goods stopped by the British
+ Government, which (by an arrangement made with their attorney here)
+ agreed to buy them at a certain price: will I go and find out why
+ the Government hasn't yet paid Lichtenstein and when he may expect
+ his money? Is it an ambassadorial duty to collect a private bill
+ for Lichtenstein, in a bargain with which our Government has had
+ nothing to do? I have telegraphed the Department, quite calmly,
+ that I don't think it is. I venture to say no ambassador ever had
+ such a request as that before from his Government.
+
+ My dear House, I often wonder if my years of work here--the kind of
+ high good work I've tried to do--have not been thrown away. I've
+ tried to take and to busy myself with a long-range view of great
+ subjects. The British Empire and the United States will be here
+ long after we are dead, and their relations will continue to be one
+ of the most important matters--perhaps the most important
+ matter--in the world. Well, now think of Lichtenstein's bill!
+
+ To get back where I started--I fear, therefore, that, when I next
+ meet the Admiral of the Grand Fleet (with whom I used to discuss
+ everything quite freely before he sailed away to the war), he may
+ forget to mention that we may have his 3,000 ships at our need.
+
+ Since this present difference is in danger of losing the healing
+ influence of a kindly touch--has become an uncourteous monster of
+ 35 heads and 3 appendices--I see no early end of it. The British
+ Foreign Office has a lot of lawyers in its great back offices. They
+ and our lawyers will now butt and rebut as long as a goat of them
+ is left alive on either side. The two governments--the two human,
+ kindly groups--have retired: they don't touch, on this matter, now.
+ The lawyers will have the time of their lives, each smelling the
+ blood of the other.
+
+ If more notes must come--as the English papers report over and over
+ again every morning and every afternoon--the President might do
+ much by writing a brief, human document to accompany the
+ Appendices. If it be done courteously, we can accuse them of
+ stealing sheep and of dyeing the skins to conceal the theft-without
+ provoking the slightest bad feeling; and, in the end, they'll pay
+ another _Alabama_ award without complaint and frame the check and
+ show it to future ambassadors as Sir Edward shows the _Alabama_
+ check to me sometimes.
+
+ And it'll be a lasting shame (and may bring other Great Wars) if
+ lawyers are now permitted to tear the garments with which Peace
+ ought to be clothed as soon as she can escape from her present rags
+ and tatters.
+
+ Yours always heartily,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. My dear House: Since I have--in weeks and months past--both
+ telegraphed and written the Department (and I presume the President
+ has seen what I've sent) about the feeling here, I've written this
+ letter to you and not to the President nor Lansing. I will not run
+ the risk of seeming to complain--nor even of seeming to seem to
+ complain. But if you think it wise to send or show this letter to
+ the President, I'm willing you should. This job was botched:
+ there's no doubt about that. We shall not recover for many a long,
+ long year. The identical indictment could have been drawn with
+ admirable temper and the way laid down for arbitration and for
+ keeping our interpretation of the law and precedents intact--all
+ done in a way that would have given no offense.
+
+ The feeling runs higher and higher every day--goes deeper and
+ spreads wider.
+
+ Now on top of it comes the _Ancona_[15]. The English press,
+ practically unanimously, makes sneering remarks about our
+ Government. After six months it has got no results from the
+ _Lusitania_ controversy, which Bernstorff is allowed to prolong in
+ secret session while factories are blown up, ships supplied with
+ bombs, and all manner of outrages go on (by Germans) in the United
+ States. The English simply can't understand why Bernstorff is
+ allowed to stay. They predict that nothing will come of the
+ _Ancona_ case, nor of any other case. Nobody wants us to get into
+ the war--nobody who counts--but they are losing respect for us
+ because we seem to them to submit to anything.
+
+ We've simply dropped out. No English person ever mentions our
+ Government to me. But they talk to one another all the time about
+ the political anaemia of the United States Government. They think
+ that Bernstorff has the State Department afraid of him and that the
+ Pacifists dominate opinion--the Pacifists-at-any-price. I no longer
+ even have a chance to explain any of these things to anybody I
+ know.
+
+ It isn't the old question we used to discuss of our having no
+ friend in the world when the war ends. It's gone far further than
+ that. It is now whether the United States Government need be
+ respected by anybody.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 14: Senator Hoke Smith, of Georgia, was at this time--and
+afterward--conducting bitter campaign against the British blockade and
+advocating an embargo as a retaliation.]
+
+[Footnote 15: Torpedoed off Sardinia on Nov. 7, 1915, by the Austrians.
+There was a large toss of life, including many Americans.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+DARK DAYS FOR THE ALLIES
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ June 30, 1915.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ There's a distinct wave of depression here--perhaps I'd better say
+ a period of setbacks has come. So far as we can find out only the
+ Germans are doing anything in the war on land. The position in
+ France is essentially the same as it was in November, only the
+ Germans are much more strongly entrenched. Their great plenty of
+ machine guns enables them to use fewer men and to kill more than
+ the Allies. The Russians also lack ammunition and are yielding more
+ and more territory. The Allies--so you hear now--will do well if
+ they get their little army away from the Dardanelles before the
+ German-Turks eat 'em alive, and no Balkan state comes in to help
+ the Allies. Italy makes progress-slowly, of course, over almost
+ impassable mountains--etc., etc. Most of this doleful recital I
+ think is true; and I find more and more men here who have lost hope
+ of seeing an end of the war in less than two or three years, and
+ more and more who fear that the Germans will never be forced out of
+ Belgium. And the era of the giant aeroplane seems about to come--a
+ machine that can carry several tons and several men and go great
+ distances--two engines, two propellers, and the like. It isn't at
+ all impossible, I am told, that these machines may be the things
+ that will at last end the war--possibly, but I doubt it.
+
+ At any rate, it is true that a great wave of discouragement is
+ come. All these events and more seem to prove to my mind the rather
+ dismal failure the Liberal Government made--a failure really to
+ grasp the problem. It was a dead failure. Of course they are waking
+ up now, when they are faced with a certain dread lest many soldiers
+ prefer frankly to die rather than spend another winter in
+ practically the same trenches. You hear rumours, too, of great
+ impending military scandals--God knows whether there be any truth
+ in them or not.
+
+ In a word, while no Englishman gives up or will ever give
+ up--that's all rot--the job he has in hand is not going well. He's
+ got to spit on his hands and buckle up his belt two holes tighter
+ yet. And I haven't seen a man for a month who dares hope for an end
+ of the fight within any time that he can foresee.
+
+ I had a talk to-day with the Russian Ambassador[16]. He wished to
+ know how matters stood between the United States and Great Britain.
+ I said to him: "I'll give you a task if you have leisure. Set to
+ and help me hurry up your distinguished Ally in dealing with our
+ shipping troubles."
+
+ The old man laughed--that seemed a huge joke to him; he threw up
+ his hands and exclaimed--"My God! He is slow about his own
+ business--has always been slow--can't be anything else."
+
+ After more such banter, the nigger in his wood-pile poked his head
+ out: "Is there any danger," he asked, "that munitions may be
+ stopped?"
+
+ The Germans have been preparing northern France for German
+ occupation. No French are left there, of course, except women and
+ children and old men. They must be fed or starved or deported. The
+ Germans put them on trains--a whole village at a time--and run
+ them to the Swiss frontier. Of course the Swiss pass them on into
+ France. The French have their own and--the Germans will have
+ northern France without any French population, if this process goes
+ on long enough.
+
+ The mere bang! bang! frightful era of the war is passed. The
+ Germans are settling down to permanent business with their great
+ organizing machine. Of course they talk about the freedom of the
+ seas and such mush-mush; of course they'd like to have Paris and
+ rob it of enough money to pay what the war has cost them, and
+ London, too. But what they really want for keeps is
+ seacoast--Belgium and as much of the French coast as they can win.
+ That's really what they are out gunning for. Of course, somehow at
+ some time they mean to get Holland, too, and Denmark, if they
+ really need it. Then they'll have a very respectable seacoast--the
+ thing that they chiefly lack now.
+
+ More and more people are getting their nerves knocked out. I went
+ to a big hospital on Sunday, twenty-five miles out of London. They
+ showed me an enormous, muscular Tommy sitting by himself in a chair
+ under the trees. He had had a slight wound which quickly got well.
+ But his speech was gone. That came back, too, later. But then he
+ wouldn't talk and he'd insist on going off by himself. He's just
+ knocked out--you can't find out just how much gumption he has left.
+ That's what the war did for him: it stupefied him. Well, it's
+ stupefied lots of folks who have never seen a trench. That's what's
+ happened. Of all the men who started in with the game, I verily
+ believe that Lloyd George is holding up best. He organized British
+ finance. Now he's organizing British industry.
+
+ It's got hot in London--hotter than I've ever known it. It gets
+ lonelier (more people going away) and sadder--more wounded coming
+ back and more visible sorrow. We seem to be settling down to
+ something that is more or less like Paris--so far less, but it may
+ become more and more like it. And the confident note of an earlier
+ period is accompanied by a dull undertone of much less
+ cheerfulness. The end is--in the lap of the gods.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ American Embassy, London,
+
+ July 25, 1915.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... Many men here are very active in their thought about the future
+ relations of the United States and Great Britain. Will the war
+ bring or leave them closer together? If the German machine be
+ completely smashed (and it may not be completely smashed) the
+ Japanese danger will remain. I do not know how to estimate that
+ danger accurately. But there is such a danger. And, if the German
+ wild beast ever come to life again, there's an eternal chance of
+ trouble with it. For defensive purposes it may become of the very
+ first importance that the whole English-speaking world should stand
+ together--not in entangling alliance, but with a much clearer
+ understanding than we have ever yet had. I'll indicate to you some
+ of my cogitations on this subject by trying to repeat what I told
+ Philip Kerr[17] a fortnight ago--one Sunday in the country. I can
+ write this to you without seeming to parade my own opinions.--Kerr
+ is one of "The Round Table," perhaps the best group of men here for
+ the real study and free discussion of large political subjects.
+ Their quarterly, _The Round Table_, is the best review, I dare
+ say, in the world. Kerr is red hot for a close and perfect
+ understanding between Great Britain and the United States. I told
+ him that, since Great Britain had only about forty per cent. of the
+ white English-speaking people and the United States had about sixty
+ per cent., I hoped in his natural history that the tail didn't wag
+ the dog. I went on:
+
+ "You now have the advantage of us in your aggregation of three
+ centuries of accumulated wealth--the spoil of all the world--and in
+ the talent that you have developed for conserving it and adding to
+ it and in the institutions you have built up to perpetuate it--your
+ merchant ships, your insurance, your world-wide banking, your
+ mortgages on all new lands; but isn't this the only advantage you
+ have? This advantage will pass. You are now shooting away millions
+ and millions, and you will have a debt that is bound to burden
+ industry. On our side, we have a more recently mixed race than
+ yours; you've begun to inbreed. We have also (and therefore) more
+ adaptability, a greater keenness of mind in our masses; we are
+ Old-World men set free--free of classes and traditions and all that
+ they connote. Your so-called democracy is far behind ours. Your
+ aristocracy and your privileges necessarily bring a social and
+ economic burden. Half your people look backward.
+
+ "Your leadership rests on your wealth and on the power that you've
+ built on your wealth."
+
+ When he asked me how we were to come closer together--"closer
+ together, with your old-time distrust of us and with your
+ remoteness?"--I stopped him at "remoteness."
+
+ "That's the reason," I said. "Your idea of our 'remoteness.'
+ 'Remoteness' from what? From you? Are you not betraying the only
+ real difficulty of a closer sympathy by assuming that you are the
+ centre of the world? When you bring yourself to think of the
+ British Empire as a part of the American Union--mind you, I am not
+ saying that you would be formally admitted--but when you are
+ yourselves in close enough sympathy with us to wish to be admitted,
+ the chief difficulty of a real union of thought will be gone. You
+ recall Lord Rosebery's speech in which he pictured the capital of
+ the British Empire being moved to Washington if the American
+ Colonies had been retained under the Crown? Well, it was the Crown
+ that was the trouble, and the capital of English-speaking folk has
+ been so moved and you still remain 'remote.' Drop 'remote' from
+ your vocabulary and your thought and we'll actually be closer
+ together."
+
+ It's an enormous problem--just how to bring these countries closer
+ together. Perhaps nothing can do it but some great common danger or
+ some great common adventure. But this is one of the problems of
+ your lifetime. England can't get itself clean loose from the
+ continent nor from continental mediaevalism; and with that we can
+ have nothing to do. Men like Kerr think that somehow a great push
+ toward democracy here will be given by the war. I don't quite see
+ how. So far the aristocracy have made perhaps the best showing in
+ defence of English liberty. They are paying the bills of the war;
+ they have sent their sons; these sons have died like men; and their
+ parents never whimper. It's a fine breed for such great uses as
+ these. There was a fine incident in the House of Lords the other
+ day, which gave the lie to the talk that one used to hear here
+ about "degeneracy." Somebody made a perfectly innocent proposal to
+ complete a list of peers and peers' sons who had fallen in the
+ war--a thing that will, of course, be done, just as a similar list
+ will be compiled of the House of Commons, of Oxford and Cambridge
+ Universities. But one peer after another objected vigorously lest
+ such a list appear immodest. "We are but doing our duty. Let the
+ matter rest there."
+
+ In a time like this the aristocracy proves its worth. In fact, all
+ aristocracies grew chiefly out of wars, and perhaps they are better
+ for wars than a real democracy. Here, you see, you run into one of
+ those contradictions in life and history which make the world so
+ hard to change....
+
+ You know there are some reasons why peace, whenever it may come,
+ will bring problems as bad as the problems of the war itself. I can
+ think of no worse task than the long conferences of the Allies with
+ their conflicting interests and ambitions. Then must come their
+ conferences with the enemy. Then there are sure to be other
+ conferences to try to make peace secure. And, of course, many are
+ going to be dissatisfied and disappointed, and perhaps out of these
+ disappointments other wars may come. The world will not take up its
+ knitting and sit quietly by the fire for many a year to come....
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+One happiness came to Mr. and Mrs. Page in the midst of all these war
+alarums. On August 4, 1915, their only daughter, Katharine, was married
+to Mr. Charles G. Loring, of Boston, Massachusetts. The occasion gave
+the King an opportunity of showing the high regard in which Page and his
+family were held. It had been planned that the wedding should take place
+in Westminster Abbey, but the King very courteously offered Miss Page
+the Royal chapel in St. James's Palace. This was a distinguished
+compliment, as it was the first time that any marriage, in which both
+bride and bridegroom were foreigners, had ever been celebrated in this
+building, which for centuries has been the scene of royal weddings. The
+special place which his daughter had always held in the Ambassador's
+affections is apparent in the many letters that now followed her to her
+new home in the United States. The unique use Page made of the initials
+of his daughter's name was characteristic.
+
+
+ _To Mrs. Charles G. Loring_
+
+ London, September 1, 1915.
+
+ MY DEAR K.A. P-TAIN:
+
+ Here's a joke on your mother and Frank: We three (and Smith) went
+ up to Broadway in the car, to stay there a little while and then to
+ go on into Wales, etc. The hotel is an old curiosity shop; you sit
+ on Elizabethan chairs by a Queen Anne table, on a drunken floor,
+ and look at the pewter platters on the wall or do your best to look
+ at them, for the ancient windows admit hardly any light. "Oh!
+ lovely," cries Frank; and then he and your mother make out in the
+ half-darkness a perfectly wonderful copper mug on the mantelpiece;
+ and you go out and come in the ramshackle door (stooping every
+ time) after you've felt all about for the rusty old iron latch, and
+ then you step down two steps (or fall), presently to step up two
+ more. Well, for dinner we had six kinds of meat and two meat pies
+ and potatoes and currants! My dinner was a potato. I'm old and
+ infirm and I have many ailments, but I'm not so bad off as to be
+ able to live on a potato a day. And since we were having a
+ vacation, I didn't see the point. So I came home where I have seven
+ courses for dinner, all good; and Mrs. Leggett took my place in the
+ car. That carnivorous company went on. They've got to eat six
+ kinds of meat and two meat pies and--currants! I haven't. Your
+ mother calls me up on the phone every morning--me, who am living
+ here in luxury, seven courses at every dinner--and asks anxiously,
+ "And how _are_ you, dear?" I answer: "Prime, and how are _you_?" We
+ are all enjoying ourselves, you see, and I don't have to eat six
+ kinds of meat and two meat pies and--currants! They do; and may
+ Heaven save 'em and get 'em home safe!
+
+ [Illustration: Col. Edward M. House. From a painting by P.A.
+ Laszlo]
+
+ [Illustration: The Rt. Hon. Herbert Henry Asquith, Prime Minister
+ of Great Britain, 1908-1916]
+
+ It's lovely in London now--fine, shining days and showers at night
+ and Ranelagh beautiful, and few people here; but I don't deny its
+ loneliness--somewhat. Yet sleep is good, and easy and long. I have
+ neither an ocean voyage nor six kinds of meat and two meat pies and
+ currants. I congratulate myself and write to you and mother.
+
+ You'll land to-morrow or next day--good; I congratulate you. Salute
+ the good land for me and present my respectful compliments to
+ vegetables that have taste and fruit that is not sour--to the
+ sunshine, in fact, and to everything that ripens and sweetens in
+ its glow.
+
+ And you're now (when this reaches you) fixing up your home--your
+ _own_ home, dear Kitty. Bless your dear life, you left a home
+ here--wasn't it a good and nice one?--left it very lonely for the
+ man who has loved you twenty-four years and been made happy by your
+ presence. But he'll love you twenty-five more and on and
+ on--always. So you haven't lost that--nor can you. And it's very
+ fit and right that you should build your own nest; that adds
+ another happy home, you see. And I'm very sure it will be very
+ happy always. Whatever I can do to make it so, now or ever, you
+ have only to say. But--your mother took your photograph with her
+ and got it out of the bag and put it on the bureau as soon as she
+ went to her room--a photograph taken when you were a little girl.
+
+ Hodson[18] came up to see me to-day and with tears of gratitude in
+ his voice told me of the present that you and Chud had made him. He
+ is very genuinely pleased. As for the rest, life goes on as usual.
+
+ I laugh as I think of all your new aunts and cousins looking you
+ over and wondering if you'll fit, and then saying to one another as
+ they go to bed: "She is lovely--isn't she?" I could tell 'em a
+ thing or two if I had a whack at 'em.
+
+ And you'll soon have all your pretty things in place in your pretty
+ home, and a lot more that I haven't seen. I'll see 'em all before
+ many years--and you, too! Tell me, did Chud get you a dinner book?
+ Keep your record of things: you'll enjoy it in later years. And
+ you'll have a nice time this autumn--your new kinsfolk, your new
+ friends and old and Boston and Cambridge. If you run across Mr.
+ Muffin, William Roscoe Thayer, James Ford Rhodes, President
+ Eliot--these are my particular old friends whose names occur at the
+ moment.
+
+ My love to you and Chud too,
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+The task of being "German Ambassador to Great Britain" was evidently not
+without its irritations.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ September 15, 1915.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ Yesterday was my German day. When the boy came up to my room, I
+ told him I had some official calls to make. "Therefore get out my
+ oldest and worst suit." He looked much confused; and when I got up
+ both my worst and best suits were laid out. Evidently he thought he
+ must have misunderstood me. I asked your mother if she was ready to
+ go down to breakfast. "Yes."--"Well, then I'll leave you." She
+ grunted something and when we both got down she asked: "What _did_
+ you say to me upstairs?" I replied: "I regard the incident as
+ closed." She looked a sort of pitying look at me and a minute or
+ two later asked: "What on earth is the matter with you? Can't you
+ hear at all?" I replied: "No. Therefore let's talk." She gave it
+ up, but looked at me again to make sure I was all there.
+
+ I stopped at the barber shop, badly needing a shave. The barber got
+ his brush and razor ready. I said: "Cut my hair." He didn't talk
+ for a few minutes, evidently engaged in deep thought.
+
+ When I got to my office, a case was brought to me of a runaway
+ American who was caught trying to send news to Germany. "Very
+ good," said I, "now let it be made evident that it shall appear
+ therefore that his innocence having been duly established he shall
+ be shot."
+
+ "What, sir?"
+
+ "That since it must be evident that his guilt is genuine therefore
+ see that he be acquitted and then shot."
+
+ Laughlin and Bell and Stabler were seen in an earnest conference in
+ the next room for nearly half an hour.
+
+ Shoecraft brought me a letter. "This is the most courteous
+ complaint about the French passport bureau we have yet had. I
+ thought you'd like to see this lady's letter. She says she knows
+ you."
+
+ "Do not answer it, then."
+
+ He went off and conferred with the others.
+
+ Hodson spoke of the dog he sold to Frank. "Yes," said I, "since he
+ was a very nice dog, therefore he was worthless."
+
+ "Sir?"
+
+ And he went off after looking back at me in a queer way.
+
+ The day went on in that fashion. When I came out to go to lunch,
+ the stairs down led upward and I found myself, therefore, stepping
+ out of the roof on to the sidewalk--the house upside down. Smith
+ looked puzzled. "Home, Sir?"
+
+ "No. Go the other way." After he had driven two or three blocks, I
+ told him to turn again and go the other way--home!
+
+ Your mother said almost as soon as I got into the door--"What was
+ the matter with you this morning?"
+
+ "Oh, nothing. You forget that I am the German Ambassador."
+
+ Now this whole narrative is a lie. Nothing in it occurred. If it
+ were otherwise it wouldn't be German.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Mrs. Charles G. Loring_
+
+ London, 6 Grosvenor Square.
+ Sunday, September 19, 1915.
+
+ DEAR KITTY:
+
+ You never had a finer autumnal day in the land of the free than
+ this day has been in this old kingdom--fresh and fair; and so your
+ mother said to herself and me: "Let's go out to the Laughlins' to
+ lunch," and we went. There never was a prettier drive. We found out
+ among other things that you pleased Mrs. Laughlin very much by your
+ letter. Her garden changes every week or so, and it never was
+ lovelier than it is now.--Then we came back home and dined alone.
+ Well, since we can't have you and Chud and Frank, I don't care if
+ we do dine alone sometimes for some time to come. Your mother's
+ monstrous good company, and sometimes three is a crowd. And now is
+ a good time to be alone. London never was so dull or deserted since
+ I've known it, nor ever so depressed. The military (land)
+ operations are not cheerful; the hospitals are all full; I see more
+ wounded soldiers by far than at any previous time; the Zeppelins
+ came somewhere to this island every night for a week--one of them,
+ on the night of the big raid, was visible from our square for
+ fifteen or twenty minutes--in general it is a dull and depressing
+ time. I have thought that since you were determined to run off with
+ a young fellow, you chose a pretty good time to go away. I'm afraid
+ there'll be no more of what we call "fun" in this town as long as
+ we stay here.
+
+ Worse yet: in spite of the Coalition Government and everybody's
+ wish to get on smoothly and to do nothing but to push the war,
+ since Parliament convened there's been a great row, which doesn't
+ get less. The labour men give trouble; people blame the
+ politicians: Lloyd George is saving the country, say some; Lloyd
+ George ought to be hanged, say others. Down with Northcliffe! They
+ seem likely to burn him at the stake--except those who contend that
+ he has saved the nation. Some maintain that the cabinet is too
+ big--twenty-two. More say that it has no leadership. If you favour
+ conscription, you are a traitor: if you don't favour it, you are
+ pro-German. It's the same sort of old quarrel they had before the
+ war, only it is about more subjects. In fact, nobody seems very
+ clearly to know what it's about. Meantime the Government is
+ spending money at a rate that nobody ever dreamed of before. Three
+ million pounds a day--some days five million. The Germans,
+ meantime are taking Russia; the Allies are not taking the
+ Dardanelles; in France the old deadlock continues. Boston at its
+ worst must be far more cheerful than this.
+
+ Affectionately and with my love to Chud,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, September 26, 1915.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ The suppression of facts about the military situation is more
+ rigorous than ever since the military facts have become so
+ discouraging. The volume of pretty well authenticated news that I
+ used to hear privately has become sensibly diminished. Rumours that
+ reach me by the back door, in all sorts of indirect ways, are not
+ fewer, but fewer of them are credible. There is great confusion,
+ great fear, very great depression--far greater, I think, than
+ England has felt, certainly since the Napoleonic scare and probably
+ since the threat of the Armada. Nobody, I think, supposes that
+ England herself will be conquered: confidence in the navy is
+ supreme. But the fear of a practical defeat of the Allies on the
+ continent is become general. Russia may have to pay a huge
+ indemnity, going far to reimburse Germany for the cost of the war;
+ Belgium may be permanently held unless Germany receive an indemnity
+ to evacuate, and her seaports may be held anyhow; the Germans may
+ reach Constantinople before the Allies, and Germany may thus hold,
+ when the war ends, an open way to the East; and France may have to
+ pay a large sum to regain her northern territory now held by the
+ Germans. These are not the convictions of men here, but they have
+ distinctly become the fears; and many men's mind are beginning to
+ adjust themselves to the possible end of the war, as a draw, with
+ these results. Of course such an end would be a real German
+ victory and--another war as soon as enough men grow up to fight it.
+
+ When the more cheerful part of public opinion, especially when any
+ member of the Government, affects to laugh at these fears, the
+ people say: "Well, make known the facts that you base your hope on.
+ Precisely how many men have volunteered? Is the voluntary system a
+ success or has it reached its limit? Precisely what is the
+ situation in the Dardanelles? Are the allied armies strong enough
+ to make a big drive to break through the German line in France?
+ Have they big guns and ammunition enough? What are the facts about
+ the chance in the Dardanelles? What have we done with reference to
+ the Balkan States?" Thus an angry and ominous political situation
+ is arising. The censorship on war news apparently becomes severer,
+ and the general fear spreads and deepens. The air, of course,
+ becomes heavily charged with such rumours as these: that if the
+ Government continue its policy of secrecy, Lloyd George will
+ resign, seeing no hope of a real victory: that, if he do resign,
+ his resignation will disrupt the Government--cause a sort of
+ earthquake; that the Government will probably fall and Lloyd George
+ will be asked to form another one, since he is, as the public sees
+ it, the most active and efficient man in political life; that, if
+ all the Balkan States fail the Allies, Sir Edward Grey will be
+ reckoned a failure and must resign; and you even now hear talk of
+ Mr. Balfour's succeeding him.
+
+ It is impossible to say what basis there is for these and other
+ such rumours, but they show the general very serious depression and
+ dissatisfaction. Of that there is no doubt. Nor is there any doubt
+ about grave differences in the Cabinet about conscription nor of
+ grave fear in the public mind about the action of labour unions in
+ hindering the utmost production of ammunition, nor of the
+ increasing feeling that the Prime Minister doesn't lead the nation.
+ Except Lloyd George and the Chancellor of the Exchequer[19] the
+ Cabinet seems to suffer a sort of paralysis. Lord Kitchener's
+ speech in the House of Lords, explaining the military situation,
+ reads like a series of month-old bulletins and was a great
+ disappointment. Mr. Asquith's corresponding speech in the House
+ seemed to lack complete frankness. The nation feels that it is
+ being kept in the dark, and all the military information that it
+ gets is discouraging. Sir Edward Grey, as philosophic and enduring
+ a man as I know, seems much more depressed than I have ever known
+ him to be; Bryce is very very far from cheerful; Plunkett[20], whom
+ also you know, is in the dumps--it's hard to find a cheerful or a
+ hopeful man.
+
+ The secrecy of official life has become so great and successful
+ that prophecy of political changes must be mere guess work. But,
+ unless good news come from the Dardanelles in particular, I have a
+ feeling that Asquith may resign--be forced out by the gradual
+ pressure of public opinion; that Lloyd George will become Prime
+ Minister, and that (probably) Sir Edward Grey may resign. Yet I
+ cannot take the prevailing military discouragement at its face
+ value. The last half million men and the last million pounds will
+ decide the contest, and the Allies will have these. This very
+ depression strengthens the nation's resolution to a degree that
+ they for the moment forget. The blockade and the armies in the
+ field will wear Germany down--not absolutely conquer her, but wear
+ her down--probably in another year.
+
+ In the meantime our prestige (if that be the right word), in
+ British judgment, is gone. As they regard it, we have permitted
+ the Germans to kill our citizens, to carry on a world-wide underhand
+ propaganda from our country (as well as in it), for which they have
+ made no apology and no reparation but only vague assurances for the
+ future now that their submarine fleet has been almost destroyed.
+ They think that we are credulous to the point of simplicity to
+ accept any assurances that Bernstorff may give--in a word, that the
+ peace-at-any-price sentiment so dominates American opinion and the
+ American Government that we will submit to any indignity or
+ insult--that we will learn the Germans' real character when it is
+ too late to save our honour or dignity. There is no doubt of the
+ definiteness or depth of this opinion.
+
+ And I am afraid that this feeling will show itself in our future
+ dealings with this government. The public opinion of the nation as
+ well as the Government accepts their blockade as justified as well
+ as necessary. They will not yield on that point, and they will
+ regard our protests as really inspired by German influence--thus
+ far at least: that the German propaganda has organized and
+ encouraged the commercial objection in the United States, and that
+ this propaganda and the peace-at-any-price sentiment demand a stiff
+ controversy with England to offset the stiff controversy with
+ Germany; and, after all, they ask, what does a stiff controversy
+ with the United States amount to? I had no idea that English
+ opinion could so quickly become practically indifferent as to what
+ the United States thinks or does. And as nearly as I can make it
+ out, there is not a general wish that we should go to war. The
+ prevalent feeling is not a selfish wish for military help. In fact
+ they think that, by the making of munitions, by the taking of
+ loans, and by the sale of food we can help them more than by
+ military and naval action. Their feeling is based on their
+ disappointment at our submitting to what they regard as German
+ dallying with us and to German insults. They believe that, if we
+ had sent Bernstorff home when his government made its
+ unsatisfactory reply to our first _Lusitania_ note, Germany would
+ at once have "come down"; opportunist Balkan States would have come
+ to the help of the Allies; Holland and perhaps the Scandinavian
+ States would have got some consideration at Berlin for their losses
+ by torpedoes; that more attention would have been paid by Turkey to
+ our protest against the wholesale massacre of the Armenians; and
+ that a better settlement with Japan about Pacific islands and
+ Pacific influence would have been possible for the English at the
+ end of the war. Since, they argue, nobody is now afraid of the
+ United States, her moral influence is impaired at every capital;
+ and I now frequently hear the opinion that, if the war lasts
+ another year and the Germans get less and less use of the United
+ States as a base of general propaganda in all neutral countries,
+ especially all American countries, they are likely themselves to
+ declare war on us as a mere defiance of the whole world and with
+ the hope of stirring up internal trouble for our government by the
+ activity of the Germans and the Irish in the United States, which
+ may hinder munitions and food and loans to the Allies.
+
+ I need not remark that the English judgment of the Germans is
+ hardly judicial. But they reply to this that every nation has to
+ learn the real, incredible character of the Prussian by its own
+ unhappy experience. France had so to learn it, and England, Russia,
+ and Belgium; and we (the United States), they say, fail to profit
+ in time by the experience of these. After the Germans have used us
+ to the utmost in peace, they will force us into war--or even flatly
+ declare war on us when they think they can thus cause more
+ embarrassment to the Allies, and when they conclude that the time
+ is come to make sure that no great nation shall emerge from the war
+ with a clear commercial advantage over the others; and in the
+ meantime they will prove to the world by playing with us that a
+ democracy is necessarily pacific and hence (in their view)
+ contemptible. I felt warranted the other day to remark to Lord
+ Bryce on the unfairness of much of the English judgment of us (he
+ is very sad and a good deal depressed). "Yes," he said, "I have
+ despaired of one people's ever really understanding another even
+ when the two are as closely related and as friendly as the
+ Americans and the English."
+
+ You were kind enough to inquire about my health in your last note.
+ If I could live up to the popular conception here of my labours and
+ responsibilities and delicate duties (which is most flattering and
+ greatly exaggerated), I should be only a walking shadow of a man.
+ But I am most inappreciately well. I imagine that in some year to
+ come, I may enjoy a vacation, but I could not enjoy it now. Besides
+ since civilization has gone backward several centuries, I suppose
+ I've gone back with it to a time when men knew no such thing as a
+ vacation. (Let's forgive House for his kindly, mistaken
+ solicitude.) The truth is, I often feel that I do not know
+ myself--body or soul, boots or breeches. This experience is making
+ us all here different from the men we were--but in just what
+ respects it is hard to tell. We are not within hearing of the guns
+ (except the guns that shoot at Zeppelins when they come); but the
+ war crowds itself in on us sensibly more and more. There are more
+ wounded soldiers on the streets and in the parks. More and more
+ families one knows lose their sons, more and more women their
+ husbands. Death is so common that it seems a little thing. Four
+ persons have come to my house to-day (Sunday) in the hope that I
+ may find their missing kinsmen, and two more have appealed to me on
+ the telephone and two more still have sent me notes. Since I began
+ this letter, Mrs. Page insisted on my going out on the edge of the
+ city to see an old friend of many years who has just lost both his
+ sons and whose prospective son-in-law is at home wounded. The first
+ thing he said was: "Tell me, what is America going to do?" As we
+ drove back, we made a call on a household whose nephew is
+ "missing."--"Can't you possibly help us hear definitely about him?"
+
+ This sort of thing all day every day must have some effect on any
+ man. Then--yesterday morning gave promise of a calm, clear day. I
+ never know what sensational experience awaits me around the next
+ corner. Then there was put on my desk the first page of a reputable
+ weekly paper which was filled with an open letter to me written by
+ the editor and signed. After the usual description of my
+ multitudinous and delicate duties, I was called on to insist that
+ my government should protest against Zeppelin raids on London
+ because a bomb might kill me! Humour doesn't bubble much now on
+ this side the world, for the censor had forbidden the publication
+ of this open letter lest it should possibly cause American-German
+ trouble! Then the American correspondents came in to verify a
+ report that a news agency is said to have had that I was deluged
+ with threatening letters!--More widows, more mothers looking for
+ lost sons!... Once in a while--far less often than if I lived in a
+ sane and normal world--I get a few hours off and go to a lonely
+ golf club. Alas! there is seldom anybody there but now and then a
+ pair of girls and now and then a pair of old fellows who have
+ played golf for a century. Yet back in London in the War Office I
+ hear they indulge in disrespectful hilarity at the poor game I
+ play. Now how do they know? (You'd better look to your score with
+ Grayson: the English have spies in America. A major-general in
+ their spy-service department told Mrs. Page that they knew all
+ about Archibaldi[21] before he got on the ship in New York.)
+
+ All this I send you not because it is of the slightest permanent
+ importance (except the English judgment of us) but because it will
+ prove, if you need proof, that the world is gone mad. Everything
+ depends on fighting power and on nothing else. A victory will save
+ the Government. Even distinctly hopeful military news will. And
+ English depression will vanish with a turn of the military tide. If
+ it had been Bernstorff instead of Dumba--_that_ would have affected
+ even the English judgment of us. Tyrrell[22] remarked to me--did I
+ write you? "Think of the freaks of sheer, blind Luck; a man of
+ considerable ability like Dumba caught for taking a risk that an
+ idiot would have avoided, and a fool like Bernstorff escaping!"
+ Then he added: "I hope Bernstorff will be left. No other human
+ being could serve the English as well as he is serving them." So,
+ you see, even in his depression the Englishman has some humour
+ left--e.g., when that old sea dog Lord Fisher heard that Mr.
+ Balfour was to become First Lord of the Admiralty, he cried out:
+ "Damn it! he won't do: Arthur Balfour is too much of a gentleman."
+ So John Bull is now, after all, rather pathetic--depressed as he
+ has not been depressed for at least a hundred years. The nobility
+ and the common man are doing their whole duty, dying on the
+ Bosphorus or in France without a murmur, or facing an insurrection
+ in India; but the labour union man and the commercial class are
+ holding hack and hindering a victory. And there is no great
+ national leader.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 16: Count Beckendorff.]
+
+[Footnote 17: Afterward private secretary to Premier Lloyd George.]
+
+[Footnote 18: A messenger in the American Embassy.]
+
+[Footnote 19: The Rt. Hon. Reginald McKenna.]
+
+[Footnote 20: Sir Horace Plunkett.]
+
+[Footnote 21: It was Archibald's intercepted baggage that furnished the
+documents which caused Dumba's dismissal.]
+
+[Footnote 22: Sir William Tyrrell, private secretary to Sir Edward
+Grey.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+CHRISTMAS IN ENGLAND, 1915
+
+
+ To Edward M. House
+ London, December 7, 1915.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I hear you are stroking down the Tammany tiger--an easier job than
+ I have with the British lion. You can find out exactly who your
+ tiger is, you know the house he lives in, the liquor he drinks, the
+ company he goes with. The British lion isn't so easy to find. At
+ times in English history he has dwelt in Downing Street--not so
+ now. So far as our struggle with him is concerned, he's all over
+ the Kingdom; for he is public opinion. The governing crowd in usual
+ times and on usual subjects can here overrun public opinion--can
+ make it, turn it, down it, dodge it. But it isn't so now--as it
+ affects us. Every mother's son of 'em has made up his mind that
+ Germany must and shall be starved out, and even Sir Edward's scalp
+ isn't safe when they suspect that he wishes to be lenient in that
+ matter. They keep trying to drive him out, on two counts: (1) he
+ lets goods out of Germany for the United States "and thereby
+ handicaps the fleet"; and (2) he failed in the Balkans. Sir Edward
+ is too much of a gentleman for this business of rough-riding over
+ all neutral rights and for bribing those Balkan bandits.
+
+ I went to see him to-day about the _Hocking_, etc. He asked me: "Do
+ _you know_ that the ships of this line are really owned, in good
+ faith, by Americans?"
+
+ "I'll answer your question," said I, "if I may then ask you one.
+ No, I don't know of my own knowledge. Now, _do you know_ that they
+ are _not_ owned by Americans?"
+
+ He had to confess that he, of his own knowledge, didn't know.
+
+ "Then," I said, "for the relief of us both, I pray you hurry up
+ your prize court."
+
+ When we'd got done quarrelling about ships and I started to go, he
+ asked me how I liked Wordsworth's war poems. "The best of all war
+ poems," said he, "because they don't glorify war but have to do
+ with its philosophy." Then he told me that some friend of his had
+ just got out a little volume of these war poems selected from
+ Wordsworth; "and I'm going to send you a copy."
+
+ "Just in time," said I, "for I have a copy of 'The Life and Letters
+ of John Hay'[23] that I'm sending to you."
+
+ He's coming to dine with me in a night or two: he'll do anything
+ but discuss our Note with me. And he's the only member of the
+ Government who, I think, would like to meet our views; and he
+ can't. To use the language of Lowell about the campaign of Governor
+ Kent--these British are hell-bent on starving the Germans out, and
+ neutrals have mighty few rights till that job's done.
+
+ The worst of it is that the job won't be done for a very long time.
+ I've been making a sort of systematic round of the Cabinet to see
+ what these fellows think about things in general at this stage of
+ the game. Bonar Law (the Colonies) tells me that the news from the
+ Balkans is worse than the public or the newspapers know, and that
+ still worse news will come. Germany will have it all her own way in
+ that quarter.
+
+ "And take Egypt and the canal?"
+
+ "I didn't say _that_," he replied. But he showed that he fears even
+ that.
+
+ [Illustration: Herbert C. Hoover, in 1914]
+
+ [Illustration: A facsimile page from the Ambassador's letter of
+ November 24. 1916, resigning his Ambassadorship]
+
+ I could go on with a dozen of 'em; but I sat down to write you a
+ Christmas letter, and nothing else. The best news I have for you is
+ not news at all, but I conceive it to be one of the best hopes of
+ the future. In spite of Irishmen past, present, and to come; in
+ spite of Germans, whose fuss will soon be over; in spite of
+ lawyers, who (if left alone) would bankrupt empires as their
+ clients and think they'd won a victory; I'm going to leave things
+ here in a year and a half so that, if wise men wish to lay a plan
+ for keeping the peace of the world, all they need to do will be to
+ say first to Uncle Sam: "This fellow or that must understand that
+ he can't break loose like a wild beast." If Uncle Sam agrees (and
+ has a real navy himself), he'll wink at John Bull, and John will
+ follow after. You see our blackleg tail-twisters have the whole
+ thing backward. They say we truckle to the British. My plan is to
+ lead the British--not for us to go to them but to have them come to
+ us. We have three white men to every two white men in their whole
+ Empire; and, when peace comes, we'll be fairly started on the road
+ to become as rich as the war will leave them. There are four clubs
+ in London which have no other purpose than this; and the best
+ review[24] in the world exists chiefly for this purpose. All we
+ need to do is to be courteous (we can do what we like if we do it
+ courteously). Our manners, our politicians, and our newspapers are
+ all that keep the English-speaking white man, under our lead, from
+ ruling the world, without any treaty or entangling alliance
+ whatsoever. If, when you went to Berlin to talk to your gentle and
+ timid friend, the Emperor, about disarmament before the war--if
+ about 200 American dreadnaughts and cruisers, with real grog on
+ 'em, had come over to make a friendly call, in the North Sea, on
+ the 300 English dreadnaughts and cruisers--just a friendly call,
+ admirals on admirals--the "Star-Spangled Banner" and "God Save the
+ King"--and if General Bell, from the Philippines, had happened in
+ London just when Kitchener happened to be home from Egypt--_then,
+ there wouldn't have been this war now_. Nothing need have been
+ said--no treaty, no alliance, nothing. For then 100 or more British
+ naval ships would have joined the Panama naval procession and any
+ possible enemy would have seen that combined fleet clean across the
+ Pacific.
+
+ Now this may all be a mere Christmas fancy--a mere yarn about what
+ might have been--because we wouldn't have sent ships here in our
+ old mood; the crew would have missed one Sunday School. But it's
+ _this kind_ of thing that does the trick. But this means the
+ practice of courtesy, and we haven't acquired the habit. Two years
+ or more ago the training ships from Annapolis with the cadets
+ aboard anchored down the Thames and stayed several weeks and let
+ the boys loose in England. They go on such a voyage every two years
+ to some country, you know. The English didn't know that fact and
+ they took the visit as a special compliment. Their old admirals
+ were all greatly pleased, and I hear talk about that yet. We ought
+ to have two or three of our rear-admirals here on their fleet now.
+ Symington, of course, is a good fellow; but he's a mere commander
+ and attache--not an admiral--in other words, not any particular
+ compliment or courtesy to the British Navy. (As soon as the war
+ began, a Japanese admiral turned up here and he is here now.) We
+ sent over two army captains as military observers. The Russians
+ sent a brigadier-general. We ought to have sent General Wood. You
+ see the difference? There was no courtesy in our method. It would
+ be the easiest and prettiest job in the world to swallow the whole
+ British organization, lock, stock, and barrel--King, Primate,
+ Cabinet, Lords, and Commons, feathers and all, and to make 'em
+ follow our _courteous_ lead anywhere. The President had them in
+ this mood when the war started and for a long time after--till the
+ _Lusitania_ seemed to be forgotten and till the lawyers began to
+ write his Notes. He can get 'em back, after the war ends, by
+ several acts of courtesy--if we could get into the habit of doing
+ such things as sending generals and admirals as compliments to
+ them. The British Empire is ruled by a wily use of courtesies and
+ decorations. If I had the President himself to do the
+ correspondence, if I had three or four fine generals and admirals
+ and a good bishop or two, a thoroughbred senator or two and now and
+ then a Supreme Court Justice to come on proper errands and be
+ engineered here in the right way--we could do or say anything we
+ liked and they'd do whatever we'd say. I'd undertake to underwrite
+ the whole English-speaking world to keep peace, under our
+ leadership. Instead whereof, every move we now make is to _follow_
+ them or to _drive_ them. The latter is impossible, and the former
+ is unbecoming to us.
+
+ But to return to Christmas.--I could go on writing for a week in
+ this off-hand, slap-dash way, saying wise things flippantly. But
+ Christmas--that's the thing now. Christmas! What bloody irony it is
+ on this side the world! Still there will be many pleasant and
+ touching things done. An Englishman came in to see me the other day
+ and asked if I'd send $1,000 to Gerard[25] to use in making the
+ English prisoners in Germany as happy as possible on Christmas
+ Day--only I must never tell anybody who did it. A lady came on the
+ same errand--for the British prisoners in Turkey, and with a less
+ but still a generous sum. The heroism, the generosity, the
+ endurance and self-restraint and courtesy of these people would
+ melt a pyramid to tears. Of course there are yellow dogs among 'em,
+ here and there; but the genuine, thoroughbred English man or woman
+ is the real thing--one of the realest things in this world. So
+ polite are they that not a single English person has yet mentioned
+ our Note to me--not one.
+
+ But every one I've met for two days has mentioned the sending of
+ Von Papen and Boy-Ed[26] home--not that they expect us to get into
+ the war, but because they regard this action as maintaining our
+ self-respect.
+
+ Nor do they neglect other things because of the war. I went to the
+ annual dinner of the Scottish Corporation the other night-an
+ organization which for 251 years has looked after Scotchmen
+ stranded in London; and they collected $20,000 then and there.
+ There's a good deal of Christmas in 'em yet. One fellow in a little
+ patriotic speech said that the Government is spending twenty-five
+ million dollars a day to whip the Germans.--"Cheap work, very cheap
+ work. We can spend twice that if necessary. Why, gentlemen, we
+ haven't exhausted our pocket-change yet."
+
+ Somehow I keep getting away from Christmas. It doesn't stay put.
+ It'll be a memorable one here for its sorrows and for its grim
+ determination--an empty chair at every English table. But nowhere
+ in the world will it be different except in the small neutral
+ states here and in the lands on your side the world.
+
+ How many Christmases the war may last, nobody's wise enough to
+ know. That depends absolutely on Germany. The Allies announced
+ their terms ten months ago, and nothing has yet happened to make
+ them change them. That would leave the Germans with Germany and a
+ secure peace--no obliteration or any other wild nonsense, but only
+ a secure peace. Let 'em go back home, pay for the damage they've
+ done, and then stay there. I do hope that the actual fighting will
+ be ended by Christmas of next year. Of course it _may_ end with
+ dramatic suddenness at any time, this being the only way, perhaps,
+ for the Kaiser to save his throne. Or it may go on for two or three
+ years. My guess is that it'll end next year--a guess subject to
+ revision, of course, by events that can't be foreseen.
+
+ But as I said before--to come back to Christmas. Mrs. Page and I
+ send you and Mrs. House our affectionate good wishes and the hope
+ that you keep very well and very happy in your happy, prosperous
+ hemisphere. We do, I thank you. We haven't been better for
+ years--never before so busy, never, I think, so free from care. We
+ get plenty to eat (such as it is in this tasteless wet zone), at a
+ high cost, of course; we have comfortable beds and shoes (we spend
+ all our time in these two things, you know); we have good company,
+ enough to do (!!), no grievances nor ailments, no ill-will, no
+ disappointments, a keen interest in some big things--all the chips
+ are blue, you know; we don't feel ready for halos, nor for other
+ uncomfortable honours; we deserve less than we get and are content
+ with what the gods send. This, I take it, is all that Martin[27]
+ would call a comfortable mood for Christmas; and we are old enough
+ and tough enough to have thick armour against trouble. When Worry
+ knocks at the door, the butler tells him we're not at home.
+
+ And I see the most interesting work in the world cut out for me
+ for the next twenty-five or thirty years--to get such courtesy into
+ our dealings with these our kinsmen here, public and private--as
+ will cause them to follow us in all the developments of democracy
+ and-in keeping the peace of the world secure. I can't impress it on
+ you strongly enough that the English-speaking folk have got to set
+ the pace and keep this world in order. Nobody else is equal to the
+ job. In all our dealings with the British, public and private, we
+ allow it to be assumed that _they_ lead: they don't. _We_ lead.
+ They'll follow, if we do really lead and are courteous to them. If
+ we hold back, the Irishman rears up and says we are surrendering to
+ the English! Suppose we go ahead and the English surrender to us,
+ what can your Irishmen do then? Or your German? The British Navy is
+ a pretty good sort of dog to have to trot under your wagon. If we
+ are willing to have ten years of thoughtful good manners, I tell
+ you Jellicoe will eat out of your hand.
+
+ Therefore, cheer up! It's not at all improbable that Ford[28] and
+ his cargo of cranks, if they get across the ocean, may strike a
+ German mine in the North Sea. Then they'll die happy, as martyrs;
+ and the rest of us will live happy, and it'll be a Merry Christmas
+ for everybody.
+
+ Our love to Mrs. House.
+
+ Always heartily yours,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday and Others_
+
+ London, Christmas, 1915.
+
+ DEAR D.P. & Co.
+
+ ... Now, since we're talking about the war, let me deliver my
+ opinion and leave the subject. They're killing one another all
+ right; you needn't have any doubt about that--so many thousand
+ every day, whether there's any battle or not. When there's "nothing
+ to report" from France, that means the regular 5,000 casualties
+ that happen every day. There isn't any way of getting rid of men
+ that has been forgotten or neglected. Women and children, too, of
+ course, starve in Serbia and Poland and are massacred in Turkey.
+ England, though she has by very much the largest army she ever had,
+ has the smallest of all the big armies and yet I don't know a
+ family that had men of fighting age which hasn't lost one or more
+ members. And the worst is to come. But you never hear a complaint.
+ Poor Mr. Dent[29], for instance (two sons dead), says: "It's all
+ right. England must be saved."
+
+ And this Kingdom alone, as you know, is spending twenty-five
+ million dollars a day. The big loan placed in the United States[30]
+ would last but twenty days! if this pace of slaughter and of
+ spending go on long enough, there won't be any men or any money
+ left on this side the world. Yet there will be both left, of
+ course; for somehow things never quite go to the ultimate smash
+ that seems to come. Read the history of the French Revolution. How
+ did the French nation survive?
+
+ It will go on, unless some unexpected dramatic military event end
+ it, for something like another year at least--many say for two
+ years more, and some, three years more. It'll stop, of course,
+ whenever Germany will propose terms that the Allies can
+ consider--or something near such terms; and it won't stop before.
+ By blockade pressure and by fighting, the Allies are gradually
+ wearing the Germans out. We can see here the gradual pressure of
+ events in that direction. My guess is that they won't go into a
+ third winter.
+
+ Well, dear gentlemen, however you may feel about it, that's enough
+ for me. My day--every day--is divided into these parts: (1) two to
+ three hours listening to Americans or their agents here whose
+ cargoes are stopped, to sorrowing American parents whose boys have
+ run away and gone into the English Army, to nurses and doctors and
+ shell makers who wish to go to France, to bereaved English men and
+ women whose sons are "missing": can I have them found in Germany?
+ (2) to answering letters about these same cheerful subjects; (3) to
+ going over cases and documents prepared about all these sorts of
+ troubles and forty other sorts, by the eight or ten secretaries of
+ the Embassy, and a conference with every one of them; (4) the
+ reading of two books of telegrams, one incoming, the other
+ outgoing, and the preparation of a lot of answers; (5) going to the
+ Foreign Office, not every day but often, to discuss more troubles
+ there; (6) home to dinner at 8 o'clock--at home or somewhere else,
+ and there is more talk about the war or about the political
+ troubles. That for a regular daily routine for pretty nearly a year
+ and a half! As I say, if anybody is keeping the war up for my
+ entertainment, he now has my permission to stop. No time to read,
+ no time to write, little time to think, little or no time to see
+ the people you most wish to see, I often don't know the day of the
+ week or of the month: it's a sort of life in the trenches, without
+ the immediate physical danger. Then I have my cabinet meetings, my
+ financial reports (money we spend for four governments: I had till
+ recently about a million dollars subject to my check); then the
+ commission for the relief of Belgium; then the Ambassadors and
+ Ministers of the other neutral states--our task is worse than war!
+
+ Well, praise God for sleep. I get from seven to nine hours a night,
+ unbroken; and I don't take Armageddon to bed with me.
+
+ I don't mind telling _you_ (nobody else) that the more I see just
+ how great statesmen work and manage great governments--the more I
+ see of them at close range--whether in Washington or London or
+ Berlin or Vienna or Constantinople (for these are _my_ Capitals),
+ the more I admire the methods of the Long Island farmers. Boys, I
+ swear I could take our crowd and do a better job than many of these
+ great men do. I have to spend a lot of time to correct their moves
+ before the other fellow finds out the mistake. For instance I know
+ I spent $2,000 in telegrams before I could make the German
+ Government understand the British military age, and the British
+ Government understand the German military age, for exchanging
+ prisoners who had lost two legs or arms or both eyes; and I've had
+ to send a man to Berlin to get a financial report from one man on
+ one floor of a building there and to take it to another man on the
+ floor above. Just yesterday I was reminded that I had made eighteen
+ requests for the same information of the British Government, when
+ the nineteenth request for it came from Washington; and I have now
+ telegraphed that same thing nineteen times since the war began. Of
+ course everybody's worked to death. But something else ails a lot
+ of 'em all the way from Constantinople to London. Leaving out
+ common gutter lying (and there's much of it) the sheer stupidity of
+ governments is amazing. They are all so human, so mighty human! I
+ wouldn't be a government for any earthly consideration. I'd rather
+ be a brindled dog and trot under the wagon.
+
+ But it has been an inexpressibly interesting experience to find all
+ this out for myself. There's a sort of weary satisfaction in
+ feeling that you've seen too much of them to be fooled by 'em any
+ more. And, although most men now engaged in this game of government
+ are mere common mortals with most of the common mortal weaknesses,
+ now and then a really big man does stumble into the business. I
+ have my doubts whether a really big man ever deliberately goes into
+ it. And most of the men who the crowd for the moment thinks are big
+ men don't really turn out so. It's a game like bull fighting. The
+ bull is likely to kill you--pretty sure to do so if you keep at the
+ business long enough; but in the meantime you have some exciting
+ experiences and the applause of the audience. When you get killed,
+ they forget you--immediately. There are two rather big men in this
+ Government, and you wouldn't guess in three rounds who they are.
+ But in general the war hasn't so far developed very big men in any
+ country. Else we are yet too close to them to recognize their
+ greatness. Joffre seems to have great stuff in him; and (I assure
+ you) you needn't ever laugh at a Frenchman again. They are a great
+ people. As for the British, there was never such a race. It's
+ odd--I hear that it happens just now to be the fashion in the
+ United States to say that the British are not doing their share.
+ There never was a greater slander. They absolutely hold the Seven
+ Seas. They have caught about seventy submarines and some of them
+ are now destroying German ships in the Baltic Sea. They've sent to
+ France by several times the largest army that any people ever sent
+ over the sea. They are financing most of their allies and they have
+ turned this whole island into gun and shell factories. They made a
+ great mistake at the Dardanelles and they are slower than death to
+ change their set methods. But no family in the land, from charcoal
+ burners to dukes, hesitates one moment to send its sons into the
+ army. When the news comes of their death, they never whimper. When
+ you come right down to hard facts, the courage and the endurance of
+ the British and the French excel anything ever before seen on this
+ planet. All the old stories of bravery from Homer down are outdone
+ every day by these people. I see these British at close range,
+ full-dress and undress; and I've got to know a lot of 'em as well
+ as we can ever come to know anybody after we get grown. There is
+ simply no end to the silly sides of their character. But, when the
+ real trial comes, they don't flinch; and (except the thoroughbred
+ American) there are no such men in the world.
+
+ A seven-foot Kansas lawyer (Kansas all over him) came to see me
+ yesterday. He came here a month ago on some legal business. He told
+ me yesterday that he had always despised Englishmen. He's seen a
+ few with stud-horse clothes and white spats and monocles on who had
+ gone through Kansas to shoot in the Rocky Mountains. He couldn't
+ understand 'em and he didn't like 'em. "So infernally uppish," said
+ he.
+
+ "Well, what do you think of 'em now?"
+
+ "The very best people in the world," said he. I think he has a
+ notion of enlisting!
+
+ You're still publishing books, I hear. That's a good occupation.
+ I'd like to be doing it myself. But I can't even get time to read
+ 'em now.
+
+ But, as you know, nobody's writing anything but war books--from
+ Kipling to Hall Caine. Poor Kipling!--his boy's dead. I have no
+ doubt of it. I've had all the German hospitals and prison camps
+ searched for him in vain. These writing men and women, by the way,
+ are as true blue and as thoroughbred as any other class. I can
+ never forget Maurice Hewlett's brave behaviour when he thought that
+ his flying corps son had been killed by the Germans or drowned at
+ sea. He's no prig, but a real man. And the women are as fine as the
+ men....
+
+ To go back to books: Of course nobody can tell what effect the war
+ will have on the writing of them, nor what sort of new writers may
+ come up. You may be sure that everything is stirred to its
+ profoundest depths and will be stirred still more. Some old stagers
+ will be laid on the shelf; that's certain. What sort of new ones
+ will come? I asked H.G. Wells this question. He has promised to
+ think it out and tell me. He has the power to guess some things
+ very well. I'll put that question to Conrad when I next see him.
+
+ Does anybody in the United States take the Prime Minister, Mr.
+ Asquith, to be a great man? His wife is a brilliant woman; and she
+ has kept a diary ever since he became Prime Minister; and he now
+ has passed the longest single term in English history. Mr. Dent
+ thinks he's the biggest man alive, and Dent has some mighty good
+ instincts.
+
+ Talk about troubles! Think of poor Northcliffe. He thinks he's
+ saved the nation from its miserable government, and the government
+ now openly abuses him in the House of Commons. Northcliffe puts on
+ his brass knuckles and turns the _Times_ building upside down and
+ sets all the _Daily Mail_ machine guns going, and has to go to bed
+ to rest his nerves, while the row spreads and deepens. The
+ Government keeps hell in the prayer-book because without it they
+ wouldn't know what to do with Northcliffe; and Northcliffe is just
+ as sure that he has saved England as he is sure the Duke of
+ Wellington did.
+
+ To come back to the war. (We always do.) Since I wrote the first
+ part of this letter, I spent an evening with a member of the
+ Cabinet and he told me so much bad military news, which they
+ prevent the papers from publishing or even hearing, that to-night I
+ almost share this man's opinion that the war will last till 1918.
+ That isn't impossible. If that happens the offer that I heard a
+ noble old buck make to a group of ladies the other night may be
+ accepted. This old codger is about seventy-five, ruddy and saucy
+ yet. "My dear ladies," said he, "if the war goes on and on we shall
+ have no young men left. A double duty will fall on the old fellows.
+ I shall be ready, when the need comes, to take four extra wives,
+ and I daresay there are others of my generation who are as
+ patriotic as I am."
+
+ All of which is only my long-winded, round-about diplomatic way of
+ wishing you every one and every one of yours and all the folk in
+ the office, their assigns, superiors, dependents, companions in
+ labour--all, everyone and sundry, the happiest of Christmases; and
+ when you take stock of your manifold blessings, don't forget to be
+ thankful for the Atlantic Ocean. That's the best asset of safety
+ that we have.
+
+ Affectionately yours,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Mrs. Charles G. Loring_
+
+ 6 Grosvenor Square,
+
+ London, December 7, 1915.
+
+ DEAR KITTY:
+
+ This is my Christmas letter to you and Chud--a poor thing, but the
+ best I have to give you. At least it carries my love, dear, and my
+ wishes that every Christmas under your own roof will be happier
+ than the preceding one. Since your starting point is on the high
+ level of your first Christmas in your own home--that's a good wish:
+ isn't it?
+
+ I'm beginning to think a good deal of your mother and me. Here we
+ are left alone by every one of you--in a foreign land; and,
+ contrary to all predictions that any of you would have made about
+ us four or five years ago, we're faring pretty well, thank you, and
+ not on the edge of dying of loneliness at all. I tell you, I think
+ we're pretty brave and hardy.
+
+ We're even capable of becoming cocky and saucy to every one of you.
+ Be careful, then.
+
+ You see if you have a war to live with you don't necessarily need
+ children: you'll have strife enough without 'em. We'll console
+ ourselves with such reflections as these.
+
+ And the truth is--at least about me--that there isn't time to think
+ of what you haven't got. Of course, I'm working, as always, to
+ soften the relations between these two governments. So far, in
+ spite of the pretty deep latent feeling on both sides--far worse
+ than it ought to be and far worse than I wish it were--I'm working
+ all the time to keep things as smooth as possible. Happily, nobody
+ can prove it, but I believe it, that there is now and there has
+ been all along more danger of a serious misunderstanding than
+ anybody has known. The Germans have, of course, worked in 1000 ways
+ to cause misunderstanding between England and the United States.
+ Then, of course, there has been constant danger in the English
+ bull-headed insularity which sees nothing but the Englishman's
+ immediate need, and in the English slowness. Add to these causes
+ the American ignorance of war and of European conditions. It has
+ been a God's mercy for us that we have so far had a man like Sir
+ Edward Grey in his post. And in my post, while there might well
+ have been a better man, this much at least has been lucky--that I
+ do have a consciousness of English history and of our common
+ origin and some sense of the inevitable destiny of the great
+ English-speaking race--so that, when we have come to sharp corners
+ in the road, I have known that whatever happen we must travel in
+ the right general direction--have known that no temporary
+ difference must be allowed to assume a permanent quality. I have
+ thought several times that we had passed the worst possible place,
+ and then a still worse one would appear. It does look now as if we
+ had faced most of the worst difficulties that can come, but I am
+ not sure what Congress may do or provoke. If we outlast Congress,
+ we shall be safe. Now to come through this enormous war even with
+ no worse feeling than already exists between the two
+ countries--that'll be a big thing to have done. But it's work like
+ the work of the English fleet. Nobody can prove that Jellicoe has
+ been a great admiral. Yet the fleet has done the whole job more
+ successfully than if it had had sea-fights and lost a part of their
+ ships.
+
+ Our Note has left a great deal of bad feeling--suppressed, but
+ existent. A part of it was inevitable and (I'd say) even necessary.
+ But we put in a lot of things that seem to me to be merely
+ disputatious, and we didn't write it in the best form. It
+ corresponds to what you once called _suburban_: do you remember?
+ Not thoroughbred. But we'll get over even that, especially if the
+ Administration and the courts continue to bring the Germans to book
+ who are insulting our dignity and destroying our property and
+ killing Americans. If we can satisfactorily settle the _Lusitania_
+ trouble, the whole outlook will be very good.
+
+ Your mother and I are hearing much interesting political talk. We
+ dined last night with Mr. Bonar Law. Sir Edward Carson was there.
+ To-day we lunched with Lady P.--the other side, you see. There are
+ fundamental differences continually arising. They thought a few
+ weeks ago that they had the Prime Minister's scalp. He proved too
+ nimble for them. Now one person after another says to you:
+ "Kitchener doesn't deserve the reverence the people give him." More
+ and more folks say he's hard to work with--is domineering and
+ selfish. Nobody seems really to know him; and there are some signs
+ that there may be a row about him.
+
+ We've heard nothing from Harold in quite a little while. We have,
+ you know, three of our footmen in the war. Allen was wounded at
+ Loos--a flesh, bullet-wound. He's about well now and is soon going
+ back. Leslie is in the trenches and a postal card came from him the
+ other day. The third one, Philip, is a prisoner in Germany. Your
+ mother sent him a lot of things, but we've never heard whether he
+ received them or not. The general strain--military, political,
+ financial--gets greater. The streets are darker than ever. The
+ number of wounded increases rapidly. More houses are turned into
+ hospitals. The Manchesters', next door, is a hospital now. And
+ everybody fears worse days are to come. But they have no nerves,
+ these English. They grit their teeth, but they go on bravely,
+ enduring everything. We run into experiences every day that melt
+ you, and the heroic things we hear outnumber and outdo all the
+ stories in all the books.
+
+ I keep forgetting Xmas, Kitty, and this is my Xmas letter. You
+ needn't put it in your stocking, but you'd really better burn it
+ up. It would be the ruination of the world if my frank comments got
+ loose. It's for you and Chud only. You may fill your stocking full
+ of the best wishes you ever received--enough to fill the polar bear
+ skin. And I send you both my love.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Ralph W., Arthur 147., and Frank C. Page_[31]
+
+ London, Christmas, 1915.
+
+ DEAR Boys: R.W.P., A.W.P., F.C.P.
+
+ A Merry Christmas to you! Good cheer, good company, good food, good
+ fires, good golf. I suppose (though the Lord only knows) that I'll
+ have to be here another Christmas; but another after that? Not on
+ your life!
+
+ I think I'm as cheerful and hopeful as I ever was, but this
+ experience here and the war have caused my general confidence in
+ the orderly progress of civilization somewhat to readjust itself. I
+ think that any man who looks over the world and who knows something
+ of the history of human society--I mean any American who really
+ believes in democracy and in human progress--is somewhat saddened
+ to see the exceeding slowness of that progress. In the early days
+ of our Republic hopeful Americans held the opinion that the other
+ countries of the world would follow our example; that is to say,
+ would educate the people, would give the masses a chance to become
+ real men, would make their governments and institutions serve the
+ people, would dispense with kings and gross privileges and become
+ free. Well, they haven't done it. France is nominally a republic,
+ but the masses of its people are far, far backward. Switzerland
+ _is_ a republic, but a very small one. Denmark is a very free
+ state, in spite of its monarchical form of government. In South
+ America they think they have republics, but they haven't the
+ slightest idea of the real education and freedom of the people.
+ Practically, therefore, the United States and the self-governing
+ British colonies are the only really free countries of much
+ importance in the whole world--these and this Kingdom. Our example
+ hasn't been followed. In Europe, Germany and Russia in particular
+ have monarchs who are in absolute command. Thus on both sides the
+ world, so far as government and the danger of war are concerned,
+ there hasn't been very much real progress in five hundred years.
+
+ This is a little disappointing. And it means, of course, that we
+ are likely to have periodical earthquakes like this present one
+ till some radical change come. Republics have their faults, no
+ doubt. But they have at least this virtue: that no country where
+ the people really have the control of their government is likely to
+ start out deliberately on any war of conquest--is not likely to run
+ amuck--and will not regard its population as mere food for shell
+ and powder.
+
+ Nor do I believe that our example of our government has, relatively
+ to our strength and wealth and population, as much influence in the
+ world as we had one hundred years ago. Our people have no foreign
+ consciousness and I know that our government knows almost nothing
+ about European affairs; nor do our people know. As regards foreign
+ affairs our government lacks proper machinery. Take this as an
+ illustration: The President wrote vigorous and proper notes about
+ the _Lusitania_ and took a firm stand with Germany. Germany has
+ paid no attention to the _Lusitania_ outrage. Yet (as I understand
+ it) the people will not run the risk of war--or the Administration
+ thinks they will not--and hence the President can do nothing to
+ make his threat good. Therefore we stand in a ridiculous situation;
+ and nobody cares how many notes we write. I don't know that the
+ President could have done differently--unless, before he sent the
+ _Lusitania_ notes, he had called Congress together and submitted
+ his notes to Congress. But, as the matter stands, the Germans are
+ merely encouraged to blow up factories and practically to carry on
+ war in the United States, because they know we can (or will) do
+ nothing. Mere notes break nobody's skin.
+
+ We don't seem to have any machinery to bring any influence to bear
+ on foreign governments or on foreign opinion; and, this being so,
+ it is little wonder that the rest of the world does not follow our
+ republican example.
+
+ And this sort of impotence in influence has curious effects at
+ home. For example, the ship-purchase bill, as it was at the last
+ session of Congress, was an economic crime. See what has happened:
+ We have waked up to the fact that we must have a big navy. Well, a
+ navy is of no far-fighting value unless we have auxiliary ships and
+ a lot of 'em. Admiral Jellicoe has 3,000 ships under his command;
+ and he couldn't keep his fleet on the job if he didn't have them.
+ Most of them are commandeered merchant, passenger, and fishing
+ ships. Now we haven't merchant, passenger, and fishing ships to
+ commandeer. We've got to build and buy auxiliary ships to our navy.
+ This, to my mind, makes the new ship-purchase bill, or something
+ like it, necessary. Else our navy, when it comes to the scratch,
+ will be of no fighting value, however big it be. It's the price
+ we've got to pay for not having built up a merchant marine. And we
+ haven't built up a merchant marine because we've had no foreign
+ consciousness. While our Irishmen have been leading us to twist the
+ Lion's tail, we've been depending almost wholly on English
+ ships--and, in late years, on German ships. You can't cross the
+ ocean yet in a decent American ship. You see, we've declared our
+ independence; and, so far as individual development goes, we've
+ worked it out. But the governmental machinery for maintaining it
+ and for making it visible to the world--we've simply neglected to
+ build it or to shape it. Hence the President's notes hurt nobody
+ and accomplish nothing; nor could our navy put up a real fight, for
+ lack of colliers and supply ships. It's the same way all around the
+ horizon. And these are the reasons we haven't made our democracy
+ impress the world more.
+
+ A democracy is not a quick-trigger war-engine and can't be made
+ into one. When the quick-trigger engines get to work, they forget
+ that a democracy does not consider fighting the first duty of man.
+ You can bend your energies to peaceful pursuits or you can bend
+ them to war. It's hard to do both at the same time. The Germans are
+ the only people who have done both at the same time; and even they
+ didn't get their navy big enough for their needs.
+
+ When the infernal thing's over--that'll be a glad day; and the
+ European world won't really know what it has cost in men and money
+ and loss of standards till it is over....
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Walter H. Page, Jr._[32].
+
+ London, Christmas, 1915.
+
+ SIR:
+
+ For your first Christmas, I have the honour to send you my most
+ affectionate greetings; and in wishing you all good health, I take
+ the liberty humbly to indicate some of the favours of fortune that
+ I am pleased to think I enjoy in common with you.
+
+ _First_--I hear with pleasure that you are quite well content with
+ yourself--not because of a reasoned conviction of your own worth,
+ which would be mere vanity and unworthy of you, but by reason of a
+ philosophical disposition. It is too early for you to bother over
+ problems of self-improvement--as for me it is too late; wherefore
+ we are alike in the calm of our self-content. What others may think
+ or say about us is a subject of the smallest concern to us.
+ Therefore they generally speak well of us; for there is little
+ satisfaction in speaking ill of men who care nothing for your
+ opinion of them. Then, too, we are content to be where we happen to
+ be--a fact that we did not order in the beginning and need not now
+ concern ourselves about. Consider the eternal coming and going of
+ folk. On every road many are travelling one way and an equal number
+ are travelling the other way. It is obvious that, if they were all
+ content to remain at the places whence they set forth, the
+ distribution of the population would be the same. Why therefore
+ move hither and yon at the cost of much time and labour and money,
+ since nothing is accomplished thereby? We spare ourselves by being
+ content to remain where we are. We thereby have the more time for
+ reflection. Nor can we help observing with a smile that all persons
+ who have good reasons to see us themselves make the necessary
+ journey after they discover that we remain fixed.
+
+ Again, people about us are continually doing this service and that
+ for some other people--running errands, mending fences, bearing
+ messages, building, and tearing down; and they all demand equal
+ service in return. Thus a large part of mankind keeps itself in
+ constant motion like bubbles of water racing around a pool at the
+ foot of a water-fall--or like rabbits hurrying into their warrens
+ and immediately hurrying out again. Whereas, while these antics
+ amuse and sadden us, we for the most part remain where we are.
+ Hence our wants are few; they are generally most courteously
+ supplied without our asking; or, if we happen to be momentarily
+ forgotten, we can quickly secure anything in the neighbourhood by a
+ little judicious squalling. Why, then, should we whirl as bubbles
+ or scurry as rabbits? Our conquering self-possession gives a
+ masterful charm to life that the victims of perpetual locomotion
+ never seem to attain.
+
+ You have discovered, and my experience confirms yours, that a
+ perpetual self-consciousness brings most of the misery of the
+ world. Men see others who are richer than they; or more famous, or
+ more fortunate--so they think; and they become envious. You have
+ not reached the period of such empty vanity, and I have long passed
+ it. Let us, therefore, make our mutual vows not to be disturbed by
+ the good luck or the good graces of others, but to continue,
+ instead, to contemplate the contented cat on the rug and the
+ unenvious sky that hangs over all alike.
+
+ This mood will continue to keep our lives simple. Consider our
+ diet. Could anything be simpler or better? We are not even tempted
+ by the poisonous victuals wherewith mankind destroys itself. The
+ very first sound law of life is to look to the belly; for it is
+ what goes into a man that ruins him. By avoiding murderous food, we
+ may hope to become centenarians. And why not? The golden streets
+ will not be torn up and we need be in no indecent haste to travel
+ even on them. The satisfactions of this life are just beginning for
+ us; and we shall be wise to endure this world for as long a period
+ as possible.
+
+ And sleep is good--long sleep and often; and your age and mine
+ permit us to indulge in it without the sneers of the lark or the
+ cock or the dawn.
+
+ I pray you, sir, therefore, accept my homage as the philosopher
+ that you are and my assurance of that high esteem indicated by my
+ faithful imitation of your virtues. I am,
+
+ With the most distinguished consideration,
+ With the sincerest esteem, and
+ With the most affectionate good wishes,
+ Sir,
+ Your proud,
+ Humble,
+ Obedient
+ GRANDDADDY.
+
+To Master Walter Hines Page,
+
+On Christmas, 1915.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 23: By William Roscoe Thayer, published in 1915.]
+
+[Footnote 24: The Ambassador had in mind _The Round Table_.]
+
+[Footnote 25: James W. Gerard, American Ambassador to Germany, and, as
+such, in charge of British interests in Germany.]
+
+[Footnote 26: The German military and naval attaches, whose persistent
+and outrageous violation of American laws led to their dismissal by
+President Wilson.]
+
+[Footnote 27: E.S. Martin, Editor of _Life_.]
+
+[Footnote 28: Mr. Henry Ford at this time was getting together his
+famous peace ship, which was to sail to Europe "to get the boys out of
+the trenches by Christmas."]
+
+[Footnote 29: J.M. Dent, the London publisher.]
+
+[Footnote 30: $500,000,000.]
+
+[Footnote 31: The Ambassador's Sons.]
+
+[Footnote 32: The Ambassador's infant grandson, son of Arthur W. Page.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+A PERPLEXED AMBASSADOR
+
+
+The beginning of the new year saw no improvement in German-American
+relations. Germany and Austria continued to violate the pledge given by
+Bernstorff after the sinking of the _Arabic_--if that shifty statement
+could be regarded as a "pledge." On November 7, 1915, the Austrians sank
+the _Ancona_, in the Mediterranean, drowning American citizens under
+conditions of particular atrocity, and submarine attacks on merchant
+ships, without the "warning" or attempt to save passengers and crew
+which Bernstorff had promised, took place nearly every day. On April 18,
+1916, the _Sussex_ was torpedoed in the English Channel, without warning
+and with loss of American life. This caused what seemed to be a real
+crisis; President Wilson sent what was practically an ultimatum to
+Germany, demanding that it "immediately declare and effect an
+abandonment of its present methods of warfare against passenger and
+freight carrying vessels," declaring that, unless it did so, the United
+States would sever diplomatic relations with the German Empire. In
+reply, Germany apparently backed down and gave the promise the President
+had demanded. However, it coupled this concession with an expression of
+its expectation that the United States would compel Great Britain to
+observe international law in the blockade. As this latter statement
+might be interpreted as a qualification of its surrender, the incident
+hardly ended satisfactorily.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Bournemouth
+
+ May 22, 1916.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ I stick on the back of this sheet a letter that Sydney Brooks wrote
+ from New York (May 1st) to the _Daily Mail_. He formulates a
+ question that we have many times asked ourselves and that, in one
+ way or other, comes into everybody's mind here. Of course the
+ common fellow in Jonesville who has given most of his time and
+ energy to earning a living for his wife and children has no foreign
+ consciousness, whether his Jonesville be in the United States or in
+ England or in France or in Zanzibar. The real question is, _Do_
+ these fellows in Jonesville make up the United States? or has there
+ been such a lack of prompt leadership as to make all the Jonesville
+ people confused? It's hard for me to judge at this distance just
+ how far the President has led and just how far he has waited and
+ been pushed along. Suppose he had stood on the front steps every
+ morning before breakfast for a month after the _Lusitania_ went
+ down and had called to the people in the same tone that he used in
+ his note to Germany--had sounded a bugle call--would we have felt
+ as we now feel? What would the men in Jonesville have done then?
+ Would they have got their old guns down from over the doors? Or do
+ they so want peace and so think that they can have peace always
+ that they've lost their spine? Have they really been Bryanized,
+ Fordized, Janeaddamsized, Sundayschooled, and Chautauquaed into
+ supine creatures to whom the United States and the ideals of the
+ Fathers mean nothing? Who think a German is as good as an
+ Englishman? Who have no particular aims or aspirations for our
+ country and for democracy? When T.R. was in the White House he
+ surely was an active fellow. He called us to exercise ourselves
+ every morning. He bawled "Patriotism" loudly. We surely thought we
+ were awake during those strenuous years. Were we really awake or
+ did we only look upon him and his antics as a sort of good show?
+ All that time Bryan was peace-a-footing and prince-of-peacing. Now
+ did he really have the minds of the people or did T.R.?
+
+ If we've really gone to sleep and if the United States stands for
+ nothing but personal comfort and commercialism to our own people,
+ what a job you and the patriotic men of your generation have cut
+ out for you!
+
+ My own conviction (which I don't set great store by) is that our
+ isolation and prosperity have not gone so far in softening us as it
+ seems. They've gone a good way, no doubt; but I think that even the
+ Jonesville people yet feel their Americanism. What they need
+ is--leadership. Their Congressmen are poor, timid, pork-barrel
+ creatures. Their governors are in training for the Senate. The
+ Vice-President reads no official literature of the war, "because
+ then I might have a conviction about it and that wouldn't be
+ neutral." And so on. If the people had a _real_ leadership, I
+ believe they'd wake up even in Jonesville.
+
+ Well, let's let these things go for the moment. How's the
+ Ambassador[33]? And the Ambassador's mother and sister? They're
+ nice folks of whom and from whom I hear far too little. Give 'em my
+ love. I don't want you to rear a fighting family. But these kids
+ won't and mustn't grow up peace-cranks--not that anybody objects to
+ peace, but I do despise and distrust a crank, a crank about
+ anything. That's the lesson we've got to learn from these troubled
+ times. First, let cranks alone--the other side of the street is
+ good enough for them. Then, if they persist, I see nothing to do
+ but to kill 'em, and that's troublesome and inconvenient.
+
+ But, as I was saying, bless the babies. I can't begin to tell you
+ how very much I long to see them, to make their acquaintance, to
+ chuckle 'em and punch 'em and see 'em laugh, and to see just what
+ sort of kids they be.
+
+ I've written you how in my opinion there's no country in the world
+ fit for a modern gentleman and man-of-character to live in except
+ (1) the United States and (2) this island. And this island is
+ chiefly valuable for the breed of men--the right stock. They become
+ more valuable to the world after they go away from home. But the
+ right blood's here. This island's breed is the best there is. An
+ Englishman or a Scotchman is the best ancestor in this world, many
+ as his shortcomings are. Some Englishman asked me one night in
+ what, I thought, the Englishman appeared at his best. I said, "As
+ an ancestor to Americans!" And this is the fundamental reason why
+ we (two peoples) belong close together. Reasons that flow from
+ these are such as follows: (1) The race is the sea-mastering race
+ and the navy-managing race and the ocean-carrying race; (2) the
+ race is the literary race, (3) the exploring and settling and
+ colonizing race, (4) the race to whom fair play appeals, and (5)
+ that insists on individual development.
+
+ Your mother having read these two days 1,734 pages of memoirs of
+ the Coke family, one of whose members wrote the great law
+ commentaries, another carried pro-American votes in Parliament in
+ our Revolutionary times, refused peerages, defied kings and--begad!
+ here they are now, living in the same great house and saying and
+ doing what they darn please--we know this generation of 'em!--well,
+ your mother having read these two big volumes about the old ones
+ and told me 175 good stories out of these books, bless her soul!
+ she's gone to sleep in a big chair on the other side of the table.
+ Well she may, she walked for two hours this morning over hills and
+ cliffs and through pine woods and along the beach. I guess I'd
+ better wake her up and get her to go to bed--as the properer thing
+ to do at this time o'night, viz. 11. My golf this afternoon was too
+ bad to confess. But I must say that a 650 and a 730 yard hole
+ argues the audacity of some fellow and the despair of many more.
+ Nature made a lot of obstructions there and Man made more. It must
+ be seven or eight miles around that course! It's almost a three
+ hour task to follow my slow ball around it. I suggested we play
+ with howitzers instead of clubs. Good night!
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday and Others_
+
+ Royal Bath and East Cliff Hotel,
+ Bournemouth, May 29, 1916.
+
+ DEAR D.P. & Co.:
+
+ I always have it in mind to write you letters; but there's no
+ chance in my trenches in London; and, since I have not been out of
+ London for nearly two years--since the war began--only an
+ occasional half day and a night--till now--naturally I've concocted
+ no letter. I've been down here a week--a week of sunshine, praise
+ God--and people are not after me every ten minutes, or Governments
+ either; and my most admirable and efficient staff (now grown to one
+ hundred people) permit few letters and telegrams to reach me. There
+ never was a little rest more grateful. The quiet sea out my window
+ shows no sign of crawling submarines; and, in general, it's as
+ quiet and peaceful here as in Garden City itself.
+
+ I'm on the home-stretch now in all my thoughts and plans. Three of
+ my four years are gone, and the fourth will quickly pass. That's
+ not only the limit of my leave, but it's quite enough for me. I
+ shouldn't care to live through another such experience, if the
+ chance should ever come to me. It has changed my whole life and my
+ whole outlook on life; and, perhaps, you'd like to hear some
+ impressions that it has made upon me.
+
+ The first impression--perhaps the strongest--is a loss of permanent
+ interest in Europe, especially all Europe outside of this Kingdom.
+ I have never had the illusion that Europe had many things that we
+ needed to learn. The chief lesson that it has had, in my judgment,
+ is the lesson of the art of living--the comforts and the courtesies
+ of life, the refinements and the pleasures of conversation and of
+ courteous conduct. The upper classes have this to teach us; and we
+ need and can learn much from them. But this seems to me all--or
+ practically all. What we care most for are individual character,
+ individual development, and a fair chance for every human being.
+ Character, of course, the English have--immense character, colossal
+ character. But even they have not the dimmest conception of what we
+ mean by a fair chance for every human being--not the slightest. In
+ one thousand years they _may_ learn it from us. Now on the
+ continent, the only important Nation that has any character worth
+ mentioning is the French. Of course the little nations--some of
+ them--have character, such as Holland, Switzerland, Sweden, etc.
+ But these are all. The others are simply rotten. In giving a free
+ chance to every human creature, we've nothing to learn from
+ anybody. In character, I bow down to the English and Scotch; I
+ respect the Frenchman highly and admire his good taste. But, for
+ our needs and from our point of view, the English can teach us only
+ two great lessons--character and the art of living (if you are
+ rich).
+
+ The idea that we were brought up on, therefore, that Europe is the
+ home of civilization in general--nonsense! It's a periodical
+ slaughter-pen, with all the vices that this implies. I'd as lief
+ live in the Chicago stock-yards. There they kill beeves and pigs.
+ Here they kill men and (incidentally) women and children. I should
+ no more think of encouraging or being happy over a child of mine
+ becoming a European of any Nation than I should be happy over his
+ fall from Grace in any other way.
+
+ Our form of government and our scheme of society--God knows they
+ need improving--are yet so immeasurably superior, as systems, to
+ anything on this side the world that no comparison need be made.
+
+ My first strong impression, then, is not that Europe is
+ "effete"--that isn't it. It is mediaeval--far back toward the Dark
+ Ages, much of it yet uncivilized, held back by _inertia_ when not
+ held back by worse things. The caste system is a constant burden
+ almost as heavy as war itself and often quite as cruel.
+
+ The next impression I have is, that, during the thousand years that
+ will be required for Europe to attain real (modern) civilization,
+ wars will come as wars have always come in the past. The different
+ countries and peoples and governments will not and cannot learn the
+ lesson of federation and cooeperation so long as a large mass of
+ their people have no voice and no knowledge except of their
+ particular business. Compare the miles of railway in proportion to
+ population with the same proportion in the United States--or the
+ telephones, or the use of the mails, or of bank checks; or make any
+ other practical measure you like. Every time, you'll come back to
+ the discouraging fact that the masses in Europe are driven as
+ cattle. So long as this is true, of course, they'll be driven
+ periodically into wars. So many countries, so many races, so many
+ languages all within so small an area as Europe positively invite
+ deadly differences. If railroads had been invented before each
+ people had developed its own separate language, Europe could
+ somehow have been coordinated, linked up, federated, made to look
+ at life somewhat in the same way. As it is, wars will be bred here
+ periodically for about another thousand years. The devil of this
+ state of things is that they may not always be able to keep their
+ wars at home.
+
+ For me, then, except England and the smaller exceptions that I have
+ mentioned, Europe will cut no big figure in my life. In all the
+ humanities, we are a thousand years ahead of any people here. So
+ also in the adaptabilities and the conveniences of life, in its
+ versatilities and in its enjoyments. Most folk are stolid and sad
+ or dull on this side of the world. Else how could they take their
+ kings and silly ceremonies seriously?
+
+ Now to more immediate and definite impressions. I have for a year
+ had the conviction that we ought to get into the war--into the
+ economic war--for the following among many reasons.
+
+ 1. That's the only way to shorten it. We could cause Germany's
+ credit (such as she has) instantly to collapse, and we could hasten
+ her hard times at home which would induce a surrender.
+
+ 2. That's the only way we can have any real or important influence
+ in adjusting whatever arrangements can be made to secure peace.
+
+ 3. That's the best way we can inspire complete respect for us in
+ the minds of other nations and thereby, perhaps, save ourselves
+ from some wars in the future.
+
+ 4. That's the best way we can assert our own character--our
+ Americanism, and forever get rid of all kinds of hyphens.
+
+ 5. That's the only way we shall ever get a real and sensible
+ preparedness, which will be of enormous educational value even if
+ no military use should ever be made of our preparation.
+
+ 6. That's the only way American consciousness will ever get back to
+ the self-sacrificing and patriotic point of view of the Fathers of
+ the Republic.
+
+ 7. That's the best way to emancipate ourselves from cranks.
+
+ 8. That's the only way we'll ever awaken in our whole people a
+ foreign consciousness that will enable us to assert our natural
+ influence in the world--political, financial, social,
+ commercial--the best way to make the rest of the world our
+ customers and friends and followers.
+
+ All the foregoing I have fired at the Great White Chief for a year
+ by telegraph and by mail; and I have never fired it anywhere else
+ till now. Be very quiet, then. No man with whom I have talked or
+ whose writings I have read seems to me to have an adequate
+ conception of the colossal changes that the war is bringing and
+ will bring. Of course, I do not mean to imply that I have any
+ adequate conception. Nobody can yet grasp it. The loss of (say) ten
+ million men from production of work or wares or children; what a
+ changed world that fact alone will make! The presence in all Europe
+ of (perhaps) fifteen or twenty million more women than men will
+ upset the whole balance of society as regards the sexes. The loss
+ of most of the accumulated capital of Europe and the vast burdens
+ of debt for the future to pay will change the financial relations
+ of the whole world. From these two great losses--men and money--God
+ knows the many kinds of changes that will come. Women are doing and
+ will continue to do many kinds of work hitherto done by men.
+
+ Of course there are some great gains. Many a flabby or abject
+ fellow will come out of the war a real man: he'll be nobody's slave
+ thereafter. The criminal luxury of the rich will not assert itself
+ again for a time. The unparalleled addition to the world's heroic
+ deeds will be to the good of mankind, as the unparalleled suffering
+ has eclipsed all records. The survivors will be in an heroic mood
+ for the rest of their lives. In general, life will start on a new
+ plane and a lot of old stupid habits and old party quarrels and
+ class prejudices will disappear. To get Europe going again will
+ call for new resolution and a new sort of effort. Nobody can yet
+ see what far-reaching effects it will have on government.
+
+ If I could make the English and Scotch over, I could greatly
+ improve them. I'd cut out the Englishman's arrogance and key him up
+ to a quicker gait. Lord! he's a slow beast. But he's worked out the
+ germ and the beginning of all real freedom, and he has character.
+ He knows how to conserve and to use wealth. He's a great John Bull,
+ after all. And as for commanding the sea, for war or trade, you may
+ properly bow down to him and pay him homage. The war will, I think,
+ quicken him up. It will lessen his arrogance--to _us_, at least. I
+ think it will make him stronger and humbler. And, whatever his
+ virtues and his faults, he's the only Great Power we can go hand in
+ hand with....
+
+ These kinds of things have been going on now nearly two years, and
+ not till these ten days down here have I had time or chance or a
+ free mind to think them over; and now there's nothing in particular
+ to think--nothing but just to go on, doing these 40,000 things (and
+ they take a new turn every day) the best I can, without the
+ slightest regard to consequences. I've long ago passed the place
+ where, having acted squarely according to my best judgment, I can
+ afford to pay the slightest attention to what anybody thinks. I see
+ men thrown on the scrap heap every day. Many of them deserve it,
+ but a good many do not. In the abnormal state of mind that
+ everybody has, there are inevitable innocent misunderstandings,
+ which are as fatal as criminal mistakes. The diplomatic service is
+ peculiarly exposed to misunderstandings: and, take the whole
+ diplomatic service of all nations as shown up by this great strain,
+ it hasn't stood the test very well. I haven't the respect for it
+ that I had when I started. Yet, God knows, I have a keen sympathy
+ for it. I've seen some of 'em displaced; some of 'em lie down; some
+ of 'em die.
+
+ As I've got closer and closer to big men, as a rule they shrink up.
+ They are very much like the rest of us--many of 'em more so. Human
+ nature is stripped in these times of most of its disguises, and men
+ have to stand and be judged as a rule by their real qualities.
+ Among all the men in high place here, Sir Edward Grey stands out in
+ my mind bigger, not smaller, than he stood in the beginning. He's a
+ square, honourable gentleman, if there is one in this world. And it
+ is he, of course, with whom I have had all my troubles. It's been a
+ truly great experience to work and to quarrel with such a man.
+ We've kept the best friendship--a constantly ripening one. There
+ are others like him--only smaller.
+
+ Yet they are all in turn set upon by the press or public opinion
+ and hounded like criminals. They try (somebody tries) to drive 'em
+ out of office every once in a while. If there's anything I'm afraid
+ of, it's the newspapers. The correspondents are as thick as flies
+ in summer--all hunting sensations--especially the yellow American
+ press. I play the game with these fellows always squarely,
+ sometimes I fear indiscreetly. But what is discretion? That's the
+ hardest question of all. We have regular meetings. I tell 'em
+ everything I can--always on the condition that I'm kept out of the
+ papers. If they'll never mention me, I'll do everything possible
+ for them. Absolute silence of the newspapers (as far as I can
+ affect it) is the first rule of safety. So far as I know, we've
+ done fairly well; but always in proportion to silence. I don't want
+ any publicity. I don't want any glory. I don't want any office. I
+ don't want nothin'--but to do this job squarely, to get out of this
+ scrape, to go off somewhere in the sunshine and to see if I can
+ slip back into my old self and see the world sane again. Yet I'm
+ immensely proud that I have had the chance to do some good--to keep
+ our record straight--as far as I can, and to be of what service I
+ can to these heroic people.
+
+ Out of it all, one conviction and one purpose grows and becomes
+ clearer. The world isn't yet half-organized. In the United States
+ we've lived in a good deal of a fool's paradise. The world isn't
+ half so safe a place as we supposed. Until steamships and
+ telegraphs brought the nations all close together, of course we
+ could enjoy our isolation. We can't do so any longer. One mad fool
+ in Berlin has turned the whole earth topsy-turvy. We'd forgotten
+ what our forefathers learned--the deadly dangers of real monarchs
+ and of castes and classes. There are a lot of 'em left in the world
+ yet. We've grown rich and-weak; we've let cranks and old women
+ shape our ideas. We've let our politicians remain provincial and
+ ignorant.
+
+ And believe me, dear D.P. & Co. with affectionate greeting to every
+ one of you and to every one of yours, collectively and singly,
+
+ Yours heartily,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _Memorandum written after attending the service at St. Paul's in
+ memory of Lord Kitchener_[34].
+
+ American Embassy, London.
+
+ There were two Kitcheners, as every informed person knows--(1) the
+ popular hero and (2) the Cabinet Minister with whom it was
+ impossible for his associates to get along. He made his
+ administrative career as an autocrat dealing with dependent and
+ inferior peoples. This experience fixed his habits and made it
+ impossible for him to do team work or to delegate work or even to
+ inform his associates of what he had done or was doing. While,
+ therefore, his name raised a great army, he was in many ways a
+ hindrance in the Cabinet. First one thing and then another was
+ taken out of his hands--ordnance, munitions, war plans. When he
+ went to Gallipoli, some persons predicted that he would never come
+ back. There was a hot meeting of the Cabinet at which he was asked
+ to go to Russia, to make a sort of return visit for the visit that
+ important Russians had made here, and to link up Russia's military
+ plans with the plans of the Western Allies. He is said to have
+ remarked that he was going only because he had been ordered to go.
+ There was a hope and a feeling again that he might not come back
+ till after the war.
+
+ Now just how much truth there is in all this, one has to guess; but
+ undoubtedly a good deal. He did much in raising the army, but his
+ name did more. What an extraordinary situation! The great hero of
+ the Nation an impossible man to work with. The Cabinet could not
+ tell the truth about him: the people would not believe it and would
+ make the Cabinet suffer. Moreover, such a row would have given
+ comfort to the enemy. Kitchener, on his part, could not afford to
+ have an open quarrel. The only solution was to induce him to go
+ away for a long time. Both sides saw that. Such thoughts were in
+ everybody's mind while the impressive funeral service was said and
+ sung in St. Paul's. The Great Hero, who had failed, was celebrated
+ of course as a Great Hero--quite truly and yet far from true. For
+ him his death came at a lucky time: his work was done.
+
+ There is even a rumour, which I don't for a moment believe, that he
+ is alive on the Orkney Islands and prefers to disappear there till
+ the war ends. This is fantastic, and it was doubtless suggested by
+ the story that he did disappear for several years while he was a
+ young officer.
+
+ I could not help noticing, when I saw all the Cabinet together at
+ the Cathedral, how much older many of them look than they looked
+ two years ago. Sir Edward Grey, Mr. Asquith, Mr. Balfour, who is
+ really an old man, Lloyd George--each of these seems ten years
+ older. And so does the King. The men in responsible places who are
+ not broken by the war will be bent. General French, since his
+ retirement to command of the forces in England, seems much older.
+ So common is this quick aging that Lady Jellicoe, who went to
+ Scotland to see her husband after the big naval battle, wrote to
+ Mrs. Page in a sort of rhapsody and with evident surprise that the
+ Admiral really did not seem older! The weight of this thing is so
+ prodigious that it is changing all men who have to do with it. Men
+ and women (who do not wear mourning) mention the death of their
+ sons in a way that a stranger might mistake for indifference. And
+ it has a curious effect on marriages. Apparently every young fellow
+ who gets a week's leave from the trenches comes home and marries
+ and, of course, goes straight back--especially the young officers.
+ You see weddings all day as you pass the favourite churches; and
+ already the land is full of young widows.
+
+ _To Edwin A. Alderman_[35]
+
+ Embassy of the U.S.A., London,
+
+ June 22, 1916.
+
+ MY DEAR ED ALDERMAN:
+
+ I shall not forget how good you were to take time to write me a
+ word about the meeting of the Board--_the_ Board: there's no other
+ one in that class--at Hampton[36], and I did most heartily
+ appreciate the knowledge that you all remembered me. Alas! it's a
+ long, long time ago when we all met--so long ago that to me it
+ seems a part of a former incarnation. These three years--especially
+ these two years of the war--have changed my whole outlook on life
+ and foreshortened all that came before. I know I shall never link
+ back to many things (and alas! too, to many people) that once
+ seemed important and surely were interesting. Life in these
+ trenches (five warring or quarrelling governments mining and
+ sapping under me and shooting over me)--two years of universal
+ ambassadorship in this hell are enough--enough I say, even for a
+ man who doesn't run away from responsibilities or weary of toil.
+ And God knows how it has changed me and is changing me: I sometimes
+ wonder, as a merely intellectual and quite impersonal curiosity.
+
+ Strangely enough I keep pretty well--very well, in fact. Perhaps
+ I've learned how to live more wisely than I knew in the old days;
+ perhaps again, I owe it to my old grandfather who lived (and
+ enjoyed) ninety-four years. I have walked ten miles to-day and I
+ sit down as the clock strikes eleven (P.M.) to write this letter.
+
+ You will recall more clearly than I certain horrible, catastrophic,
+ universal-ruin passages in Revelation--monsters swallowing the
+ universe, blood and fire and clouds and an eternal crash, rolling
+ ruin enveloping all things--well, all that's come. There are,
+ perhaps, ten million men dead of this war and, perhaps, one hundred
+ million persons to whom death would be a blessing. Add to these as
+ many millions more whose views of life are so distorted that blank
+ idiocy would be a better mental outlook, and you'll get a hint (and
+ only a hint) of what the continent has already become--a bankrupt
+ slaughter-house inhabited by unmated women. We have talked of
+ "problems" in our day. We never had a problem; for the worst task
+ we ever saw was a mere blithe pastime compared with what these
+ women and the few men that will remain here must face. The hills
+ about Verdun are not blown to pieces worse than the whole social
+ structure and intellectual and spiritual life of Europe. I wonder
+ that anybody is sane.
+
+ Now we have swung into a period and a state of mind wherein all
+ this seems normal. A lady said to me at a dinner party (think of a
+ dinner party at all!), "Oh, how I shall miss the war when it ends!
+ Life without it will surely be dull and tame. What can we talk
+ about? Will the old subjects ever interest us again?" I said,
+ "Let's you and me try and see." So we talked about books--not war
+ books--old country houses that we both knew, gardens and gold and
+ what not; and in fifteen minutes we swung back to the war before we
+ were aware.
+
+ I get out of it, as the days rush by, certain fundamental
+ convictions, which seem to me not only true--true beyond any
+ possible cavil--truer than any other political things are true--and
+ far more important than any other contemporary facts whatsoever in
+ any branch of endeavour, but better worth while than anything else
+ that men now living may try to further:
+
+ 1. The cure for democracy is more democracy. The danger to the
+ world lies in autocrats and autocracies and privileged classes; and
+ these things have everywhere been dangerous and always will be.
+ There's no security in any part of the world where people cannot
+ think of a government without a king, and there never will be. You
+ cannot conceive of a democracy that will unprovoked set out on a
+ career of conquest. If all our religious missionary zeal and cash
+ could be turned into convincing Europe of this simple and obvious
+ fact, the longest step would be taken for human advancement that
+ has been taken since 1776. If Carnegie, or, after he is gone, his
+ Peace People could see this, his Trust might possibly do some good.
+
+ 2. As the world stands, the United States and Great Britain must
+ work together and stand together to keep the predatory nations in
+ order. A League to Enforce Peace and the President's idea of
+ disentangling alliances are all in the right direction, but vague
+ and general and cumbersome, a sort of bastard children of
+ Neutrality. _The_ thing, the _only_ thing is--a perfect
+ understanding between the English-speaking peoples. That's
+ necessary, and that's all that's necessary. We must boldly take the
+ lead in that. I frankly tell my friends here that the English have
+ got to throw away their damned arrogance and their insularity and
+ that we Americans have got to throw away our provincial ignorance
+ ("What is abroad to us?"), hang our Irish agitators and shoot our
+ hyphenates and bring up our children with reverence for English
+ history and in the awe of English literature. This is the only job
+ now in the world worth the whole zeal and energy of all
+ first-class, thoroughbred English-speaking men. _We_ must lead. We
+ are natural leaders. The English must be driven to lead. Item: We
+ must get their lads into our universities, ours into theirs. They
+ don't know how to do it, except the little driblet of Rhodes men.
+ Think this out, remembering what fools we've been about exchange
+ professors with Germany! How much good could Fons Smith[37] do in a
+ thousand years, on such an errand as he went on to Berlin? And the
+ English don't know _how_ to do it. They are childish (in some
+ things) beyond belief. An Oxford or Cambridge man never thinks of
+ going back to his university except about twice a lifetime when his
+ college formally asks him to come and dine. Then he dines as
+ docilely as a scared Freshman. I am a D.C.L. of Oxford. I know a
+ lot of their faculty. They are hospitality itself. But I've never
+ yet found out one important fact about the university. They never
+ tell me. I've been down at Cambridge time and again and stayed with
+ the Master of one of the colleges. I can no more get at what they
+ do and how they do it than I could get at the real meaning of a
+ service in a Buddhist Temple. I have spent a good deal of time with
+ Lord Rayleigh, who is the Chancellor of Cambridge University. He
+ never goes there. If he were to enter the town, all the men in the
+ university would have to stop their work, get on their parade-day
+ gowns, line-up by precedent and rank and go to meet him and go
+ through days of ceremony and incantations. I think the old man has
+ been there once in five years. Now this mediaevalism must go--or be
+ modified. You fellers who have universities must work a real
+ alliance--a big job here. But to go on.
+
+ The best informed English opinion is ripe for a complete working
+ understanding with us. We've got to work up our end--get rid of our
+ ignorance of foreign affairs, our shirt-sleeve, complaining kind of
+ diplomacy, our sport of twisting the lion's tail and such things
+ and fall to and bring the English out. It's the _one_ race in this
+ world that's got the guts.
+
+ Hear this in confirmation: I suppose 1,000 English women have been
+ to see me--as a last hope--to ask me to have inquiries made in
+ Germany about their "missing" sons or husbands, generally sons.
+ They are of every class and rank and kind, from marchioness to
+ scrubwoman. Every one tells her story with the same dignity of
+ grief, the same marvellous self-restraint, the same courtesy and
+ deference and sorrowful pride. Not one has whimpered--but one. And
+ it turned out that she was a Belgian. It's the breed. Spartan
+ mothers were theatrical and pinchbeck compared to these women.
+
+ I know a lady of title, very well to do, who for a year got up at
+ 5:30 and drove herself in her own automobile from her home in
+ London to Woolwich where she worked all day long in a shell factory
+ as a volunteer and got home at 8 o'clock at night. At the end of a
+ year they wanted her to work in a London place where they keep the
+ records of the Woolwich work. "Think of it," said she, as she shook
+ her enormous diamond ear-rings as I sat next to her at dinner one
+ Sunday night not long ago, "think of it--what an easy time I now
+ have. I don't have to start till half-past seven and I get home at
+ half-past six!"
+
+ I could fill forty pages with stories like these. This very Sunday
+ I went to see a bedridden old lady who sent me word that she had
+ something to tell me. Here it was: An English flying man's machine
+ got out of order and he had to descend in German territory. The
+ Germans captured him and his machine. They ordered him to take two
+ of their flying men in his machine to show them a particular place
+ in the English lines. He declined. "Very well, we'll shoot you,
+ then." At last he consented. The three started. The Englishman
+ quietly strapped himself in. There were no straps for the two
+ Germans. The Englishman looped-the-loop. The Germans fell out. The
+ Englishman flew back home. "My son has been to see me from France.
+ He told me that. He knows the man"--thus said the old lady and
+ thanked me for coming to hear it! She didn't know that the story
+ has been printed.
+
+ But the real question is, "How are you?" Do you keep strong? Able,
+ without weariness, to keep up your good work? I heartily hope so,
+ old man. Take good care of yourself--very.
+
+ My love to Mrs. Alderman. Please don't quote me--yet. I have to be
+ very silent publicly about everything. After March 4th, I shall
+ again be free.
+
+ Yours always faithfully,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 33: A playful reference to the Ambassador's infant grandson,
+Walter H. Page, Jr.]
+
+[Footnote 34: Drowned on the Hampshire, June 5, 1916, off the coast of
+Scotland.]
+
+[Footnote 35: President of the University of Virginia.]
+
+[Footnote 36: Hampton Institute, at Hampton, Va.]
+
+[Footnote 37: C. Alphonso Smith, Professor of English, U.S. Naval
+Academy; Roosevelt Professor at Berlin, 1910-11.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+WASHINGTON IN THE SUMMER OF 1916
+
+
+I
+
+In July Page received a cablegram summoning him to Washington. This
+message did not explain why his presence was desired, nor on this point
+was Page ever definitely enlightened, though there were more or less
+vague statements that a "change of atmosphere" might better enable the
+Ambassador to understand the problems which were then engrossing the
+State Department.
+
+The President had now only a single aim in view. From the date of the
+so-called _Sussex_ "pledge," May 4, 1916, until the resumption of
+submarine warfare on February 1, 1917, Mr. Wilson devoted all his
+energies to bringing the warring powers together and establishing peace.
+More than one motive was inspiring the president in this determination.
+That this policy accorded with his own idealistic tendencies is true,
+and that he aspired to a position in history as the great "peace maker"
+is probably the fact, but he had also more immediate and practical
+purposes in mind. Above all, Mr. Wilson was bent on keeping the United
+States out of the war; he knew that there was only one certain way of
+preserving peace in this country, and that was by bringing the war
+itself to an end. "An early peace is all that can prevent the Germans
+from driving us at last into the war," Page wrote at about this time;
+and this single sentence gives the key to the President's activities for
+the succeeding nine months. The negotiations over the _Sussex_ had
+taught Mr. Wilson this truth. He understood that the pledge which the
+German Government had made was only a conditional one; that the
+submarine campaign had been suspended only for the purpose of giving the
+United States a breathing spell during which it could persuade Great
+Britain and France to make peace.
+
+"I repeat my proposal," Bernstorff cabled his government on April
+26,[38] "to suspend the submarine war at least for the period of
+negotiations. This would remove all danger of a breach [with the United
+States] and also enable Wilson to continue his labours in his great plan
+of bringing about a peace based upon the freedom of the seas--i.e., that
+for the future trade shall be free from all interference in time of war.
+According to the assurances which Wilson, through House, has given me,
+he would in that case take in hand measures directly against England. He
+is, however, of the opinion that it would be easier to bring about peace
+than to cause England to abandon the blockade. This last could only be
+brought about by war and it is well known that the means of war are
+lacking here. A prohibition of exports as a weapon against the blockade
+is not possible as the prevailing prosperity would suffer by it.
+
+"The inquiries made by House have led Wilson to believe that our enemies
+would not be unwilling to consider peace. In view of the present
+condition of affairs, I repeat that there is only one possible course,
+namely, that Your Excellency [Von Jagow] empower me to declare that we
+will enter into negotiations with the United States touching the conduct
+of the submarine war while the negotiations are proceeding. This would
+give us the advantage that the submarine war, being over Mr. Wilson's
+head, like the sword of Damocles, would compel him at once to take in
+hand the task of mediation."
+
+This dispatch seems sufficiently to explain all the happenings of the
+summer and winter of 1916-1917. It was sent to Berlin on April 26th; the
+German Government gave the _Sussex_ "pledge" on May 4th, eight days
+afterward. In this reply Germany declared that she would now expect Mr.
+Wilson to bring pressure upon Great Britain to secure a mitigation or
+suspension of the British blockade, and to this Mr. Wilson promptly and
+energetically replied that he regarded the German promise as an
+unconditional one and that the Government of the United States "cannot
+for a moment entertain, much less discuss, a suggestion that respect by
+German naval authorities for the rights of citizens of the United States
+upon the high seas should in any way or in the slightest degree be made
+contingent upon the conduct of any other government affecting the rights
+of neutrals and non-combatants. Responsibility in such matters is single
+not joint; absolute not relative."
+
+This reply gave satisfaction to both the United States and the countries
+of the Allies, and Page himself regarded it as a master stroke. "The
+more I think of it," he wrote on May 17th, "the better the strategy of
+the President appears, in his latest (and last) note to Germany. They
+laid a trap for him and he caught them in their own trap. The Germans
+had tried to 'put it up' to the President to commit the first unfriendly
+act. He now 'puts it up' to them. And this is at last bound to end the
+controversy if they sink another ship unlawfully. The French see this
+clearly and so do the best English, and it has produced a most
+favourable impression. The future? The German angling for peace will
+prove futile. They'll have another fit of fury. Whether they will again
+become reckless or commit 'mistakes' with their submarines will depend
+partly on their fury, partly on their fear to make a breach with the
+United States, but mainly on the state of their submarine fleet. How
+many have the English caught and destroyed? That's the main question,
+after all. The English view may not be fair to them. But nobody here
+believes that they will long abstain from the luxury of crime."
+
+It is thus apparent that when the Germans practically demanded, as a
+price of their abstention from indiscriminate submarine warfare, that
+Mr. Wilson should move against Great Britain in the matter of the
+blockade, they realized the futility of any such step, and that what
+they really expected to obtain was the presidential mediation for peace.
+President Wilson at once began to move in this direction. On May 27th,
+three weeks after the Sussex "pledge," he made an address in Washington
+before the League to Enforce Peace, which was intended to lay the basis
+for his approaching negotiations. It was in this speech that he made the
+statement that the United States was "not concerned with the causes and
+the objects" of the war. "The obscure fountains from which its
+stupendous flood has burst forth we are not interested to search for or
+to explain." This was another of those unfortunate sentences which made
+the President such an unsympathetic figure in the estimation of the
+Allies and seemed to indicate to them that he had no appreciation of the
+nature of the struggle. Though this attitude of non-partisanship, of
+equal balance between the accusations of the Allies and Germany, was
+intended to make the President acceptable as a mediator, the practical
+result was exactly the reverse, for Allied statesmen turned from Wilson
+as soon as those sentences appeared in print. The fact that this same
+oration specified the "freedom of the seas" as one of the foundation
+rocks of the proposed new settlement only accentuated this unfavourable
+attitude.
+
+This then was clearly the "atmosphere" which prevailed in Washington at
+the time that Page was summoned home. But Page's letters of this period
+indicate how little sympathy he entertained for such negotiations. "It
+is quite apparent," he had recently written to Colonel House, "that
+nobody in Washington understands the war. Come over and find out."
+Extracts from a letter which he wrote to his brother, Mr. Henry A. Page,
+of Aberdeen, North Carolina, are especially interesting when placed side
+by side with the President's statements of this particular time. These
+passages show that a two years' close observation of the Prussians in
+action had not changed Page's opinion of their motives or of their
+methods; in 1916, as in 1914, Page could see in this struggle nothing
+but a colossal buccaneering expedition on the part of Germany. "As I
+look at it," he wrote, "our dilly-dallying is likely to get us into war.
+The Germans want somebody to rob--to pay their great military bills.
+They've robbed Belgium and are still robbing it of every penny they can
+lay their hands on. They robbed Poland and Serbia--two very poor
+countries which didn't have much. They set out to rob France and have so
+far been stopped from getting to Paris. If they got to Paris there
+wouldn't be thirty cents' worth of movable property there in a week, and
+they'd levy fines of millions of francs a day. Their military scheme and
+teaching and open purpose is to make somebody pay for their vast
+military outlay of the last forty years. They must do that or go
+bankrupt. Now it looks as if they would go bankrupt. But in a little
+while they may be able to bombard New York and demand billions of
+dollars to refrain from destroying the city. That's the richest place
+left to spoil.
+
+"Now they say that--quite openly and quite frankly. Now if we keep
+'neutral' to a highwayman--what do we get for our pains? That's the
+mistake we are making. If we had sent Bernstorff home the day after the
+_Lusitania_ was sunk and recalled Gerard and begun to train an army we'd
+have had no more trouble with them. But since they have found out that
+they can keep us discussing things forever and a day, they will keep us
+discussing things till they are ready. We are very simple; and we'll get
+shot for it yet....
+
+"The prestige and fear of the United States has gone down, down,
+down-disappeared; and we are regarded as 'discussors,' incapable of
+action, scared to death of war. That's all the invitation that robbers,
+whose chief business is war, want--all the invitation they need. These
+devils are out for robbery--and you don't seem to believe it in the
+United States: that's the queer thing. This neutrality business makes us
+an easy mark. As soon as they took a town in Belgium, they asked for all
+the money in the town, all the food, all the movable property; and
+they've levied a tax every month since on every town and made the town
+government borrow the money to pay it. If a child in a town makes a
+disrespectful remark, they fine the town an extra $1,000. They haven't
+got enough so far to keep them going flush; and they won't unless they
+get Paris--which they can't do now. If they got London, they'd be rich;
+they wouldn't leave a shilling and they'd make all the rich English get
+all the money they own abroad. This is the reason that Frenchmen and
+Englishmen prefer to be killed by the 100,000. In the country over which
+their army has passed a crow would die of starvation and no human being
+has ten cents of real money. The Belgian Commission is spending more
+than 100 million dollars a year to keep the Belgians alive--only because
+they are robbed every day. They have a rich country and could support
+themselves but for these robbers. That's the meaning of the whole thing.
+And yet we treat them as if they were honourable people. It's only a
+question of time and of power when they will attack us, or the Canal, or
+South America. Everybody on this side the world knows that. And they are
+'yielding' to keep us out of this war so that England will not help us
+when they (the Germans) get ready to attack America.
+
+"There is the strangest infatuation in the United States with Peace--the
+strangest illusion about our safety without preparation."
+
+Several letters to Colonel House show the state of the British mind on
+the subject of the President's peace proposals:
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ Royal Bath and East Cliff Hotel,
+ Bournemouth,
+ 23 May, 1916.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ The motor trip that the Houses, the Wallaces, and the Pages took
+ about a year ago was the last trip (three days) that I had had out
+ of London; and I'd got pretty tired. The _China_ case having been
+ settled (and settled as we wanted it), I thought it a good time to
+ try to get away for a week. So here Mrs. Page and I are--very much
+ to my benefit. I've spent a beautiful week out of doors, on this
+ seashore; and I have only about ten per cent. of the fatal diseases
+ that I had a week ago. That is to say, I'm as sound as a dollar and
+ feel like a fighting cock.
+
+ Sir Edward was fine about the China[39] case. He never disputed the
+ principle of the inviolability of American ships on the high seas;
+ but the Admiralty maintained that some of these men are officers in
+ the German Army and are now receiving officers' pay. I think that
+ that is probably true. Nevertheless, the Admiralty had bungled the
+ case badly and Sir Edward simply rode over them. They have a fine
+ quarrel among themselves and we got all we wanted and asked for.
+
+ Of course, I can't make out the Germans but I am afraid some huge
+ deviltry is yet coming. When the English say that the Germans must
+ give up their militarism, I doubt if the Germans yet know what they
+ mean. They talk about conquered territory--Belgium, Poland, and the
+ rest. It hasn't entered their heads that they've got to give up
+ their armies and their military system. When this does get into
+ their heads, if it ever do, I think they may so swell with rage at
+ this "insult" that they may break loose in one last desperate
+ effort, ignoring the United States, defying the universe, running
+ amuck. Of course it would be foolhardy to predict this, but the
+ fear of it keeps coming into my mind. The fear is the more
+ persistent because, if the worst comes to them, the military caste
+ and perhaps the dynasty itself will prefer to die in one last
+ terrific onslaught rather than to make a peace on terms which will
+ require the practical extinction of their supreme power. This, I
+ conceive, is the really great danger that yet awaits the world--if
+ the Allies hold together till defeat and famine drive the Germans
+ to the utmost desperation.
+
+ In the meantime, the Allies still holding together as they are,
+ there's no peace yet in the British and French minds. They're after
+ the militarism of Prussia--not territory or other gains; and they
+ seem likely to get it, as much by the blockade as by victories on
+ land. Do you remember how in the Franco-Prussian War, Bismarck
+ refused to deal with the French Emperor? He demanded that
+ representatives of the French people should deal with him. He got
+ what he asked for and that was the last of the French Emperor.
+ Neither the French nor the English have forgotten that. You will
+ recall that the Germans starved Paris into submission. Neither the
+ French nor the English have forgotten that. These two leaves out of
+ the Germans' own book of forty-five years ago--these two and no
+ more--_may_ be forced on the Germans themselves. They are both
+ quite legitimate, too. You can read a recollection of both these
+ events between the lines of the interviews that Sir Edward and Mr.
+ Balfour recently gave to American newspapers.
+
+ There is nothing but admiration here for the strategy of the
+ President's last note to Germany. That was the cleverest play made
+ by anybody since the war began--clever beyond praise. Now he's "got
+ 'em." But nobody here doubts that they will say, sooner or later,
+ that the United States, not having forced the breaking of the
+ British blockade, has not kept its bargain--that's what they'll
+ say--and it is in order again to run amuck. This is what the
+ English think--provided the Germans have enough submarines left to
+ keep up real damage. By that time, too, it will be clear to the
+ Germans that the President can't bring peace so long as only one
+ side wishes peace. The Germans seem to have counted much on the
+ Irish uprising, which came to pass at all only because of the
+ customary English stupid bungling; and the net result has been only
+ to put the mass of the Irish on their mettle to show that they are
+ not Sinn Feiners. The final upshot will be to strengthen the
+ British Army. God surely is good to this bungling British
+ Government. Wind and wave and the will of High Heaven seem to work
+ for them. I begin to understand their stupidity and their
+ arrogance. If your enemies are such fools in psychological tactics
+ and Heaven is with you, why take the trouble to be alert? And why
+ be modest? Whatever the reason, these English are now more cocky
+ and confident than they've been before since the war began. They
+ are beginning to see results. The only question seems to be to hold
+ the Allies together, and they seem to be doing that. In fact, the
+ battle of Verdun has cemented them. They now have visible proof
+ that the German Army is on the wane. And they have trustworthy
+ evidence that the blockade is telling severely on the Germans.
+ Nobody, I think, expects to thrash 'em to a frazzle; but the almost
+ universal opinion here is that the hold of militarism will be
+ shaken loose. And the German High Canal Navy--what's to become of
+ that? Von Tirpitz is down and out, but there are thousands of
+ Germans, I hear, who complain of their naval inactivity. But God
+ only knows the future--I don't. I think that I do well if I keep
+ track of the present....
+
+ My kindest regards to Mrs. House,
+
+ Yours very heartily,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, 25 May, 1916.
+
+ DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ No utterance by anybody has so stirred the people of this kingdom
+ for many months as Sir Edward Grey's impromptu speech last night in
+ the House of Commons about Peace, when he called the German
+ Chancellor a first-class liar. I sent you to-day a clipping from
+ one of the morning papers. Every paper I pick up compliments Sir
+ Edward. Everyone says, "We must fight to a finish." The more
+ sensational press intimates that any Englishman who uses the word
+ "peace" ought to be shot. You have never seen such a rally as that
+ which has taken place in response to Sir Edward's cry. In the first
+ place, as you know, he is the most gentle of all the Cabinet, the
+ last man to get on a "war-rampage," the least belligerent and
+ rambunctious of the whole lot. When he felt moved to say that there
+ can be no peace till the German military despotism is broken,
+ everybody from one end of the Kingdom to the other seems to have
+ thrown up his hat and applauded. Except the half-dozen peace-cranks
+ in the House (Bryan sort of men) you can't find a man, woman,
+ child, or dog that isn't fired with the determination to see the
+ war through. The continued talk about peace which is reported
+ directly and indirectly from Germany--coming from Switzerland, from
+ Rome, from Washington--has made the English and the French very
+ angry: no, "angry" isn't quite the right word. It has made them
+ very determined. They feel insulted by the impudence of the
+ Germans, who, since they know they are bound to lose, seem to be
+ turning heaven and earth to induce neutrals to take their view of
+ peace. People are asking here, "If they are victorious, why doesn't
+ their fleet come out of the canal and take the seas, and again open
+ their commerce? Why do they whimper about the blockade when they
+ will not even risk a warship to break it?" You'll recall how the
+ talk here used to be that the English wouldn't wake up. You
+ wouldn't know 'em now. Your bulldog has got his grip and even
+ thunder doesn't disturb him.
+
+ Incidentally, all the old criticism of Sir Edward Grey seems to
+ have been forgotten. You hear nothing but praise of him now. I am
+ told that he spoke his impromptu speech last night with great fire
+ and at once left the House. His speech has caused a greater stir
+ than the Irish rebellion, showing that every Englishman feels that
+ Sir Edward said precisely what every man feels.
+
+ The Germans have apparently overdone and overworked their premature
+ peace efforts and have made things worse for them. They've
+ overplayed their hand.
+
+ In fact, I see no end of the war. The Allies are not going to quit
+ prematurely. They won't even discuss the subject yet with one
+ another, and the Germans, by their peace-talk of the sort that they
+ inspire, simply postpone the day when the Allies will take the
+ subject up.
+
+ All the while, too, the Allies work closer and closer together.
+ They'll soon be doing even their diplomatic work with neutrals, as
+ a unit--England and France as one nation, and (on great subjects)
+ Russia and Italy also with them.
+
+ I've talked lately not only with Sir Edward but with nearly half
+ the other members of the Cabinet, and they are all keyed up to the
+ same tune. The press of both parties, too, are (for once) wholly
+ agreed: Liberal and Conservative papers alike hold the same
+ war-creed.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+Before leaving for Washington Page discussed the situation personally
+with Sir Edward Grey and Lord Bryce. He has left memoranda of both
+interviews.
+
+_Notes of a Private and Informal Conversation with Sir Edward Grey, at
+his residence, on July 27, 1916, when I called to say good-bye before
+sailing on leave to the United States_
+
+... Sir Edward Grey went on to say quite frankly that two thoughts
+expressed in a speech by the President some months ago had had a very
+serious influence on British opinion. One thought was that the causes or
+objects of the war were of no concern to him, and the other was his (at
+least implied) endorsement of "the freedom of the seas," which the
+President did not define. Concerning the first thought, he understood of
+course that a neutral President could not say that he favoured one side
+or the other: everybody understood that and nobody expected him to take
+sides. But when the President said that the objects of the war did not
+concern him, that was taken by British public opinion as meaning a
+condemnation of the British cause, and it produced deep feeling.
+
+Concerning the "freedom of the seas," he believed that the first use of
+the phrase was made by Colonel House (on his return from one of his
+visits to Berlin)[40], but the public now regarded it as a German
+invention and it meant to the British mind a policy which would render
+British supremacy at sea of little value in time of war; and public
+opinion resented this. He knew perfectly well that at a convenient time
+new rules must be made governing the conduct of war at sea and on the
+land, too. But the German idea of "the freedom of the seas" ("freedom"
+was needed on land also) is repulsive to the British mind.
+
+He mentioned these things because they had produced in many minds an
+unwillingness, he feared, to use the good offices of the President
+whenever any mediatorial service might be done by a neutral. The
+tendency of these remarks was certainly in that direction. Yet Sir
+Edward carefully abstained from expressing such an unwillingness on his
+own part, and the inference from his tone and manner, as well as from
+his habitual attitude, is that he feels no unwillingness to use the
+President's good office, if occasion should arise.
+
+I asked what he meant by "mediatorial"--the President's offering his
+services or good offices on his own initiative? He said--No, not that.
+But the Germans might express to the President their willingness or even
+their definite wish to have an armistice, on certain terms, to discuss
+conditions of peace coupled with an intimation that he might sound the
+Allies. He did not expect the President to act on his own initiative,
+but at the request or at least at the suggestion of the German
+Government, he might conceivably sound the Allies--especially, he added,
+"since I am informed that the notion is wide-spread in America that the
+war will end inconclusively--as a draw." He smiled and remarked, as an
+aside, that he didn't think that this notion was held by any
+considerable group of people in any other country, certainly not in
+Great Britain.
+
+In further talk on this subject he said that none of the Allies could
+mention peace or discuss peace till France should express such a wish;
+for it is the very vitals of France that have received and are receiving
+the shock of such an assault as was never before launched against any
+nation. Unless France was ready to quit, none of France's Allies could
+mention peace, and France showed no mood to quit. Least of all could the
+English make or receive any such suggestion at least till her new great
+army had done its best; for until lately the severest fighting had not
+been done by the British, whose army had practically been held in
+reserve. There had for a long time been a perfect understanding between
+Joffre and Haig--that the English would wait to begin their offensive
+till the moment arrived when it best suited the French.
+
+The impression that I got from this part of the conversation was that
+Sir Edward hoped that I might convey to the President (as, of course, he
+could not) Sir Edward's idea of the effect of these parts of the
+President's speech on feeling in England toward him. Nowhere in the
+conversation did he make any request of me. Any one, overhearing it,
+might have supposed it to be a conversation between two men, with no
+object beyond expressing their views. But, of course, he hoped and meant
+that I should, in my own way, make known to the President what he said.
+He did not say that the President's good offices, when the time should
+come, would be unwelcome to him or to his government; and he meant, I am
+sure, to convey only the fear that by these assertions the President had
+planted an objection to his good offices in a large section of British
+opinion.
+
+Among the conditions of peace that Sir Edward himself personally would
+like to see imposed (he had not yet discussed the subject with any of
+his colleagues in the Government) was this: that the German Government
+should agree to submit to an impartial (neutral) commission or court the
+question, Who began the war and who is responsible for it? The German
+Chancellor and other high German officials have put it about and
+continue to put it about that England is responsible, and doubtless the
+German people at least believe it. All the governments concerned must
+(this is his idea) submit to the tribunal all its documents and other
+evidence bearing on the subject; and of course the finding of the
+tribunal must be published.
+
+Then he talked a good deal about the idea that lies behind the League
+for Enforcing Peace--in a sympathetic mood. He went on to point out how
+such a league--with force behind it--would at any one of three stages
+have prevented this war--(1) When England proposed a conference to
+France, Germany, Italy, and Russia, all agreed to it but Germany.
+Germany alone prevented a discussion. If the League to Enforce Peace had
+included England, France, Italy, and Russia--there would have been no
+war; for Germany would have seen at once that they would all be against
+her. (2) Later, when the Czar sent the Kaiser a personal telegram
+proposing to submit their differences to some tribunal, a League to
+Enforce Peace would have prevented war. And (3) when the question of the
+invasion of Belgium came up, every signatory to the treaty guaranteeing
+Belgium's integrity gave assurance of keeping the treaty--but Germany,
+and Germany gave an evasive answer. A league would again have prevented
+a war--or put all the military force of all its members against Germany.
+
+Throughout the conversation, which lasted about an hour, Sir Edward said
+more than once, as he has often said to me, that he hoped we should be
+able to keep the friction between our governments at the minimum. He
+would regard it as the greatest calamity if the ill-feeling that various
+events have stirred up in sections of public opinion on each side should
+increase or should become permanent. His constant wish and effort were
+to lessen and if possible to remove all misunderstandings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lord Bryce was one of the Englishmen with whom Page was especially
+inclined to discuss pending problems.
+
+ _Notes on a conversation with Lord Bryce, July 31, 1916_
+
+Lord Bryce spoke of the President's declaration that we were not
+concerned with the causes or objects of the war and he said that that
+remark had caused much talk--all, as he thought, on a misunderstanding
+of Mr. Wilson's meaning. "He meant, I take it, only that he did not
+propose at that time to discuss the causes or the objects of the war;
+and it is a pity that his sentence was capable of being interpreted to
+mean something else; and the sentence was published and discussed here
+apart from its context--a most unfair proceeding. I can imagine that the
+President and his friends may be much annoyed by this improper
+interpretation."
+
+I remarked that the body of the speech in which this remark occurred
+might have been written in Downing Street, so friendly was it to the
+Allies.
+
+"Quite, quite," said he.
+
+This was at dinner, Lady Bryce and Mrs. Page and he and I only being
+present.
+
+When he and I went into the library he talked more than an hour.
+
+"And what about this blacklist?" he asked. I told him. He had been in
+France for a week and did not know just what had been done. He said that
+that seemed to him a mistake. "The Government doesn't know
+America--neither does the British public. Neither does the American
+Government (no American government) know the British. Hence your
+government writes too many notes--all governments are likely to write
+too many notes. Everybody gets tired of seeing them and they lose their
+effect."
+
+He mentioned the blockade and said that it had become quite
+effective--wonderfully effective, in fact; and he implied that he did
+not see why we now failed to recognize it. Our refusal to recognize it
+had caused and doubtless is now causing such ill-feeling as exists in
+England.
+
+Then he talked long about peace and how it would probably be arranged.
+He judged, from letters that he receives from the United States as well
+as from Americans who come over here, that there was an expectation in
+America that the President would be called in at the peace settlement
+and that some persons even expected him to offer mediation. He did not
+see how that could be. He knew no precedent for such a proceeding. The
+President might, of course, on the definite request of either side, make
+a definite inquiry of the other side; but such a course would be, in
+effect, merely the transmission of an inquiry.
+
+But after peace was made and the time came to set up a League for
+Enforcing Peace, or some such machinery, of course the United States
+would be and would have to be a party to that if it were to succeed. He
+reminded me that a little group of men here, of whom he was one, early
+in the war sketched substantially the same plan that the American League
+to Enforce Peace has worked out. It had not seemed advisable to have any
+general public discussion of it in England till the war should end:
+nobody had time now to give to it.
+
+As he knew no precedent for belligerents to call in a third party when
+they met to end a war, so he knew no precedent for any outside
+government to protest against the invasion of a country by a Power that
+had signed a treaty to guarantee the integrity of the invaded
+country--no precedent, that is to say, for the United States to protest
+against the invasion of Belgium. "That precedent," I said, "was found in
+Hysteria."
+
+Lord Bryce, who had just returned from a visit to the British
+headquarters in France, hardly dared hope for the end of the war till
+next year; and the intervening time between now and the end would be a
+time, he feared, of renewed atrocities and increasing hatred. He cited
+the killing of Captain Fryatt of the _Brussels_ and the forcible
+deportation of young women from Lille and other towns in the provinces
+of France occupied by the Germans.
+
+The most definite idea that he had touching American-British relations
+was the fear that the anti-British feeling in the United States would
+become stronger and would outlast the war. "It is organized," he said.
+"The disaffected Germans and the disaffected Irish are interested in
+keeping it up." He asked what effect I thought the Presidential campaign
+would have on this feeling. He seemed to have a fear that somehow the
+campaign would give an occasion for stirring it up even more.
+
+"Good-bye. Give my regards to all my American friends; and I'm proud to
+say there are a good many of them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One episode that was greatly stirring both Great Britain and the United
+States at this time was the trial of Sir Roger Casement, the Irish
+leader who had left Wilhelmshaven for Ireland in a German submarine and
+who had been captured at Tralee in the act of landing arms and munitions
+for an Irish insurrection. Casement's subsequent trial and conviction on
+a charge of high treason had inspired a movement in his favour from
+Irish-Americans, the final outcome of which was that the Senate, in
+early August, passed a resolution asking the British Government for
+clemency and stipulating that this resolution should be presented to the
+Foreign Office. Page was then on the ocean bound for the United States
+and the delicate task of presenting this document to Sir Edward Grey
+fell upon Mr. Laughlin, who was now Charge d'affaires. Mr. Laughlin is a
+diplomat of great experience, but this responsibility at first seemed to
+be something of a poser even for him. He had received explicit
+instructions from Washington to present this resolution, and the one
+thing above all which a diplomatic officer must do is to carry out the
+orders of his government, but Mr. Laughlin well knew that, should he
+present this paper in the usual manner, the Foreign Secretary might
+decline to receive it; he might regard it as an interference with
+matters that exclusively concerned the sovereign state. Mr. Laughlin,
+however, has a technique all his own, and, in accordance with this, he
+asked for an interview with Sir Edward Grey to discuss a matter of
+routine business. However, the Charge d'affaires carried the Casement
+resolution tucked away in an inside pocket when he made his call.
+
+Like Mr. Page, Mr. Laughlin was on the friendliest terms with Sir Edward
+Grey, and, after the particular piece of business had been transacted,
+the two men, as usual, fell into casual conversation. Casement then
+loomed large in the daily press, and the activities of the American
+Senate had likewise caused some commotion in London. In round-about
+fashion Mr. Laughlin was able to lead Sir Edward to make some reference
+to the Casement case.
+
+"I see the Senate has passed a resolution asking clemency," said the
+Foreign Secretary--exactly the remark which the American wished to
+elicit.
+
+"Yes," was the reply. "By the way, I happen to have a copy of the
+resolution with me. May I give it to you?"
+
+"Yes, I should like to have it."
+
+The Foreign Secretary read it over with deliberation.
+
+"This is a very interesting document," he said, when he had finished.
+"Would you have any objection if I showed it to the Prime Minister?"
+
+Of course that was precisely what Mr. Laughlin did wish, and he replied
+that this was the desire of his government. The purpose of his visit had
+been accomplished, and he was able to cable Washington that its
+instructions had been carried out and that the Casement resolution had
+been presented to the British Government. Simultaneously with his
+communication, however, he reported also that the execution of Roger
+Casement had taken place. In fact, it was being carried out at the time
+of the interview. This incident lends point to Page's memorandum of the
+last interview which he had before leaving England.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+August 1st. I lunched with Mr. Asquith. One does not usually bring away
+much from his conversations, and he did not say much to-day worth
+recording. But he showed a very eager interest in the Presidential
+campaign, and he confessed that he felt some anxiety about the
+anti-British feeling in the United States. This led him to tell me that
+he could not in good conscience interfere with Casement's execution, in
+spite of the shoals of telegrams that he was receiving from the United
+States. This man, said he, visited Irish prisoners in German camps and
+tried to seduce them to take up arms against Great Britain--their own
+country. When they refused, the Germans removed them to the worst places
+in their Empire and, as a result, some of them died. Then Casement came
+to Ireland in a German man-of-war (a submarine) accompanied by a ship
+loaded with guns. "In all good conscience to my country and to my
+responsibilities I cannot interfere." He hoped that thoughtful opinion
+in the United States would see this whole matter in a fair and just way.
+
+I asked him about anti-American feeling in Great Britain. He said: "Do
+not let that unduly disturb you. At bottom we understand you. At bottom
+the two people surely understand one another and have unbreakable bonds
+of sympathy. No serious breach is conceivable." He went on quite
+earnestly: "Mr. Page, after any policy or plan is thought out on its
+merits my next thought always is how it may affect our relations with
+the United States. That is always a fundamental consideration."
+
+I ventured to say that if he would keep our relations smooth on the
+surface, I'd guarantee their stability at the bottom. It's the surface
+that rolls high at times, and the danger is there. Keep the surface
+smooth and the bottom will take care of itself.
+
+Then he asked about Mexico, as he usually has when I have talked with
+him. I gave him as good a report as I could, reminding him of the great
+change in the attitude of all Latin-America caused by the President's
+patient policy with Mexico. When he said, "Mexico is a bad problem," I
+couldn't resist the impulse to reply: "When Mexico troubles you, think
+of--Ireland. As there are persons in England who concern themselves with
+Mexico, so there are persons in the United States who concern themselves
+about Ireland. Ireland and Mexico have each given trouble for two
+centuries. Yet these people talk about them as if they could remove all
+trouble in a month."
+
+"Quite true," he said, and smiled himself into silence. Then he talked
+about more or less frivolous subjects; and, as always, he asked about
+Mr. Bryan and Mr. Roosevelt, "alike now, I suppose, in their present
+obscure plight." I told him I was going from his house to the House of
+Lords to see Sir Edward Grey metamorphosed into Viscount Grey of
+Fallodon.
+
+"The very stupidest of the many stupid ceremonies that we have," said
+he--very truly.
+
+He spoke of my "onerous duties" and so on and so on--tut, tut! talk that
+gets nowhere. But he did say, quite sincerely, I think, that my
+frankness called forth frankness and avoided misunderstanding; for he
+has said that to other people about me.
+
+Such is the Prime Minister of Great Britain in this supreme crisis in
+English history, a remarkable man, of an abnormally quick mind, pretty
+nearly a great man, but now a spent force, at once nimble and weary.
+History may call him Great. If it do, he will owe this judgment to the
+war, with the conduct of which his name will be forever associated.
+
+
+II
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Page's homecoming was a tragedy. They sailed from Liverpool
+on August 3rd, and reached New York on the evening of August 11th. But
+sad news awaited them upon the dock. About two months previously their
+youngest son, Frank, had been married to Miss Katherine Sefton, of
+Auburn, N.Y., and the young couple had settled down in Garden City, Long
+Island. That was the summer when the epidemic of infantile paralysis
+swept over the larger part of the United States. The young bride was
+stricken; the case was unusually rapid and unusually severe; at the
+moment of the Pages' arrival, they were informed that there was
+practically no hope; and Mrs. Frank Page died at two o'clock on the
+afternoon of the following day. The Pages had always been a particularly
+united and happy family; this was the first time that they had suffered
+from any domestic sorrow of this kind, and the Ambassador was so
+affected that it was with difficulty that he could summon himself for
+the task that lay ahead.
+
+In a few days, however, he left for Washington. He has himself
+described his experience at the Capital in words that must inevitably
+take their place in history. To appreciate properly the picture which
+Page gives, it must be remembered that the city and the officialdom
+which he portrays are the same city and the same men who six months
+afterward declared war on Germany. When Page reached Washington, the
+Presidential campaign was in full swing, with Mr. Wilson as the
+Democratic candidate and Mr. Charles E. Hughes as the Republican. But
+another crisis was absorbing the nation's attention: the railway unions,
+comprising practically all the 2,000,000 railway employees in the United
+States, were threatening to strike--ostensibly for an eight-hour day, in
+reality for higher wages.
+
+ _Mr. Page's memorandum of his visit to Washington in August, 1916_
+
+The President was very courteous to me, in his way. He invited me to
+luncheon the day after I arrived. Present: the President, Mrs. Wilson,
+Miss Bones, Tom Bolling, his brother-in-law, and I. The conversation was
+general and in the main jocular. Not a word about England, not a word
+about a foreign policy or foreign relations.
+
+He explained that the threatened railway strike engaged his whole mind.
+I asked to have a talk with him when his mind should be free. Would I
+not go off and rest and come back?--I preferred to do my minor errands
+with the Department, but I should hold myself at his convenience and at
+his command.
+
+Two weeks passed. Another invitation to lunch. Sharp, the Ambassador to
+France, had arrived. He, too, was invited. Present: the President, Mrs.
+Wilson, Mrs. Wallace, the Misses Smith of New Orleans, Miss Bones,
+Sharp, and I. Not one word about foreign affairs.
+
+After luncheon, the whole party drove to the Capitol, where the
+President addressed Congress on the strike, proposing legislation to
+prevent it and to forestall similar strikes. It is a simple ceremony and
+somewhat impressive. The Senators occupy the front seats in the House,
+the Speaker presides and the President of the Senate sits on his right.
+An escorting committee is sent out to bring the President in. He walks
+to the clerk's or reader's desk below the presiding officer's, turns and
+shakes hands with them both and then proceeds to read his speech, very
+clearly and audibly. Some passages were applauded. When he had done, he
+again shook hands with the presiding officer and went out, preceded and
+followed by the White House escort. I sat in the Presidential (or
+diplomatic?) gallery with the White House party, higgledy-piggledy.
+
+The speech ended, the President drove to the White House with his escort
+in his car. The crowds in the corridors and about the doors waited and
+crowded to see Mrs. Wilson, quite respectful but without order or
+discipline. We had to push our way through them. Now and then a
+policeman at a distance would yell loudly, "Make way there!"
+
+When we reached the White House, I asked the doorman if the President
+had arrived.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Does he expect me to go in and say good-bye?"
+
+"No."
+
+Thus he had no idea of talking with me now, if ever. Not at lunch nor
+after did he suggest a conversation about American-British affairs or
+say anything about my seeing him again.
+
+This threatened strike does hold his whole mind--bothers him greatly.
+It seems doubtful if he can avert a general strike. The Republicans are
+trying "to put him in a political hole," and they say he, too, is
+playing politics. Whoever be to blame for it, it is true that politics
+is in the game. Nobody seems to foresee who will make capital out of it.
+Surely I can't.
+
+There's no social sense at the White House. The President has at his
+table family connections only--and they say few or no distinguished men
+and women are invited, except the regular notables at the set
+dinners--the diplomatic, the judiciary, and the like. His table is his
+private family affair--nothing more. It is very hard to understand why
+so intellectual a man doesn't have notable men about him. It's the
+college professor's village habit, I dare say. But it's a great
+misfortune. This is one way in which Mr. Wilson shuts out the world and
+lives too much alone, feeding only on knowledge and subjects that he has
+already acquired and not getting new views or fresh suggestions from men
+and women.
+
+He sees almost nobody except members of Congress for whom he sends for
+special conferences, and he usually sees these in his office. The
+railroad presidents and men he met in formal conference--no social
+touch.
+
+A member of his Cabinet told me that Mr. Wilson had shown confidence in
+him, given him a wide range of action in his own Department and that he
+relies on his judgment. This Cabinet member of course attends the
+routine state dinners and receptions, as a matter of required duty. But
+as for any social recognition of his existence--he had never received a
+hint or nod. Nor does any member of the Cabinet (except, no doubt, Mr.
+McAdoo, his son-in-law). There is no social sense nor reason in this. In
+fact, it works to a very decided disadvantage to the President and to
+the Nation.
+
+By the way, that a notable man in our educational life could form such a
+habit does not speak well for our educational life.
+
+What an unspeakably lamentable loss of opportunity! This is the more
+remarkable and lamentable because the President is a charming
+personality, an uncommonly good talker, a man who could easily make
+personal friends of all the world. He does his own thinking, untouched
+by other men's ideas. He receives nothing from the outside. His domestic
+life is spent with his own, nobody else, except House occasionally. His
+contact with his own Cabinet is a business man's contact with his
+business associates and kind--at his office.
+
+He declined to see Cameron Forbes[41] on his return from the
+Philippines.
+
+The sadness of this mistake!
+
+Another result is--the President doesn't hear the frank truth about the
+men about him. He gives nobody a chance to tell him. Hence he has
+several heavy encumbrances in his official family.
+
+The influence of this lone-hand way of playing the game extends very
+far. The members of the Cabinet do not seem to have the habit of
+frankness with one another. Each lives and works in a water-tight
+compartment. I sat at luncheon (at a hotel) with Lansing, Secretary of
+State; Lane, Secretary of the Interior; Gregory, Attorney-General;
+Baker, Secretary of War; Daniels, Secretary of the Navy; and Sharp,
+Ambassador to France; and all the talk was jocular or semi-jocular, and
+personal--mere cheap chaff. Not a question was asked either of the
+Ambassador to France or of the Ambassador to Great Britain about the war
+or about our foreign relations. The war wasn't mentioned. Sharp and I
+might have come from Bungtown and Jonesville and not from France and
+England. We were not encouraged to talk--the local personal joke held
+the time and conversation. This astounding fact must be the result of
+this lone-hand, water-tight compartment method and--of the neutrality
+suppression of men. The Vice-President confessed to his neighbour at a
+Gridiron dinner that he had read none of the White Papers, or Orange
+Papers, etc., of the belligerent governments--confessed this with
+pride--lest he should form an opinion and cease to be neutral! Miss X, a
+member of the President's household, said to Mrs. Y, the day we lunched
+there, that she had made a remark privately to Sharp showing her
+admiration of the French.
+
+"Was that a violation of neutrality?" she asked in all seriousness.
+
+I can see it in no other way but this: the President suppressed free
+thought and free speech when he insisted upon personal neutrality. He
+held back the deliberate and spontaneous thought and speech of the
+people except the pro-Germans, who saw their chance and improved it! The
+mass of the American people found themselves forbidden to think or talk,
+and this forbidding had a sufficient effect to make them take refuge in
+indifference. It's the President's job. He's our leader. He'll attend to
+this matter. We must not embarrass him. On this easy cushion of
+non-responsibility the great masses fell back at their intellectual and
+moral ease--softened, isolated, lulled.
+
+That wasn't leadership in a democracy. Right here is the President's
+vast failure. From it there is now no escape unless the Germans commit
+more submarine crimes. They have kept the United States for their own
+exploiting after the war. They have thus had a real triumph of us.
+
+I have talked in Washington with few men who showed any clear conception
+of the difference between the Germans and the British. To the minds of
+these people and high Government officials, German and English are alike
+foreign nations who are now foolishly engaged in war. Two of the men who
+look upon the thing differently are Houston[42] and Logan Waller
+Page[43]. In fact, there is no realization of the war in Washington.
+Secretary Houston has a proper perspective of the situation. He would
+have done precisely what I recommended--paved the way for claims and let
+the English take their course. "International law" is no strict code and
+it's all shot to pieces anyhow.
+
+The Secretary [of State] betrayed not the slightest curiosity about our
+relations with Great Britain. I saw him several times--(1) in his
+office; (2) at his house; (3) at the French Ambassador's; (4) at
+Wallace's; (5) at his office; (6) at Crozier's[44]--this during my first
+stay in Washington. The only remark he made was that I'd find a
+different atmosphere in Washington from the atmosphere in London. Truly.
+All the rest of his talk was about "cases." Would I see Senator Owen?
+Would I see Congressman Sherley? Would I take up this "case" and that?
+His mind ran on "cases."
+
+Well, at Y's, when I was almost in despair, I rammed down him a sort of
+general statement of the situation as I saw it; at least, I made a
+start. But soon he stopped me and ran off at a tangent on some
+historical statement I had made, showing that his mind was not at all on
+the real subject, the large subject. When I returned to Washington, and
+he had read my interviews with Grey, Asquith, and Bryce[45], and my own
+statement, he still said nothing, but he ceased to talk of "cases." At
+my final interview he said that he had had difficulty in preventing
+Congress from making the retaliatory resolution mandatory. He had tried
+to keep it back till the very end of the session, etc.
+
+This does not quite correspond with what the President told me--that the
+State Department asked for this retaliatory resolution.
+
+I made specific suggestions in my statement to the President and to
+Lansing. They have (yet) said nothing about them. I fancy they will not.
+I have found nowhere any policy--only "cases."
+
+I proposed to Baker and Daniels that they send a General and an Admiral
+as attaches to London. They both agreed. Daniels later told me that
+Baker mentioned it to the President and he "stepped on the suggestion
+with both feet." I did not bring it up. In the Franco-Prussian War of
+1870, both General McClellan (or Sheridan[46]?) and General Forsythe
+were sent to the German Army. Our military ideas have shrunk since then!
+
+I find at this date (a month before the Presidential election), the
+greatest tangle and uncertainty of political opinion that I have ever
+observed in our country. The President, in spite of his unparalleled
+leadership and authority in domestic policy, is by no means certain of
+election. He has the open hostility of the Germans--all very well, if he
+had got the fruits of a real hostility to them; but they have, in many
+ways, directed his foreign policy. He has lost the silent confidence of
+many men upon whose conscience this great question weighs heavily. If he
+be defeated he will owe his defeat to the loss of confidence in his
+leadership on this great subject. His opponent has put forth no
+clear-cut opinion. He plays a silent game on the German "issue." Yet he
+will command the support of many patriotic men merely as a lack of
+confidence in the President.
+
+Nor do I see any end of the results of this fundamental error. In the
+economic and political readjustment of the world we shall be "out of the
+game," in any event--unless we are yet forced into the war by Hughes's
+election or by the renewal of the indiscriminate use of submarines by
+the Germans.
+
+There is a great lesson in this lamentable failure of the President
+really to lead the Nation. The United States stands for democracy and
+free opinion as it stands for nothing else and as no other nation stands
+for it. Now when democracy and free opinion are at stake as they have
+not before been, we take a "neutral" stand--we throw away our very
+birthright. We may talk of "humanity" all we like: we have missed the
+largest chance that ever came to help the large cause that brought us
+into being as a Nation....
+
+And the people, sitting on the comfortable seats of neutrality upon
+which the President has pushed them back, are grateful for Peace, not
+having taken the trouble to think out what Peace has cost us and cost
+the world--except so many as have felt the uncomfortable stirrings of
+the national conscience.
+
+There is not a man in our State Department or in our Government who has
+ever met any prominent statesmen in any European Government--except the
+third Assistant Secretary of State, who has no authority in forming
+policies; there is not a man who knows the atmosphere of Europe. Yet
+when I proposed that one of the under Secretaries should go to England
+on a visit of a few weeks for observation, the objection arose that
+such a visit would not be "neutral."
+
+
+III
+
+The extraordinary feature of this experience was that Page had been
+officially summoned home, presumably to discuss the European situation,
+and that neither the President nor the State Department apparently had
+the slightest interest in his visit.
+
+"The President," Page wrote to Mr. Laughlin, "dominates the whole show
+in a most extraordinary way. The men about him (and he sees them only on
+'business') are very nearly all very, very small fry, or worse--the
+narrowest twopenny lot I've ever come across. He has no real companions.
+Nobody talks to him freely and frankly. I've never known quite such a
+condition in American life." Perhaps the President had no desire to
+discuss inconvenient matters with his Ambassador to Great Britain, but
+Page was certainly determined to have an interview with the President.
+"I'm not going back to London," he wrote Mr. Laughlin, "till the
+President has said something to me or at least till I have said
+something to him. I am now going down to Garden City and New York till
+the President send for me; or, if he do not send for me, I'm going to
+his house and sit on his front steps till he come out!" Page had brought
+from England one of the medals which the Germans had struck in honour of
+the _Lusitania_ sinking, and one reason why he particularly wished to
+see the President alone was to show him this memento.
+
+Another reason was that in early September Page had received important
+news from London concerning the move which Germany was making for peace
+and the attitude of Great Britain in this matter. The several plans
+which Germany had had under consideration had now taken the form of a
+definite determination to ask for an armistice before winter set in. A
+letter from Mr. Laughlin, Charge d'affaires in Page's absence, tells the
+story.
+
+ _From Irwin Laughlin_
+
+ Embassy of the United States of America.
+ London, August 30, 1916.
+
+ DEAR MR. PAGE:
+
+ For some little time past I have heard persistent rumours, which
+ indeed are more than rumours, since they have come from important
+ sources, of an approaching movement by Germany toward an early
+ armistice. They have been so circumstantial and so closely
+ connected--in prospect--with the President, that I have examined
+ them with particular attention and I shall try to give you the
+ results, and my conclusions, with the recommendation that you take
+ the matter up directly with the President and the Secretary of
+ State. I have been a little at a loss to decide how to communicate
+ what I have learned to the Government in Washington, for the
+ present conditions make it impossible to set down what I want to
+ say in an official despatch, but the fortunate accident of your
+ being in the United States gives me the safe opportunity I want,
+ and so I send my information to you, and by the pouch, as time is
+ of less importance than secrecy.
+
+ There seems to be no doubt that Germany is casting about for an
+ opportunity to effect an armistice, if possible before the winter
+ closes in. She hopes it may result in peace--a peace more or less
+ favourable to her, of course--but even if such a result should fail
+ of accomplishment she would have gained a breathing space; have
+ secured an opportunity to improve her strategic position in a
+ military sense, perhaps by shortening her line in Flanders: have
+ stiffened the resistance of her people; and probably have
+ influenced a certain body of neutral opinion not only in her favour
+ but against her antagonists.
+
+ I shall not try to mention the various sources from which the
+ threads that compose this fabric have been drawn, but I finally
+ fastened on X of the Admiralty as a man with whom I could talk
+ profitably and confidentially, and he told me positively that his
+ information showed that Germany was looking in the direction I have
+ indicated, and that she would soon approach the President on the
+ subject--even if she had not already taken the first steps toward
+ preparing her advance to him.
+
+ I asked X if he thought it well for me to broach the subject to
+ Lord Grey and he suggested that I first consult Y, which I did. The
+ latter seemed very wary at the outset, but he warmed up at last and
+ in the course of the conversation told me he had reliable
+ information that when Bethmann-Hollweg went to Munich just before
+ the beginning of the allied offensive in the west in June he told
+ the King of Bavaria that he was confident the Allies would be
+ obliged to begin overtures for peace next October; adding that if
+ they didn't Germany would have to do so. The King, it appears,
+ asked him how Germany could approach the Allies if it proved to be
+ advisable and he replied: "Through our good friend Wilson."
+
+ I asked Y if the King of Spain's good offices would not be enlisted
+ jointly with those of the President in attempting to arrange an
+ armistice, but he thought not, and said that the King of Spain was
+ very well aware that the Allies would not consider anything short
+ of definite peace proposals from Germany and that His Majesty knew
+ the moment for them had not arrived. I then finally asked him point
+ blank if he thought the Germans would approach the President for an
+ armistice, and, if so, when. He said he was inclined to think they
+ might do so perhaps about October. On my asking him if he was
+ disposed to let me communicate his opinion privately to the
+ Government in Washington he replied after some hesitation that he
+ had no objection, but he quickly added that I must make it clear at
+ the same time that the British Government would not listen to any
+ such proposals.
+
+ These conversations took place during the course of last week, and
+ on Sunday--the 27th--I invited the Spanish Ambassador to luncheon
+ at Tangley when I was able to get him to confirm what Y had said of
+ his Sovereign's attitude and opinions.
+
+ I may mention for what it is worth that on Hoover's last trip to
+ Germany he was told by Bullock, of the Philadelphia _Ledger_, that
+ Zimmermann of the Berlin Foreign Office had told him that the
+ Germans had intended in June to take steps for an armistice which
+ were prevented by the preparations for the allied offensive in the
+ west.
+
+ Y was very emphatic in what he said of the attitude of his
+ government and the British people toward continuing the war to an
+ absolutely conclusive end, and I was much impressed. He said among
+ other things that the execution of Captain Fryatt had had a
+ markedly perceptible effect in hardening British public opinion
+ against Germany and fixing the determination to fight to a
+ relentless finish. This corresponds exactly with my own
+ observations.
+
+ I leave this letter entirely in your hands. You will know what use
+ to make of it. It is meant as an official communication in
+ everything but the usual form from which I have departed for
+ reasons I need not explain further.
+
+ I look forward eagerly to your return,
+
+ Very sincerely yours,
+
+ IRWIN LAUGHLIN.
+
+Page waited five weeks before he succeeded in obtaining his interview
+with Mr. Wilson.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ The New Willard, Washington, D.C.
+
+ Thursday, September 21, 1916.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ While I am waiting for a convenient time to come when you will see
+ me for a conference and report, I send you notes on conversations
+ with Lord Grey and Lord Bryce[47]. They are, in effect, though of
+ course not in form, messages to you.
+
+ The situation between our government and Great Britain seems to me
+ most alarming; and (let me add) easily removable, if I can get the
+ ear of anybody in authority. But I find here only an atmosphere of
+ suspicion--unwarranted by facts and easily dissipated by straight
+ and simple friendly methods. I am sure of this.
+
+ I have, besides, a most important and confidential message for you
+ from the British Government which they prefer should be orally
+ delivered.
+
+ And I have written out a statement of my own study of the situation
+ and of certain proposals which, I think, if they commend themselves
+ to you, will go far to remove this dangerous tension. I hope to go
+ over them with you at your convenience.
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+The situation was alarming for more reasons than the determination of
+Germany to force the peace issue. The State Department was especially
+irritated at this time over the blockade. Among the "trade advisers"
+there was a conviction, which all Page's explanations had not destroyed,
+that Great Britain was using the blockade as a means of destroying
+American commerce and securing America's customers for herself. Great
+Britain's regulations on the blacklist and "bunker coal" had intensified
+this feeling. In both these latter questions Page regarded the British
+actions as tactless and unjust; he had had many sharp discussions at the
+Foreign Office concerning them, but had not made much headway in his
+efforts to obtain their abandonment. The purpose of the "blacklist" was
+to strike at neutral firms with German affiliations which were trading
+with Germany. The Trading with the Enemy Act provided that such firms
+could not trade with Great Britain; that British vessels must refuse to
+accept their cargoes, and that any neutral ship which accepted such
+cargoes would be denied bunker coal at British ports. Under this law the
+Ministry of Blockade issued a "blacklist" of more than 1,000 proscribed
+exporting houses in the United States. So great was the indignation
+against this boycott in the United States that Congress, in early
+September, had passed a retaliatory act; this gave the President the
+authority at any time to place an embargo upon the exports to the United
+States of countries which discriminated against American firms and also
+to deny clearance to ships which refused to accept American cargoes. The
+two countries indeed seemed to be hastening toward a crisis.
+
+Page's urgent letter to Mr. Wilson brought a telegram from Mr. Tumulty
+inviting the Ambassador to spend the next evening and night with the
+President at Shadow Lawn, the seaside house on the New Jersey coast in
+which Mr. Wilson was spending the summer. Mr. Wilson received his old
+friend with great courtesy and listened quietly and with apparent
+interest to all that he had to say. The written statement to which Page
+refers in his letter told the story of Anglo-American relations from the
+time of the Panama tolls repeal up to the time of Page's visit to Shadow
+Lawn. Quotations have already been made from it in preceding chapters,
+and the ideas which it contains have abundantly appeared in letters
+already printed. The document was an eloquent plea for American
+cooeperation with the Allies--for the dismissal of Bernstorff, for the
+adoption of a manly attitude toward Germany, and for the vindication of
+a high type of Americanism.
+
+Page showed the President the _Lusitania_ medal, but that did not
+especially impress him. "The President said to me," wrote Page in
+reference to this visit, "that when the war began he and all the men he
+met were in hearty sympathy with the Allies; but that now the sentiment
+toward England had greatly changed. He saw no one who was not vexed and
+irritated by the arbitrary English course. That is, I fear, true--that
+he sees no one but has a complaint. So does the Secretary of State, and
+the Trade Bureau and all the rest in Washington. But in Boston, in New
+York, and in the South and in Auburn, N.Y., I saw no one whose sympathy
+with the Allies had undergone any fundamental change. I saw men who felt
+vexed at such an act as the blacklist, but that was merely vexation, not
+a fundamental change of feeling. Of course, there came to see me men who
+had 'cases.' Now these are the only kind of men, I fear, whom the
+Government at Washington sees--these and the members of Congress whom
+the Germans have scared or have 'put up' to scare the Government--who
+are 'twisting the lion's tail,' in a word."
+
+"The President said," wrote Page immediately after coming from Shadow
+Lawn, "Tell those gentlemen for me'--and then followed a homily to the
+effect that a damage done to any American citizen is a damage to him,
+etc. He described the war as a result of many causes, some of long
+origin. He spoke of England's having the earth and of Germany wanting
+it. Of course, he said, the German system is directly opposed to
+everything American. But I do not gather that he thought that this
+carried any very great moral reprehensibility.
+
+"He said that he wouldn't do anything with the retaliatory act till
+after election lest it might seem that he was playing politics. But he
+hinted that if there were continued provocation afterward (in case he
+were elected) he would. He added that one of the worst provocations was
+the long English delay in answering our Notes. Was this delay due to
+fear or shame? He evidently felt that such a delay showed contempt. He
+spoke of the Bryan treaty[48]. But on no question had the British
+'locked horns' with us--on no question had they come to a clear issue so
+that the matter might be referred to the Commission."
+
+Page delivered his oral message about the German determination to obtain
+an armistice. This was to the effect that Great Britain would not grant
+it. Page intimated that Britain would be offended if the President
+proposed it.
+
+"If an armistice, no," answered Mr. Wilson. "That's a military matter
+and is none of my business. But if they propose an armistice looking
+toward peace--yes, I shall be glad."
+
+The experience was an exceedingly trying one for both men. The
+discussion showed how far apart were the President and his Ambassador on
+practically every issue connected with the crisis. Naturally the
+President's reference to the causes of the war--that there were many
+causes, some of them of long persistence, and that Great Britain's
+domination of the "earth" was one of them--conflicted with the judgment
+of a man who attributed the origin of the struggle to German aggression.
+The President's statement that American sympathy for the Allies had now
+changed to irritation, and the tolerant attitude toward Germany which
+Mr. Wilson displayed, affected Page with the profoundest discouragement.
+The President's intimation that he would advance Germany's request for
+an armistice, if it looked toward peace--this in reply to Page's message
+that Great Britain would not receive such a proposal in a kindly
+spirit--seemed to lay the basis of further misunderstandings. The
+interview was a disheartening one for Page. Many people whom the
+Ambassador met in the course of this visit still retain memories of his
+fervour in what had now become with him a sacred cause. With many
+friends and officials he discussed the European situation almost like a
+man inspired. The present writer recalls two long conversations with
+Page at this time: the recollection of his brilliant verbal portraiture,
+his description of the determination of Englishmen, his admiration for
+the heroic sacrifice of Englishwomen, remain as about the most vivid
+memories of a life-time. And now the Ambassador had brought this same
+eloquence to the President's ear at Shadow Lawn. It was in this
+interview that Page had hoped to show Mr. Wilson the real merits of the
+situation, and persuade him to adopt the course to which the national
+honour and safety pointed; he talked long and eloquently, painting the
+whole European tragedy with that intensity and readiness of utterance
+and that moral conviction which had so moved all others with whom he had
+come into contact during this memorable visit to the United States; but
+Mr. Wilson was utterly cold, utterly unresponsive, interested only in
+ending the war. The talk lasted for a whole morning; its nature may be
+assumed from the many letters already printed; but Page's voice, when it
+attempted to fire the conscience of the President, proved as ineffective
+as his pen. However, there was nothing rasping or contentious about the
+interview. The two men discussed everything with the utmost calmness and
+without the slightest indications of ill-nature. Both men had in mind
+their long association, both inevitably recalled the hopes with which
+they had begun their official relationship three years before, at that
+time neither having the faintest intimation of the tremendous problems
+that were to draw them asunder. Mr. Wilson at this meeting did not
+impress his Ambassador as a perverse character, but as an extremely
+pathetic one. Page came away with no vexation or anger, but with a real
+feeling for a much suffering and a much perplexed statesman. The fact
+that the President's life was so solitary, and that he seemed to be so
+completely out of touch with men and with the living thoughts of the
+world, appealed strongly to Page's sympathies. "I think he is the
+loneliest man I have ever known," Page remarked to his son Frank after
+coming away from this visit.
+
+Page felt this at the time, for, as he rose to say good-bye to the
+President, he put his hand upon his shoulder. At this Mr. Wilson's eyes
+filled with tears and he gave Page an affectionate good-bye. The two men
+never met again.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 38: This is quoted from a hitherto unpublished despatch of
+Bernstorff's to Berlin which is found among Page's papers.]
+
+[Footnote 39: The _China_ case was a kind of _Trent_ case reversed. In
+1861 the American ship _San Jacinto_ stopped the British vessel _Trent_
+and took off Mason and Slidell, Confederate commissioners to Great
+Britain. Similarly a British ship, in 1916, stopped an American ship,
+the _China_, and removed several German subjects. As the British quickly
+saw the analogy, and made suitable amends, the old excitement over the
+_Trent_ was not duplicated in the recent war.]
+
+[Footnote 40: See Chapter XIII, page 434.]
+
+[Footnote 41: Mr. Forbes had been Governor-General of the Philippines
+from 1909 to 1913. His work had been extraordinarily successful.]
+
+[Footnote 42: Secretary of Agriculture.]
+
+[Footnote 43: In charge of government road building, a distant relative
+of the Ambassador.]
+
+[Footnote 44: Major General William Crozier, U.S.A., Chief of Ordnance.]
+
+[Footnote 45: See Chapter XIX, pages 160-164.]
+
+[Footnote 46: It was General Sheridan.]
+
+[Footnote 47: See Chapter XIX, pages 160 and 164.]
+
+[Footnote 48: The treaty between the United States and Great Britain,
+adopted through the urgency of Mr. Bryan, providing for the arbitration
+of disputes between the two countries.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"PEACE WITHOUT VICTORY"
+
+
+"Of one thing I am sure," Page wrote to his wife from Washington, while
+waiting to see President Wilson. "We wish to come home March 4th at
+midnight and to go about our proper business. There's nothing here that
+I would for the world be mixed up with. As soon as I can escape with
+dignity I shall make my bow and exit.... But I am not unhappy or
+hopeless for the long run. They'll find out the truth some day, paying,
+I fear, a heavy penalty for delay. But the visit here has confirmed me
+in our previous conclusions--that if we can carry the load until March
+4th, midnight, we shall be grateful that we have pulled through."
+
+Soon after President Wilson's reelection, therefore, Page sent his
+resignation to Washington. The above quotation shows that he intended
+this to be more than a "courtesy resignation," a term traditionally
+applied to the kind of leave-takings which Ambassadors usually send on
+the formation of a new administration, or at the beginning of a new
+Presidential term, for the purpose of giving the President the
+opportunity of reorganizing his official family. Page believed that his
+work in London had been finished, that he had done everything in his
+power to make Mr. Wilson see the situation in its true light and that he
+had not succeeded. He therefore wished to give up his post and come
+home. This explains the fact that his resignation did not consist of the
+half dozen perfunctory lines which most diplomatic officers find
+sufficient on such an occasion, but took the form of a review of the
+reasons why the United States should align itself on the side of the
+Allies.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, November 24, 1916.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ We have all known for many years that the rich and populous and
+ organized states in which the big cities are do not constitute the
+ political United States. But, I confess, I hardly expected so soon
+ to see this fact proclaimed at the ballot-box. To me that's the
+ surprise of the election. And your popular majority as well as your
+ clear majority in the Electoral College is a great personal triumph
+ for you. And you have remade the ancient and demoralized Democratic
+ party. Four years ago it consisted of a protest and of the wreck
+ wrought by Mr. Bryan's long captaincy. This rebirth, with a popular
+ majority, is an historical achievement--of your own.
+
+ You have relaid the foundation and reset the pillars of a party
+ that may enjoy a long supremacy for domestic reasons. Now, if you
+ will permit me to say so, from my somewhat distant view (four years
+ make a long period of absence) the big party task is to build up a
+ clearer and more positive foreign policy. We are in the world and
+ we've got to choose what active part we shall play in it--I fear
+ rather quickly. I have the conviction, as you know, that this whole
+ round globe now hangs as a ripe apple for our plucking, if we use
+ the right ladder while the chance lasts. I do not mean that we want
+ or could get the apple for ourselves, but that we can see to it
+ that it is put to proper uses. What we have to do, in my judgment,
+ is to go back to our political fathers for our clue. If my longtime
+ memory be good, they were sure that their establishment of a great
+ free Republic would soon be imitated by European peoples--that
+ democracies would take the place of autocracies in all so-called
+ civilized countries; for that was the form that the fight took in
+ their day against organized Privilege. But for one reason or
+ another--in our life-time partly because we chose so completely to
+ isolate ourselves--the democratic idea took root in Europe with
+ disappointing slowness. It is, for instance, now perhaps for the
+ first time, in a thoroughgoing way, within sight in this Kingdom.
+ The dream of the American Fathers, therefore, is not yet come true.
+ They fought against organized Privilege exerted from over the sea.
+ In principle it is the same fight that we have made, in our
+ domestic field, during recent decades. Now the same fight has come
+ on a far larger scale than men ever dreamed of before.
+
+ It isn't, therefore, for merely doctrinal reasons that we are
+ concerned for the spread of democracy nor merely because a
+ democracy is the only scheme of organization yet wrought out that
+ keeps the door of opportunity open and invites all men to their
+ fullest development. But we are interested in it because under no
+ other system can the world be made an even reasonably safe place to
+ live in. For only autocracies wage aggressive wars. Aggressive
+ autocracies, especially military autocracies, must be softened down
+ by peace (and they have never been so softened) or destroyed by
+ war. The All-Highest doctrine of Germany to-day is the same as the
+ Taxation-without-Representation of George III--only more virulent,
+ stronger, and farther-reaching. Only by its end can the German
+ people recover and build up their character and take the permanent
+ place in the world that they--thus changed--will be entitled to.
+ They will either reduce Europe to the vassalage of a military
+ autocracy, which may then overrun the whole world or drench it in
+ blood, or they must through stages of Liberalism work their way
+ toward some approach to a democracy; and there is no doubt which
+ event is impending. The Liberal idea will win this struggle, and
+ Europe will be out of danger of a general assault on free
+ institutions till some other autocracy which has a military caste
+ try the same Napoleonic game. The defeat of Germany, therefore,
+ will make for the spread of the doctrine of our Fathers and our
+ doctrine yet.
+
+ An interesting book might be made of concrete evidences of the
+ natural antipathy that the present German autocracy has for
+ successful democracy and hence for us. A new instance has just come
+ to me. My son, Arthur, who succeeded to most of my activities at
+ home, has been over here for a month and he has just come from a
+ visit to France. In Paris he had a long conversation with Delcasse,
+ who told him that the Kaiser himself once made a proposal to him to
+ join in producing "the complete isolation" of the United States.
+ What the Kaiser meant was that if the great Powers of Europe would
+ hold off, he would put the Monroe Doctrine to the test and smash
+ it.
+
+ The great tide of the world will, by reason of the war, now flow
+ toward democracy--at present, alas! a tide of blood. For a century
+ democracies and Liberal governments have kept themselves too much
+ isolated, trusting prematurely and too simply to international law
+ and treaties and Hague conventions. These things have never been
+ respected, except as springs to catch woodcock, where the Divine
+ Right held sway. The outgrowing or the overthrow of the Divine
+ Right is a condition precedent to the effectiveness of
+ international law and treaties.
+
+ It has seemed to me, looking at the subject only with reference to
+ our country's duty and safety, that somehow and at some early time
+ our championship of democracy must lead us to redeclare our faith
+ and to show that we believe in our historic creed. Then we may
+ escape falling away from the Liberal forces of the Old World and
+ escape the suspicion of indifference to the great scheme of
+ government which was set up by our fathers' giving their blood for
+ it. I see no other way for us to take the best and biggest
+ opportunity that has ever come to prove true to our faith as well
+ as to secure our own safety and the safety of the world. Only some
+ sort of active and open identification with the Allies can put us
+ in effective protest against the assassins of the Armenians and the
+ assassins of Belgium, Poland, and Serbia, and in a friendly
+ attitude to the German people themselves, as distinguished from
+ their military rulers. This is the attitude surely that our fathers
+ would have wished us to take--and would have expected us to
+ take--and that our children will be proud of us for taking; for it
+ is our proper historic attitude, whether looked at from the past or
+ looked back at from the future. There can be no historic approval
+ of neutrality for years, while the world is bleeding to death.
+
+ The complete severance of relations, diplomatic at first and later
+ possibly economic as well, with the Turks and the Germans, would
+ probably not cost us a man in battle nor any considerable treasure;
+ for the moral effect of withdrawing even our formal approval of
+ their conduct--at least our passive acquiescence--would be--that
+ the Germans would see that practically all the Liberal world stands
+ against their system, and the war would end before we should need
+ to or could put an army in the field. The Liberal Germans are
+ themselves beginning to see that it is not they, but the German
+ system, that is the object of attack because it is _the_ dangerous
+ thing in the world. Maximilian Harden presents this view in his
+ Berlin paper. He says in effect that Germany must get rid of its
+ predatory feudalism. That was all that was the matter with George
+ III.
+
+ Among the practical results of such action by us would, I believe,
+ be the following:
+
+ 1. The early ending of the war and the saving of, perhaps, millions
+ of lives and of incalculable treasure;
+
+ 2. The establishment in Germany of some form of more liberal
+ government;
+
+ 3. A league to enforce peace, ready-made, under our guidance--i.e.,
+ the Allies and ourselves;
+
+ 4. The sympathetic cooeperation and the moral force of every Allied
+ Government in dealing with Mexico:
+
+ 5. The acceptance--and even documentary approval--of every Allied
+ Government of the Monroe Doctrine;
+
+ 6. The warding off and no doubt the final prevention of danger from
+ Japan, and, most of all, the impressive and memorable spectacle of
+ our Great Democracy thus putting an end to this colossal crime,
+ merely from the impulse and necessity to keep our own ideals and to
+ lead the world right on. We should do for Europe on a large scale
+ essentially what we did for Cuba on a small scale and thereby usher
+ in a new era in human history.
+
+ I write thus freely, Mr. President, because at no time can I write
+ in any other way and because I am sure that all these things can
+ quickly be brought to pass under your strong leadership. The United
+ States would stand, as no other nation has ever stood in the
+ world--predominant and unselfish--on the highest ideals ever
+ reached in human government. It is a vision as splendid as the Holy
+ Grael. Nor have I a shadow of doubt of the eager and faithful
+ following of our people, who would thereby reestablish once for all
+ our weakened nationality. We are made of the stuff that our Fathers
+ were made of.
+
+ And I write this now for the additional reason that I am within
+ sight of the early end of my service here. When you called me I
+ answered, not only because you did me great honour and laid a
+ definite patriotic duty on me, but because also of my personal
+ loyalty to you and my pride in helping forward the great principles
+ in which we both believe. But I understood then (and I am sure the
+ subject lay in your mind in the same way) that my service would be
+ for four years at the most. I made all my arrangements,
+ professional and domestic, on this supposition. I shall, therefore,
+ be ready to lay down my work here on March 4th or as soon
+ thereafter as meets your pleasure.
+
+ I am more than proud of the confidence that you have shown in me.
+ To it I am indebted for the opportunity I have had to give such
+ public service to my country as I could, as well as for the most
+ profitable experience of my life. A proper and sympathetic
+ understanding between the two English-speaking worlds seems to me
+ the most important duty of far-seeing men in either country. It has
+ taken such a profound hold on me that I shall, in whatever way I
+ can, work for its complete realization as long as I can work for
+ anything.
+
+ I am, Mr. President, most faithfully and gratefully yours,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+This letter was written at a time when President Wilson was exerting his
+best energies to bring about peace. The Presidential campaign had caused
+him to postpone these efforts, for he believed that neither Germany nor
+Great Britain could take seriously the activities of a President whose
+own political position was insecure. At the time Page's letter was
+received, the President was thinking only of a peace based upon a
+stalemate; it was then his apparent conviction that both sides to the
+struggle were about equally in the wrong and that a decisive victory of
+either would not be a good thing for the world. Yet it is interesting to
+compare this letter with the famous speech which the President made six
+months afterward when he asked Congress to declare the existence of a
+state of war with Germany. Practically all the important reasons which
+Mr. Wilson then advanced for this declaration are found in Page's letter
+of the preceding November. That autocracies are a constant menace to
+world peace, that the United States owes it to its democratic tradition
+to take up arms against the enemy of free government, that in doing
+this, it was not making war upon the German people, but upon its
+imperialistic masters--these were the arguments which Page laid before
+the President in his letter of resignation, and these were the leading
+ideas in Mr. Wilson's address of April 2nd. There are even sentences in
+Page's communication which seem to foreshadow Mr. Wilson's assertion
+that "The world must be made safe for democracy." This letter in itself
+sufficiently makes it clear that Page's correspondence, irritating in
+its later phases as it may have been, strongly influenced Mr. Wilson in
+his final determination on war.
+
+On one point, indeed, Colonel House afterward called the Ambassador to
+account. When America was preparing to raise armies by the millions and
+to spend its treasure by the billions, he reminded Page of his statement
+that the severance of diplomatic relations "would probably not cost us a
+man in battle nor any considerable treasure." Page's statement in this
+November letter merely reiterated a conviction which for more than a
+year he had been forcing upon the President and Colonel House--that the
+dismissal of Bernstorff would not necessarily imply war with Germany,
+but that it would in itself be enough to bring the war to an end. On
+this point Page never changed his mind, as is evident from the letter
+which he wrote to Colonel House when this matter was called to his
+attention:
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ London, June 29, 1917.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ I never put any particular value on my own prophecies nor on
+ anybody else's. I have therefore no pride as a prophet. Yet I do
+ think that I hit it off accurately a year or a year and a half ago
+ when I said that we could then have ended the war without any
+ appreciable cost. And these are my reasons:
+
+ If we had then come in and absolutely prevented supplies from
+ reaching Germany, as we are now about to do, the war would then
+ have been much sooner ended than it can now be ended:
+
+ (1) Our supplies enabled her to go on.
+
+ (2) She got time in this way to build her great submarine fleet.
+ She went at it the day she promised the President to reform.
+
+ (3) She got time and strength to overrun Rumania whence she got
+ food and oil; and continues to get it.
+
+ (4) During this time Russia fell down as a military force and gave
+ her more time, more armies for France and more supplies. Russian
+ guns have been sold to the Germans.
+
+ If a year and a half ago we had starved her out, it would have been
+ over before any of these things happened. This delay is what will
+ cost us billions and billions and men and men.
+
+ And it cost us one thing more. During the neutrality period we
+ were as eager to get goods to the little neutral states which were
+ in large measure undoubtedly bound to Germany as we are now eager
+ to keep them out. Grey, who was and is our best friend, and who was
+ unwilling to quarrel with us more than he was obliged to, was
+ thrown out of office and his career ended because the blockade,
+ owing to his consideration for us, was not tight enough. Our delay
+ caused his fall.
+
+ But most of all, it gave the Germans time (and to some extent
+ material) to build their present fleet of submarines. They were at
+ work on them all the while and according to the best opinion here
+ they continue to build them faster than the British destroy them;
+ and the submarines are destroying more merchant ships than all the
+ shipbuilding docks of all the world are now turning out. This is
+ the most serious aspect of the war--by far the most serious. I am
+ trying to get our Government to send over hundreds of improvised
+ destroyers--armed tugs, yachts, etc., etc. Admiral Sims and the
+ British Admiralty have fears that unless such help come the full
+ fruits of the war may never be gathered by the Allies--that some
+ sort of a compromise peace may have to be made.
+
+ It is, therefore, true that the year and a half we waited after the
+ _Lusitania_ will prove to be the most costly year and a half in our
+ history; and for once at least my old prophecy was quite a good
+ guess. But that water has flowed over the dam and it is worth
+ mentioning now only because you challenged me....
+
+That part of Page's letter which refers to his retirement had a curious
+history. It was practically a resignation and therefore called for an
+immediate reply, but Mr. Wilson did not even acknowledge its receipt.
+For two months the Ambassador was left in the dark as to the attitude
+of Washington. Finally, in the latter part of January, 1917, Page wrote
+urgently to Mr. Lansing, asking him to bring the matter to the
+President's attention. On February 5, 1917, Mr. Lansing's reply was
+received. "The President," he said, "under extreme pressure of the
+present situation, has been unable to consider your communication in
+regard to your resignation. He desires me to inform you that he hopes
+that, at the present time, you will not press to be relieved from
+service; that he realizes that he is asking you to make a personal
+sacrifice, but he believes that you will appreciate the importance, in
+the crisis which has developed, that no change should be made. I hardly
+need to add my personal hope that you will put aside any thought of
+resigning your post for the present."
+
+At this time, of course, any idea of retiring was out of the question.
+The President had dismissed Bernstorff and there was every likelihood
+that the country would soon be at war. Page would have regarded his
+retirement at this crisis as little less than the desertion of his post.
+Moreover, since Mr. Wilson had adopted the policy which the Ambassador
+had been urging for nearly two years, and had sent Bernstorff home, any
+logical excuse that may have existed for his resignation existed no
+longer. Mr. Wilson had now adopted a course which Page could
+enthusiastically support.
+
+"I am happy to serve here at any sacrifice"--such was his reply to Mr.
+Lansing--"until after the end of the war, and I am making my
+arrangements to stay for this period."
+
+The months that intervened between the Presidential election and the
+declaration of war were especially difficult for the American Embassy in
+London. Page had informed the President, in the course of his interview
+of September 22nd, how unfavourably Great Britain regarded his efforts
+in the direction of peace; he had in fact delivered a message from the
+Foreign Office that any Presidential attempt to "mediate" would be
+rejected by the Allies. Yet his earnest representation on this point had
+produced no effect upon Mr. Wilson. The pressure which Germany was
+bringing to bear upon Washington was apparently irresistible. Count
+Bernstorff's memoirs, with their accompanying documents, have revealed
+the intensity of the German efforts during this period; the most
+startling fact revealed by the German Ambassador is that the Kaiser, on
+October 9th, notified the President, almost in so many words, that,
+unless he promptly moved in the direction of peace, the German
+Government "would be forced to regain the freedom of action which it has
+reserved to itself in the note of May 4th last[49]." It is unlikely that
+the annals of diplomacy contain many documents so cool and insolent as
+this one. It was a notification from the Kaiser to the President that
+the so-called "Sussex pledge" was not regarded as an unconditional one
+by the Imperial Government; that it was given merely to furnish Mr.
+Wilson an opportunity to bring the war to an end; and that unless the
+Presidential attempt to accomplish this were successful, there would be
+a resumption of the indiscriminate submarine campaign. The curious
+developments of the next two months are now a familiar story. Possibly
+because the British Government had notified him, through Page, that his
+proffer of mediation would be unacceptable, Mr. Wilson moved cautiously
+and slowly, and Germany became impatient. The successful campaign
+against Rumania, resulting in the capture of Bucharest on December 6th,
+and the new vista which it opened to Germany of large food supplies,
+strengthened the Teutonic purpose. Perhaps Germany, with her
+characteristic lack of finesse, imagined that her own open efforts would
+lend emphasis to Mr. Wilson's pacific exertions. At any rate, on
+December 12th, just as Mr. Wilson was preparing to launch his own
+campaign for mediation, Germany herself approached her enemies with a
+proposal for a peace conference. A few days afterward Page, as the
+representative of Germany, called at the Foreign Office to deliver the
+large white envelope which contained the Kaiser's "peace proposal." In
+delivering this to Lord Robert Cecil, who was acting as Foreign
+Secretary in the temporary absence of Mr. Balfour, Page emphasized the
+fact that the American Government entirely disassociated itself from its
+contents and that he was acting merely in his capacity of "German
+Ambassador." Two communications from Lord Robert to Sir Cecil Spring
+Rice, British Ambassador at Washington, tell the story and also reveal
+that it was almost impossible for Page, even when engaged in an official
+proceeding, to conceal his contempt for the whole enterprise:
+
+ _Lord R. Cecil to Sir C. Spring Rice_
+
+ Foreign Office,
+
+ December 18, 1916.
+
+ SIR:
+
+ The American Ambassador came to see me this morning and presented
+ to me the German note containing what is called in it the "offer of
+ peace." He explained that he did so on instructions of his
+ Government as representing the German Government, and not in any
+ way as representing their own opinions. He also explained that the
+ note must be regarded as coming from the four Central Powers, and
+ as being addressed to all the Entente Powers who were represented
+ by the United States.
+
+ He then read to me a telegram from his Government, but declined to
+ leave me a copy of it. The first part of the telegram explained
+ that the Government of the United States would deeply appreciate a
+ confidential intimation of the response to be made to the German
+ note and that they would themselves have certain representations to
+ make to the Entente Powers, to which they urgently begged the
+ closest consideration. The telegram went on to explain that the
+ Government of the United States had had it in mind for some time
+ past to make such representations on behalf of neutral nations and
+ humanity, and that it must not be thought that they were prompted
+ by the Governments of the Central Powers. They wished us to
+ understand that the note of the Central Powers created a good
+ opportunity for making the American representations, but was not
+ the cause of such representations being made.
+
+ I replied that I could of course say nothing to him on such an
+ important matter without consulting my colleagues.
+
+ I am, etc.,
+
+ ROBERT CECIL.
+
+ _Lord R. Cecil to Sir C. Spring Rice_
+
+ Foreign Office,
+
+ 19 December, 1916.
+
+ SIR:
+
+ The American Ambassador came to see me this afternoon.
+
+ I asked him whether he could tell me why his government were
+ anxious to have confidential information as to the nature of our
+ response to the German peace note. He replied that he did not know,
+ but he imagined it was to enable them to frame the representations
+ of which he had spoken to me.
+
+ I then told him that we had asked the French to draft a reply, and
+ that it would then be considered by the Allies, and in all
+ probability an identic note would be presented in answer to the
+ German note. I thought it probable that we should express our view
+ that it was impossible to deal with the German offer, since it
+ contained no specific proposals.
+
+ He said that he quite understood this, and that we should in fact
+ reply that it was an offer "to buy a pig in a poke" which we were
+ not prepared to accept. He added that he thought his Government
+ would fully anticipate a reply in this sense, and he himself
+ obviously approved it.
+
+ Then, speaking quite seriously, he said that he had heard people in
+ London treating the German offer with derision, but that no doubt
+ the belligerent governments would treat it seriously.
+
+ I said that it was certainly a serious thing, and no doubt would be
+ treated seriously.
+
+ I asked him if he knew what would be contained in the proposed
+ representations from his government.
+
+ He said that he did not; but as he understood that they were to be
+ made to all the belligerents, he did not think that they could be
+ much more than a pious aspiration for peace; since that was the
+ only thing that was equally applicable to the Germans and to us.
+
+ As he was leaving he suggested that the German note might be
+ published in our press.
+
+ I am, etc.,
+
+ ROBERT CECIL.
+
+This so-called German "peace proposal" began with the statement that the
+war "had been forced" upon Germany, contained the usual reference to the
+military might of the Central Powers, and declared that the Fatherland
+was fighting for "the honour and liberty of national evolution." It is
+therefore not surprising that Lord Robert received it somewhat
+sardonically, especially as the communication contained no specific
+proposals, but merely a vague suggestion of "negotiations." But another
+spectacular performance now drove the German manoeuvre out of
+everybody's mind. That President Wilson resented this German
+interference with his own plans is well known; he did not drop them,
+however, but on December 18th, he sent his long-contemplated peace
+communication to all the warring Powers. His appeal took the form of
+asking that they state the objects for which they were fighting, the
+Presidential belief evidently being that, if they did this, a common
+meeting ground might possibly be found. The suggestion that the Allied
+war aims were not public property, despite the fact that British
+statesmen had been broadly proclaiming them for three years, caused a
+momentary irritation in England, but this was not a serious matter,
+especially as the British Cabinet quickly saw that this request gave
+them a position of advantage over Germany, which had always refused to
+make public the terms on which it would end the war. The main substance
+in this Presidential approach, therefore, would have produced no
+ill-feeling; as usual, it was a few parenthetical phrases--phrases which
+were not essential to the main argument--which set the allied countries
+seething with indignation. The President, this section of his note ran,
+"takes the liberty of calling attention to the fact that the objects
+which the statesmen of the belligerents on both sides have in mind in
+this war, are virtually the same, as stated in general terms to their
+own people and to the world. Each side desires to make the rights and
+privileges of weak peoples and small states as secure against aggression
+and denial in the future as the rights and privileges of the great and
+powerful states now at war." This idea was elaborated in several
+sentences of a similar strain, the general purport of the whole passage
+being that there was little to choose between the combatants, inasmuch
+as both were apparently fighting for about the same things. Mr. Wilson's
+purpose in this paragraph is not obscure; he was making his long
+expected appearance as a mediator, and he evidently believed that it was
+essential to this role that he should not seem to be prejudiced in
+favour of either side, but should hold the balance impartially between
+them.
+
+It is true that a minute reading indicates that Mr. Wilson was merely
+quoting, or attempting to paraphrase, the statements of the leaders of
+both sides, but there is such a thing as quoting with approval, and no
+explanation could convince the British public that the ruler of the
+greatest neutral nation had not declared that the Allies and the Central
+Powers stood morally upon the same level. The popular indignation which
+this caused in Great Britain was so intense that it alarmed the British
+authorities. The publication of this note in the British press was
+withheld for several hours, in order to give the Government an
+opportunity to control the expression of editorial opinion; otherwise it
+was feared that this would be so unrestrained in its bitterness that
+relations with the United States might be imperilled. The messages which
+the London correspondents were permitted to send to the United States
+were carefully censored for the same reason. The dispatch sent by the
+Associated Press was the product of a long struggle between the Foreign
+Office and its London correspondent. The representatives spent half an
+hour considering whether the American correspondents could cable their
+country that the note had been received in England with "surprise and
+irritation." After much discussion it was decided that "irritation"
+could not be used, and the message of the Associated Press, after
+undergoing this careful editing by the Foreign Office, was a weak and
+ridiculous description of the high state of excitement which prevailed
+in Great Britain. The fact that the British Foreign Office should have
+given all this trouble over the expressions sent to American newspapers
+and should even have spent half an hour debating whether a particular
+word should be used, almost pathetically illustrates the great care
+taken by the British Government not to influence American opinion
+against the Allies.
+
+The Government took the same precautions with its own press in England.
+When the note was finally released the Foreign Office explicitly
+directed the London newspapers to comment with the utmost caution and in
+no case to question the President's sincerity. Most of them acquiesced
+in these instructions by maintaining silence. There was only one London
+newspaper, the _Westminster Gazette_, which made even a faint-hearted
+attempt to explain away the President's statement. From the first day of
+the war the British people had declared that President Wilson did not
+understand the issues at stake; and they now declared that this note
+confirmed their worst forebodings. The comments of the man-in-the-street
+were unprintable, but more serious than these was the impression which
+Mr. Wilson's dubious remarks made upon those Englishmen who had always
+been especially friendly to the United States and who had even defended
+the President in previous crises. Lord Bryce, who had accepted
+philosophically the Presidential statement that the United States was
+not "concerned with the causes" of the war, could not regard so
+indulgently this latest judgment of Great Britain and Germany. "Bryce
+came to see me in a state of great depression," wrote Page. "He has sent
+Mr. Wilson a personal letter on this matter." Northcliffe commanded his
+newspapers, the _Times_ and the _Daily Mail_, to discuss the note in a
+judicial spirit, but he himself told Mr. Page that "everybody is as
+angry as hell." When someone attempted to discuss the Wilson note with
+Mr. Asquith, he brushed the subject away with a despairing gesture.
+"Don't talk to me about it," he said. "It is most disheartening." But
+the one man in England who was perhaps the most affected was King
+George. A man who had attended luncheon at Buckingham Palace on December
+21st gave Page a description of the royal distress. The King, expressing
+his surprise and dismay that Mr. Wilson should think that Englishmen
+were fighting for the same things in this war as the Germans, broke
+down.
+
+The world only now understands the dreadful prospect which was opening
+before Europe at the moment when this Presidential note added a new
+cause for general despondency. Rumania had collapsed, the first inkling
+of the Russian revolution had been obtained, the British well knew that
+the submarine warfare was to be resumed, and British finances were also
+in a desperate plight. More and more it was becoming evident to the
+British statesmen that they needed the intervention of the United
+States. This is the reason why they could not destroy the chances of
+American help by taking official offense even at what Page, in a
+communication to the Secretary of State, did not hesitate to call
+President Wilson's "insulting words"; and hence their determination to
+silence the press and to give no outward expression of what they felt.
+Page's interview with Lord Robert Cecil on December 26th, while the
+Presidential communication was lying on his desk, discloses the real
+emotions of Englishmen. Apparently Page's frank cables concerning the
+reception of this paragraph had caused a certain interest in the State
+Department; at least the Ambassador was instructed to call at the
+Foreign Office and explain that the interpretation which had been
+commonly put upon the President's words was not the one which he had
+intended. At the same time Page was instructed to request the British
+Foreign Office, in case its reply were "favourable," not to publish it,
+but to communicate it secretly to the American Government. The purpose
+of this request is a little obscure; possibly it was the President's
+plan to use such a favourable reply to force Germany likewise to display
+an acquiescent mood. The object of Page's call was to present this
+disclaimer.
+
+Lord Robert Cecil, the son of the late Lord Salisbury,--that same Lord
+Salisbury whose combats with Secretary Blaine and Secretary Olney form
+piquant chapters in British-American history--is one of the most able
+and respected of British statesmen. In his earlier life Lord Salisbury
+had been somewhat overbearing in his attitude toward the United States;
+in his later years, however, perhaps owing to the influence of his
+nephew, Mr. Balfour, his manner had changed. In his attitude toward the
+United States Lord Robert Cecil reflected only the later phases of his
+father's career. To this country and to its peaceful ideals he had
+always been extremely sympathetic, and to Page especially he had never
+manifested anything but cordiality. Yet it was evident, as Page came
+into his office this morning, that to Lord Robert, as to every member of
+the Government, the President's note, with its equivocal phrases, had
+been a terrible shock. His manner was extremely courteous, as always,
+but he made no attempt to conceal his feelings. Ordinarily Lord Robert
+did not wear his emotions on the surface; but he took occasion on this
+visit to tell Page how greatly the President's communication had grieved
+him.
+
+"The President," he said, "has seemed to pass judgment on the allied
+cause by putting it on the same level as the German. I am deeply hurt."
+
+Page conveyed Mr. Lansing's message that no such inference was
+justified. But this was not reassuring.
+
+"Moreover," Lord Robert added, "there is one sentence in the note--that
+in which the President says that the position of neutrals is becoming
+intolerable--that seems almost a veiled threat."
+
+Page hastened to assure Lord Robert that no threat was intended.
+
+Lord Robert's manner became increasingly serious.
+
+"There is nothing that the American Government or any other human power
+can do," he remarked slowly and solemnly, "which will bring this war to
+a close before the Allies have spent their utmost force to secure a
+victory. A failure to secure such a victory will leave the world at the
+mercy of the most arrogant and the bloodiest tyranny that has ever been
+organized. It is far better to die in an effort to defeat that tyranny
+than to perish under its success."
+
+On any occasion Lord Robert is an impressive or at least a striking and
+unusual figure; he is tall, lank, and ungainly, almost Lincolnesque in
+the carelessness of his apparel and the exceeding awkwardness of his
+postures and manners. His angular features, sharp nose, pale face, and
+dark hair suggest the strain of ascetism, almost of fanaticism, which
+runs in the present generation of his family. And the deep sincerity and
+power of his words on this occasion made an impression which Page never
+forgot; they transformed the British statesman into an eloquent, almost
+an heroic figure. If we are to understand the full tragedy of this
+moment we must remember that, incredible as it now seems, there was a
+fear in British officialdom that the United States might not only not
+pursue a course favourable to the Allies, but that it might even throw
+its support to Germany. The fear, of course, was baseless; any
+suggestion of such a policy in the United States would have destroyed
+any official who had brought it forward; but Lord Robert knew and Page
+knew that there were insidious influences at work at that time, both in
+the United States and in Great Britain, which looked in this direction.
+A group of Americans, whom Page used to refer to as "peace spies," were
+associated with English pacifists, for the purpose of bringing about
+peace on almost any terms. These "peace spies" had worked out a
+programme all their own. The purpose was to compel Great Britain to
+accept the German terms for ending the war. Unless she did accept them,
+then it was intended that the American Government should place an
+embargo on the shipment of foodstuffs and munitions to the Allies. There
+is little question that the United States, by taking such action, could
+have ended the war almost instantaneously. Should the food of her people
+and the great quantities of munitions which were coming from this
+country be suddenly cut off, there is little likelihood that Great
+Britain could have long survived. The possibility that an embargo might
+shut out these supplies had hung over the heads of British statesmen
+ever since the war began; they knew that the possession of this mighty
+power made the United States the potential dictator of events; and the
+fear that it might be used had never ceased to influence their thoughts
+or their actions. Even while this interview was taking place, certain
+anti-British forces in the United States, such as Senator Hoke Smith of
+Georgia, were urging action of this kind.
+
+"I have always been almost a Pacifist," Lord Robert continued. "No man
+has ever hated war worse than I. No man has ever had a more earnest
+faith that war can be abolished. But European civilization has been
+murderously assaulted and there is nothing now to do but to defeat this
+desperate enemy or to perish in the effort. I had hoped that the United
+States understood what is at stake."
+
+Lord Robert went on:
+
+"I will go so far as to say that if the United States will come into the
+war it will decide which will win, freedom or organized tyranny. If the
+United States shall help the Germans, civilization will perish and it
+will be necessary to build it up slowly again--if indeed it will ever
+appear again. If the United States will help the Allies, civilization
+will triumph[50]."
+
+As to the proposal that the British terms should be conveyed
+confidentially to Mr. Wilson, Lord Robert said that that would be a
+difficult thing to do. The President's note had been published, and it
+therefore seemed necessary that the reply should also be given to the
+press. This was the procedure that was ultimately adopted.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Startling as was the sensation caused by the President's December note,
+it was mild compared with that which was now to come. Page naturally
+sent prompt reports of all these conversations to the President and
+likewise kept him completely informed as to the state of public feeling,
+but his best exertions apparently did not immediately affect the Wilson
+policy. The overwhelming fact is that the President's mind was fixed on
+a determination to compel the warring powers to make peace and in this
+way to keep the United States out of the conflict. Even the disturbance
+caused by his note of December 18th did not make him pause in this peace
+campaign. To that note the British sent a manly and definite reply,
+drafted by Mr. Balfour, giving in detail precisely the terms upon which
+the Allies would compose their differences with the Central Powers. The
+Germans sent a reply consisting of ten or a dozen lines, which did not
+give their terms, but merely asked again for a conference. Events were
+now moving with the utmost rapidity. On January 9th, a council of German
+military chieftains was held at Pless; in this it was decided to resume
+unrestricted submarine warfare. On January 16th the Zimmermann-Mexico
+telegram was intercepted; this informed Bernstorff, among other things,
+that this decision had been made. On January 16th, at nine o'clock in
+the morning, the American Embassy in London began receiving a long
+cipher despatch from Washington. The preamble announced that the
+despatch contained a copy of an address which the President proposed to
+deliver before the Senate "in a few days." Page was directed to have
+copies of the address "secretly prepared" and to hand them to the
+British Foreign Office and to newspapers of the type of the Nation, the
+Daily News, and the Manchester Guardian--all three newspapers well known
+for their Pacifist tendencies. As the speech approached its end, this
+sentence appeared: "It must be a peace without victory." The words
+greatly puzzled the secretary in charge, for they seemed almost
+meaningless. Suspecting that an error had been made in transmission, the
+secretary directed the code room to cable Washington for a verification
+of the cipher groups. Very soon the answer was received; there had been
+no mistake; the Presidential words were precisely those which had been
+first received: "Peace without victory." The slips were then taken to
+Page, who read the document, especially these fateful syllables, with a
+consternation which he made no effort to conceal. He immediately wrote a
+cable to President Wilson, telling him of the deplorable effect this
+sentence would produce and imploring him to cut it out of his
+speech--with what success the world now knows.
+
+An astonishing feature of this episode is that Page had recently
+explained to the Foreign Office, in obedience to instructions from
+Washington, that Mr. Wilson's December note should not be interpreted as
+placing the Allies and the Central Powers on the same moral level. Now
+Mr. Wilson, in this "peace without victory" phrase, had repeated
+practically the same idea in another form. On the day the speech was
+received at the Embassy, about a week before it was delivered in the
+Senate, Page made the following memorandum:
+
+ The President's address to the Senate, which was received to-day
+ (January 16th)[51], shows that he thinks he can play peace-maker.
+ He does not at all understand, (or, if he do, so much the worse for
+ him) that the Entente Powers, especially Great Britain and France,
+ cannot make "peace without victory." If they do, they will become
+ vassals of Germany. In a word, the President does not know the
+ Germans; and he is, unconsciously, under their influence in his
+ thought. His speech plays into their hands.
+
+ This address will give great offense in England, since it puts each
+ side in the war on the same moral level.
+
+ I immediately saw the grave danger to our relations with Great
+ Britain by the Peace-without-Victory plan; and I telegraphed the
+ President, venturing to advise him to omit that phrase--with no
+ result.
+
+Afterward Page added this to the above:
+
+ Compare this Senate speech with his speech in April calling for
+ war: Just when and how did the President come to see the true
+ nature of the German? What made him change from Peace-Maker to
+ War-Maker? The Zimmermann telegram, or the February U-boat renewal
+ of warfare? Had he been so credulous as to believe the German
+ promise? This promise had been continuously and repeatedly broken.
+
+ Or was it the pressure of public opinion, the growing impatience of
+ the people that pushed him in?
+
+ This distressing peace-move--utterly out of touch with the facts of
+ the origin of the war or of its conduct or of the mood and
+ necessities of Great Britain--a remote, academic deliverance, while
+ Great Britain and France were fighting for their very lives--made a
+ profoundly dejected feeling; and it made my place and work more
+ uncomfortable than ever. "Peace without victory" brought us to the
+ very depths of European disfavour.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 49: "My Three Years in America," by Count Bernstorff, p. 294.]
+
+[Footnote 50: This narrative is based upon memoranda made by Page.]
+
+[Footnote 51: It was delivered and published on January 22nd.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+THE UNITED STATES AT WAR
+
+
+I
+
+The United States broke off diplomatic relations with Germany on
+February 3, 1917. The occasion was a memorable one in the American
+Embassy in London, not unrelieved by a touch of the ridiculous. All day
+long a nervous and rather weary company had waited in the Ambassador's
+room for the decisive word from Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Page, Mr. and
+Mrs. Laughlin, Mr. Shoecraft, the Ambassador's secretary, sat there hour
+after hour, hardly speaking to one another in their tense excitement,
+waiting for the news that would inform them that Bernstorff's course had
+been run and that their country had taken its decision on the side of
+the Allies. Finally, at nine o'clock in the evening, the front door bell
+rang. Mr. Shoecraft excitedly left the room; half way downstairs he met
+Admiral William Reginald Hall, the head of the British Naval
+Intelligence, who was hurrying up to the Ambassador. Admiral Hall, as he
+spied Mr. Shoecraft, stopped abruptly and uttered just two words:
+
+"Thank God!"
+
+He then went into the Ambassador's room and read a secret code message
+which he had just received from Captain Gaunt, the British naval attache
+at Washington. It was as follows:
+
+"Bernstorff has just been given his passports. I shall probably get
+drunk to-night!"
+
+It was in this way that Page first learned that the long tension had
+passed.
+
+Page well understood that the dismissal of Bernstorff at that time meant
+war with the Central Empires. Had this dismissal taken place in 1915,
+after the sinking of the _Lusitania_, or in 1916, after the sinking of
+the _Sussex_, Page believed that a simple break in relations would in
+itself have brought the war to an early end. But by February, 1917,
+things had gone too far. For Germany had now decided to stake everything
+upon the chance of winning a quick victory with the submarine. Our
+policy had persuaded the Kaiser's advisers that America would not
+intervene; and the likelihood of rapidly starving Great Britain was so
+great--indeed the Germans had reduced the situation to a mathematical
+calculation of success--that an American declaration of war seemed to
+Berlin to be a matter of no particular importance. The American
+Ambassador in London regarded Bernstorff's dismissal much more
+seriously. It justified the interpretations of events which he had been
+sending to Mr. Wilson, Colonel House, and others for nearly three years.
+If Page had been inclined to take satisfaction in the fulfilment of his
+own prophecies, Germany's disregard of her promises and the American
+declaration of war would have seemed an ample justification of his
+course as ambassador.
+
+[Illustration: Walter H. Page, at the time of America's entry into the
+war, April, 1917]
+
+[Illustration: Resolution passed by the two Houses of Parliament, April
+18, 1917, on America's entry into the war]
+
+But Page had little time for such vain communings. "All that water," as
+he now wrote, "has flowed over the dam." Occasionally his mind would
+revert to the dreadful period of "neutrality," but in the main his
+activities, mental and physical, were devoted to the future. A letter
+addressed to his son Arthur shows how quickly and how sympathetically he
+was adjusting himself to the new prospect. His mind was now occupied
+with ships, food, armies, warfare on submarines, and the approaching
+resettlement of the world. How completely he foresaw the part that
+the United States must play in the actual waging of hostilities, and to
+what an extent he himself was responsible for the policies that
+ultimately prevailed, appears in this letter:
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ 25 March, 1917, London.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ It's very hard, not to say impossible, to write in these swiftly
+ moving days. Anything written to-day is out of date to-morrow--even
+ if it be not wrong to start with. The impression becomes stronger
+ here every day that we shall go into the war "with both feet"--that
+ the people have pushed the President over in spite of his vision of
+ the Great Peacemaker, and that, being pushed over, his idea now
+ will be to show how he led them into a glorious war in defense of
+ democracy. That's my reading of the situation, and I hope I am not
+ wrong. At any rate, ever since the call of Congress for April 2nd,
+ I have been telegraphing tons of information and plans that can be
+ of use only if we go to war. Habitually they never acknowledge the
+ receipt of anything at Washington. I don't know, therefore, whether
+ they like these pieces of information or not. I have my staff of
+ twenty-five good men getting all sorts of warlike information; and
+ I have just organized twenty-five or thirty more--the best business
+ Americans in London--who are also at work. I am trying to get the
+ Government at Washington to send over a committee of conference--a
+ General, an Admiral, a Reserve Board man, etc., etc. If they do
+ half the things that I recommend we'll be in at the final lickin'
+ big, and will save our souls yet.
+
+ There's lots of human nature in this world. A note is now
+ sometimes heard here in undertone (Northcliffe strikes it)--that
+ they don't want the Americans in the war. This means that if we
+ come in just as the Allies finish the job we'll get credit, in
+ part, for the victory, which we did little to win! But that's a
+ minor note. The great mass of people do want us in, quick, hard,
+ and strong--our money and our guns and our ships.
+
+ A gift of a billion dollars[52] to France will fix Franco-American
+ history all right for several centuries. Push it through. Such a
+ gift could come to this Kingdom also but for the British stupidity
+ about the Irish for three hundred years. A big loan to Great
+ Britain at a low rate of interest will do the work here.
+
+ My mind keeps constantly on the effect of the war and especially of
+ our action on our own country. Of course that is the most important
+ end of the thing for us. I hope that--
+
+ 1. It will break up and tear away our isolation;
+
+ 2. It will unhorse our cranks and soft-brains.
+
+ 3. It will make us less promiscuously hospitable to every kind of
+ immigrant;
+
+ 4. It will reestablish in our minds and conscience and policy our
+ true historic genesis, background, kindred, and destiny--i.e., kill
+ the Irish and the German influence.
+
+ 5. It will revive our real manhood--put the molly-coddles in
+ disgrace, as idiots and dandies are;
+
+ 6. It will make our politics frank and manly by restoring our true
+ nationality;
+
+ 7. It will make us again a great sea-faring people. It is this that
+ has given Great Britain its long lead in the world;
+
+ 8. Break up our feminized education--make a boy a vigorous animal
+ and make our education rest on a wholesome physical basis;
+
+ 9. Bring men of a higher type into our political life.
+
+ We need waking up and shaking up and invigorating as much as the
+ Germans need taking down.
+
+ There is no danger of "militarism" in any harmful sense among any
+ English race or in any democracy.
+
+ By George! all these things open an interesting outlook and series
+ of tasks--don't they?
+
+ My staff and I are asking everybody what the Americans can best do
+ to help the cause along. The views are not startling, but they are
+ interesting.
+
+ _Jellicoe_: More ships, merchant ships, any kind of ships, and take
+ over the patrol of the American side of the Atlantic and release
+ the British cruisers there.
+
+ _Balfour_: American credits in the United States big enough to keep
+ up the rate of exchange.
+
+ _Bonar Law_: Same thing.
+
+ _The military men_: An expeditionary force, no matter how small,
+ for the effect of the American Flag in Europe. If one regiment
+ marched through London and Paris and took the Flag to the front,
+ that would be worth the winning of a battle.
+
+ Think of the vast increase of territory and power Great Britain
+ will have--her colonies drawn closer than ever, the German
+ colonies, or most of them, taken over by her, Bagdad hers--what a
+ way Germany chose to lessen the British Empire! And these gains of
+ territory will be made, as most of her gains have been, not by any
+ prearranged, set plan, but as by-products of action for some other
+ purpose. The only people who have made a deliberate plan to conquer
+ the earth--now living--are the Germans. And from first to last the
+ additions to the British Empire have been made because she has been
+ a first-class maritime power.
+
+ And that's the way she has made her trade and her money, too.
+
+ On top of this the President speculates about the danger of the
+ white man losing his supremacy because a few million men get
+ killed! The truth is every country that is playing a big part in
+ the war was overpopulated. There will be a considerable productive
+ loss because the killed men were, as a rule, the best men; but the
+ white man's control of the world hasn't depended on any few million
+ of males. This speculation is far up in the clouds. If Russia and
+ Germany really be liberated from social and political and
+ industrial autocracy, this liberation will bring into play far more
+ power than all the men killed in the war could have had under the
+ pre-war regime. I observe this with every year of my
+ observation--there's no substitute for common-sense.
+
+ The big results of the war will, after all, be the freedom and the
+ stimulation of men in these weary Old-World lands--in Russia,
+ Germany itself, and in England. In five or ten years (or sooner,
+ alas!) the dead will be forgotten.
+
+ If you wish to make a picture of the world as it will be when the
+ war ends, you must conjure up such scenes as these--human bones
+ along the Russian highways where the great retreat took place and
+ all that such a sight denotes; Poland literally starved; Serbia,
+ blasted and burned and starved; Armenia butchered; the horrible
+ tragedy of Gallipoli, where the best soldiers in the world were
+ sacrificed to politicians' policies; Austria and Germany starved
+ and whipped but liberalized--perhaps no king in either country;
+ Belgium--belgiumized; northern France the same and worse; more
+ productive Frenchmen killed in proportion to the population perhaps
+ than any other country will have lost; Great Britain--most of her
+ best men gone or maimed; colossal debts; several Teutonic countries
+ bankrupt; every atrocity conceivable committed somewhere--a
+ hell-swept great continent having endured more suffering in three
+ years than in the preceding three hundred. Then, ten years later,
+ most of this suffering a mere memory; governments reorganized and
+ liberalized; men made more efficient by this strenuous three years'
+ work; the fields got back their bloom, and life going on much as it
+ did before--with this chief difference--some kings have gone and
+ many privileges have been abolished. The lessons are two--(1) that
+ no government can successfully set out and conquer the world; and
+ (2) that the hold that privilege holders acquire costs more to
+ dislodge than any one could ever have guessed. That's the sum of
+ it. Kings and privilege mongers, of course, have held the parts of
+ the world separate from one another. They fatten on provincialism,
+ which is mistaken for patriotism. As they lose their grip, human
+ sympathy has its natural play between nations, and civilization has
+ a chance. With any Emperor of Germany left the war will have been
+ half in vain.
+
+ If we (the U.S.A.) cultivate the manly qualities and throw off our
+ cranks and read our own history and be true to our traditions and
+ blood and get some political vigour; then if we emancipate
+ ourselves from the isolation theory and from the landlubber
+ theory--get into the world and build ships, ships, ships, ships,
+ and run them to the ends of the seas, we can dominate the world in
+ trade and in political thought.
+
+ You know I have moments when it occurs to me that perhaps I'd
+ better give whatever working years I may have to telling this
+ story--the story of the larger meaning of the war. There's no
+ bigger theme--never was one so big.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+On April 1st, the day before President Wilson made his great address
+before Congress requesting that body to declare the existence of a state
+of war with Germany, Page committed to paper a few paragraphs which
+summed up his final judgment of President Wilson's foreign policy for
+the preceding two and a half years.
+
+ Embassy of the United States of America,
+ April 1, 1917.
+
+ In these last days, before the United States is forced into war--by
+ the people's insistence--the preceding course of events becomes
+ even clearer than it was before; and it has been as clear all the
+ time as the nose on a man's face.
+
+ The President began by refusing to understand the meaning of the
+ war. To him it seemed a quarrel to settle economic rivalries
+ between Germany and England. He said to me last September[53] that
+ there were many causes why Germany went to war. He showed a great
+ degree of toleration for Germany; and he was, during the whole
+ morning that I talked with him, complaining of England. The
+ controversies we had with England were, of course, mere by-products
+ of the conflict. But to him they seemed as important as the
+ controversy we had with Germany. In the beginning he had made--as
+ far as it was possible--neutrality a positive quality of mind. He
+ would not move from that position.
+
+ That was his first error of judgment. And by insisting on this he
+ soothed the people--sat them down in comfortable chairs and said,
+ "Now stay there." He really suppressed speech and thought.
+
+ The second error he made was in thinking that he could play a
+ great part as peacemaker--come and give a blessing to these erring
+ children. This was strong in his hopes and ambitions. There was a
+ condescension in this attitude that was offensive.
+
+ He shut himself up with these two ideas and engaged in what he
+ called "thought." The air currents of the world never ventilated
+ his mind.
+
+ This inactive position he has kept as long as public sentiment
+ permitted. He seems no longer to regard himself nor to speak as a
+ leader--only as the mouthpiece of public opinion after opinion has
+ run over him.
+
+ He has not breathed a spirit into the people: he has encouraged
+ them to supineness. He is _not_ a leader, but rather a stubborn
+ phrasemaker.
+
+ And now events and the aroused people seem to have brought the
+ President to the necessary point of action; and even now he may act
+ timidly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"One thing pleases me," Page wrote to his son Arthur, "I never lost
+faith in the American people. It is now clear that I was right in
+feeling that they would have gladly come in any time after the
+_Lusitania_ crime. Middle West in the front, and that the German hasn't
+made any real impression on the American nation. He was made a bug-a-boo
+and worked for all he was worth by Bernstorff; and that's the whole
+story. We are as Anglo-Saxon as we ever were. If Hughes had had sense
+and courage enough to say: 'I'm for war, war to save our honour and to
+save democracy,' he would now be President. If Wilson had said that,
+Hughes would have carried no important states in the Union. The
+suppressed people would have risen to either of them. That's God's truth
+as I believe it. The real United States is made up of you and Frank and
+the Page boys at Aberdeen and of the 10,000,000 other young fellows who
+are ready to do the job and who instinctively see the whole truth of the
+situation. But of course what the people would not have done under
+certain conditions--that water also has flowed over the dam; and I
+mention it only because I have resolutely kept my faith in the people
+and there has been nothing in recent events that has shaken it."
+
+Two letters which Page wrote on this same April 1st are interesting in
+that they outline almost completely the war policy that was finally
+carried out:
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday_
+
+ Embassy of the United States of America,
+ April 1, 1917.
+
+ DEAR EFFENDI:
+
+ Here's the programme:
+
+ (1) Our navy in immediate action in whatever way a conference with
+ the British shows we can best help.
+
+ (2) A small expeditionary force to France immediately--as large as
+ we can quickly make ready, if only 10,000 men--as proof that we are
+ ready to do some fighting.
+
+ (3) A large expeditionary force as soon as the men can be organized
+ and equipped. They can be trained into an effective army in France
+ in about one fourth of the time that they could be trained anywhere
+ else.
+
+ (4) A large loan to the Allies at a low rate of interest.
+
+ (5) Ships, ships, ships--troop ships, food ships, munition ships,
+ auxiliary ships to the navy, wooden ships, steel ships, little
+ ships, big ships, ships, ships, ships without number or end.
+
+ (6) A clear-cut expression of the moral issue involved in the war.
+ Every social and political ideal that we stand for is at stake. If
+ we value democracy in the world, this is the chance to further it
+ or--to bring it into utter disrepute. After Russia must come
+ Germany and Austria; and then the King-business will pretty nearly
+ be put out of commission.
+
+ (7) We must go to war in dead earnest. We must sign the Allies'
+ agreement not to make a separate peace, and we must stay in to the
+ end. Then the end will be very greatly hastened.
+
+ It's been four years ago to-day since I was first asked to come
+ here. God knows I've done my poor best to save our country and to
+ help. It'll be four years in the middle of May since I sailed. I
+ shall still do my best. I'll not be able to start back by May 15th,
+ but I have a feeling, if we do our whole duty in the United States,
+ that the end may not be very many months off. And how long off it
+ may be may depend to a considerable degree on our action.
+
+ We are faring very well on army rations. None of us will live to
+ see another time when so many big things are at stake nor another
+ time when our country can play so large or important a part in
+ saving the world. Hold up your end. I'm doing my best here.
+
+ I think of you engaged in the peaceful work of instructing the
+ people, and I think of the garden and crocuses and the smell of
+ early spring in the air and the earth and--push on; I'll be with
+ you before we grow much older or get much grayer; and a great and
+ prosperous and peaceful time will lie before us. Pity me and hold
+ up your end for real American participation. Get together? Yes; but
+ the way to get together is to get in!
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To David F. Houston_[54]
+
+ Embassy of the United States of America,
+ April 1, 1917.
+
+ DEAR HOUSTON:
+
+ The Administration can save itself from becoming a black blot on
+ American history only by vigorous action--acts such as these:
+
+ Putting our navy to work--vigorous work--wherever and however is
+ wisest. I have received the Government's promise to send an Admiral
+ here at once for a conference. We must work out with the British
+ Navy a programme whereby we can best help; and we must carry it
+ without hesitancy or delay.
+
+ Sending over an expeditionary military force immediately--a small
+ one, but as large as we can, as an earnest of a larger one to come.
+ This immediate small one will have a good moral effect; and we need
+ all the moral reinstatement that we can get in the estimation of
+ the world; our moral stock is lower than, I fear, any of you at
+ home can possibly realize. As for a larger expeditionary force
+ later--even that ought to be sent quite early. It can and must
+ spend some time in training in France, whatever its training
+ beforehand may have been. All the military men agree that soldiers
+ in France back of the line can be trained in at least half the time
+ that they can be trained anywhere else. The officers at once take
+ their turn in the trenches, and the progress that they and their
+ men make in close proximity to the fighting is one of the
+ remarkable discoveries of the war. The British Army was so trained
+ and all the colonial forces. Two or three or four hundred thousand
+ Americans could be sent over as soon almost as they are organized
+ and equipped-provided transports and a continuous supply of food
+ and munition ships can be got. They can be trained into fighting
+ men--into an effective army--in about one third of the time that
+ would be required at home.
+
+ I suppose, of course, we shall make at once a large loan to the
+ Allies at a low rate of interest. That is most important, but that
+ alone will not save us. We must also _fight_.
+
+ All the ships we can get--build, requisition, or confiscate--are
+ needed immediately.
+
+ Navy, army, money, ships--these are the first things, but by no
+ means all. We must make some expression of a conviction that there
+ is a moral question of right and wrong involved in this war--a
+ question of humanity, a question of democracy. So far we have
+ (officially) spoken only of the wrongs done to our ships and
+ citizens. Deep wrongs have been done to all our moral ideas, to our
+ ideals. We have sunk very low in European opinion because we do not
+ seem to know even yet that a German victory would be less desirable
+ than (say) a Zulu victory of the world.
+
+ We must go in with the Allies, not begin a mere single fight
+ against submarines. We must sign the pact of London--not make a
+ separate peace.
+
+ We mustn't longer spin dreams about peace, nor leagues to enforce
+ peace, nor the Freedom of the Seas. These things are mere
+ intellectual diversions of minds out of contact with realities.
+ Every political and social ideal we have is at stake. If we make
+ them secure, we'll save Europe from destruction and save ourselves,
+ too. I pray for vigour and decision and clear-cut resolute action.
+
+ (1) The Navy--full strength, no "grapejuice" action.
+
+ (2) An immediate expeditionary force.
+
+ (3) A larger expeditionary force very soon.
+
+ (4) A large loan at a low interest.
+
+ (5) Ships, ships, ships.
+
+ (6) A clear-cut expression of the moral issue. Thus (and only thus)
+ can we swing into a new era, with a world born again.
+
+ Yours in strictest confidence,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+A memorandum, written on April 3rd, the day after President Wilson
+advised Congress to declare a state of war with Germany:
+
+ _The Day_
+
+ When I went to see Mr. Balfour to-day he shook my hand warmly and
+ said: "It's a great day for the world." And so has everybody said,
+ in one way or another, that I have met to-day.
+
+ The President's speech did not appear in the morning papers--only a
+ very brief summary in one or two of them; but the meaning of it was
+ clear. The fact that the House of Representatives organized itself
+ in one day and that the President addressed Congress on the evening
+ of that day told the story. The noon papers had the President's
+ speech in full; and everybody applauds.
+
+ My "Cabinet" meeting this morning was unusually interesting; and
+ the whole group has never before been so delighted. I spoke of the
+ suggestive, constructive work we have already done in making
+ reports on various war preparations and activities of this kingdom.
+ "Now we have greater need than ever, every man to do constructive
+ work--to think of plans to serve. We are in this excellent
+ strategical position in the capital of the greatest belligerent--a
+ position which I thank my stars, the President, and all the powers
+ that be for giving us. We can each strive to justify our
+ existence."
+
+ Few visitors called; but enthusiastic letters have begun to come
+ in.
+
+ Nearly the whole afternoon was spent with Mr. Balfour and Lord
+ Robert Cecil. Mr. Balfour had a long list of subjects. Could we
+ help in (1)--(2)--(3)?--Every once in a while he stopped his
+ enumeration of subjects long enough to tell me how the action of
+ the United States had moved him.
+
+ To Lord Robert I said: "I pray you, give the Black List a decent
+ burial: It's dead now, but through no act of yours. It insulted
+ every American because you did not see that it was insulting:
+ that's the discouraging fact to me." He thanked me earnestly. He'll
+ think about that.
+
+
+II
+
+These jottings give only a faint impression of the change which the
+American action wrought in Page. The strain which he had undergone for
+twenty-nine months had been intense; it had had the most unfortunate
+effect upon his health; and the sudden lifting might have produced that
+reaction for the worse which is not unusual after critical experiences
+of this kind. But the gratification which Page felt in the fact that the
+American spirit had justified his confidence gave him almost a certain
+exuberance of contentment. Londoners who saw him at that time describe
+him as acting like a man from whose shoulders a tremendous weight had
+suddenly been removed. For more than two years Page had been compelled,
+officially at least, to assume a "neutrality" with which he had never
+had the slightest sympathy, but the necessity for this mask now no
+longer existed. A well-known Englishman happened to meet Page leaving
+his house in Grosvenor Square the day after the Declaration of War. He
+stopped and shook the Ambassador's hand.
+
+"Thank God," the Englishman said, "that there is one hypocrite less in
+London to-day."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked Page.
+
+"I mean you. Pretending all this time that you were neutral! That isn't
+necessary any longer."
+
+"You are right!" the Ambassador answered as he walked on with a laugh
+and a wave of the hand.
+
+A few days after the Washington Declaration, the American Luncheon Club
+held a feast in honour of the event. This organization had a membership
+of representative American business men in London, but its behaviour
+during the war had not been based upon Mr. Wilson's idea of neutrality.
+Indeed its tables had so constantly rung with denunciations of the
+_Lusitania_ notes that all members of the American Embassy, from Page
+down, had found it necessary to refrain from attending its proceedings.
+When Page arose to address his compatriots on this occasion, therefore,
+he began with the significant words, "I am glad to be back with you
+again," and the mingled laughter and cheers with which this remark was
+received indicated that his hearers had caught the point.
+
+The change took place not only in Page, but in London and the whole of
+Great Britain. An England that had been saying harsh things of the
+United States for nearly two years now suddenly changed its attitude.
+Both houses of Parliament held commemorative sessions in honour of
+America's participation; in the Commons Mr. Lloyd George, Mr. Asquith,
+and other leaders welcomed their new allies, and in the Upper Chamber
+Lord Curzon, Lord Bryce, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and others
+similarly voiced their admiration. The Stars and Stripes almost
+instantaneously broke out on private dwellings, shops, hotels, and
+theatres; street hucksters did a thriving business selling rosettes of
+the American colours, which even the most stodgy Englishmen did not
+disdain to wear in their buttonholes; wherever there was a band or an
+orchestra, the Star Spangled Banner acquired a sudden popularity; and
+the day even came when the American and the British flags flew side by
+side over the Houses of Parliament--the first occasion in history that
+any other than the British standard had received this honour. The
+editorial outgivings of the British press on America's entrance form a
+literature all their own. The theatres and the music halls, which had
+found in "notes" and "nootrality" an endless theme of entertainment for
+their patrons, now sounded Americanism as their most popular refrain.
+Churches and cathedrals gave special services in honour of American
+intervention, and the King and the President began to figure side by the
+side in the prayer book. The estimation in which President Wilson was
+held changed overnight. All the phrases that had so grieved Englishmen
+were instantaneously forgotten. The President's address before Congress
+was praised as one of the most eloquent and statesmanlike utterances in
+history. Special editions of this heartening document had a rapid sale;
+it was read in school houses, churches, and at public gatherings, and it
+became a most influential force in uplifting the hopes of the Allies and
+inspiring them to renewed activities. Americans everywhere, in the
+streets, at dinner tables, and in general social intercourse, could feel
+the new atmosphere of respect and admiration which had suddenly become
+their country's portion. The first American troops that passed through
+London--a company of engineers, an especially fine body of men--aroused
+a popular enthusiasm which was almost unprecedented in a capital not
+celebrated for its emotional displays. Page himself records one
+particularly touching indication of the feeling for Americans which was
+now universal. "The increasing number of Americans who come through
+England," he wrote, "most of them on their way to France, but some of
+them also to serve in England, give much pleasure to the British
+public--nurses, doctors, railway engineers, sawmill units, etc. The
+sight of every American uniform pleases London. The other morning a
+group of American nurses gathered with the usual crowd in front of
+Buckingham Palace while the Guards band played inside the gates. Man
+after man as they passed them and saw their uniforms lifted their hats."
+
+[Illustration: The Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George, Chancellor of the
+Exchequer, 1908-1915, Minister of Munitions, 1915-1916, Prime Minister
+of Great Britain, 1916-1922]
+
+[Illustration: The Rt. Hon. Arthur James Balfour (now the Earl of
+Balfour) Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1916-1919]
+
+The Ambassador's mail likewise underwent a complete transformation. His
+correspondence of the preceding two years, enormous in its extent, had
+contained much that would have disturbed a man who could easily get
+excited over trifles, but this aspect of his work never caused Page the
+slightest unhappiness. Almost every crank in England who disliked the
+American policy had seemed to feel it his duty to express his opinions
+to the American Ambassador. These letters, at times sorrowful, at others
+abusive, even occasionally threatening, varying in their style from
+cultivated English to the grossest illiteracy, now written in red ink to
+emphasize their bitterness, now printed in large block letters to
+preserve their anonymity, aroused in Page only a temporary amusement.
+But the letters that began to pour in upon him after our Declaration,
+many of them from the highest placed men and women in the Kingdom,
+brought out more vividly than anything else the changed position of his
+country. Sonnets and verses rained upon the Embassy, most of them
+pretty bad as poetry, but all of them commendable for their admiring and
+friendly spirit. Of all these letters those that came from the steadfast
+friends of America perhaps gave Page the greatest satisfaction. "You
+will have been pleased at the universal tribute paid to the spirit as
+well as to the lofty and impressive terms of the President's speech,"
+wrote Lord Bryce. "Nothing finer in our time, few things so fine." But
+probably the letter which gave Page the greatest pleasure was that which
+came from the statesman whose courtesy and broad outlook had eased the
+Ambassador's task in the old neutrality days. In 1916, Sir Edward
+Grey--now become Viscount Grey of Fallodon--had resigned office, forced
+out, Page says in one of his letters, mainly because he had refused to
+push the blockade to a point where it might produce a break with the
+United States. He had spent the larger part of the time since that event
+at his country place in Northumberland, along the streams and the
+forests which had always given him his greatest pleasure, attempting to
+recover something of the health that he had lost in the ten years which
+he had spent as head of the British Foreign Office and bearing with
+characteristic cheerfulness and fortitude the tragedy of a gradually
+failing eyesight. The American Declaration of War now came to Lord Grey
+as the complete justification of his policy. The mainspring of that
+policy, as already explained, had been a determination to keep the
+friendship of the United States, and so shape events that the support of
+this country would ultimately be cast on the side of the Allies. And now
+the great occasion for which he had prepared had come, and in Grey's
+mind this signified more than a help to England in soldiers and ships;
+it meant bringing together the two branches of a common race for the
+promotion of common ideals.
+
+ _From Viscount Grey of Fallodon_
+
+ Rosehall Post Office,
+
+ Sutherland,
+
+ April 8, 1917.
+
+ DEAR MR. PAGE:
+
+ This is a line that needs no answer to express my congratulations
+ on President Wilson's address. I can't express adequately all that
+ I feel. Great gratitude and great hope are in my heart. I hope now
+ that some great and abiding good to the world will yet be wrought
+ out of all this welter of evil. Recent events in Russia, too,
+ stimulate this hope: they are a good in themselves, but not the
+ power for good in this war that a great and firmly established free
+ country like the United States can be. The President's address and
+ the way it has been followed up in your country is a splendid
+ instance of great action finely inspired. I glow with admiration.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+
+ GREY OF FALLODON
+
+One Englishman who was especially touched by the action of the United
+States was His Majesty the King. Few men had watched the course of
+America during the war with more intelligent interest than the head of
+the British royal house. Page had had many interviews with King George
+at Buckingham Palace and at Windsor, and his notes contain many
+appreciative remarks on the King's high character and conscientious
+devotion to his duties. That Page in general did not believe in kings
+and emperors as institutions his letters reveal; yet even so profound a
+Republican as he recognized sterling character, whether in a crowned
+head or in a humble citizen, and he had seen enough of King George to
+respect him. Moreover, the peculiar limitations of the British monarchy
+certainly gave it an unusual position and even saved it from much of the
+criticism that was fairly lavished upon such nations as Germany and
+Austria. Page especially admired King George's frankness in recognizing
+these limitations and his readiness to accommodate himself to the
+British Constitution. On most occasions, when these two men met, their
+intercourse was certainly friendly or at least not formidable. After all
+formalities had been exchanged, the King would frequently draw the
+Ambassador aside; the two would retire to the smoking room, and there,
+over their cigars, discuss a variety of matters--submarines,
+international politics, the Irish question and the like. His Majesty was
+not averse even to bringing up the advantages of the democratic and the
+monarchical system. The King and Ambassador would chat, as Page himself
+would say, like "two human beings"; King George is an emphatic and
+vivacious talker, fond of emphasizing his remarks by pounding the table;
+he has the liveliest sense of humour, and enjoys nothing quite so much
+as a good story. Page found that, on the subject of the Germans, the
+King entertained especially robust views. "They are my kinsmen," he
+would say, "but I am ashamed of them."
+
+Probably most Englishmen, in the early days of the war, preferred that
+the United States should not engage in hostilities; even after the
+_Lusitania_, the majority in all likelihood held this view. There are
+indications, however, that King George favoured American participation.
+A few days after the _Lusitania_ sinking, Page had an audience for the
+purpose of presenting a medal sent by certain societies in New Orleans.
+Neither man was thinking much about medals that morning. The thoughts
+uppermost in their minds, as in the minds of most Americans and
+Englishmen, were the _Lusitania_ and the action that the United States
+was likely to take concerning it. After the formalities of presentation,
+the King asked Page to sit down and talked with him for more than half
+an hour. "He said that Germany was evidently trying to force the United
+States into the war; that he had no doubt we would soon be in it and
+that, for his part, he would welcome us heartily. The King also said he
+had reliable information from Germany, that the Emperor had wished to
+return a conciliatory answer to our _Lusitania_ note, but that Admiral
+von Tirpitz had prevented it, even going so far as to 'threaten' the
+Kaiser. It appears that the Admiral insisted that the submarine was the
+only weapon the Germans could use with effect against England and that
+they could not afford to give it up. He was violent and the Kaiser
+finally yielded[55]."
+
+The statement from the King at that crisis, that he would "heartily
+welcome the United States into the war," was interpreted by the
+Ambassador as amounting practically to an invitation--and certainly as
+expressing a wish that such an intervention should take place.
+
+That the American participation would rejoice King George could
+therefore be taken for granted. Soon after this event, the Ambassador
+and Mrs. Page were invited to spend the night at Windsor.
+
+"I arrived during the middle of the afternoon," writes Page, "and he
+sent for me to talk with him in his office.
+
+"'I've a good story on you,' said he. 'You Americans have a queer use of
+the word "some," to express mere bigness or emphasis. We are taking that
+use of the word from you over here. Well, an American and an Englishman
+were riding in the same railway compartment. The American read his
+paper diligently--all the details of a big battle. When he got done, he
+put the paper down and said: "Some fight!" "And some don't!" said the
+Englishman.'
+
+"And the King roared. 'A good one on you!'
+
+"'The trouble with that joke, sir,' I ventured to reply, 'is that it's
+out of date.'
+
+"He was in a very gay mood, surely because of our entry into the war.
+After the dinner--there were no guests except Mrs. Page and me, the
+members of his household, of course, being present--he became even
+familiar in the smoking room. He talked about himself and his position
+as king. 'Knowing the difficulties of a limited monarch, I thank heaven
+I am spared being an absolute one.'
+
+"He went on to enumerate the large number of things he was obliged to
+do, for example, to sign the death warrant of every condemned man--and
+the little real power that he had--not at all in a tone of complaint,
+but as a merely impersonal explanation.
+
+"Just how much power--perhaps 'influence' is a better word--the King
+has, depends on his personality. The influence of the throne--and of him
+on the throne, being a wholly thoughtful, industrious, and conscientious
+man--is very great--greatest of all in keeping the vested interests of
+the aristocratic social structure secure.
+
+"Earlier than this visit to Windsor he sent for me to go to Buckingham
+Palace very soon after we declared war. He went over the whole course of
+events--and asked me many questions. After I had risen and said
+'good-bye' and was about to bow myself out the door, he ran toward me
+and waving his hand cried out, 'Ah--Ah!--we knew where _you_ stood all
+the time.'
+
+"When General Pershing came along on his way to France, the King
+summoned us to luncheon. The luncheon was eaten (here, as everywhere,
+strict war rations are observed) to a flow of general talk, with the
+Queen, Princess Mary, and one of the young Princes. When they had gone
+from the luncheon room, the King, General Pershing, and I stood smoking
+by the window; and the King at once launched into talk about guns,
+rifles, ammunition, and the American place in the battle line. Would our
+place be with the British or with the French or between the two?
+
+"General Pershing made a diplomatic reply. So far as he knew the
+President hadn't yet made a final decision, but there was a feeling
+that, since we were helping the British at sea, perhaps we ought to help
+the French on land.
+
+"Then the King expressed the earnest hope that our guns and ammunition
+would match either the British or the French. Else if we happened to run
+out of ammunition we could not borrow from anybody. He thought it most
+unfortunate that the British and French guns and rifles were of
+different calibres."
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Brighton, England,
+
+ April 28, 1917.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... Well, the British have given us a very good welcome into the
+ war. They are not very skillful at such a task: they do not know
+ how to say "Welcome" very vociferously. But they have said it to
+ the very best of their ability. My speeches (which I send you, with
+ some comment) were very well received indeed. Simple and obvious as
+ they were, they meant a good deal of work.
+
+ I cannot conceal nor can I express my gratification that we are in
+ the war. I shall always wonder but never find out what influence I
+ had in driving the President over. All I know is that my letters
+ and telegrams for nearly two years--especially for the last twelve
+ months--have put before him every reason that anybody has expressed
+ why we should come in--in season and out of season. And there is no
+ new reason--only more reason of the same old sort--why we should
+ have come in now than there was why we should have come in a year
+ ago. I suspect that the pressure of the press and of public opinion
+ really became too strong for him. And, of course, the Peace-Dream
+ blew up--was torpedoed, mined, shot, captured, and killed. I trust,
+ too, much enlightenment will be furnished by the two Commissions
+ now in Washington[56]. Yet it's comical to think of the attitude of
+ the poor old Department last September and its attitude now. But
+ thank God for it! Every day now brings a confession of the blank
+ idiocy of its former course and its long argument! Never mind that,
+ so long as we are now right.
+
+ I have such a sense of relief that I almost feel that my job is now
+ done. Yet, I dare say, my most important work is still to come.
+
+ The more I try to reach some sort of rational judgment about the
+ war, the more I find myself at sea. It does look as if the very
+ crisis is near. And there can be no doubt now--not even, I hope, in
+ the United States--about the necessity of a clear and decisive
+ victory, nor about punishment. All the devastation of Northern
+ France, which outbarbarizes barbarism, all the ships sunk,
+ including hospital ships, must be paid for; that's all. There'll be
+ famine in Europe whenever it end. Not only must these destructions
+ be paid for, but the Hohenzollerns and all they stand for must go.
+ Trust your Frenchman for that, if nobody else!
+
+ If Europe had the food wasted in the United States, it would make
+ the difference between sustenance and famine. By the way, the
+ submarine has made every nation a danger zone except those few that
+ have self-feeding continents, such as ours. It can bring famine to
+ any other kind of a country.
+
+ You are now out in the country again--good. Give Mollie my love and
+ help her with the garden. I envy you the fresh green things to eat.
+ Little Mollie, kiss her for granddaddy. The Ambassador, I suppose,
+ waxes even sturdier, and I'm glad to hear that A.W.P., Jr., is
+ picking up. Get him fed right at all costs. If Frank stays at home
+ and Ralph and his family come up, you'll all have a fine summer.
+ We've the very first hint of summer we've had, and it's cheerful to
+ see the sky and to feel the sunshine.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday_
+
+ American Embassy,
+
+ London, May 3, 1917.
+
+ DEAR EFFENDI:
+
+ I aim this at you. It may hit a German submarine. But we've got to
+ take our chances in these days of risk. Your letter from the
+ tropics--a letter from you from any place is as scarce as
+ peace!--gave me a pleasant thrill and reminder of a previous state
+ of existence, a long way back in the past. I wonder if, on your
+ side the ocean you are living at the rate of a century a year, as
+ we are here? Here in bountiful England we are living on rations. I
+ spent a night with the King a fortnight ago, and he gave us only so
+ much bread, one egg apiece, and--lemonade. We are to begin bread
+ tickets next week. All this is perfectly healthful and wholesome
+ and as much as I ever eat. But the hard part of it is that it's
+ necessary. We haven't more than six weeks' food supply and the
+ submarines sunk eighty-eight ships--237,000 tons--last week. These
+ English do not publish these harrowing facts, and nobody knows them
+ but a few official people. And they are destroying the submarines
+ at a most beggarly slow rate. They work far out at sea--100 to 200
+ miles--and it's as hard to find them as it would be to find whales.
+ The simple truth is we are in a dangerous plight. If they could
+ stop this submarine warfare, the war would pretty quickly be won,
+ for the Germans are in a far worse plight for food and materials
+ and they are getting much the worst of it on land. The war would be
+ won this summer or autumn if the submarine could be put out of
+ business. If it isn't, the Germans may use this success to keep
+ their spirits up and go on till next year.
+
+ We (the United States) have about 40 destroyers. We are sending
+ over 6! I'm doing my best to persuade the Government at Washington
+ to send every one we have. But, since the British conceal the facts
+ from their own press and the people and from all the world, the
+ full pressure of the situation is hard to exert on Washington. Our
+ Admiral (Sims) and I are trying our best, and we are spending
+ enough on cables to build a destroyer. All this, you must, of
+ course, regard as a dark secret; but it's a devilish black secret.
+
+ I don't mean that there's any danger of losing the war. Even if the
+ British armies have to have their food cut down and people here go
+ hungry, they'll win; but the winning may be a long time off.
+ Nothing but their continued success can keep the Germans going.
+ Their people are war-weary and hungry. Austria is knocked out and
+ is starving. Turkey is done up but can go on living on nothing,
+ but not fighting much more. When peace comes, there'll be a general
+ famine, on the continent at least, and no ships to haul food. This
+ side of the world will have to start life all over again--with
+ insufficient men to carry things on and innumerable maimed men
+ who'll have (more or less) to be cared for. The horror of the whole
+ thing nobody realizes. We've all got used to it here; and nobody
+ clearly remembers just what the world was like in peace times;
+ those times were so far away. All this I write not to fill you with
+ horrors but to prove that I speak the literal truth when I say that
+ it seems a hundred years since I had before heard from you.
+
+ Just how all this affects a man, no man can accurately tell. Of how
+ much use I'll be when I can get home, I don't know. Sometimes I
+ think that I shall be of vastly greater use than ever. Plans and
+ publishing ambitions pop up in my mind at times which look good and
+ promising. I see books and series of books. I see most useful
+ magazine stuff. Then, before I can think anything out to a clear
+ plan or conclusion, the ever-increasing official duties and
+ responsibilities here knock everything else out of my head, perhaps
+ for a whole month. It's a literal fact that many a month I do not
+ have an hour to do with as I please nor to think about what I
+ please, from the time I wake up till I go to bed. In spite of
+ twenty-four secretaries (the best fellows that ever were and the
+ best staff that any Embassy ever had in the world) more and more
+ work comes to me. I thank Heaven we no longer have the interests of
+ Germany, Austria, and Turkey to look after; but with our coming
+ into the war, work in general has increased enormously. I have to
+ spend very much more time with the different departments of the
+ British Government on war plans and such like things. They have
+ welcomed us in very handsomely; and one form of their welcome is
+ consulting with me about--navy plans, war plans, loans of billions,
+ ships, censorship, secret service--everything you ever heard of. At
+ first it seemed a little comical for the admirals and generals and
+ the Governor of the Bank of England to come and ask for advice. But
+ when I gave it and it worked out well, I went on and, after all,
+ the thing's easier than it looks. With a little practice you can
+ give these fellows several points in the game and play a pretty
+ good hand. They don't know half as much as you might suppose they'd
+ know. All these years of lecturing the State Department and the
+ President got my hand in! The whole game is far easier than any
+ small business. You always play with blue chips better than you
+ play with white ones.
+
+ This country and these people are not the country and the people
+ they were three years ago. They are very different. They are much
+ more democratic, far less cocksure, far less haughty, far humbler.
+ The man at the head of the army rose from the ranks. The Prime
+ Minister is a poor Welsh schoolteacher's son, without early
+ education. The man who controls all British shipping began life as
+ a shipping "clark," at ten shillings a week. Yet the Lords and
+ Ladies, too, have shown that they were made of the real stuff. This
+ experience is making England over again. There never was a more
+ interesting thing to watch and to be part of.
+
+ There are about twenty American organizations here--big, little,
+ rag-tag, and bobtail. When we declared war, every one of 'em
+ proceeded to prepare for some sort of celebration. There would have
+ been an epidemic of Fourth-of-July oratory all over the
+ town--before we'd done anything--Americans spouting over the edges
+ and killing Kruger with their mouths. I got representatives of 'em
+ all together and proposed that we hold our tongues till we'd won
+ the war--then we can take London. And to give one occasion when we
+ might all assemble and dedicate ourselves to this present grim
+ business, I arranged for an American Dedicatory Service at St.
+ Paul's Cathedral. The royal family came, the Government came, the
+ Allied diplomats came, my Lords and Ladies came, one hundred
+ wounded American (Canadian) soldiers came--the pick of the Kingdom;
+ my Navy and Army staff went in full uniform, the Stars and Stripes
+ hung before the altar, a double brass band played the Star Spangled
+ Banner and the Battle Hymn of the Republic, and an American bishop
+ (Brent) preached a red-hot American sermon, the Archbishop of
+ Canterbury delivered the benediction; and (for the first time in
+ English history) a foreign flag (the Stars and Stripes) flew over
+ the Houses of Parliament. It was the biggest occasion, so they say,
+ that St. Paul's ever had. And there's been no spilling of American
+ oratory since! If you had published a shilling edition of the words
+ and music of the Star Spangled Banner and the Battle Hymn you could
+ have sent a cargo of 'em here and sold them. There isn't paper
+ enough in this Kingdom to get out an edition here.
+
+ Give my love to all the Doubledays and to all the fellows in the
+ shop, and (I wonder if you will) try your hand at another letter.
+ You write very legibly these days!
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+"Curiously enough," Page wrote about this time, "these most exciting
+days of the war are among the most barren of exciting topics for private
+correspondence. The 'atmosphere' here is unchanging--to us--and the
+British are turning their best side to us continuously. They are
+increasingly appreciative, and they see more and more clearly that our
+coming into the war is all that saved them from a virtual defeat--I mean
+the public sees this more and more clearly, for, of course, the
+Government has known it from the beginning. I even find a sort of morbid
+fear lest they do not sufficiently show their appreciation. The
+Archbishop last night asked me in an apprehensive tone whether the
+American Government and public felt that the British did not
+sufficiently show their gratitude. I told him that we did not come into
+the war to win compliments but to whip the enemy, and that we wanted all
+the help the British can give: that's the main thing; and that
+thereafter of course we liked appreciation, but that expressions of
+appreciation had not been lacking. Mr. Balfour and Sir Edward Carson
+also spoke to me yesterday much in the same tone as the Archbishop of
+Canterbury.
+
+"Try to think out any line of action that one will, or any future
+sequence of events or any plan touching the war, one runs into the
+question whether the British are doing the best that could be done or
+are merely plugging away. They are, as a people, slow and unimaginative,
+given to over-much self-criticism; but they eternally hold on to a task
+or to a policy. Yet the question forever arises whether they show
+imagination, to say nothing of genius, and whether the waste of a slow,
+plodding policy is the necessary price of victory.
+
+"Of course such a question is easy to ask and it is easy to give
+dogmatic answers. But it isn't easy to give an answer based on facts.
+Our General Lassiter[57], for instance--a man of sound judgment--has in
+general been less hopeful of the military situation in France than most
+of the British officers. But he is just now returned from the front,
+much cheered and encouraged. 'Lassiter,' I asked, 'have the British in
+France or has any man among them what we call genius, or even wide
+vision; or are they merely plodding along at a mechanical task? His
+answer was, 'We don't see genius till it has done its job. It is a
+mechanical task--yes, that's the nature of the struggle--and they surely
+do it with intelligence and spirit. There is waste. There is waste in
+all wars. But I come back much more encouraged.'
+
+"The same sort of questions and answers are asked and given continuously
+about naval action. Every discussion of the possibility of attacking the
+German naval bases ends without a plan. So also with preventing the
+submarines from coming out. These subjects have been continuously under
+discussion by a long series of men who have studied them; and the total
+effect so far has been to leave them among the impossible tasks. So far
+as I can ascertain all naval men among the Allies agree that these
+things can't be done.
+
+"Here again--Is this a merely routine professional opinion--a merely
+traditional opinion--or is it a lack of imagination? The question will
+not down. Yet it is impossible to get facts to combat it. What are the
+limits of the practicable?
+
+"Mr. Balfour told me yesterday his personal conviction about the German
+colonies, which, he said, he had not discussed with his associates in
+the Cabinet. His firm opinion is that they ought not to be returned to
+the Germans, first for the sake of humanity. 'The natives--the Africans
+especially--have been so barbarously treated and so immorally that it
+would be inhuman to permit the Germans to rule and degrade them further.
+But Heaven forbid that we should still further enlarge the British
+Empire. As a practical matter I do not care to do that. Besides, we
+should incur the criticism of fighting in order to get more territory,
+and that was not and is not our aim. If the United States will help us,
+my wish is that these German Colonies that we have taken, especially in
+Africa, should be "internationalized." There are great difficulties in
+such a plan, but they are not insuperable if the great Powers of the
+Allies will agree upon it.' And much more to the same effect. The parts
+of Asiatic Turkey that the British have taken, he thought, might be
+treated in the same way."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 52: At this time the proposal of such a gift found much
+popular favour. However, the plan was not carried through.]
+
+[Footnote 53: At the meeting of Page and the President at Shadow Lawn,
+September 22, 1916. See Chapter XIX.]
+
+[Footnote 54: Secretary of Agriculture in President Wilson's Cabinet.]
+
+[Footnote 55: The quotation is from a memorandum of the conversation
+made by one of the secretaries of the American Embassy.]
+
+[Footnote 56: The British and French Commissions, headed by Mr. Balfour
+and M. Viviani.]
+
+[Footnote 57: American military attache in London.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE BALFOUR MISSION TO THE UNITED STATES
+
+
+I
+
+Page now took up a subject which had been near his heart for a long
+time. He believed that one of the most serious causes of Anglo-American
+misunderstanding was the fact that the leading statesmen of the two
+countries had never had any personal contact with one another. At one
+time, as this correspondence shows, the Ambassador had even hoped that
+President Wilson himself might cross the ocean and make the British
+people an official visit. The proposal, however, was made before the
+European war broke out, the occasion which Page had in mind being the
+dedication of Sulgrave Manor, the old English home of the Washington
+family, as a perpetual memorial to the racial bonds and common ideals
+uniting the two countries. The President found it impossible to act upon
+this suggestion and the outbreak of war made the likelihood of such a
+visit still more remote. Page had made one unsuccessful attempt to bring
+the American State Department and the British Foreign Office into
+personal contact. At the moment when American irritation had been most
+keen over the blockade and the blacklist, Page had persuaded the Foreign
+Office to invite to England Mr. Frank L. Polk, at that time Counsellor
+of the Department; the Ambassador believed that a few conversations
+between such an intelligent gentleman as Mr. Polk and the British
+statesmen would smooth out all the points which were then making things
+so difficult. Unfortunately the pressure of work at Washington prevented
+Mr. Polk from accepting Sir Edward Grey's invitation.
+
+But now a greater necessity for close personal association had arisen.
+The United States had entered the war, and this declaration had
+practically made this country an ally of Great Britain and France. The
+British Government wished to send a distinguished commission to the
+United States, for two reasons: first, to show its appreciation of the
+stand which America had taken, and secondly, to discuss plans for
+cooeperation in the common task. Great Britain frankly admitted that it
+had made many mistakes in the preceding three years--mistakes naval,
+military, political, and economic; it would welcome an opportunity to
+display these errors to Washington, which might naturally hope to profit
+from them. As soon as his country was in the war, Page took up this
+suggestion with the Foreign Office. There was of course one man who was
+preeminently fitted, by experience, position, and personal qualities, to
+head such a commission; on this point there was no discussion. Mr.
+Balfour was now in his seventieth year; his activities in British
+politics dated back to the times of Disraeli; his position in Great
+Britain had become as near that of an "elder statesman" as is tolerable
+under the Anglo-Saxon system. By this time Page had established the
+friendliest possible relations with this distinguished man. Mr. Balfour
+had become Foreign Secretary in December, 1916, in succession to Lord
+Grey. Greatly as Page regretted the resignation of Grey, he was much
+gratified that Mr. Balfour had been selected to succeed him. Mr.
+Balfour's record for twenty-five years had been one of consistent
+friendliness toward the United States. When President Cleveland's
+Venezuelan message, in 1896, had precipitated a crisis in the relations
+of the two countries, it was Mr. Balfour's influence which was
+especially potent in causing Great Britain to modify its attitude and to
+accept the American demand for arbitration. That action not only
+amicably settled the Venezuelan question; it marked the beginning of a
+better feeling between the English-speaking countries and laid the basis
+for that policy of benevolent neutrality which Great Britain had
+maintained toward the United States in the Spanish War. The excellent
+spirit which Mr. Balfour had shown at this crisis he had manifested on
+many occasions since. In the criticisms of the United States during the
+_Lusitania_ troubles Mr. Balfour had never taken part. The era of
+"neutrality" had not ruffled the confidence which he had always felt in
+the United States. During all this time the most conspicuous dinner
+tables of London had rung with criticisms of American policy; the fact
+was well known, however, that Mr. Balfour had never sympathized with
+these reproaches; even when he was not in office, no unfriendly word
+concerning the United States had ever escaped his lips. His feeling
+toward this country was well shown in a letter which he wrote Page, in
+reply to one congratulating him on his seventieth birthday. "I have now
+lived a long life," said Mr. Balfour, "and most of my energies have been
+expended in political work, but if I have been fortunate enough to
+contribute, even in the smallest degree, to drawing closer the bonds
+that unite our two countries, I shall have done something compared with
+which all else that I may have attempted counts in my eyes as nothing."
+
+Page's letters and notes contain many references to Mr. Balfour's kindly
+spirit. On the day following the dismissal of Bernstorff the American
+Ambassador lunched with the Foreign Secretary at No. 4 Carlton Gardens.
+
+"Mr. Balfour," Page reported to Washington, "gave expression to the
+hearty admiration which he entertained for the President's handling of a
+difficult task. He said that never for a moment had he doubted the
+President's wisdom in the course he was pursuing. He had the profoundest
+admiration for the manner in which he had promptly broken with Germany
+after receiving Germany's latest note. Nor had he ever entertained the
+slightest question of the American people's ready loyalty to their
+Government or to their high ideals. One of his intellectual pleasures,
+he added, had long been contemplation of the United States as it is and,
+even more, as its influence in the world will broaden. 'The world,' said
+Mr. Balfour, 'will more and more turn on the Great Republic as on a
+pivot.'"
+
+Occasionally Mr. Balfour's discussion of the United States would take a
+more pensive turn. A memorandum which Page wrote a few weeks after the
+above touches another point:
+
+ March 27, 1917.
+
+ I had a most interesting conversation with Mr. Balfour this
+ afternoon. "It's sad to me," said he, "that we are so unpopular, so
+ much more unpopular than the French, in your country. Why is it?
+ The old school books?"
+
+ I doubted the school-book influence.
+
+ "Certainly their influence is not the main cause. It is the
+ organized Irish. Then it's the effect of the very fact that the
+ Irish question is not settled. You've had that problem at your very
+ door for 300 years. What's the matter that you don't solve it?"
+
+ "Yes, yes,"--he saw it. But the plaintive tone of such a man asking
+ such a question was significant and interesting and--sad.
+
+ Then I told him the curious fact that a British Government made up
+ of twenty individuals, every one of whom is most friendly to the
+ United States, will, when they act together as a Government, do the
+ most offensive things. I mentioned the blacklist; I mentioned
+ certain complaints that I then held in my hand--of Americans here
+ who are told by the British Government that they must turn over to
+ the British Government's agent in New York their American
+ securities which they hold in America!
+
+ There's a sort of imperious, arrogant, Tory action that comes
+ natural to the English Government, even when not natural to the
+ individual Englishman.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On April 5th, the day before the United States formally declared war,
+Page notified Washington that the British Government wished Mr. Balfour
+to go to the United States as the head of a Commission to confer with
+our Government. "Mr. Balfour is chosen for this mission," Page reported,
+"not only because he is Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, but
+because he is personally the most distinguished member of the
+Government." Page tells the story in more detail in a letter to Mr.
+Polk, at that time Counsellor of the State Department.
+
+ _To Frank L. Polk_
+
+ London, May 3, 1917.
+
+ DEAR MR. POLK:
+
+ ... Mr. Balfour accurately represents British character, British
+ opinion, and the British attitude. Nobody who knows him and knows
+ British character and the British attitude ever doubted that. I
+ know his whole tribe, his home-life, his family connections, his
+ friends; and, of course, since he became Foreign Secretary, I've
+ come to know him intimately. When the question first came up here
+ of his going, of course I welcomed it enthusiastically. About that
+ time during a two-hour conversation he asked me why the British
+ were so unpopular in the United States. Among other reasons I told
+ him that our official people on both sides steadfastly refused to
+ visit one another and to become acquainted. Neither he nor Lord
+ Grey, nor Mr. Asquith, nor Mr. Lloyd George, had ever been to the
+ United States, nor any other important British statesman in recent
+ times, and not a single member of the Administration was personally
+ known to a single member of the British Government. "I'll go," said
+ he, "if you are perfectly sure my going will be agreeable to the
+ President." He himself recalled the fact, during one of our several
+ conversations just before he left, that you had not come when he
+ and Lord Grey had invited you. If you had come, by the way, this
+ era of a better understanding would have begun then, and half our
+ old troubles would then have been removed. Keeping away from one
+ another is the best of all methods of keeping all old
+ misunderstandings alive and of making new ones.
+
+ I have no doubt that Mr. Balfour's visit will cause visits of many
+ first-class British statesmen during the war or soon afterward.
+ That's all we need to bring about a perfect understanding.
+
+ You may remember how I tried to get an official report about the
+ behaviour of the _Benham_[58], and how, in the absence of that,
+ Lord Beresford made a disagreeable speech about our Navy in the
+ House of Lords, and how, when months later you sent me
+ Roosevelt's[59] letter, Lord Beresford expressed regret to me and
+ said that he would explain in another speech. I hadn't seen the old
+ fellow for a long time till a fortnight ago. He greeted me
+ cheerily, and I said, "I don't think I ought to shake hands with
+ you till you retract what you said about our navy." He insisted on
+ my dining with him. He invited Admiral Sims also, and those two
+ sailors had a jolly evening of it. Sims's coming has straightened
+ out all that naval misunderstanding and more. He is of immense help
+ to them and to us. But I'm going to make old Beresford's life a
+ burden till he gets up in the Lords and takes that speech
+ back--publicly. He's really all right; but it's just as well to
+ keep the records right. The proceedings of the House of Lords are
+ handsomely bound and go into every gentleman's library. I have seen
+ two centuries of them in many a house.
+
+ We can now begin a distinctly New Era in the world's history and in
+ its management if we rise to the occasion: there's not a shadow of
+ doubt about that. And the United States can play a part bigger than
+ we have yet dreamed of if we prove big enough to lead the British
+ and the French instead of listening to Irish and Germans. Neither
+ England nor France is a democracy--far from it. We can make them
+ both democracies and develop their whole people instead of about 10
+ per cent. of their people. We have simply to conduct our affairs by
+ a large national policy and not by the complaints of our really
+ non-American people. See how a declaration of war has cleared the
+ atmosphere!
+
+ We're happy yet, on rations. There are no potatoes. We have
+ meatless days. Good wheat meantime is sunk every day. The
+ submarine must be knocked out. Else the earth will be ruled by the
+ German bayonet and natural living will be _verboten_. We'll all
+ have to goose-step as the Crown Prince orders or--be shot. I see
+ they now propose that the United States shall pay the big war
+ indemnity in raw materials to the value of hundreds of billions of
+ dollars! Not just yet, I guess!
+
+ As we get reports of what you are doing, it's most cheerful. I
+ assure you, God has yet made nothing or nobody equal to the
+ American people; and I don't think He ever will or can.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+One of the curious developments of this Balfour Mission was a request
+from President Wilson that Great Britain should take some decisive step
+for the permanent settlement of the Irish question. "The President,"
+this message ran, "wishes that, when you next meet the Prime Minister,
+you would explain to him that only one circumstance now appears to stand
+in the way of perfect cooeperation with Great Britain. All Americans who
+are not immediately connected with Germany by blood ties find their one
+difficulty in the failure of Great Britain so far to establish a
+satisfactory form of self-government in Ireland. In the recent debates
+in Congress on the War Resolution, this sentiment was especially
+manifest. It came out in the speeches of those enemies of the
+Declaration who were not Irish themselves nor representatives of
+sections in which Irish voters possessed great influence--notably
+members from the Southern States.
+
+"If the American people were once convinced that there was a likelihood
+that the Irish question would soon be settled, great enthusiasm and
+satisfaction would result and it would also strengthen the cooeperation
+which we are now about to organize between the United States and Great
+Britain. Say this in unofficial terms to Mr. Lloyd George, but impress
+upon him its very great significance. If the British Government should
+act successfully on this matter, our American citizens of Irish descent
+and to a great extent the German sympathizers who have made common cause
+with the Irish, would join hands in the great common cause."
+
+ _To the President_
+ London, May 4, 1917.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ ... It is a remarkable commentary on the insularity of the British
+ and on our studied isolation that till Mr. Balfour went over not a
+ member of this Government had ever met a member of our
+ Administration! Quite half our misunderstandings were due to this.
+ If I had the making of the laws of the two governments, I'd have a
+ statutory requirement that at least one visit a year by high
+ official persons should be made either way. We should never have
+ had a blacklist, etc., if that had been done. When I tried the
+ quite humble task of getting Polk to come and the excuse was made
+ that he couldn't be spared from his desk--Mr. President, I fear we
+ haven't half enough responsible official persons in our Government.
+ I should say that no man even of Polk's rank ought to have a desk:
+ just as well give him a mill-stone. Even I try not to have a desk:
+ else I'd never get anything of importance done; for I find that
+ talks and conferences in my office and in the government offices
+ and wherever else I can find out things take all my waking hours.
+ The Foreign Office here has about five high position men to every
+ one in the State Department. God sparing me, I'm going one of
+ these days to prepare a paper for our Foreign Affairs Committee on
+ the Waste of Having too Few High Grade Men in the Department of
+ State; a Plea for Five Assistant Secretaries for Every One Now
+ Existing and for Provision for International Visits by Them.
+
+ Here's an ancient and mouldy precedent that needs shattering--for
+ the coming of our country into its proper station and influence in
+ the world.
+
+ I am sure that Mr. Balfour's visit has turned out as well as I
+ hoped, and my hopes were high. He is one of the most interesting
+ men that I've ever had the honour to know intimately--he and Lord
+ Grey. Mr. Balfour is a Tory, of course; and in general I don't like
+ Tories, yet liberal he surely is--a sort of high-toned Scotch
+ democrat. I have studied him with increasing charm and interest.
+ Not infrequently when I am in his office just before luncheon he
+ says, "Come, walk over and we'll have lunch with the family." He's
+ a bachelor. One sister lives with him. Another (Lady Rayleigh, the
+ wife of the great chemist and Chancellor of Cambridge University)
+ frequently visits him. Either of those ladies could rule this
+ Empire. Then there are nieces and cousins always about--people of
+ rare cultivation, every one of 'em. One of those girls confirmed
+ the story that "Uncle Arthur" one day concluded that the niblick
+ was something more than a humble necessity of a bad golfer--that it
+ had positive virtues of its own and had suffered centuries of
+ neglect. He, therefore, proceeded to play with the niblick only,
+ till he proved his case and showed that it is a club entitled to
+ the highest respect.
+
+ A fierce old Liberal fighter in Parliamentary warfare, who entered
+ politics about the time Mr. Balfour did, told me this story the
+ other day. "I've watched Balfour for about forty years as a cat
+ watches a rat. I hate his party. I hated him till I learned better,
+ for I hated that whole Salisbury crowd. They wanted to Cecil
+ everything. But I'll tell you, Sir, apropos of his visit to your
+ country, that in all those years he has never spoken of the United
+ States except with high respect and often with deep affection. I
+ should have caught him, if he had."
+
+ I went with him to a college in London one afternoon where he
+ delivered a lecture on Dryden, to prove that poetry can carry a
+ certain cargo of argument but that argument can't raise the
+ smallest flight of poetry. Dry as it sounds, it was as good a
+ literary performance as I recall I ever heard.
+
+ At his "family" luncheon, I've found Lord Milner or Lord Lansdowne,
+ or some literary man who had come in to find out from Lady Rayleigh
+ how to conduct the Empire or to write a great book; and the modest
+ old chemical Lord sits silent most of the time and now and then
+ breaks loose to confound them all with a pat joke. This is a
+ vigorous family, these Balfours. There's one of them (a cousin of
+ some sort, I think, of the Foreign Secretary) who is a Lord of much
+ of Scotland, about as tall as Ben Nevis is high--a giant of a man.
+ One of his sons was killed early in the war and one was
+ missing--whether dead or not he did not know. Mrs. Page expressed
+ her hope one day to the old man that he had had news from his
+ missing son. "No, no," said he simply, "and me lady is awearying."
+
+ We've been lucky, Mr. President, in these days of immortal horrors
+ and of difficulties between two governments that did not know one
+ another--uncommonly lucky, in the large chances that politics gives
+ for grave errors, to have had two such men in the Foreign Office
+ here as Lord Grey and Mr. Balfour. There are men who were
+ mentioned for this post that would have driven us mad--or to war
+ with them. I'm afraid I've almost outgrown my living hero worship.
+ There isn't worshipful material enough lying around in the world to
+ keep a vigorous reverence in practice. But these two gentlemen by
+ birth and culture have at least sometimes seemed of heroic size to
+ me. It has meant much to know them well. I shall always be grateful
+ to them, for in their quiet, forceful way they helped me much to
+ establish right relations with these people--which, pray God, I
+ hope to retain through whatever new trials we may yet encounter.
+ For it will fall to us yet to loose and to free the British, and a
+ Briton set free is an American. That's all you can do for a man or
+ for a nation of men.
+
+ These Foreign Secretaries are not only men of much greater
+ cultivation than their Prime Ministers but of greater moral force.
+ But I've come to like Lloyd George very much. He'd never deliver a
+ lecture on Dryden, and he doesn't even play a good game of golf;
+ but he has what both Lord Grey and Mr. Balfour lack--a touch of
+ genius--whatever that is--not the kind that takes infinite pains,
+ but the kind that acts as an electric light flashed in the dark. He
+ said to me the other day that experts have nearly been the death of
+ him. "The Government has experts, experts, experts, everywhere. In
+ any department where things are not going well, I have found boards
+ and committees and boards of experts. But in one department at
+ least I've found a substitute for them. I let twenty experts go and
+ I put in one Man, and things began to move at once. Do you know any
+ real Men? When you hear of any, won't you let me know?"
+
+ A little while ago he dined with me, and, after dinner, I took him
+ to a corner of the drawing room and delivered your message to him
+ about Ireland. "God knows, I'm trying," he replied. "Tell the
+ President that. And tell him to talk to Balfour." Presently he
+ broke out--"Madmen, madmen--I never saw any such task," and he
+ pointed across the room to Sir Edward Carson, his First Lord of the
+ Admiralty--"Madmen." "But the President's right. We've got to
+ settle it and we've got to settle it now." Carson and Jellicoe came
+ across the room and sat down with us. "I've been telling the
+ Ambassador, Carson, that we've got to settle the Irish question
+ now--in spite of you.
+
+ "I'll tell you something else we've got to settle now," said
+ Carson. "Else it'll settle us. That's the submarines. The press and
+ public are working up a calculated and concerted attack on Jellicoe
+ and me, and, if they get us, they'll get you. It's an attack on the
+ Government made on the Admiralty. Prime Minister," said this Ulster
+ pirate whose civil war didn't come off only because the big war was
+ begun--"Prime Minister, it may be a fierce attack. Get ready for
+ it." Well, it has been developing ever since. But I can't for the
+ life of me guess at the possible results of an English
+ Parliamentary attack on a government. It's like a baseball man
+ watching a game of cricket. He can't see when the player is out or
+ why, or what caused it. Of course, the submarine may torpedo Lloyd
+ George and his Government. It looks very like it may overturn the
+ Admiralty, as Gallipoli did. If this public finds out the whole
+ truth, it will demand somebody's head. But I'm only a baseball man;
+ cricket is beyond me.
+
+ But Lloyd George will outlive the war as an active force, whatever
+ happen to him in the meantime. He's too heavily charged with
+ electricity to stop activity. The war has ended a good many careers
+ that seemed to have long promise. It is ending more every day. But
+ there is only one Lloyd George, and, whatever else he lack, he
+ doesn't lack life.
+
+ I heard all the speeches in both Houses on the resolution of
+ appreciation of our coming into the war--Bonar Law's, Asquith's
+ (one of the best), Dillon's, a Labour man's, and, in the Lords,
+ Curzon's, Crewe's, the Archbishop's (who delivered in the course of
+ his remarks a benediction on me) and Bryce's (almost the best of
+ all). It wasn't "oratory," but it was well said and well meant.
+ They know how badly they need help and they do mean to be as good
+ to us as their benignant insularity will permit. They are changing.
+ I can't describe the great difference that the war has made in
+ them. They'll almost become docile in a little more time.
+
+ And we came in in the nick of time for them--in very truth. If we
+ hadn't, their exchange would have gone down soon and they know it.
+ I shall never forget the afternoon I spent with Mr. Balfour and Mr.
+ Bonar Law on that subject. They saw blue ruin without our financial
+ help. And now, if we can save them from submarines, those that know
+ will know how vital our help was. Again, the submarine is the great
+ and grave and perhaps the only danger now. If that can be scotched,
+ I believe the whole Teutonic military structure would soon tumble.
+ If not, the Germans may go on as long as they can feed their army,
+ allowing their people to starve.
+
+ Of course, you know, we're on rations now--yet we suffer no
+ inconvenience on that score. But these queer people (they are the
+ most amusing and confusing and contradictory of all God's
+ creatures, these English, whose possibilities are infinite and
+ whose actualities, in many ways, are pitiful)--these queer people
+ are fiercely pursuing food-economy by discussing in the newspapers
+ whether a hen consumes more food than she produces, and whether
+ what dogs eat contains enough human food to justify the shooting of
+ every one in the Kingdom. That's the way we are coming down to
+ humble fare. But nothing can quite starve a people who all live
+ near the sea which yields fish enough near shore to feed them
+ wastefully.
+
+ All along this South shore, where I am to-day[60], I see the Stars
+ and Stripes; and everywhere there is a demand for the words and
+ music of the Battle Hymn of the Republic and the Star Spangled
+ Banner.
+
+ This our-new-Ally business is bringing me a lot of amusing
+ troubles. Theatres offer me boxes, universities offer me degrees,
+ hospitals solicit visits from me, clubs offer me dinners--I'll have
+ to get a new private secretary or two well-trained to say "No"
+ politely, else I shall not have my work done. But all that will
+ presently wear away as everything wears away (quickly, too) in the
+ grim face of this bloody monster of war which is consuming men as a
+ prairie fire consumes blades of grass. There's a family that lives
+ around the corner from this hotel. One son is in the trenches,
+ another is in a madhouse from shell-shock, a third coming home
+ wounded the other day was barely rescued when a torpedo sunk a
+ hospital ship and may lose his reason. I suppose I saw one hundred
+ men this afternoon on a single mile of beach who had lost both
+ legs. Through the wall from my house in London is a hospital. A
+ young Texan has been there, whose legs are gone at the thighs and
+ one arm at the elbow. God pity us for not having organized the
+ world better than this! We'll do it, yet, Mr. President--_you'll_
+ do it; and thank God for you. If we do not organize Europe and
+ make another such catastrophe impossible, life will not be worth
+ being born into except to the few whose days happen to fall between
+ recurring devastations of the world.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+"I hope that the English people," Colonel House wrote to Page about this
+time, "realize how successful Mr. Balfour's visit to America really was.
+There is no man they could have sent who could have done it better. He
+and the President got along marvellously well. The three of us dined and
+spent the evening together and it was delightful to see how sympathetic
+their minds were."
+
+A letter from Mr. Polk also discloses the impression which Mr. Balfour
+made upon Washington:
+
+ _From Frank L. Polk_
+
+ Washington, May 25, 1917.
+
+ MY DEAR MR. PAGE:
+
+ I just want to get off a line to catch the pouch.
+
+ You probably know what a wonderful success the British Mission has
+ been, but I do not think you can realize what a deep impression
+ they have made on all of us. Mr. Balfour really won the affection
+ of us all, and I do not know when I was more sorry to have a man
+ leave than I was to have him go last night. He expressed himself as
+ having been very much impressed with his reception and the way he
+ was treated. He was most fair in all discussions, and I think has a
+ better understanding of our point of view. I had the good fortune
+ of being present at the financial and the diplomatic conferences,
+ and I think we all felt that we were dealing with a sympathetic
+ friend.
+
+ He and the President got on tremendously. The best evidence of that
+ was the fact that the President went up to Congress and sat in the
+ gallery while Mr. Balfour addressed the House. This is without
+ precedent.
+
+ The difficult problem of course was the blacklist and bunkering
+ agreement, but I think we are by that. The important thing now is
+ for the British to make all the concessions possible in connection
+ with the release of goods in Rotterdam and the release of goods in
+ Prize Court, though the cases have not been begun. Of course I mean
+ cases of merely suspicion rather than where there is evidence of
+ wrongdoing.
+
+ The sending of the destroyers and troops abroad is going to do a
+ great deal toward impressing our people with the fact that we
+ really are in the war. I do not think it is thoroughly borne home
+ on the majority yet what a serious road we have chosen.
+
+ With warm regards,
+
+ Yours faithfully,
+
+ FRANK L. POLK.
+
+Mr. Polk's reference to the blacklist recalls an episode which in itself
+illustrates the changed character of the relations that had now been
+established between the American and the British governments. Mr.
+Balfour discussed shipping problems for the most part with Mr. Polk,
+under whose jurisdiction these matters fell. As one of these conferences
+was approaching its end Mr. Balfour slightly coughed, uttered an "er,"
+and gave other indications that he was about to touch upon a ticklish
+question.
+
+"Before I go," he said, "there--er--is one subject I would--er--like to
+say something about."
+
+Mr. Polk at once grasped what was coming.
+
+"I know what you have in mind," said Mr. Polk in his characteristically
+quick way. "You want us to apply your blacklist to neutrals."
+
+In other words, the British hoped that the United States, now that it
+was in the war, would adopt against South America and other offenders
+those same discriminations which this country had so fiercely objected
+to, when it was itself a neutral.
+
+The British statesman gave Mr. Polk one of his most winning smiles and
+nodded.
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said Mr. Polk, "it took Great Britain three years to
+reach a point where it was prepared to violate all the laws of blockade.
+You will find that it will take us only two months to become as great
+criminals as you are!"
+
+Mr. Balfour is usually not explosive in his manifestations of mirth, but
+his laughter, in reply to this statement, was almost uproarious. And the
+State Department was as good as its word. It immediately forgot all the
+elaborate "notes" and "protests" which it had been addressing to Great
+Britain. It became more inexorable than Great Britain had ever been in
+keeping foodstuffs out of neutral countries that were contiguous to
+Germany. Up to the time the United States entered the war, Germany, in
+spite of the watchful British fleet, had been obtaining large supplies
+from the United States through Holland, Denmark, and the Scandinavian
+peninsula. But the United States now immediately closed these leaks. In
+the main this country adopted a policy of "rationing"; that is, it would
+furnish the little nations adjoining Germany precisely the amount of
+food which they needed for their own consumption. This policy was one of
+the chief influences in undermining the German people and forcing their
+surrender. The American Government extended likewise the blacklist to
+South America and other countries, and, in doing so, it bettered the
+instruction of Great Britain herself.
+
+Though the whole story of the blockade thus seems finally to have ended
+in a joke, the whole proceeding has its serious side. The United States
+had been posing for three years as the champion of neutral rights; the
+point of view of Washington had been that there was a great principle at
+stake. If such a principle were involved, it was certainly present in
+just the same degree after the United States became belligerent as in
+the days when we were neutrals. The lofty ideals by which the
+Administration had professed to be guided should have still controlled
+its actions; the mere fact that we, as a belligerent, could obtain
+certain advantages would hardly have justified a great and high-minded
+nation in abandoning its principles. Yet abandon them we did from the
+day that we declared war. We became just as remorseless in disregarding
+the rights of small states as Great Britain--according to our numerous
+blockade notes--had been. Possibly, therefore, Mr. Balfour's mirth was
+not merely sympathetic or humorous; it perhaps echoed his discovery that
+our position for three years had really been nothing but a sham; that
+the State Department had been forcing points in which it did not really
+believe, or in which it did not believe when American interests were
+involved. At any rate, this ending of our long argument with Great
+Britain was a splendid justification for Page; his contention had always
+been that the preservation of civilization was more important than the
+technicalities of the international lawyers. And now the Wilson
+Administration, by throwing into the waste basket all the finespun
+theories with which it had been embarrassing the Allied cause since
+August 4, 1914, accepted--and accepted joyously--his point of view.
+
+
+II
+
+One of the first things which Mr. Balfour did, on his arrival in
+Washington, was personally to explain to President Wilson about the
+so-called "secret treaties." The "secret treaty" that especially preyed
+upon Mr. Wilson's mind, and which led to a famous episode at the
+Versailles Conference, was that which had been made with Italy in 1915,
+as consideration for Italy's participation in the war. Mr. Balfour, in
+telling the President of these territorial arrangements with Italy,
+naturally did not criticise his ally, but it was evident that he
+regarded the matter as something about which the United States should be
+informed.
+
+"This is the sort of thing you have to do when you are engaged in a
+war," he explained, and then he gave Mr. Wilson the details.
+
+Probably the most important information which Mr. Balfour and the French
+and Italian Commissions brought to Washington was the desperate
+situation of the Allied cause. On that point not one of the visiting
+statesmen or military and naval advisers made the slightest attempt at
+concealment. Mr. Balfour emphasized the seriousness of the crisis in one
+of his earliest talks with Mr. McAdoo, Secretary of the Treasury. The
+British statesman was especially interested in the financial situation
+and he therefore took up this matter at an early date with the Treasury
+Department.
+
+"Mr. Balfour," said Mr. McAdoo, "before we make any plans of financial
+assistance it is absolutely necessary that we know precisely where we
+stand. The all-important thing is the question as to how long the war is
+likely to last. If it is only to last a few months, it is evident that
+we need to make very different arrangements than if it is to last
+several years. Just what must we make provision for? Let us assume that
+the United States goes in with all its men and resources--that we
+dedicate all our money, our manufacturing plants, our army, our navy,
+everything we have got, to bringing the war to an end. How long will it
+take?"
+
+Mr. Balfour replied that it would be necessary to consult his naval and
+military advisers before he answered that question. He said that he
+would return in a day or two and make an explicit statement. He did so
+and his answer was this: Under these circumstances--that the United
+States should make war to the full limit of its power, in men and
+resources--the war could not be ended until the summer or the autumn of
+1919. Mr. McAdoo put the same question in the same form to the French
+and Italian Missions and obtained precisely the same answer.
+
+Page's papers show that Mr. Balfour, in the early stages of American
+participation, regarded the financial situation as the thing which
+chiefly threatened the success of the Allied cause. So much greater
+emphasis has been laid upon the submarine warfare that this may at first
+seem rather a misreading of Great Britain's peril. Yet the fact is that
+the high rate of exchange and the depredatory U-boat represented almost
+identically the same danger. The prospect that so darkened the horizon
+in the spring of 1917 was the possible isolation of Great Britain.
+England's weakness, as always, consisted in the fact that she was an
+island, that she could not feed herself with her own resources and that
+she had only about six weeks' supply of food ahead of her at any one
+time. If Germany could cut the lines of communication and so prevent
+essential supplies from reaching British ports, the population of Great
+Britain could be starved into surrender in a very brief time, France
+would be overwhelmed, and the triumph of the Prussian cause would be
+complete. That the success of the German submarine campaign would
+accomplish this result was a fact that the popular mind readily grasped.
+What it did not so clearly see, however, was that the financial collapse
+of Great Britain would cut these lines of communication quite as
+effectually as the submarine itself. The British were practically
+dependent for their existence upon the food brought from the United
+States, just as the Allied armies were largely dependent upon the steel
+which came from the great industrial plants of this country. If Great
+Britain could not find the money with which to purchase these supplies,
+it is quite apparent that they could not be shipped. The collapse of
+British credit therefore would have produced the isolation of the
+British Isles and led to a British surrender, just as effectively as
+would the success of the German submarine campaign.
+
+As soon as Bernstorff was sent home, therefore, and the participation of
+this country in the war became extremely probable, Mr. Balfour took up
+the financial question with Page.
+
+ _To the President_
+ March 5, 1917.
+
+ The inquiries which I have made here about financial conditions
+ disclose an international situation which is most alarming to the
+ financial and industrial outlook of the United States. England has
+ not only to pay her own war bills, but is obliged to finance her
+ Allies as well. Up to the present time she has done these tasks out
+ of her own capital. But she cannot continue her present extensive
+ purchases in the United States without shipping gold as payment for
+ them, and there are two reasons why she cannot make large
+ shipments of gold. In the first place, both England and France must
+ keep the larger part of the gold they have to maintain issues of
+ their paper at par; and, in the second place, the German U-boat has
+ made the shipping of gold a dangerous procedure even if they had it
+ to ship. There is therefore a pressing danger that the
+ Franco-American and Anglo-American exchange will be greatly
+ disturbed; the inevitable consequence will be that orders by all
+ the Allied Governments will be reduced to the lowest possible
+ amount and that trans-Atlantic trade will practically come to an
+ end. The result of such a stoppage will be a panic in the United
+ States. The world will therefore be divided into two hemispheres,
+ one of them, our own, will have the gold and the commodities; the
+ other, Great Britain and Europe, will need these commodities, but
+ it will have no money with which to pay for them. Moreover, it will
+ have practically no commodities of its own to exchange for them.
+ The financial and commercial result will be almost as bad for the
+ United States as for Europe. We shall soon reach this condition
+ unless we take quick action to prevent it. Great Britain and France
+ must have a credit in the United States which will be large enough
+ to prevent the collapse of world trade and the whole financial
+ structure of Europe.
+
+ If the United States declare war against Germany, the greatest help
+ we could give Great Britain and its Allies would be such a credit.
+ If we should adopt this policy, an excellent plan would be for our
+ Government to make a large investment in a Franco-British loan.
+ Another plan would be to guarantee such a loan. A great advantage
+ would be that all the money would be kept in the United States. We
+ could keep on with our trade and increase it, till the war ends,
+ and after the war Europe would purchase food and an enormous supply
+ of materials with which to reequip her peace industries. We should
+ thus reap the profit of an uninterrupted and perhaps an enlarging
+ trade over a number of years and we should hold their securities in
+ payment.
+
+ On the other hand, if we keep nearly all the gold and Europe cannot
+ pay for reestablishing its economic life, there may be a world-wide
+ panic for an indefinite period.
+
+ Of course we cannot extend such a credit unless we go to war with
+ Germany. But is there no way in which our Government might
+ immediately and indirectly help the establishment in the United
+ States of a large Franco-British credit without violating armed
+ neutrality? I do not know enough about our own reserve bank law to
+ form an opinion. But these banks would avert such a danger if they
+ were able to establish such a credit. Danger for us is more real
+ and imminent, I think, than the public on either side the Atlantic
+ understands. If it be not averted before its manifestations become
+ apparent, it will then be too late to save the day.
+
+ The pressure of this approaching crisis, I am certain, has gone
+ beyond the ability of the Morgan financial agency for the British
+ and French governments. The financial necessities of the Allies are
+ too great and urgent for any private agency to handle, for every
+ such agency has to encounter business rivalries and sectional
+ antagonisms.
+
+ It is not improbable that the only way of maintaining our present
+ preeminent trade position and averting a panic is by declaring war
+ on Germany. The submarine has added the last item to the danger of
+ a financial world crash. There is now an uncertainty about our
+ being drawn into the war; no more considerable credits can be
+ privately placed in the United States. In the meantime a collapse
+ may come.
+
+ PAGE.
+
+Urgent as this message was, it really understated the desperate
+condition of British and Allied finances. That the warring powers were
+extremely pressed for money has long been known; but Page's papers
+reveal for the first time the fact that they were facing the prospect of
+bankruptcy itself. "The whole Allied combination on this side the ocean
+are very much nearer the end of their financial resources," he wrote in
+July, "than anybody has guessed or imagined. We only can save them....
+The submarines are steadily winning the war. Pershing and his army have
+bucked up the French for the moment. But for his coming there was more
+or less danger of a revolution in Paris and of serious defection in the
+army. Everybody here fears that the French will fail before another
+winter of the trenches. Yet--the Germans must be still worse off."
+
+The matter that was chiefly pressing at the time of the Balfour visit
+was the fact that the British balances in the New York banks were in a
+serious condition. It should always be remembered, however, that Great
+Britain was financing not only herself, but her Allies, and that the
+difficult condition in which she now found herself was caused by the not
+too considerate demands of the nations with which she was allied in the
+war. Thus by April 6, 1917, Great Britain had overdrawn her account with
+J.P. Morgan to the extent of $400,000,000 and had no cash available with
+which to meet this overdraft. This obligation had been incurred in the
+purchase of supplies, both for Great Britain and the allied governments;
+and securities, largely British owned stocks and bonds, had been
+deposited to protect the bankers. The money was now coming due; if the
+obligations were not met, the credit of Great Britain in this country
+would reach the vanishing point. Though at first there was a slight
+misunderstanding about this matter, the American Government finally
+paid this over-draft out of the proceeds of the first Liberty Loan. This
+act saved the credit of the allied countries; it was, of course, only
+the beginning of the financial support that America brought to the
+allied cause; the advances that were afterward furnished from the
+American Treasury made possible the purchases of food and supplies in
+enormous quantities. The first danger that threatened, the isolation and
+starvation of Great Britain, was therefore overcome. It was the joint
+product of Page's work in London and that of the Balfour Commission in
+the United States.
+
+
+III
+
+Until these financial arrangements had been made there was no certainty
+that the supplies which were so essential to victory would ever leave
+the United States; this obstruction at the source had now been removed.
+But the greater difficulty still remained. The German submarines were
+lying off the waters south and west of Ireland ready to sink the supply
+ships as soon as they entered the prohibited zone. Mr. Balfour and his
+associates were working also on this problem in Washington; and, at the
+same time, Page and Admiral Sims and the British Admiralty were bending
+all their energies in London to obtain immediate cooeperation.
+
+A remark which Mr. Balfour afterward made to Admiral Sims shows the
+frightful nature of the problem which was confronting Great Britain at
+that time.
+
+"That was a terrible week we spent at sea in that voyage to the United
+States," Mr. Balfour said. "We knew that the German submarine campaign
+was succeeding. Their submarines were destroying our shipping and we
+had no means of preventing it. I could not help thinking that we were
+facing the defeat of Great Britain."
+
+Page's papers show that as early as February 25th he understood in a
+general way the disheartening proportions of the German success. "It is
+a momentous crisis," he wrote at that time. "The submarines are
+destroying shipping at an appalling rate." Yet it was not until Admiral
+Sims arrived in London, on April 9th, that the Ambassador learned all
+the details. In sending the Admiral to England the Navy Department had
+acted on an earnest recommendation from Page. The fact that the American
+Navy was inadequately represented in the British capital had long been a
+matter of embarrassment to him. The ability and personal qualifications
+of our attaches had been unquestioned; but none of them during the war
+had been men of high rank, and this in itself proved to be a constant
+impediment to their success. While America was represented by
+Commanders, Japan, Italy, and France had all sent Admirals to London.
+Page's repeated requests for an American Admiral had so far met with no
+response, but the probability that this country would become involved in
+the war now gave new point to his representations. In the latter part of
+March, Page renewed his request in still more urgent form, and this time
+the President and the Navy Department responded favourably. The result
+was that, on April 9th, three days after the American declaration of
+war, Admiral Sims and his flag-lieutenant, Commander Babcock, presented
+themselves at the American Embassy. There was little in the appearance
+of these men to suggest a violent naval demonstration against Germany.
+Both wore civilian dress, their instructions having commanded them not
+to bring uniforms; both were travelling under assumed names, and both
+had no more definite orders than to investigate the naval situation and
+cable the results to Washington. In spite of these attempts at secrecy,
+the British had learned that Admiral Sims was on the way; they rejoiced
+not only in this fact, but in the fact that Sims had been chosen, for
+there was no American naval officer whose professional reputation stood
+so high in the British Navy or who was so personally acceptable to
+British officialdom and the British public. The Admiralty therefore met
+Admiral Sims at Liverpool, brought him to London in a special train,
+and, a few hours after his arrival, gave him the innermost secrets on
+the submarine situation--secrets which were so dangerous that not all
+the members of the British Cabinet had been let into them.
+
+Page welcomed Admiral Sims with a cordiality which that experienced sea
+veteran still gratefully remembers. He at once turned over to him two
+rooms in the Embassy. "You can have everything we've got," the
+Ambassador said. "If necessary to give you room, we'll turn the whole
+Embassy force out into the street." The two men had not previously met,
+but in an instant they became close friends. A common sympathy and a
+common enthusiasm were greatly needed at that crisis. As soon as Admiral
+Sims had finished his interview with Admiral Jellicoe, he immediately
+sought out the Ambassador and laid all the facts before him. Germany was
+winning the war. Great Britain had only six weeks' food supply on hand,
+and the submarines were sinking the ships at a rate which, unless the
+depredations should be checked, meant an early and unconditional
+surrender of the British Empire. Only the help of the United States
+could prevent this calamity.
+
+Page, of course, was aghast: the facts and figures Admiral Sims gave him
+disclosed a situation which was even more desperate than he had
+imagined. He advised the Admiral to cable the whole story immediately to
+Washington. Admiral Sims at first had some difficulty in obtaining the
+Admiralty's consent to doing this, and the reason was the one with which
+Page had long been familiar--the fear, altogether too justified, that
+the news would "leak" out of Washington. Of course there was no
+suspicion in British naval circles of the good faith of the Washington
+officials, but important facts had been sent so many times under the
+seal of the strictest secrecy and had then found their way into the
+newspapers that there was a deep distrust of American discretion.
+Certainly no greater damage could have been done the allied cause at
+that time than to have the Germans learn how successfully their
+submarine campaign was progressing. The question was referred to the
+Imperial War Council and its consent obtained. The report, however, was
+sent to the Navy Department in the British naval code, and decoded in
+the British Embassy in Washington.
+
+Admiral Sims's message gave all the facts about the submarine situation,
+and concluded with the recommendation that the United States should
+assemble all floating craft that could be used in the anti-submarine
+warfare, destroyers, tugs, yachts, light cruisers, and similar vessels,
+and send them immediately to Queenstown, where they would do valuable
+service in convoying merchant vessels and destroying the U-boats. At
+that time the American Navy had between fifty and sixty destroyers that
+were patrolling the American coast; these could have been despatched,
+almost immediately, to the scene of operations; but, in response to this
+request, the Department sent six to Queentown.
+
+The next few months were very unhappy ones for Admiral Sims. He was the
+representative in London of one of the world's greatest naval powers,
+participating in the greatest war that had ever enlisted its energies,
+yet his constant appeals for warships elicited the most inadequate
+response, his well-reasoned recommendations for meeting the crisis were
+frequently unanswered and at other times were met with counter-proposals
+so childish that they seemed almost to have originated in the brains of
+newspaper amateurs, and his urgent pictures of a civilization rapidly
+going to wreck were apparently looked upon with suspicion as the
+utterances of a man who had been completely led astray by British guile.
+To give a fair idea of Washington's neglect during this period it is
+only necessary to point out that, for four months, Admiral Sims occupied
+the two rooms in the Embassy directly above Page's, with Commander
+Babcock as his only aid. Sims's repeated requests to Secretary Daniels
+for an additional staff went unheeded. Had it not been for the Admiral's
+constant daily association with Page and the comfort and encouragement
+which the Ambassador gave him, this experience would have been almost
+unbearable. In the latter part of April, the Admiral's appeals to
+Washington having apparently fallen on deaf ears, he asked Page to
+second his efforts. The Admiral and Commander Babcock wrote another
+message, and drove in a motor car to Brighton, where Page was taking a
+little rest. The Admiral did not know just how strong a statement the
+Ambassador would care to sponsor, and so he did not make this
+representation as emphatic as the judgment of both men would have
+preferred.
+
+The Admiral handed Page the paper, saying that he had prepared it with
+the hope that the Ambassador would sign it and send it directly to
+President Wilson.
+
+"It is quite apparent," Admiral Sims said, "that the Department doesn't
+believe what I have been saying. Or they don't believe what the British
+are saying. They think that England is exaggerating the peril for
+reasons of its own. They think I am hopelessly pro-British and that I
+am being used. But if you'll take it up directly with the President,
+then they may be convinced."
+
+Page put on his spectacles, took the paper, and read it through. Then,
+looking over the rim of his glasses in his characteristic way, he leaned
+toward Admiral Sims and said:
+
+"Admiral, it isn't half strong enough! I think I can write a better
+despatch than that, myself! At least let me try."
+
+He immediately took a pen and paper and in a few minutes he had written
+his own version which he gave the Admiral to read. The latter was
+delighted with it and in a brief time it was on its way to Washington.
+
+ From: Ambassador Page.
+ To: Secretary of State.
+ Sent: 27 April, 1917.
+
+ _Very confidential for Secretary and President_
+
+ There is reason for the greatest alarm about the issue of the war
+ caused by the increasing success of the German submarines. I have
+ it from official sources that during the week ending 22nd April, 88
+ ships of 237,000 tons, allied and neutral, were lost. The number of
+ vessels unsuccessfully attacked indicated a great increase in the
+ number of submarines in action.
+
+ This means practically a million tons lost every month till the
+ shorter days of autumn come. By that time the sea will be about
+ clear of shipping. Most of the ships are sunk to the westward and
+ southward of Ireland. The British have in that area every available
+ anti-submarine craft, but their force is so insufficient that they
+ hardly discourage the submarines.
+
+ The British transport of troops and supplies is already strained to
+ the utmost, and the maintenance of the armies in the field is
+ threatened. There is food enough here to last the civil population
+ only not more than six weeks or two months.
+
+ Whatever help the United States may render at any time in the
+ future, or in any theatre of the war, our help is now more
+ seriously needed in this submarine area for the sake of all the
+ Allies than it can ever be needed again, or anywhere else.
+
+ After talking over this critical situation with the Prime Minister
+ and other members of the Government, I can not refrain from most
+ strongly recommending the immediate sending over of every destroyer
+ and all other craft that can be of anti-submarine use. This seems
+ to me the sharpest crisis of the war, and the most dangerous
+ situation for the Allies that has arisen or could arise.
+
+ If enough submarines can be destroyed in the next two or three
+ months, the war will be won, and if we can contribute effective
+ help immediately, it will be won directly by our aid. I cannot
+ exaggerate the pressing and increasing danger of this situation.
+ Thirty or more destroyers and other similar craft sent by us
+ immediately would very likely be decisive.
+
+ There is no time to be lost.
+
+ (Signed) PAGE.
+
+This cablegram had a certain effect. The reply came from Washington that
+"eventually" thirty-six destroyers would be sent.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Page's letters of this period are full of the same subject.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, May 4, 1917.
+
+ Dear Mr. President:
+
+ The submarines have become a very grave danger. The loss of British
+ and allied tonnage increases with the longer and brighter days--as
+ I telegraphed you, 237,000 tons last week; and the worst of it is,
+ the British are not destroying them. The Admiralty publishes a
+ weekly report which, though true, is not the whole truth. It is
+ known in official circles here that the Germans are turning out at
+ least two a week--some say three; and the British are not
+ destroying them as fast as new ones are turned out. If merely the
+ present situation continue, the war will pretty soon become a
+ contest of endurance under hunger, with an increasing proportion of
+ starvation. Germany is yet much the worse off, but it will be
+ easily possible for Great Britain to suffer to the danger point
+ next winter or earlier unless some decided change be wrought in
+ this situation.
+
+ The greatest help, I hope, can come from us--our destroyers and
+ similar armed craft--provided we can send enough of them quickly.
+ The area to be watched is so big that many submarine hunters are
+ needed. Early in the war the submarines worked near shore. There
+ are very many more of them now and their range is one hundred
+ miles, or even two hundred, at sea.
+
+ The public is becoming very restive with its half information, and
+ it is more and more loudly demanding all the facts. There are
+ already angry threats to change the personnel of the Admiralty;
+ there is even talk of turning out the Government. "We must have
+ results, we must have results." I hear confidentially that Jellicoe
+ has threatened to resign unless the Salonica expedition is brought
+ back: to feed and equip that force requires too many ships.
+
+ And there are other troubles impending. Norway has lost so many of
+ her ships that she dare not send what are left to sea. Unarmed
+ they'll all perish. If she arms them, Germany will declare war
+ against her. There is a plan on foot for the British to charter
+ these Norwegian ships and to arm them, taking the risk of German
+ war against Norway. If war comes (as it is expected) England must
+ then defend Norway the best she can. And _then England may ask for
+ our big ships to help in these waters_. All this is yet in the
+ future, but possibly not far in the future.
+
+ For the present the only anti-submarine help is the help we may be
+ able to give to patrol the wide area off Ireland. If we had one
+ hundred destroyers to send, the job there could, I am told, be
+ quickly done. A third of that number will help mightily. At the
+ present rate of destruction more than four million tons will be
+ sunk before the summer is gone.
+
+ Such is this dire submarine danger. The English thought that they
+ controlled the sea; the Germans, that they were invincible on land.
+ Each side is losing where it thought itself strongest.
+
+ Admiral Sims is of the greatest help imaginable. Of course, I gave
+ him an office in one of our Embassy buildings, and the Admiralty
+ has given him an office also with them. He spends much of his time
+ there, and they have opened all doors and all desks and drawers to
+ him. He strikes me (and the English so regard him) as a man of
+ admirable judgment--unexcitable and indefatigable. I hope we'll
+ soon send a general over, to whom the War Department will act
+ similarly. Hoover, too, must have a good man here as, I dare say,
+ he has already made known. These will cover the Navy, the Army,
+ Food, and Shipping. Perhaps a Censor and an Intelligence (Secret
+ Service) group ought to come. I mean these for permanent--at least
+ indefinite--service. Exchange visits by a Congressional Committee
+ (such as the French and British make) and by high official persons
+ such as members of your Cabinet (such also as the French and
+ British make)--you will have got ideas about these from Mr.
+ Balfour.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+In the latter part of June Admiral Sims went to Queenstown. Admiral
+Bayly, who directed the operation of the anti-submarine forces there,
+had gone away for a brief rest, and Admiral Sims had taken over the
+command of both the British and American forces at that point. This
+experience gave Admiral Sims a first-hand picture of a really deplorable
+situation. The crisis was so desperate that he made another appeal to
+Page.
+
+ _From Admiral William S. Sims_
+
+ Admiralty House, Queenstown,
+ June 25, 1917.
+
+ My Dear Mr. Page:
+
+ I enclose herewith a letter on the submarine situation[61].
+
+ I think I have made it plain therein that the Allies are losing the
+ war; that it will be already lost when the loss of shipping reaches
+ the point where fully adequate supplies cannot be maintained on the
+ various battle fronts.
+
+ I cannot understand why our Government should hesitate to send the
+ necessary anti-submarine craft to this side.
+
+ There are at least seventeen more destroyers employed on our
+ Atlantic coast, _where there is no war_, not to mention numerous
+ other very useful anti-submarine craft, including sea-going tugs,
+ etc.
+
+ Can you not do something to bring our Government to an
+ understanding of how very serious the situation is? Would it not be
+ well to send another telegram to Mr. Lansing and the President, and
+ also send them the enclosed correspondence?
+
+ I am sending this by mail because I may be somewhat delayed in
+ returning to London.
+
+ Very sincerely yours,
+
+ Wm. S. Sims.
+
+Page immediately acted on this suggestion.
+
+ _Most confidential for the Secretary of State and President only_
+
+ Sims sends me by special messenger from Queenstown the most
+ alarming reports of the submarine situation which are confirmed by
+ the Admiralty here. He says that the war will be won or lost in
+ this submarine zone within a few months. Time is of the essence of
+ the problem, and anti-submarine craft which cannot be assembled in
+ the submarine zone almost immediately may come too late. There is,
+ therefore, a possibility that this war may become a war between
+ Germany and the United States alone. Help is far more urgently and
+ quickly needed in this submarine zone than anywhere else in the
+ whole war area.
+
+ Page.
+
+The United States had now been in the war for three months and only
+twenty-eight of the sixty destroyers which were available had been sent
+into the field. Yet this latest message of Page produced no effect, and,
+when Admiral Sims returned from Queenstown, the two men, almost in
+despair, consulted as to the step which they should take next. What was
+the matter? Was it that Washington did not care to get into the naval
+war with its full strength, or was it that it simply refused to believe
+the representations of its Admiral and its Ambassador? Admiral Sims and
+Page went over the whole situation and came to the conclusion that
+Washington regarded them both as so pro-British that their reports were
+subject to suspicion. Just as Page had found that the State Department,
+and its "trade advisers," had believed that the British were using the
+blockade as a means of destroying American trade for the benefit of
+Britain, so now he believed that Mr. Daniels and Admiral Benson, the
+Chief of Naval Operations, evidently thought that Great Britain was
+attempting to lure American warships into European waters, to undergo
+the risk of protecting British commerce, while British warships were
+kept safely in harbour. Page suggested that there was now only one thing
+left to do, and that was to request the British Government itself to
+make a statement to President Wilson that would substantiate his own
+messages.
+
+"Whatever else they think of the British in Washington," he said, "they
+know one thing--and that is that a British statesman like Mr. Balfour
+will not lie."
+
+Mr. Balfour by this time had returned from America. The fact that he had
+established these splendid personal relations with Mr. Wilson, and that
+he had impressed the American public so deeply with his sincerity and
+fine purpose, made him especially valuable for this particular appeal.
+Page and Admiral Sims therefore went to the Foreign Office and laid all
+the facts before him. Their own statements, Page informed the Foreign
+Secretary, were evidently regarded as hysterical and biased by an
+unreasoning friendliness to Great Britain. If Mr. Balfour would say the
+same things over his own signature, then they would not be disbelieved.
+
+Mr. Balfour gladly consented. He called in Admiral Jellicoe and asked
+him to draft a despatch, so that all the technical facts would be
+completely accurate. He also consulted with Sir Edward Carson, the First
+Lord of the Admiralty. Then Mr. Balfour put the document in its final
+shape and signed it. It was as follows:
+
+ _Mr. Balfour to the President_
+
+ June 30, 1917.
+
+ The forces at present at the disposal of the British Admiralty are
+ not adequate to protect shipping from submarine attack in the
+ danger zone round the British Islands. Consequently shipping is
+ being sunk at a greater rate than it can be replaced by new tonnage
+ of British origin.
+
+ The time will come when, if the present rate of loss continues, the
+ available shipping, apart from American contribution, will be
+ insufficient to bring to this country sufficient foodstuffs and
+ other essentials, including oil fuel. The situation in regard to
+ our Allies, France, and Italy, is much the same.
+
+ Consequently, it is absolutely necessary to add to our forces as a
+ first step, pending the adoption or completion of measures which
+ will, it is hoped, eventually lead to the destruction of enemy
+ submarines at a rate sufficient to ensure safety of our sea
+ communications.
+
+ The United States is the only allied country in a position to help.
+ The pressing need is for armed small craft of every kind available
+ in the area where commerce concentrates near the British and French
+ coasts. Destroyers, submarines, gunboats, yachts, trawlers, and
+ tugs would all give invaluable help, and if sent in sufficient
+ numbers would undoubtedly save a situation which is manifestly
+ critical. But they are required now and in as great numbers as
+ possible. There is no time for delay. The present method of
+ submarine attack is almost entirely by torpedo with the submarine
+ submerged. The gun defense of merchant ships keeps the submarine
+ below the surface but does no more; offensively against a submerged
+ submarine it is useless, and the large majority of the ships
+ torpedoed never see the attacking submarine until the torpedo has
+ hit the ship[62].
+
+ The present remedy is, therefore, to prevent the submarine from
+ using its periscope for fear of attack by bomb or ram from small
+ craft, and this method of defense for the shipping and offense
+ against the submarine requires small craft in very large numbers.
+
+ The introduction of the convoy system, provided there are
+ sufficient destroyers to form an adequate screen to the convoy,
+ will, it is hoped, minimize losses when it is working, and the
+ provision of new offensive measures is progressing; but for the
+ next few months there is only one safeguard, viz., the immediate
+ addition to patrols of every small vessel that can possibly be sent
+ to European waters.
+
+Page, moreover, kept up his own appeal:
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ July 5th.
+
+ _Strictly confidential to the President and the Secretary_
+
+ The British Cabinet is engaging in a threatening controversy about
+ the attitude which they should take toward the submarine peril.
+ There is a faction in the Admiralty which possesses the
+ indisputable facts and which takes a very disheartening view of
+ the situation. This group insists that the Cabinet should make a
+ confession at least to us of the full extent of the danger and that
+ it should give more information to the public. The public does not
+ feel great alarm simply because it has been kept in too great
+ ignorance. But the political faction is so far the stronger. It
+ attempts to minimize the facts, and, probably for political
+ reasons, it refuses to give these discouraging facts wide
+ publicity. The politicians urge that it is necessary to conceal the
+ full facts from the Germans. They also see great danger in throwing
+ the public into a panic.
+
+ Mr. Lloyd George is always optimistic and he is too much inclined
+ to yield his judgment to political motives. In his recent address
+ in Glasgow he gave the public a comforting impression of the
+ situation. But the facts do not warrant the impression which he
+ gave.
+
+ This dispute among the political factions is most unfortunate and
+ it may cause an explosion of public feeling at any time. Changes in
+ the Cabinet may come in consequence. If the British public knew all
+ the facts or if the American people knew them, the present British
+ Government would probably fall. It is therefore not only the
+ submarine situation which is full of danger. The political
+ situation is in a dangerous state also.
+
+ PAGE.
+
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+
+ Wilsford Manor, Salisbury,
+
+ July 8, 1917.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ Since admirals and generals began to come from home, they and the
+ war have taken my time so completely, day and night, that I haven't
+ lately written you many things that I should like to tell you. I'll
+ try here--a house of a friend of ours where the only other guest
+ besides your mother and me is Edward Grey. This is the first time
+ I've seen him since he left office. Let me take certain big
+ subjects in order and come to smaller things later:
+
+ 1. The German submarines are succeeding to a degree that the public
+ knows nothing about. These two things are true: (a) The Germans are
+ building submarines faster than the English sink them. In this way,
+ therefore, they are steadily gaining. (b) The submarines are
+ sinking freight ships faster than freight ships are being built by
+ the whole world. In this way, too, then, the Germans are
+ succeeding. Now if this goes on long enough, the Allies' game is
+ up. For instance, they have lately sunk so many fuel oil ships,
+ that this country may very soon be in a perilous condition--even
+ the Grand Fleet may not have enough fuel. Of course the chance is
+ that oil ships will not continue to fall victims to the U-boats and
+ we shall get enough through to replenish the stock. But this
+ illustrates the danger, and it is a very grave danger.
+
+ The best remedy so far worked out is the destroyer. The submarines
+ avoid destroyers and they sink very, very few ships that are
+ convoyed. If we had destroyers enough to patrol the whole approach
+ (for, say, 250 miles) to England, the safety of the sea would be
+ very greatly increased; and if we had enough to patrol and to
+ convoy every ship going and coming, the damage would be reduced to
+ a minimum. The Admiral and I are trying our best to get our
+ Government to send over 500 improvised destroyers--yachts,
+ ocean-going tugs--any kind of swift craft that can be armed. Five
+ hundred such little boats might end the war in a few months; for
+ the Germans are keeping the spirit of their people and of their
+ army up by their submarine success. If that success were stopped
+ they'd have no other cry half so effective. If they could see this
+ in Washington as we see it, they'd do it and do it not halfway but
+ with a vengeance. If they don't do it, the war may be indefinitely
+ prolonged and a wholly satisfactory peace may never be made. The
+ submarine is the most formidable thing the war has produced--by
+ far--and it gives the German the only earthly chance he has to win.
+ And he _may_ substantially win by it yet. That's what the British
+ conceal. In fact, half of them do not see it or believe it. But
+ nothing is truer, or plainer. One hundred thousand submarine
+ chasers next year may be worth far less than 500 would be worth
+ now, for next year see how few ships may be left! The mere arming
+ of ships is not enough. Nearly all that are sunk are armed. The
+ submarine now carries a little periscope and a big one, each
+ painted the colour of the sea. You can't see a little periscope
+ except in an ocean as smooth as glass. It isn't bigger than a
+ coffee cup. The submarine thus sinks its victims without ever
+ emerging or ever being seen. As things now stand, the Germans are
+ winning the war, and they are winning it on the sea; that's the
+ queer and the most discouraging fact. My own opinion is that all
+ the facts ought to be published to all the world. Let the Germans
+ get all the joy they can out of the confession. No matter, if the
+ Government and the people of the United States knew all the facts,
+ we'd have 1,000 improvised destroyers (yachts, tugs, etc., etc.)
+ armed and over here very quickly. Then the tide would turn.
+
+ Then there'd be nothing to fear in the long run. For the military
+ authorities all agree that the German Army is inferior to the
+ British and French and will be whipped. That may take a long time
+ yet; but of the result nobody who knows seems to have any
+ doubt--unless the French get tired and stop. They have periods of
+ great war weariness and there is real danger that they may quit and
+ make a separate peace. General Pershing's presence has made the
+ situation safe for the moment. But in a little while something else
+ spectacular and hopeful may be required to keep them in line.
+
+ Such is an accurate picture of the war as it is now, and it is a
+ dangerous situation.
+
+ 2. The next grave danger is financial. The European Allies have so
+ bled the English for money that the English would by this time
+ probably have been on a paper money basis (and of course all the
+ Allies as well) if we had not come to their financial aid. And
+ we've got to keep our financial aid going to them to prevent this
+ disastrous result. That wouldn't at once end the war, if they had
+ all abandoned specie payments; but it would be a frightfully severe
+ blow and it might later bring defeat. That is a real danger. And
+ the Government at Washington, I fear, does not know the full extent
+ of the danger. They think that the English are disposed to lie down
+ on them. They don't realize the cost of the war. This Government
+ has bared all this vast skeleton to me; but I fear that Washington
+ imagines that part of it is a deliberate scare. It's a very real
+ danger.
+
+ Now, certain detached items:
+
+ Sims is the idol of the British Admiralty and he is doing his job
+ just as well as any man could with the tools and the chance that he
+ has. He has made the very best of the chance and he has completely
+ won the confidence and admiration of this side of the world.
+
+ Pershing made an admirable impression here, and in France he has
+ simply set them wild with joy. His coming and his little army have
+ been worth what a real army will be worth later. It is well he came
+ to keep the French in line.
+
+ The army of doctors and nurses have had a similar effect.
+
+ Even the New England saw-mill units have caused a furor of
+ enthusiasm. They came with absolute Yankee completeness of
+ organization--with duplicate parts of all their machinery, tents,
+ cooks, pots, and pans, and everything ship-shape. The only question
+ they asked was: "Say, where the hell are them trees you want sawed
+ up?" That's the way to do a job! Yankee stock is made high here by
+ such things as that.
+
+ We're getting a crowd of Yankee lecturers on the United States to
+ go up and down this Kingdom. There's the greatest imaginable
+ curiosity to hear about the United States in all kinds of society
+ from munition workers to universities. I got the British Government
+ to write Buttrick[63] to come as its guest, and the Rockefeller
+ Boards rose to the occasion. He'll probably be along presently. If
+ he hasn't already sailed when you get this, see him and tell him to
+ make arrangements to have pictures sent over to him to illustrate
+ his lectures. Who else could come to do this sort of a job?
+
+ I am myself busier than I have ever been. The kind of work the
+ Embassy now has to do is very different from the work of the days
+ of neutrality. It continues to increase--especially the work that I
+ have to do myself. But it's all pleasant now. We are trying to help
+ and no longer to hinder. To save my life I don't see how the
+ Washington crowd can look at themselves in a mirror and keep their
+ faces straight. Yesterday they were bent on sending everything into
+ European neutral states. The foundations of civilization would give
+ way if neutral trade were interfered with. Now, nothing must go in
+ except on a ration basis. Yesterday it must be a peace without
+ victory. Now it must be a complete victory, every man and every
+ dollar thrown in, else no peace is worth having. I don't complain.
+ I only rejoice. But I'm glad that kind of a rapid change is not a
+ part of my record. The German was the same beast yesterday that he
+ is to-day; and it makes a simple-minded, straight-minded man like
+ me wonder which attitude was the (or is the) attitude of real
+ conviction. But this doesn't bother me now as a real problem--only
+ as a speculation. What we call History will, I presume, in time
+ work this out. But History is often a kind of lie. But never mind
+ that. The only duty of mankind now is to win. Other things can
+ wait.
+
+ I walked over to Stonehenge and back (about six miles) with Lord
+ Grey (Sir Edward, you know) and we, like everybody else, fell to
+ talking about when the war may end. We know as well as anybody and
+ no better than anybody else. I have very different moods about
+ it--no convictions. It seems to me to depend, as things now are,
+ more on the submarines than on anything else. If we could
+ effectually discourage them so that the Germans would have to
+ withdraw them and could no more keep up the spirit of their people
+ by stories of the imminent starvation of England, I have a feeling
+ that the hunger and the war weariness of the German people would
+ lead them to force an end. But, the more they are called on to
+ suffer the more patriotic do they think themselves and they _may_
+ go on till they drop dead in their tracks.
+
+ What I am really afraid of is that the Germans may, before winter,
+ offer all that the Western Allies most want--the restoration of
+ Belgium and France, the return of Alsace-Lorraine, etc., in the
+ West and the surrender of the Colonies--provided Austria is not
+ dismembered. That would virtually leave them the chance to work out
+ their Middle Europe scheme and ultimately there'd probably have to
+ be another war over that question. That's the real eventuality to
+ be feared--a German defeat in the West but a German victory in the
+ Southeast. Everybody in Europe is so war weary that such a plan
+ _may_ succeed.
+
+ On the other hand, what Hoover and Northcliffe fear may come
+ true--that the Germans are going to keep up the struggle for
+ years--till their armies are practically obliterated, as Lee's army
+ was. If the Allies were actually to kill (not merely wound, but
+ actually kill) 5,000 Germans a day for 300 days a year, it would
+ take about four years to obliterate the whole German Army. There is
+ the bare possibility, therefore, of a long struggle yet. But I
+ can't believe it. My dominant mood these days is an end within a
+ very few months after the submarines are knocked out. Send over,
+ therefore, 1,000 improvised destroyers the next two months, and
+ I'll promise peace by Christmas. Otherwise I can make no promises.
+ That's all that Lord Grey and I know, and surely we are two wise
+ men. What, therefore, is the use in writing any more about this?
+
+ The chief necessity that grows upon me is that all the facts must
+ be brought out that show the kinship in blood and ideals of the two
+ great English-speaking nations. We were actually coming to believe
+ ourselves that we were part German and Slovene and Pole and
+ What-not, instead of essentially being Scotch and English. Hence
+ the unspeakable impudence of your German who spoke of eliminating
+ the Anglo-Saxon element from American life! The truth should be
+ forcibly and convincingly told and repeated to the end of the
+ chapter, and our national life should proceed on its natural
+ historic lines, with its proper historic outlook and background. We
+ can do something to bring this about.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+The labour of getting the American Navy into the war was evidently at
+first a difficult one, but the determination of Page and Admiral Sims
+triumphed, and, by August and September, our energies were fully
+engaged. And the American Navy made a record that will stand
+everlastingly to its glory. Without its help the German submarines could
+never have been overcome.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 58: The reference is to the attack made in October, 1916, by
+the German Submarine U-53, off Nantucket on several British ships. An
+erroneous newspaper account said that the _Benham_, an American
+destroyer, had moved in a way that facilitated the operations of the
+German submarine. This caused great bitterness in England, until Page
+showed the Admiralty a report from the Navy Department proving that the
+story was false.]
+
+[Footnote 59: This, of course, is Franklin D. Roosevelt, Assistant
+Secretary of the Navy in 1917.]
+
+[Footnote 60: This letter is dated London and was probably begun there.
+It is evident, however, that the latter part was written at Brighton,
+where the Ambassador was taking a brief holiday.]
+
+[Footnote 61: This was a long document describing conditions in great
+detail.]
+
+[Footnote 62: The Navy Department had taken the position that arming
+merchantmen was the best protection against the submarine. This
+statement was intended to refute this belief.]
+
+[Footnote 63: Dr. Wallace Buttrick, President of the General Education
+Board, who was sent at this time to deliver lectures throughout Great
+Britain on the United States.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+PAGE--THE MAN
+
+
+The entrance of America into the war, followed by the successful
+promotion of the Balfour visit, brought a period of quiet into Page's
+life. These events represented for him a personal triumph; there were
+many things still to be done, it is true, and Page, as always, was
+active in advancing the interests that were nearest his heart; yet the
+mighty relief that followed the American declaration was the kind that
+one experiences after accomplishing the greatest task of a lifetime.
+Page's letters have contained many references to the sense of moral
+isolation which his country's policy had forced upon him; he probably
+exaggerated his feeling that there was a tendency to avoid him; this was
+merely a reflection of his own inclination to keep away from all but the
+official people. He now had more leisure and certainly more interest in
+cultivating the friends that he had made in Great Britain. For the fact
+is that, during all these engrossing years, Page had been more than an
+Ambassador; by the time the United States entered the war he had
+attained an assured personal position in the life of the British
+capital. He had long since demonstrated his qualifications for a post,
+which, in the distinction of the men who have occupied it, has few
+parallels in diplomacy. The scholarly Lowell, the courtly Bayard, the
+companionable Hay, the ever-humorous Choate, had set a standard for
+American Ambassadors which had made the place a difficult one for their
+successors. Though Page had characteristics in common with all these
+men, his personality had its own distinctive tang; and it was something
+new to the political and social life of London. And the British capital,
+which is extremely exacting and even merciless in its demands upon its
+important personages, had found it vastly entertaining. "I didn't know
+there could be anything so American as Page except Mark Twain," a
+British literary man once remarked; and it was probably this strong
+American quality, this directness and even breeziness of speech and of
+method, this absence of affectation, this almost openly expressed
+contempt for finesse and even for tradition, combined with those other
+traits which we like to think of as American--an upright purpose, a
+desire to serve not only his own country but mankind--which made the
+British public look upon Page as one of the most attractive and useful
+figures in a war-torn Europe.
+
+There was a certain ruggedness in Page's exterior which the British
+regarded as distinctly in keeping with this American flavour. The
+Ambassador was not a handsome man. To one who had heard much of the
+liveliness of his conversation and presence a first impression was
+likely to be disappointing. His figure at this time was tall, gaunt, and
+lean--and he steadily lost weight during his service in England; his
+head was finely shaped--it was large, with a high forehead, his thin
+gray hair rather increasing its intellectual aspect; and his big frank
+brown eyes reflected that keen zest for life, that unsleeping interest
+in everything about him, that ever-working intelligence and sympathy
+which were the man's predominant traits. But a very large nose at first
+rather lessened the pleasing effects of his other features, and a rather
+weather-beaten, corrugated face gave a preliminary suggestion of
+roughness. Yet Page had only to begin talking and the impression
+immediately changed. "He puts his mind to yours," Dr. Johnson said,
+describing the sympathetic qualities of a friend, and the same was true
+of Page. Half a dozen sentences, spoken in his quick, soft, and
+ingratiating accents, accompanied by the most genial smile, at once
+converted the listener into a friend. Few men have ever lived who more
+quickly responded to this human relationship. The Ambassador, at the
+simple approach of a human being, became as a man transformed. Tired
+though he might be, low in spirits as he not infrequently was, the press
+of a human hand at once changed him into an animated and radiating
+companion. This responsiveness deceived all his friends in the days of
+his last illness. His intimates who dropped in to see Page invariably
+went away much encouraged and spread optimistic reports about his
+progress. A few minutes' conversation with Page would deceive even his
+physicians. The explanation was a simple one: the human presence had an
+electric effect upon him, and it is a revealing sidelight on Page's
+character that almost any man or woman could produce this result. As an
+editor, the readiness with which he would listen to suggestions from the
+humblest source was a constant astonishment to his associates. The
+office boy had as accessible an approach to Page as had his partners. He
+never treated an idea, even a grotesque one, with contempt; he always
+had time to discuss it, to argue it out, and no one ever left his
+presence thinking that he had made an absurd proposal. Thus Page had a
+profound respect for a human being simply because he was a human being;
+the mere fact that a man, woman, or child lived and breathed, had his
+virtues and his failings, constituted in Page's imagination a tremendous
+fact. He could not wound such a living creature any more than he could
+wound a flower or a tree; consequently he treated every person as an
+important member of the universe. Not infrequently, indeed, he stormed
+at public men, but his thunder, after all, was not very terrifying; his
+remarks about such personages as Mr. Bryan merely reflected his
+indignation at their policies and their influence but did not indicate
+any feeling against the victims themselves. Page said "Good morning" to
+his doorman with the same deference that he showed to Sir Edward Grey,
+and there was not a little stenographer in the building whose joys and
+sorrows did not arouse in him the most friendly interest. Some of the
+most affecting letters written about Page, indeed, have come from these
+daily associates of more humble station. "We so often speak of Mr.
+Page," writes one of the Embassy staff--"Findlater, Short, and
+Frederick"--these were all English servants at the Embassy; "we all
+loved him equally, and hardly a day passes that something does not
+remind us of him, and I often fancy that I hear his laugh, so full of
+kindness and love of life." And the impression left on those in high
+position was the same. "I have seen ladies representing all that is most
+worldly in Mayfair," writes Mr. Ellery Sedgwick, the editor of the
+_Atlantic Monthly_, "start at the sudden thought of Page's illness,
+their eyes glistening with tears."
+
+Perhaps what gave most charm to this human side was the fact that Page
+was fundamentally such a scholarly man. This was the aspect which
+especially delighted his English friends. He preached democracy
+and Americanism with an emphasis that almost suggested the
+back-woodsman--the many ideas on these subjects that appear in his
+letters Page never hesitated to set forth with all due resonance at
+London dinner tables--yet he phrased his creed in language that was
+little less than literary style, and illuminated it with illustrations
+and a philosophy that were the product of the most exhaustive reading.
+"Your Ambassador has taught us something that we did not know before,"
+an English friend remarked to an American. "That is that a man can be a
+democrat and a man of culture at the same time." The Greek and Latin
+authors had been Page's companions from the days when, as the holder of
+the Greek Fellowship at Johns Hopkins, he had been a favourite pupil of
+Basil L. Gildersleeve. British statesmen who had been trained at
+Balliol, in the days when Greek was the indispensable ear-mark of a
+gentleman, could thus meet their American associate on the most
+sympathetic terms. Page likewise spoke a brand of idiomatic English
+which immediately put him in a class by himself. He regarded words as
+sacred things. He used them, in his writing or in his speech, with the
+utmost care and discrimination; yet this did not result in a halting or
+stilted style; he spoke with the utmost ease, going rapidly from thought
+to thought, choosing invariably the one needful word, lighting up the
+whole with whimsicalities all his own, occasionally emphasizing a good
+point by looking downward and glancing over his eyeglasses, perhaps, if
+he knew his companion intimately, now and then giving him a monitory tap
+on the knee. Page, in fact, was a great and incessant talker; hardly
+anything delighted him more than a companionable exchange of ideas and
+impressions; he was seldom so busy that he would not push aside his
+papers for a chat; and he would talk with almost any one, on almost any
+subject--his secretaries, his stenographers, his office boys, and any
+crank who succeeded in getting by the doorman--for, in spite of his
+lively warnings against the breed, Page did really love cranks and took
+a collector's joy in uncovering new types. Page's voice was normally
+quiet; though he had spent all his early life in the South, the
+characteristic Southern accents were ordinarily not observable; yet his
+intonation had a certain gentleness that was probably an inheritance of
+his Southern breeding. Thus, when he first began talking, his words
+would ripple along quietly and rapidly; a characteristic pose was to sit
+calmly, with one knee thrown over the other, his hands folded; as his
+interest increased, however, he would get up, perhaps walk across the
+room, or stand before the fireplace, his hands behind his back; a large
+cigar, sometimes unlighted, at other times emitting huge clouds of
+smoke, would oscillate from one side of his mouth to the other; his talk
+would grow in earnestness, his voice grow louder, his words come faster
+and faster, until finally they would gush forth in a mighty torrent.
+
+All Page's personal traits are explained by that one characteristic
+which tempered all others, his sense of humour. That Page was above all
+a serious-minded man his letters show; yet his spirits were constantly
+alert for the amusing, the grotesque, and the contradictory; like all
+men who are really serious and alive to the pathos of existence, he
+loved a hearty laugh, especially as he found it a relief from the gloom
+that filled his every waking moment in England. Page himself regarded
+this ability to smile as an indispensable attribute to a well-rounded
+life. "No man can be a gentleman," he once declared, "who does not have
+a sense of humour." Only he who possessed this gift, Page believed, had
+an imaginative insight into the failings and the virtues of his
+brothers; only he could have a tolerant attitude toward the stupidities
+of his fellows, to say nothing of his own. And humour with him assumed
+various shades; now it would flash in an epigram, or smile indulgently
+at a passing human weakness; now and then it would break out into genial
+mockery; occasionally it would manifest itself as sheer horse-play; and
+less frequently it would become sardonic or even savage. It was in this
+latter spirit that he once described a trio of Washington statesmen,
+whose influence he abhorred as, "three minds that occupy a single
+vacuum." He once convulsed a Scottish audience by describing the
+national motto of Scotland--and doing so with a broad burr in his voice
+that seemed almost to mark the speaker a native to the heath--as
+"Liber-r-ty, fra-a-ternity and f-r-r-u-gality." The policy of his
+country occasioned many awkward moments which, thanks to his talent for
+amiable raillery, he usually succeeded in rendering harmless. Not
+infrequently Page's fellow guests at the dinner table would think the
+American attitude toward Germany a not inappropriate topic for small
+talk. "Mr. Page," remarked an exaltedly titled lady in a conversational
+pause, "when is your country going to get into the war?" The more
+discreet members of the company gasped, but Page was not disturbed.
+"Please give us at least ninety days," he answered, and an exceedingly
+disagreeable situation was thus relieved by general laughter.
+
+On another occasion his repudiation of this flippant spirit took a more
+solemn and even more effective form. The time was a few days before the
+United States had declared war. Bernstorff had been dismissed; events
+were rapidly rushing toward the great climax; yet the behaviour of the
+Washington Administration was still inspiring much caustic criticism.
+The Pages were present at one of the few dinners which they attended in
+the course of this crisis; certain smart and tactless guests did not
+seem to regard their presence as a bar to many gibes against the
+American policy. Page sat through it all impassive, never betraying the
+slightest resentment.
+
+Presently the ladies withdrew. Page found himself sitting next to Mr.
+Harold Nicolson, an important official in the Foreign Office. It so
+happened that Mr. Nicolson and Page were the only two members of the
+company who were the possessors of a great secret which made ineffably
+silly all the chatter that had taken place during the dinner; this was
+that the United States had decided on war against Germany and would
+issue the declaration in a few days.
+
+"Well, Mr. Nicolson," said Page, "I think that you and I will drink a
+glass of wine together."
+
+The two men quietly lifted their glasses and drank the silent toast.
+Neither made the slightest reference to the forthcoming event. Perhaps
+the other men present were a little mystified, but in a few days they
+understood what it had meant, and also learned how effectively they had
+been rebuked.
+
+"Is it any wonder," says Mr. Nicolson, telling this story, "that I think
+that Mr. Page is perhaps the greatest gentleman I have ever known? He
+has only one possible competitor for this distinction--and that is
+Arthur Balfour."
+
+The English newspapers took delight in printing Page's aphorisms, and
+several anecdotes that came from America afforded them especial joy. One
+went back to the days when the Ambassador was editor of the _Atlantic
+Monthly_. A woman contributor had sent him a story; like most literary
+novices she believed that editors usually rejected the manuscripts of
+unknown writers without reading them. She therefore set a trap for Page
+by pasting together certain sheets. The manuscript came back promptly,
+and, as the prospective contributor had hoped, these sheets had not been
+disturbed. These particular sections had certainly not been read. The
+angry author triumphantly wrote to Page, explaining how she had caught
+him and denouncing the whole editorial tribe as humbugs. "Dear Madam,"
+Page immediately wrote in reply, "when I break an egg at breakfast, I do
+not have to eat the whole of it to find out that it is bad." Page's
+treatment of authors, however, was by no means so acrimonious as this
+little note might imply. Indeed, the urbanity and consideration shown in
+his correspondence with writers had long been a tradition in American
+letters. The remark of O. Henry in this regard promises to become
+immortal: "Page could reject a story with a letter that was so
+complimentary," he said, "and make everybody feel so happy that you
+could take it to a bank and borrow money on it."
+
+Another anecdote reminiscent of his editorial days was his retort to
+S.S. McClure, the editor of _McClure's Magazine_.
+
+"Page," said Mr. McClure, "there are only three great editors in the
+United States."
+
+"Who's the third one, Sam?" asked Page.
+
+Plenty of stories, illustrating Page's quickness and aptness in retort,
+have gathered about his name in England. Many of them indicate a mere
+spirit of boyish fun. Early in his Ambassadorship he was spending a few
+days at Stratford-on-Avon, his hostess being an American woman who had
+beautifully restored an Elizabethan house; the garden contained a
+mulberry tree which she liked to think had been planted by Shakespeare
+himself. The dignitaries of Stratford, learning that the American
+Ambassador had reached town, asked permission to wait upon him; the Lord
+Mayor, who headed the procession, made an excellent speech, to which
+Page appropriately replied, and several hundred people were solemnly
+presented. After the party had left Page turned to his hostess:
+
+"Have they all gone?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"All?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then let's take hands and dance around the mulberry tree!"
+
+Page was as good as his word; he danced as gaily as the youngest member
+of the party, to the singing of the old English song.
+
+The great service in St. Paul's Cathedral, in commemoration of America's
+entry into the war, has already been described. A number of wounded
+Americans, boys whose zeal for the Allies had led them to enlist in the
+Canadian Army, were conspicuous participants in this celebration. After
+the solemn religious ceremonies, the Ambassador and these young men
+betook themselves for lunch to a well-known London restaurant. In an
+interval of the conversation one of the Americans turned to Page.
+
+"Mr. Ambassador, there was just one thing wrong with that service."
+
+"What was that?"
+
+"We wanted to yell, and we couldn't."
+
+"Then why don't you yell now?"
+
+The boy jumped on a chair and began waving his napkin. "The Ambassador
+says we may yell," he cried. "Let's yell!"
+
+"And so," said Page, telling the story, "they yelled for five minutes
+and I yelled with them. We all felt better in consequence."
+
+This geniality, this disposition not to take life too solemnly,
+sometimes lightened up the sombre atmosphere of the Foreign Office
+itself. "Mr. Balfour went on a sort of mild rampage yesterday," Page
+records. "The British and American navies had come to an arrangement
+whereby the Brazilian ships that are coming over to help us fight
+should join the American unit, not the British, as was at first
+proposed. Washington telegraphed me that the British Minister at Rio was
+blocking the game by standing out for the first British idea--that the
+Brazilian ships should join the British. It turned out in the
+conversation that the British Minister had not been informed of the
+British-American naval arrangement. Mr. Balfour sent for Lord Hardinge.
+He called in one of the private secretaries. Was such a thing ever heard
+of?
+
+"Did you ever know,' said the indignant Mr. Balfour, turning to me, 'of
+such a thing as a minister not even being informed of his Government's
+decisions?' 'Yes,' I said, 'if I ransack my memory diligently, I think I
+could find such cases.' The meeting went into laughter!"
+
+Evidently the troubles which Page was having with his own State
+Department were not unfamiliar to British officialdom.
+
+Page's letters sufficiently reveal his fondness for Sir Edward Grey and
+the splendid relations that existed between them. The sympathetic chords
+which the two men struck upon their first meeting only grew stronger
+with time. A single episode brings out the bonds that drew them
+together. It took place at a time when the tension over the blockade was
+especially threatening. One afternoon Page asked for a formal interview;
+he had received another exceedingly disagreeable protest from
+Washington, with instructions to push the matter to a decision; the
+Ambassador left his Embassy with a grave expression upon his face; his
+associates were especially worried over the outcome. So critical did the
+situation seem that the most important secretaries gathered in the
+Ambassador's room, awaiting his return, their nerves strung almost to
+the breaking point. An hour went by and nothing was heard from Page;
+another hour slowly passed and still the Ambassador did not return. The
+faces of the assembled staff lengthened as the minutes went by; what was
+the Ambassador doing at the Foreign Office? So protracted an interview
+could portend only evil; already, in the minds of these nervous young
+men, ultimatums were flying between the United States and Great Britain,
+and even war might be hanging in the balance. Another hour drew out its
+weary length; the room became dark, dinner time was approaching, and
+still Page failed to make his appearance. At last, when his distracted
+subordinates were almost prepared to go in search of their chief, the
+Ambassador walked jauntily in, smiling and apparently carefree. What had
+happened? What was to be done about the detained ships?
+
+"What ships?" asked Page, and then suddenly he remembered. "Oh,
+yes--those." That was all right; Sir Edward had at once promised to
+release them; it had all been settled in a few minutes.
+
+"Then why were you so long?"
+
+The truth came out: Sir Edward and Page had quickly turned from
+intercepted cargoes to the more congenial subject of Wordsworth,
+Tennyson, and other favourite poets, and the rest of the afternoon had
+been consumed in discussing this really important business.
+
+Perhaps Page was not so great a story-teller as many Americans, but he
+excelled in a type of yarn that especially delights Englishmen, for it
+is the kind that is native to the American soil. He possessed an
+inexhaustible stock of Negro anecdotes, and he had the gift of bringing
+them out at precisely the right point. There was one which the
+Archbishop of York never tired of repeating. Soon after America entered
+the war, the Archbishop asked Page how long his country was "in for."
+"I can best answer that by telling you a story," said Page. "There were
+two Negroes who had just been sentenced to prison terms. As they were
+being taken away in the carriage placed at their disposal by the United
+States Government, one said to the other, 'Sam, how long is you in fo'?'
+'I guess dat it's a yeah or two yeahs,' said Sam. 'How long is you in
+fo'?' 'I guess it's from now on,' said the other darky." "From now on,"
+remarked the Archbishop, telling this story. "What could more eloquently
+have described America's attitude toward the war?"
+
+The mention of the Archbishop suggests another of Page's talents--the
+aptness of his letters of introduction. In the spring of 1918 the
+Archbishop, at the earnest recommendation of Page and Mr. Balfour, came
+to the United States. Page prepared the way by letters to several
+distinguished Americans, of which this one, to Theodore Roosevelt, is a
+fair sample:
+
+ _To Theodore Roosevelt_
+
+ London, January 16, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. ROOSEVELT:
+
+ The Archbishop of York goes to the United States to make some
+ observations of us and of our ways and to deliver addresses--on the
+ invitation of some one of our church organizations; a fortunate
+ event for us and, I have ventured to tell him, for him also.
+
+ During his brief stay in our country, I wish him to make your
+ acquaintance, and I have given him a card of introduction to you,
+ and thus I humbly serve you both.
+
+ The Archbishop is a man and a brother, a humble, learned, earnest,
+ companionable fellow, with most charming manners and an attractive
+ personality, a good friend of mine, which argues much for him and
+ (I think) implies also something in my behalf. You will enjoy him.
+
+ I am, dear Mr. Roosevelt,
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+Greatly as Page loved England he never ceased to preach his Americanism.
+That he preferred his own country to any other and that he believed that
+it was its greatest destiny to teach its institutions to the rest of the
+world, Page's letters show; yet this was with him no cheap
+spread-eagleism; it was a definite philosophy which the Ambassador had
+completely thought out. He never hesitated to express his democratic
+opinions in any company, and only once or twice were there any signs
+that these ideas jarred a little in certain strongholds of conservatism.
+Even in the darkest period of American neutrality Page's faith in the
+American people remained complete. After this country had entered the
+war and the apparent slowness of the Washington Administration had
+raised certain questionings, Page never doubted that the people
+themselves, however irresolute and lukewarm their representatives might
+be, would force the issue to its only logical end. Even so friendly a
+man as Mr. Balfour once voiced a popular apprehension that the United
+States might not get into the war with all its strength or might
+withdraw prematurely. This was in the early period of our participation.
+"Who is going to stop the American people and how?" Page quickly
+replied. "I think that was a good answer," he said, as he looked back at
+the episode in the summer of 1918, when hundreds of thousands of
+Americans were landing in France every month. A scrap of his writing
+records a discussion at a dinner party on this question: "If you could
+have a month in any time and any country, what time and what country
+would you choose?" The majority voted for England in the time of
+Elizabeth, but Page's preference was for Athens in the days of Pericles.
+Then came a far more interesting debate: "If you could spend a second
+lifetime when and where would you choose to spend it?" On this Page had
+not a moment's hesitation: "In the future and in the U.S.A.!" and he
+upheld his point with such persuasiveness that he carried the whole
+gathering with him. His love of anything suggesting America came out on
+all occasions. One of his English hostesses once captivated him by
+serving corn bread at a luncheon. "The American Ambassador and corn
+bread!" he exclaimed with all the delight of a schoolboy. Again he was
+invited, with another distinguished American, to serve as godfather at
+the christening of the daughter of an American woman who had married an
+Englishman. When the ceremony was finished he leaned over the font
+toward his fellow godfather. "Born on July 4th," he exclaimed, "of an
+American mother! And we two Yankee godfathers! We'll see that this child
+is taught the Constitution of the United States!"
+
+One day an American duchess came into Page's office.
+
+"I am going home for a little visit and I want a passport," she said.
+
+"But you don't get a passport here," Page replied. "You must go to the
+Foreign Office."
+
+His visitor was indignant.
+
+"Not at all," she answered. "I am an American: you know that I am; you
+knew my father. I want an American passport."
+
+Page patiently explained the citizenship and naturalization laws and
+finally convinced his caller that she was now a British subject and must
+have a British passport. As this American duchess left the room he
+shook at her a menacing forefinger.
+
+"Don't tell me," was the Ambassador's parting shot, "that you thought
+that you could have your Duke and Uncle Sam, too!"
+
+The judgments which Page passed on men and things were quick and they
+were not infrequently wise. One of these judgments had historic
+consequences the end of which cannot even yet be foreseen. On the
+outbreak of hostilities, as already related, an American Relief
+Committee was organized in London to look out for the interests of
+stranded Americans. Page kept a close eye on its operations, and soon
+his attention was attracted by the noiseless efficiency of an American
+engineer of whom he had already caught a few fleeting glimpses in the
+period of peace. After he had finished his work with the American
+Committee, Mr. Herbert C. Hoover began to make his arrangements to leave
+for the United States. His private affairs had been disorganized; he had
+already sent his family home, and his one ambition was to get on the
+first ship sailing for the United States. The idea of Belgian relief, or
+of feeding starving people anywhere, had never occurred to him. At this
+moment an American, Mr. Millard K. Shaler, came from Brussels and gave
+the most harrowing account of conditions in Belgium. Mr. Hoover took Mr.
+Shaler to Page, who immediately became sympathetic. The Ambassador
+arranged an interview between Mr. Hoover and Sir Edward Grey, who
+likewise showed great interest and promised government support. Soon
+afterward three Belgians arrived and described the situation as
+immediately alarming: Brussels had only food enough to feed the people
+for thirty-six hours; after that, unless help were forthcoming, the
+greatest distress would set in. Five men--Page, the three Belgians, and
+Mr. Hoover--at once got together at the American Embassy. Upon the
+result of that meeting hung the fate of millions of people. Who before
+had ever undertaken a scheme for feeding an entire nation for an
+indefinite period? That there were great obstacles in the way all five
+men knew; the British Admiralty in particular were strongly opposed;
+there was a fear that the food, if it could be acquired and sent to
+Belgium, would find its way to the German Army. Unless the British
+Government could be persuaded that this could be prevented, the
+enterprise would fail at the start. How could it be done?
+
+"There is only one way," said Page. "Some government must give its
+guarantee that this food will get to the Belgian people." "And, of
+course," he added, "there is only one government that can do that. It
+must be the American Government."
+
+Mr. Hoover pointed out that any such guarantee involved the management
+of transportation; only by controlling the railroads could the American
+Government make sure that this food would reach its destination.
+
+And that, added Page, involved a director--some one man who could take
+charge of the whole enterprise. Who should it be?
+
+Then Page turned quickly to the young American.
+
+"Hoover, you're It!"
+
+Mr. Hoover made no reply; he neither accepted nor rejected the proposal.
+He merely glanced at the clock, then got up and silently left the room.
+In a few minutes he returned and entered again into the discussion.
+
+"Hoover, why did you get up and leave us so abruptly?" asked Page, a
+little puzzled over this behaviour.
+
+"I saw by the clock," came the answer--and it was a story that Page was
+fond of telling, as illustrating the rapidity with which Mr. Hoover
+worked--"that there was an hour left before the Exchange closed in New
+York. So I went out and cabled, buying several millions of bushels of
+wheat--for the Belgians, of course."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For what is usually known as "society" Page had little inclination. Yet
+for social intercourse on a more genuine plane he had real gifts. Had he
+enjoyed better health, week ends in the country would have afforded him
+welcome entertainment. He also liked dinner parties but indulged in them
+very moderately. He was a member of many London clubs but he seldom
+visited any of them. There were a number of organizations, however,
+which he regularly attended. The Society of Dilettanti, a company of
+distinguished men interested in promoting the arts and improving the
+public taste, which has been continuously in existence since 1736,
+enrolling in each generation the greatest painters and writers of the
+time, elected Page to membership. He greatly enjoyed its dinners in the
+Banquet Hall of the Grafton Gallery. "Last night," he writes, describing
+his initial appearance, "I attended my first Dilettanti dinner and was
+inducted, much as a new Peer is inducted into the House of Lords. Lord
+Mersey in the chair--in a red robe. These gay old dogs have had a fine
+time of it for nearly 200 years--good wine, high food, fine
+satisfaction. The oldest dining society in the Kingdom. The blue blood
+old Briton has the art of enjoying himself reduced to a very fine point
+indeed." Another gathering whose meetings he seldom missed was that of
+the Kinsmen, an informal club of literary men who met occasionally for
+food and converse in the Trocadero Restaurant. Here Page would meet such
+congenial souls as Sir James Barrie and Sir Arthur Pinero, all of whom
+retain lively memories of Page at these gatherings. "He was one of the
+most lovable characters I have ever had the good fortune to encounter,"
+says Sir Arthur Pinero, recalling these occasions. "In what special
+quality or qualities lay the secret of his charm and influence? Surely
+in his simplicity and transparent honesty, and in the possession of a
+disposition which, without the smallest loss of dignity, was responsive
+and affectionate. Distinguished American Ambassadors will come and go,
+and will in their turn win esteem and admiration. But none, I venture to
+say, will efface the recollection of Walter Page from the minds of those
+who were privileged to gain his friendship."
+
+One aspect of Page that remains fixed in the memory of his associates is
+his unwearied industry with the pen. His official communications and his
+ordinary correspondence Page dictated; but his personal letters he wrote
+with his own hand. He himself deplored the stenographer as a deterrent
+to good writing; the habit of dictating, he argued, led to wordiness and
+general looseness of thought. Practically all the letters published in
+these volumes were therefore the painstaking work of Page's own pen. His
+handwriting was so beautiful and clear that, in his editorial days, the
+printers much preferred it as "copy" to typewritten matter. This habit
+is especially surprising in view of the Ambassador's enormous epistolary
+output. It must be remembered that the letters included in the present
+book are only a selection from the vast number that he wrote during his
+five years in England; many of these letters fill twenty and thirty
+pages of script; the labour involved in turning them out; day after day,
+seems fairly astounding. Yet with Page this was a labour of love. All
+through his Ambassadorship he seemed hardly contented unless he had a
+pen in his hand. As his secretaries would glance into his room, there
+they would see the Ambassador bending over his desk-writing, writing,
+eternally writing; sometimes he would call them in, and read what he had
+written, never hesitating to tear up the paper if their unfavourable
+criticisms seemed to him well taken. The Ambassador kept a desk also in
+his bedroom, and here his most important correspondence was attended to.
+Page's all-night self-communings before his wood fire have already been
+described, and he had another nocturnal occupation that was similarly
+absorbing. Many a night, after returning late from his office or from
+dinner, he would put on his dressing gown, sit at his bedroom desk, and
+start pouring forth his inmost thoughts in letters to the President,
+Colonel House, or some other correspondent. His pen flew over the paper
+with the utmost rapidity and the Ambassador would sometimes keep at his
+writing until two or three o'clock in the morning. There is a frequently
+expressed fear that letter writing is an art of the past; that the
+intervention of the stenographer has destroyed its spontaneity; yet it
+is evident that in Page the present generation has a letter writer of
+the old-fashioned kind, for he did all his writing with his own hand and
+under circumstances that would assure the utmost freshness and vividness
+to the result.
+
+An occasional game of golf, which he played badly, a trip now and then
+to rural England--these were Page's only relaxations from his duties.
+Though he was not especially fond of leaving his own house, he was
+always delighted when visitors came to him. And the American Embassy,
+during the five years from 1913 to 1918, extended a hospitality which
+was fittingly democratic in its quality but which gradually drew within
+its doors all that was finest in the intellect and character of
+England. Page himself attributed the popularity of his house to his
+wife. Mrs. Page certainly embodied the traits most desirable in the
+Ambassadress of a great Republic. A woman of cultivation, a tireless
+reader, a close observer of people and events and a shrewd commentator
+upon them, she also had an unobtrusive dignity, a penetrating sympathy,
+and a capacity for human association, which, while more restrained and
+more placid than that of her husband, made her a helpful companion for a
+sorely burdened man. The American Embassy under Mr. and Mrs. Page was
+not one of London's smart houses as that word is commonly understood in
+this great capital. But No. 6 Grosvenor Square, in the spaciousness of
+its rooms, the simple beauty of its furnishings, and especially in its
+complete absence of ostentation, made it the worthy abiding place of an
+American Ambassador. And the people who congregated there were precisely
+the kind that appeal to the educated American. "I didn't know I was
+getting into an assembly of immortals," exclaimed Mr. Hugh Wallace, when
+he dropped in one Thursday afternoon for tea, and found himself
+foregathered with Sir Edward Grey, Henry James, John Sargent, and other
+men of the same type. It was this kind of person who most naturally
+gravitated to the Page establishment, not the ultra-fashionable, the
+merely rich, or the many titled. The formal functions which the position
+demanded the Pages scrupulously gave; but the affairs which Page most
+enjoyed and which have left the most lasting remembrances upon his
+guests were the informal meetings with his chosen favourites, for the
+most part literary men. Here Page's sheer brilliancy of conversation
+showed at its best. Lord Bryce, Sir John Simon, John Morley, the
+inevitable companions, Henry James and John Sargent--"What things have
+I seen done at the Mermaid"; and certainly these gatherings of wits and
+savants furnished as near an approach to its Elizabethan prototype as
+London could then present.
+
+Besides his official activities Page performed great services to the two
+countries by his speeches. The demands of this kind on an American
+Ambassador are always numerous, but Page's position was an exceptional
+one; it was his fortune to represent America at a time when his own
+country and Great Britain were allies in a great war. He could therefore
+have spent practically all his time in speaking had he been so disposed.
+Of the hundreds of invitations received he was able to accept only a
+few, but most of these occasions became memorable ones. In any
+spectacular sense Page was not an orator; he rather despised the grand
+manner, with its flourishes and its tricks; the name of public speaker
+probably best describes his talents on the platform. Here his style was
+earnest and conversational: his speech flowed with the utmost readiness;
+it was invariably quiet and restrained; he was never aiming at big
+effects, but his words always went home. Of the series of speeches that
+stand to his credit in England probably the one that will be longest
+remembered is that delivered at Plymouth on August 4, 1917, the third
+anniversary of the war. This not only reviewed the common history of the
+two nations for three hundred years, and suggested a programme for
+making the bonds tighter yet, but it brought the British public
+practical assurances as to America's intentions in the conflict. Up to
+that time there had been much vagueness and doubt; no official voice had
+spoken the clear word for the United States; the British public did not
+know what to expect from their kinsmen overseas. But after Page's
+Plymouth speech the people of Great Britain looked forward with
+complete confidence to the cooeperation of the two countries and to the
+inevitable triumph of this cooeperation.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Knebworth House, Knebworth,
+ August 11, 1917.
+
+ Dear Arthur:
+
+ First of all, these three years have made me tired. I suppose
+ there's no doubt about that, if there were any scientific way of
+ measuring it. While of course the strain now is nothing like what
+ it was during the days of neutrality, there's yet some strain.
+
+ I went down to Plymouth to make a speech on the anniversary of the
+ beginning of the war--went to tell them in the west of England
+ something about relations with the United States and something
+ about what the United States is doing in the war. It turned out to
+ be a great success. The Mayor met me at the train; there was a
+ military company, the Star Spangled Banner and real American
+ applause. All the way through the town the streets were lined with
+ all the inhabitants and more--apparently millions of 'em. They made
+ the most of it for five solid days.
+
+ On the morning of August 4th the Mayor gave me an official
+ luncheon. Thence we went to the esplanade facing the sea, where
+ soldiers and sailors were lined up for half a mile. The American
+ Flag was flung loose, the Star Spangled Banner broke forth from the
+ band, and all the people in that part of the world were there
+ gathered to see the show. After all this salute the Mayor took me
+ to the stand and he and I made speeches, and the background was a
+ group of dozens of admirals and generals and many smaller fry. Then
+ I reviewed the troops; then they marched by me and in an hour or
+ two the show was over.
+
+ Then the bowling club--the same club and the same green as when
+ Drake left the game to sail out to meet the Armada.
+
+ Then a solemn service in the big church, where the prayers were
+ written and the hymns selected with reference to our part in the
+ war.
+
+ Then, of course, a dinner party. At eight o'clock at night, the
+ Guildhall, an enormous town hall, was packed with people and I made
+ my speech at 'em. A copy (somewhat less good than the version I
+ gave them) goes to you, along with a leader from the _Times_. They
+ were vociferously grateful for any assuring word about the United
+ States. It's strange how very little the provincial Englander knows
+ about what we have done and mean to do. They took the speech
+ finely, and I have had good letters about it from all sorts of
+ people in every part of the Kingdom.
+
+ Then followed five days of luncheons and dinners and garden
+ parties--and (what I set out to say) I got back to London last
+ night dead tired. To-day your mother and I came here--about
+ twenty-five miles from London--for a fortnight.
+
+ This is Bulwer-Lytton's house--a fine old English place hired this
+ year by Lady Strafford, whom your mother is visiting for a
+ fortnight or more, and they let me come along, too. They have given
+ me the big library, as good a room as I want--with as bad pens as
+ they can find in the Kingdom.
+
+ Your mother is tired, too. Since the American Red Cross was
+ organized here, she has added to her committee and hospitals. But
+ she keeps well and very vigorous. A fortnight here will set her up.
+ She enjoyed Plymouth very much in spite of the continual rush, and
+ it was a rush.
+
+ What the United States is doing looks good and large at this
+ distance. The gratitude here is unbounded; but I detect a feeling
+ here and there of wonder whether we are going to keep up this
+ activity to the end.
+
+ I sometimes feel that the German collapse _may_ come next winter.
+ Their internal troubles and the lack of sufficient food and raw
+ materials do increase. The breaking point may be reached before
+ another summer. I wish I could prove it or even certainly predict
+ it. But it is at least conceivable. Alas, no one can _prove_
+ anything about the war. The conditions have no precedents. The sum
+ of human misery and suffering is simply incalculable, as is the
+ loss of life; and the gradual and general brutalization goes on and
+ on and on far past any preceding horrors.
+
+ With all my love to you and Mollie and the trio,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+And so for five busy and devastating years Page did his work. The
+stupidities of Washington might drive him to desperation, ill-health
+might increase his periods of despondency, the misunderstandings that he
+occasionally had with the British Government might add to his
+discouragements, but a naturally optimistic and humorous temperament
+overcame all obstacles, and did its part in bringing about that united
+effort which ended in victory. And that it was a great part, the story
+of his Ambassadorship abundantly proves. Page was not the soldier
+working in the blood and slime of Flanders, nor the sea fighter spending
+day and night around the foggy coast of Ireland, nor the statesman
+bending parliaments to his will and manipulating nations and peoples in
+the mighty game whose stake was civilization itself. But history will
+indeed be ungrateful if it ever forget the gaunt and pensive figure,
+clad in a dressing gown, sitting long into the morning before the
+smouldering fire at 6 Grosvenor Square, seeking to find some way to
+persuade a reluctant and hesitating President to lead his country in the
+defense of liberty and determined that, so far as he could accomplish
+it, the nation should play a part in the great assize that was in
+keeping with its traditions and its instincts.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+A RESPITE AT ST. IVES
+
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ Knebworth House
+ Sunday, September,[sic] 1917.
+
+ Dear House:
+
+ ... By far the most important peace plan or utterance is the
+ President's extraordinary answer to the Pope[64]. His flat and
+ convincing refusal to take the word of the present rulers of
+ Germany as of any value has had more effect here than any other
+ utterance and it is, so far, the best contribution we have made to
+ the war. The best evidence that I can get shows also that it has
+ had more effect in Germany than anything else that has been said by
+ anybody. That hit the bull's-eye with perfect accuracy; and it has
+ been accepted here as _the_ war aim and _the_ war condition. So far
+ as I can make out it is working in Germany toward peace with more
+ effect than any other deliverance made by anybody. And it steadied
+ the already unshakable resolution here amazingly.
+
+ I can get any information here of course without danger of the
+ slightest publicity--an important point, because even the mention
+ of peace now is dangerous. All the world, under this long strain,
+ is more or less off the normal, and all my work--even routine
+ work--is done with the profoundest secrecy: it has to be.
+
+ Our energetic war preparations call forth universal admiration and
+ gratitude here on all sides and nerve up the British and hearten
+ them more than I know how to explain. There is an eager and even
+ pathetic curiosity to hear all the details, to hear, in fact,
+ anything about the United States; and what the British do not know
+ about the United States would fill the British Museum. They do
+ know, however, that they would soon have been obliged to make an
+ unsatisfactory peace if we hadn't come in when we did and they
+ freely say so. The little feeling of jealousy that we should come
+ in and win the war at the end has, I think, been forgotten,
+ swallowed up in their genuine gratitude.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ American Embassy,
+ London, Sept. 3, 1917.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... The President has sent Admiral Mayo over to study the naval
+ situation. So far as I can learn the feeling at Washington is that
+ the British Navy has done nothing. Why, it hasn't attacked the
+ German naval bases and destroyed the German navy and ended the war!
+ Why not? I have a feeling that Mayo will supplement and support
+ Sims in his report. Then gradually the naval men at Washington may
+ begin to understand and they may get the important facts into the
+ President's head. Meantime the submarine work of the Germans
+ continues to win the war, although the government and the people
+ here and in the United States appear not to believe it. They are
+ still destroying seventy-five British ships a month besides an
+ additional (smaller) number of allied and neutral ships. And all
+ the world together is not turning out seventy-five ships a month;
+ nor are we all destroying submarines as fast as the Germans are
+ turning _them_ out. Yet all the politicians are putting on a
+ cheerful countenance about it because the Germans are not starving
+ England out and are not just now sinking passenger ships. They may
+ begin this again at any time. They have come within a few feet of
+ torpedoing two of our American liners. The submarine _is_ the war
+ yet, but nobody seems disposed to believe it. They'll probably wake
+ up with a great shock some day--or the war may possibly end before
+ the destruction of ships becomes positively fatal.
+
+ The President's letter to the Pope gives him the moral and actual
+ leadership now. The Hohenzollerns must go. Somehow the subjects and
+ governments of these Old World kingdoms have not hitherto laid
+ emphasis on this. There's still a divinity that doth hedge a king
+ in most European minds. To me this is the very queerest thing in
+ the whole world. What again if Germany, Austria, Spain should
+ follow Russia? Whether they do or not crowns will not henceforth be
+ so popular. There is an unbounded enthusiasm here for the
+ President's letter and for the President in general.
+
+ In spite of certain details which it seems impossible to make
+ understood on the Potomac, the whole American preparation and
+ enthusiasm seem from this distance to be very fine. The _people_
+ seem in earnest. When I read about tax bills, about the food
+ regulation and a thousand other such things, I am greatly
+ gratified. And it proves that we were right when we said that
+ during the days of neutrality the people were held back. It all
+ looks exceedingly good from this distance, and it makes me
+ homesick.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday_
+
+ American Embassy.
+
+ [Undated, but written about October I, 1917]
+
+ DEAR EFFENDI:
+
+ ... The enormous war work and war help that everybody seems to be
+ doing in the United States is heartily appreciated here--most
+ heartily. The English eat out of our hands. You can see American
+ uniforms every day in London. Every ship brings them. Everybody's
+ thrilled to see them. The Americans here have great houses opened
+ as officers' clubs, and scrumptious huts for men where countesses
+ and other high ladies hand out sandwiches and serve ice cream and
+ ginger beer. Our two admirals are most popular with all classes,
+ from royalty down. English soldiers salute our officers in the
+ street and old gentlemen take off their hats when they meet nurses
+ with the American Red Cross uniform. My Embassy now occupies four
+ buildings for offices, more than half of them military and naval.
+ And my own staff, proper, is the biggest in the world and keeps
+ growing. When I go, in a little while, to receive the Freedom of
+ the City of Edinburgh, I shall carry an Admiral or a General as my
+ aide!
+
+ That's the way we keep a stiff upper lip.
+
+ And Good Lord! it's tiresome. Peace? We'd all give our lives for
+ the right sort of peace, and never move an eyelid. But only the
+ wrong sort has yet come within reach. The other sort is coming,
+ however; for these present German contortions are the beginning of
+ the end. But the weariness of it, and the tragedy and the cost. No
+ human creature was ever as tired as I am. Yet I keep well and keep
+ going and keep working all my waking hours. When it ends, I shall
+ collapse and go home and have to rest a while. So at least I feel
+ now. And, if I outlive the work and the danger and the weariness,
+ I'll praise God for that. And it doesn't let up a single day. And
+ I'm no worse off than everybody else.
+
+ So this over-weary world goes, dear Effendi; but the longest day
+ shades at last down to twilight and rest; and so this will be. And
+ poor old Europe will then not be worth while for the rest of our
+ lives--a vast grave and ruin where unmated women will mourn and
+ starvation will remain for years to come.
+
+ God bless us.
+
+ Sincerely yours, with my love to all the boys,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Frank N. Doubleday_
+
+ London, November 9, 1917.
+
+ DEAR EFFENDI:
+
+ ... This infernal thing drags its slow length along so that we
+ cannot see even a day ahead, not to say a week, or a year. If any
+ man here allowed the horrors of it to dwell on his mind he would go
+ mad, so we have to skip over these things somewhat lightly and try
+ to keep the long, definite aim in our thoughts and to work away
+ distracted as little as possible by the butchery and by the
+ starvation that is making this side of the world a shambles and a
+ wilderness. There is hardly a country on the Continent where people
+ are not literally starving to death, and in many of them by
+ hundreds of thousands; and this state of things is going to
+ continue for a good many years after the war. God knows we (I mean
+ the American people) are doing everything we can to alleviate it
+ but there is so much more to be done than any group of forces can
+ possibly do, that I have a feeling that we have hardly touched the
+ borders of the great problem itself. Of course here in London we
+ are away from all that. In spite of the rations we get quite enough
+ to eat and it's as good as it is usually in England, but we have no
+ right to complain. Of course we are subject to air raids, and the
+ wise air people here think that early next spring we are going to
+ be bombarded with thousands of aeroplanes, and with new kinds of
+ bombs and gases in a well-organized effort to try actually to
+ destroy London. Possibly that will come; we must simply take our
+ chance, every man sticking to his job. Already the slate shingles
+ on my roof have been broken, and bricks have been knocked down my
+ chimney; the sky-light was hit and glass fell down all through the
+ halls, and the nose of a shrapnel shell, weighing eight pounds,
+ fell just in front of my doorway and rolled in my area. This is the
+ sort of thing we incidentally get, not of course from the enemy
+ directly, but from the British guns in London which shoot these
+ things at German aeroplanes. What goes up must come down. Between
+ our own defences and the enemy, God knows which will kill us first!
+
+ In spite of all this I put my innocent head on my pillow every
+ night and get a good night's sleep after the bombing is done, and I
+ thank Heaven that nothing interrupts my sleep. This, and a little
+ walking, which is all I get time to do in these foggy days,
+ constitute my life outdoors and precious little of it is outdoors.
+
+ Then on every block that I know of in London there is a hospital or
+ supply place and the ambulances are bringing the poor fellows in
+ all the time. We don't get any gasolene to ride so we have to walk.
+ We don't get any white bread so we have to eat stuff made of flour
+ and corn meal ground so fine that it isn't good. While everybody
+ gets a little thinner, the universal opinion is that they also get
+ a little better, and nobody is going to die here of hunger. We
+ feel a little more cheerful about the submarines than we did some
+ time ago. For some reason they are not getting so many ships. One
+ reason, I am glad to believe, is that they are getting caught
+ themselves. If I could remember all the stories that I hear of good
+ fighting with the submarines I could keep you up two nights when I
+ get home, but in these days one big thing after another crowds so
+ in men's minds that the Lord knows if, when I get home, I shall
+ remember anything.
+
+ Always heartily yours,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, December 3, 1917.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ ... Some of the British military men in London are not hopeful of
+ an early end of the war nor even cheerful about the result. They
+ are afraid of the war-weariness that overcame Russia and gave Italy
+ a setback. They say the military task, though long and slow and
+ hard, can be done if everybody will pull together and keep at the
+ job without weariness--_be done by our help_. But they have fits of
+ fear of France. They are discouraged by the greater part of Lord
+ Lansdowne's letter[65]. I myself do not set great value on this
+ military feeling in London, for the British generals in France do
+ not share it. Lord French once said to me and General Robertson,
+ too, that when they feel despondent in London, they go to the front
+ and get cheered up. But it does seem to be a long job. Evidently
+ the Germans mean to fight to the last man unless they can succeed
+ in inducing the Allies to meet them to talk it over without naming
+ their terms in advance. That is what Lord Lansdowne favours, and no
+ public outgiving by any prominent man in England has called forth
+ such a storm of protest since the war began. I think I see the
+ genesis of his thought, and it is this: there is nothing in his
+ letter and there was nothing in the half dozen or more rather long
+ conversations that I have had with him on other subjects to show
+ that he has the slightest conception of democracy as a social creed
+ or as a political system. He is, I think, the most complete
+ aristocrat that I have ever met. He doesn't see the war at all as a
+ struggle between democracy and its opposite. He sees it merely as a
+ struggle between Germany and the Allies; and inferentially he is
+ perfectly willing the Kaiser should remain in power. He is of
+ course a patriotic man and a man of great cultivation. But he
+ doesn't see the deeper meaning of the conflict. Add to this defect
+ of understanding, a long period of bad health and a lasting
+ depression because of the loss of his son, and his call to the
+ war-weary ceases to be a surprise.
+
+ I am, dear Mr. President,
+ Sincerely yours,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ American Embassy,
+ London, December 23, 1917.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ I sent you a Christmas cable yesterday for everybody. That's about
+ all I can send in these days of slow mail and restricted shipping
+ and enormously high prices; and you gave all the girls each $100
+ for me, for the babies and themselves? That'll show 'em that at
+ least we haven't forgotten them. Forgotten? Your mother and I are
+ always talking of the glad day when we can go home and live among
+ them. We get as homesick as small boys their first month at a
+ boarding school. Do you remember the day I left you at
+ Lawrenceville, a forlorn and lonely kid?--It's like that.
+
+ A wave of depression hangs over the land like a London fog. And
+ everybody on this tired-out side of the world shows a disposition
+ to lean too heavily on us--to depend on us so completely that the
+ fear arises that they may unconsciously relax their own utmost
+ efforts when we begin to fight. Yet they can't in the least afford
+ to relax, and, when the time comes, I dare say they will not. Yet
+ the plain truth is, the French may give out next year for lack of
+ men. I do not mean that they will quit, but that their fighting
+ strength will have passed its maximum and that they will be able to
+ play only a sort of second part. Except the British and the French,
+ there's no nation in Europe worth a tinker's damn when you come to
+ the real scratch. The whole continent is rotten or tyrannical or
+ yellow-dog. I wouldn't give Long Island or Moore County for the
+ whole of continental Europe, with its kings and itching palms.
+
+ ... Waves of depression and of hope--if not of elation--come and
+ go. I am told, and I think truly, that waves of weariness come in
+ London far oftener and more depressingly than anywhere else in the
+ Kingdom. There is no sign nor fear that the British will give up;
+ they'll hold on till the end. Winston Churchill said to me last
+ night: "We can hold on till next year. But after 1918, it'll be
+ your fight. We'll have to depend on you." I told him that such a
+ remark might well be accepted in some quarters as a British
+ surrender. Then he came up to the scratch: "Surrender? Never." But
+ I fear we need--in some practical and non-ostentatious way--now
+ and then to remind all these European folk that we get no
+ particular encouragement by being unduly leaned on.
+
+ It is, however, the weariest Christmas in all British annals,
+ certainly since the Napoleonic wars. The untoward event after the
+ British advance toward Cambrai caused the retirement of six British
+ generals and deepened the depression here. Still I can see it now
+ passing. Even a little victory will bring back a wave of
+ cheerfulness.
+
+ Depression or elation show equally the undue strain that British
+ nerves are under. I dare say nobody is entirely normal. News of
+ many sorts can now be circulated only by word of mouth. The
+ queerest stories are whispered about and find at least temporary
+ credence. For instance: The report has been going around that the
+ revolution that took place in Portugal the other day was caused by
+ the Germans (likely enough); that it was a monarchical movement and
+ that the Germans were going to put the King back on the throne as
+ soon as the war ended. Sensation-mongers appear at every
+ old-woman's knitting circle. And all this has an effect on conduct.
+ Two young wives of noble officers now in France have just run away
+ with two other young noblemen--to the scandal of a large part of
+ good society in London. It is universally said that the morals of
+ more hitherto good people are wrecked by the strain put upon women
+ by the absence of their husbands than was ever before heard of.
+ Everybody is overworked. Fewer people are literally truthful than
+ ever before. Men and women break down and fall out of working ranks
+ continuously. The number of men in the government who have
+ disappeared from public view is amazing, the number that would like
+ to disappear is still greater--from sheer overstrain. The Prime
+ Minister is tired. Bonar Law in a long conference that Crosby and
+ I had with him yesterday wearily ran all round a circle rather than
+ hit a plain proposition with a clear decision. Mr. Balfour has kept
+ his house from overwork a few days every recent week. I lunched
+ with Mr. Asquith yesterday; even he seemed jaded; and Mrs. Asquith
+ assured me that "everything is going to the devil damned fast."
+ Some conspicuous men who have always been sober have taken to
+ drink. The very few public dinners that are held are served with
+ ostentatious meagreness to escape criticism. I attended one last
+ week at which there was no bread, no butter, no sugar served. All
+ of which doesn't mean that the world here is going to the bad--only
+ that it moves backward and forward by emotions; and this is
+ normally a most unemotional race. Overwork and the loss of Sons and
+ friends--the list of the lost grows--always make an abnormal
+ strain. The churches are fuller than ever before. So, too, are the
+ "parlours" of the fortune-tellers. So also the theatres--in the
+ effort to forget one's self. There are afternoon dances for young
+ officers at home on leave: the curtains are drawn and the music is
+ muffled. More marriages take place--blind and maimed, as well as
+ the young fellows just going to France--than were ever celebrated
+ in any year within men's memory. Verse-writing is rampant. I have
+ received enough odes and sonnets celebrating the Great Republic and
+ the Great President to fill a folio volume. Several American
+ Y.M.C.A. workers lately turned rampant Pacifists and had to be sent
+ home. Colonial soldiers and now and then an American sailor turn up
+ at our Y.M.C.A. huts as full as a goat and swear after the event
+ that they never did such a thing before. Emotions and strain
+ everywhere!
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+In March Page, a very weary man--as these letters indicate--took a brief
+holiday at St. Ives, on the coast of Cornwall. As he gazed out on the
+Atlantic, the yearning for home, for the sandhills and the pine trees of
+North Carolina, again took possession of his soul. Yet it is evident,
+from a miscellaneous group of letters written at this time, that his
+mind revelled in a variety of subjects, ranging all the way from British
+food and vegetables to the settlement of the war and from secret
+diplomacy to literary style.
+
+ _To Mrs. Charles G. Loring_
+ St. Ives, Cornwall, March 3, 1918.
+
+ DEAR KITTY:
+
+ Your mother of course needed a rest away from London after the
+ influenza got done with her; and I discovered that I had gone
+ stale. So she and I and the golf clubs came here yesterday--as near
+ to the sunlit land of Uncle Sam as you can well get on this island.
+ We look across the ocean--at least out into it--in your direction,
+ but I must confess that Labrador is not in sight. The place is all
+ right, the hotel uncommonly good, but it's Greenlandish in its
+ temperature--a very cold wind blowing. The golf clubs lean up
+ against the wall and curse the weather. But we are away from the
+ hordes of people and will have a little quiet here. It's as quiet
+ as any far-off place by the sea, and it's clean. London is the
+ dirtiest town in the world.
+
+ By the way that picture of Chud came (by Col. Honey) along with
+ Alice Page's adorable little photograph. As for the wee chick, I
+ see how you are already beginning to get a lot of fun with her. And
+ you'll have more and more as she gets bigger. Give her my love and
+ see what she'll say. You won't get so lonesome, dear Kitty, with
+ little Alice; and I can't keep from thinking as well as hoping
+ that the war will not go on as long as it sometimes seems that it
+ must. The utter collapse of Russia has given Germany a vast victory
+ on that side and it may turn out that this will make an earlier
+ peace possible than would otherwise have come. And the Germans may
+ be--in fact, _must_ be, very short of some of the essentials of war
+ in their metals or in cotton. They are in a worse internal plight
+ than has been made known, I am sure. I can't keep from hoping that
+ peace may come this year. Of course, my guess may be wrong; but
+ everything I hear points in the direction of my timid prediction.
+
+ Bless you and little Alice,
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+Page's oldest son was building a house and laying out a garden at
+Pinehurst, North Carolina, a fact which explains the horticultural and
+gastronomical suggestions contained in the following letter:
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ Tregenna Castle Hotel,
+ St. Ives, Cornwall, England,
+ March 4, 1918.
+
+DEAR RALPH:
+
+ Asparagus
+ Celery
+ Tomatoes
+ Butter Beans
+ Peas
+ Sweet Corn
+ Sweet Potatoes
+ Squash--the sort you cook in the rind
+ Cantaloupe
+ Peanuts
+ Egg Plant
+ Figs
+ Peaches
+ Pecans
+ Scuppernongs
+ Peanut-bacon, in glass jars
+ Razor-back hams, divinely cured
+ Raspberries
+ Strawberries
+ etc. etc. etc. etc.
+
+ You see, having starved here for five years, my mind, as soon as it
+ gets free, runs on these things and my mouth waters. All the
+ foregoing things that grow can be put up in pretty glass jars, too.
+
+ Add cream, fresh butter, buttermilk, fresh eggs. Only one of all
+ the things on page one grows with any flavour here at
+ all--strawberries; and only one or two more grow at all. Darned if
+ I don't have to confront Cabbage every day. I haven't yet
+ surrendered, and I never shall unless the Germans get us. Cabbage
+ and Germans belong together: God made 'em both the same stinking
+ day.
+
+ Now get a bang-up gardener no matter what he costs. Get him
+ started. Put it up to him to start toward the foregoing programme,
+ to be reached in (say) three years--two if possible. He must learn
+ to grow these things absolutely better than they are now grown
+ anywhere on earth. He must get the best seed. He must get muck out
+ of the swamp, manure from somewhere, etc. etc. He must have the
+ supreme flavour in each thing. Let him take room enough for
+ each--plenty of room. He doesn't want much room for any one thing,
+ but good spaces between.
+
+ This will be the making of the world. Talk about fairs? If he fails
+ to get every prize he must pay a fine for every one that goes to
+ anybody else.
+
+ How we'll live! I can live on these things and nothing else. But
+ (just to match this home outfit) I'll order tea from Japan, ripe
+ olives from California, grape fruit and oranges from Florida. Then
+ poor folks will hang around, hoping to be invited to dinner!
+
+ Plant a few fig trees now; and pecans? Any good?
+
+ The world is going to come pretty close to starvation not only
+ during the war but for five or perhaps ten years afterward. An acre
+ or two _done right_--divinely right--will save us. An acre or two
+ on my land in Moore County--no king can live half so well if the
+ ground be got ready this spring and such a start made as one
+ natural-born gardener can make. The old Russian I had in Garden
+ City was no slouch. Do you remember his little patch back of the
+ house? That far, far, far excelled anything in all Europe. And
+ you'll recall that we jarred 'em and had good things all winter.
+
+ This St. Ives is the finest spot in England that I've ever seen.
+ To-day has been as good as any March day you ever had in North
+ Carolina--a fine air, clear sunshine, a beautiful sea--looking out
+ toward the United States; and this country grows--the best golf
+ links that I've ever seen in the world, and nothing else worth
+ speaking of but--tin. Tin mines are all about here. Tin and golf
+ are good crops in their way, but they don't feed the belly of man.
+ As matters stand the only people that have fit things to eat now in
+ all Europe are the American troops in France, and their food comes
+ out of tins chiefly. Ach! Heaven! In these islands man is
+ amphibious and carnivorous. It rains every day and meat, meat,
+ meat is the only human idea of food. God bless us, one acre of the
+ Sandhills is worth a vast estate of tin mines and golf links to
+ feed the innards of
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ P.S. And cornfield peas, of just the right rankness, cooked with
+ just the right dryness.
+
+ When I become a citizen of the Sandhills I propose to induce some
+ benevolent lover of good food to give substantial prizes to the
+ best grower of each of these things and to the best cook of each
+ and to the person who serves each of them most daintily.
+
+ We can can and glass jar these things and let none be put on the
+ market without the approval of an expert employed by the community.
+ Then we can get a reputation for Sandhill Food and charge double
+ price.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ St. Ives, Cornwall,
+
+ England, March 8, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ Your letter, written from the University Club, is just come. It
+ makes a very distinct impression on my mind which my own
+ conclusions and fears have long confirmed. Let me put it at its
+ worst and in very bald terms: The Great White Chief is at bottom
+ pacifist, has always been so and is so now. Of course I do not mean
+ a pacifist at any price, certainly not a cowardly pacifist. But
+ (looked at theoretically) war is, of course, an absurd way of
+ settling any quarrel, an irrational way. Men and nations are
+ wasteful, cruel, pigheaded fools to indulge in it. Quite true. But
+ war is also the only means of adding to a nation's territory the
+ territory of other nations which they do not wish to sell or to
+ give up--the robbers' only way to get more space or to get booty.
+ This last explains this war. Every Hohenzollern (except the present
+ Emperor's father, who reigned only a few months) since Frederick
+ the Great has added to Prussian and German area of rule. Every one,
+ therefore, as he comes to the throne, feels an obligation to make
+ his addition to the Empire. For this the wars of Prussia with
+ Austria, with Denmark, with France were brought on. They succeeded
+ and won the additions that old William I made to the Empire. Now
+ William II must make _his_ addition. He prepared for more than
+ forty years; the nation prepared before he came to the throne and
+ his whole reign has been given to making sure that he was ready.
+ It's a robber's raid. Of course, the German case has been put so as
+ to direct attention from this bald fact.
+
+ Now the philosophical pacifists--I don't mean the cowardly,
+ yellow-dog ones--have never quite seen the war in this aspect. They
+ regard it as a dispute about something--about trade, about more
+ seaboard, about this or that, whereas it is only a robber's
+ adventure. They want other people's property. They want money,
+ treasure, land, indemnities, minerals, raw materials; and they set
+ out to take them.
+
+ Now confusing this character of the war with some sort of rational
+ dispute about something, the pacifists try in every way to stop it,
+ so that the "issue" may be reasoned out, debated, discussed,
+ negotiated. Surely the President tried to reach peace--tried as
+ hard and as long as the people would allow him. The Germans argued
+ away time with him while they got their submarine fleet built. Then
+ they carried out the programme they had always had in mind and had
+ never thought of abandoning. Now they wish to gain more time, to
+ slacken the efforts of the Allies, if possible to separate them by
+ asking for "discussions"--peace by "negotiation." When you are
+ about to kill the robber, he cries out, "For God's sake, let's
+ discuss the question between us. We can come to terms."--Now here's
+ where the danger comes from the philosophical pacifist--from any
+ man who does not clearly understand the nature of the war and of
+ the enemy. To discuss the difference between us is so very
+ reasonable in sound--so very reasonable in fact if there were a
+ discussable difference. It is a programme that would always be in
+ order except with a burglar or a robber.
+
+ The yet imperfect understanding of the war and of the nature of the
+ German in the United States, especially at Washington--more
+ especially in the White House--herein lies the danger.
+
+ ... This little rest down here is a success. The weather is a
+ disappointment--windy and cold. But to be away from London and away
+ from folks--that's much. Shoecraft is very good[66]. He sends us
+ next to nothing. Almost all we've got is an invitation to lunch
+ with Their Majesties and they've been good enough to put that off.
+ It's a far-off country, very fine, I'm sure in summer, and with
+ most beautiful golf links. The hill is now so windy that no sane
+ man can play there.
+
+ We're enjoying the mere quiet. And your mother is quite well again.
+
+ Affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ To Mrs. Charles G. Loring
+ St. Ives, Cornwall,
+ March 10, 1918.
+
+ DEAR KITTY:
+
+ A week here. No news. Shoecraft says we've missed nothing in
+ London. What we came for we've got: your mother's quite well. She
+ climbs these high hills quite spryly. We've had a remarkable week
+ in this respect--we haven't carried on a conversation with any
+ human being but ourselves. I don't think any such thing has ever
+ happened before. I can stand a week, perhaps a fortnight of this
+ now. But I don't care for it for any long period. At the bottom of
+ this high and steep hill is the quaintest little town I ever saw.
+ There are some streets so narrow that when a donkey cart comes
+ along the urchins all have to run to the next corner or into doors.
+ There is no sidewalk, of course; and the donkey cart takes the
+ whole room between the houses. Artists take to the town, and they
+ have funny little studios down by the water front in tiny houses
+ built of stone in pieces big enough to construct a tidewater front.
+ Imagine stone walls made of stone, each weighing tons, built into
+ little houses about as big as your little back garden! There's one
+ fellow here (an artist) whom I used to know in New York, so small
+ has the world become!
+
+ On another hill behind us is a triangular stone monument to John
+ Knill. He was once mayor of the town. When he died in 1782, he left
+ money to the town. If the town is to keep the money (as it has) the
+ Mayor must once in every five years form a procession and march up
+ to this monument. There ten girls, natives of the town, and two
+ widows must dance around the monument to the playing of a fiddle
+ and a drum, the girls dressed in white. This ceremony has gone on,
+ once in five years, all this time and the town has old Knill's
+ money!
+
+ Your mother and I--though we are neither girls nor widows--danced
+ around it this morning, wondering what sort of curmudgeon old John
+ Knill was.
+
+ Don't you see how easily we fall into an idle mood? Well, here's a
+ photograph of little Alice looking up at me from the table where I
+ write--a good, sweet face she has.
+
+ And you'll never get another letter from me in a time and from a
+ place whereof there is so little to tell.
+
+ Affectionately, dear Kitty,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+
+ To Ralph W. Page
+ Tregenna Castle Hotel,
+ St. Ives, Cornwall,
+ March 12, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR RALPH:
+
+ Arthur has sent me Gardiner's 37-page sketch of American-British
+ Concords and Discords--a remarkable sketch; and he has reminded me
+ that your summer plan is to elaborate (into a popular style) your
+ sketch of the same subject. You and Gardiner went over the same
+ ground, each in a very good fashion. That's a fascinating task, and
+ it opens up a wholly new vista of our History and of Anglo-Saxon,
+ democratic history. Much lies ahead of that. And all this puts it
+ in my mind to write you a little discourse on _style_. Gardiner has
+ no style. He put his facts down much as he would have noted on a
+ blue print the facts about an engineering project that he sketched.
+ The style of your article, which has much to be said for it as a
+ magazine article, is not the best style for a book.
+
+ Now, this whole question of style--well, it's the gist of good
+ writing. There's no really effective writing without it. Especially
+ is this true of historical writing. Look at X Y Z's writings. He
+ knows his American history and has written much on it. He's written
+ it as an Ohio blacksmith shoes a horse--not a touch of literary
+ value in it all; all dry as dust--as dry as old Bancroft.
+
+ Style is good breeding--and art--in writing. It consists of the
+ arrangement of your matter, first; then, more, of the gait; the
+ manner and the manners of your expressing it. Work every group of
+ facts, naturally and logically grouped to begin with, into a
+ climax. Work every group up as a sculptor works out his idea or a
+ painter, each group complete in itself. Throw out any superfluous
+ facts or any merely minor facts that prevent the orderly working up
+ of the group--that prevent or mar the effect you wish to present.
+
+ Then, when you've got a group thus presented, go over what you've
+ made of it, to make sure you've used your material and its
+ arrangement to the best effect, taking away merely extraneous or
+ superfluous or distracting facts, here and there adding concrete
+ illustrations--putting in a convincing detail here, and there a
+ touch of colour.
+
+ Then go over it for your vocabulary. See that you use no word in a
+ different meaning than it was used 100 years ago and will be used
+ 100 years hence. You wish to use only the permanent words--words,
+ too, that will be understood to carry the same meaning to English
+ readers in every part of the world. Your vocabulary must be chosen
+ from the permanent, solid, stable parts of the language.
+
+ Then see that no sentence contains a hint of obscurity.
+
+ Then go over the words you use to see if they be the best. Don't
+ fall into merely current phrases. If you have a long word, see if a
+ native short one can be put in its place which will be more natural
+ and stronger. Avoid a Latin vocabulary and use a plain English
+ one--short words instead of long ones.
+
+ Most of all, use _idioms_--English idioms of force. Say an
+ agreement was "come to." Don't say it was "consummated." For the
+ difference between idioms and a Latin style, compare Lincoln with
+ George Washington. One's always interesting and convincing. The
+ other is dull in spite of all his good sense. How most folk do
+ misuse and waste words!
+
+ Freeman went too far in his use of one-syllable words. It became an
+ affectation. But he is the only man I can think of that ever did go
+ too far in that direction. X--would have written a great history if
+ he had had the natural use of idioms. As it is, he has good sense
+ and no style; and his book isn't half so interesting as it would
+ have been if he had some style--some proper value of short,
+ clear-cut words that mean only one thing and that leave no
+ vagueness.
+
+ You'll get a good style if you practice it. It is in your blood and
+ temperament and way of saying things. But it's a high art and must
+ be laboriously cultivated.
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+This glimpse of a changing and chastened England appears in a letter of
+this period:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The disposition shown by an endless number of such incidents is
+something more than a disposition of gratitude of a people helped when
+they are hard pressed. All these things show the changed and changing
+Englishman. It has already come to him that he may be weaker than he
+had thought himself and that he may need friends more than he had once
+imagined; and, if he must have helpers and friends, he'd rather have his
+own kinsmen. He's a queer "cuss," this Englishman. But he isn't a liar
+nor a coward nor any sort of "a yellow dog." He's true, and he never
+runs--a possible hero any day, and, when heroic, modest and quiet and
+graceful. The trouble with him has been that he got great world power
+too easily. In the times when he exploited the world for his own
+enrichment, there were no other successful exploiters. It became an easy
+game to him. He organized sea traffic and sea power. Of course he became
+rich--far, far richer than anybody else, and, therefore, content with
+himself. He has, therefore, kept much of his mediaeval impedimenta, his
+dukes and marquesses and all that they imply--his outworn ceremonies and
+his mediaeval disregard of his social inferiors. Nothing is well done in
+this Kingdom for the big public, but only for the classes. The railway
+stations have no warm waiting rooms. The people pace the platform till
+the train comes, and milord sits snugly wrapt up in his carriage till
+his footman announces the approach of the train. And occasional
+discontent is relieved by emigration to the Colonies. If any man becomes
+weary of his restrictions he may go to Australia and become a gentleman.
+The remarkable loyalty of the Colonies has in it something of a
+servant's devotion to his old master.
+
+Now this trying time of war and the threat and danger of extinction are
+bringing--have in fact already brought--the conviction that many changes
+must come. The first sensible talk about popular education ever heard
+here is just now beginning. Many a gentleman has made up his mind to try
+to do with less than seventeen servants for the rest of his life since
+he now _has_ to do with less. Privilege, on which so large a part of
+life here rests, is already pretty well shot to pieces. A lot of old
+baggage will never be recovered after this war: that's certain. During a
+little after-dinner speech in a club not long ago I indulged in a
+pleasantry about excessive impedimenta. Lord Derby, Minister of War and
+a bluff and honest aristocrat, sat near me and he whispered to
+me--"That's me." "Yes," I said, "that's you," and the group about us
+made merry at the jest. The meaning of this is, they now joke about what
+was the most solemn thing in life three years ago.
+
+None of this conveys the idea I am trying to explain--the change in the
+English point of view and outlook--a half century's change in less than
+three years, radical and fundamental change, too. The mother of the Duke
+of X came to see me this afternoon, hobbling on her sticks and feeble,
+to tell me of a radiant letter she had received from her granddaughter
+who has been in Washington visiting the Spring Rices. "It's all very
+wonderful," said the venerable lady, "and my granddaughter actually
+heard the President make a speech!" Now, knowing this lady and knowing
+her son, the Duke, and knowing how this girl, his daughter, has been
+brought up, I dare swear that three years ago not one of them would have
+crossed the street to hear any President that ever lived. They've simply
+become different people. They were very genuine before. They are very
+genuine now.
+
+It is this steadfastness in them that gives me sound hope for the
+future. They don't forget sympathy or help or friendship. Our going into
+the war has eliminated the Japanese question. It has shifted the virtual
+control of the world to English-speaking peoples. It will bring into the
+best European minds the American ideal of service. It will, in fact,
+give us the lead and make the English in the long run our willing
+followers and allies. I don't mean that we shall always have plain
+sailing. But I do mean that the direction of events for the next fifty
+or one hundred years has now been determined.
+
+[Illustration: Lord Robert Cecil, Minister of Blockade, 1916-18,
+Assistant Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, 1918]
+
+[Illustration: General John J. Pershing, Commander-in-Chief of the
+American Expeditionary Force in the Great War]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yet Page found one stolid opposition to his attempts to establish the
+friendliest relations between the two peoples. That offish attitude of
+the Washington Administration, to which reference has already been made,
+did not soften with the progress of events. Another experience now again
+brought out President Wilson's coldness toward his allies. About this
+time many rather queer Americans--some of the "international"
+breed--were coming to England on more or less official missions. Page
+was somewhat humiliated by these excursions; he knew that his country
+possessed an almost unlimited supply of vivid speakers, filled with zeal
+for the allied cause, whose influence, if they could be induced to cross
+the Atlantic, would put new spirit into the British. The idea of having
+a number of distinguished Americans come to England and tell the British
+public about the United States and especially about the American
+preparations for war, was one that now occupied his thoughts. In June,
+1917, he wrote his old friend Dr. Wallace Buttrick, extending an
+invitation to visit Great Britain as a guest of the British Government.
+Dr. Buttrick made a great success; his speeches drew large crowds and
+proved a source of inspiration to the British masses. So successful were
+they, indeed, that the British Government desired that other Americans
+of similar type should come and spread the message. In November,
+therefore, Dr. Buttrick returned to the United States for the purpose of
+organizing such a committee. Among the eminent Americans whom he
+persuaded to give several months of their time to this work of
+heartening our British allies were Mr. George E. Vincent, President of
+the Rockefeller Foundation, Mr. Harry Pratt Judson, President of Chicago
+University, Mr. Charles H. Van Hise, President of the University of
+Wisconsin, Mr. Edwin A. Alderman, President of the University of
+Virginia, Mr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, and Bishop Lawrence of
+Massachusetts. It was certainly a distinguished group, but it was the
+gentleman selected to be its head that gave it almost transcendent
+importance in the eyes of the British Government. This was ex-President
+William H. Taft. The British lay greater emphasis upon official rank
+than do Americans, and the fact that an ex-President of the United
+States was to head this delegation made it almost an historic event. Mr.
+Taft was exceedingly busy, but he expressed his willingness to give up
+all his engagements for several months and to devote his energies to
+enlightening the British public about America and its purposes in the
+war. An official invitation was sent him from London and accepted.
+
+Inasmuch as Mr. Taft was an ex-President and a representative of the
+political party opposed to the one in power, he thought it only
+courteous that he call upon Mr. Wilson, explain the purpose of his
+mission, and obtain his approval. He therefore had an interview with the
+President at the White House; the date was December 12, 1917. As soon as
+Mr. Wilson heard of the proposed visit to Great Britain he showed signs
+of irritation. He at once declared that it met with his strongest
+disapproval. When Mr. Taft remarked that the result of such an
+enterprise would be to draw Great Britain and the United States more
+closely together, Mr. Wilson replied that he seriously questioned the
+desirability of drawing the two countries any more closely together than
+they already were. He was opposed to putting the United States in a
+position of seeming in any way to be involved with British policy. There
+were divergencies of purpose, he said, and there were features of the
+British policy in this war of which he heartily disapproved. The motives
+of the United States in this war, the President continued, "were
+unselfish, but the motives of Great Britain seemed to him to be of a
+less unselfish character." Mr. Wilson cited the treaty between Great
+Britain and Italy as a sample of British statesmanship which he regarded
+as proving this contention. The President's reference to this Italian
+treaty has considerable historic value; there has been much discussion
+as to when the President first learned of its existence, but it is
+apparent from this conversation with ex-President Taft that he must have
+known about it on December 12, 1917, for President Wilson based his
+criticism of British policy largely upon this Italian convention[67].
+
+The President showed more and more feeling about the matter as the
+discussion continued. "There are too many Englishmen," he said, "in this
+country and in Washington now and I have asked the British Ambassador to
+have some of them sent home."
+
+Mr. Wilson referred to the jealousy of France at the close relations
+which were apparently developing between Great Britain and the United
+States. This was another reason, he thought, why it was unwise to make
+the bonds between them any tighter. He also called Mr. Taft's attention
+to the fact that there were certain elements in the United States which
+were opposed to Great Britain--this evidently being a reference to the
+Germans and the Irish--and he therefore believed that any conspicuous
+attempts to increase the friendliness of the two countries for each
+other would arouse antagonism and resentment.
+
+As Mr. Taft was leaving he informed Mr. Wilson that the plan for his
+visit and that of the other speakers had originated with the American
+Ambassador to Great Britain. This, however, did not improve the
+President's temper.
+
+"Page," said the President, "is really an Englishman and I have to
+discount whatever he says about the situation in Great Britain."
+
+And then he added, "I think you ought not to go, and the same applies to
+the other members of the party. I would like you to make my attitude on
+this question known to those having the matter in charge."
+
+Despite this rebuff Dr. Buttrick and Mr. Taft were reluctant to give up
+the plan. An appeal was therefore made to Colonel House. Colonel House
+at once said that the proposed visit was an excellent thing and that he
+would make a personal appeal to Mr. Wilson in the hope of changing his
+mind. A few days afterward Colonel House called up Dr. Buttrick and
+informed him that he had not succeeded. "I am sorry," wrote Colonel
+House to Page, "that the Buttrick speaking programme has turned out as
+it has. The President was decidedly opposed to it and referred to it
+with some feeling."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 64: August 1, 1917, Pope Benedict XV sent a letter to the
+Powers urging them to bring the war to an end and outlining possible
+terms of settlement. On August 29th President Wilson sent his historic
+reply. This declared, in memorable language, that the Hohenzollern
+dynasty was unworthy of confidence and that the United States would have
+no negotiations with its representatives. It inferentially took the
+stand that the Kaiser must abdicate, or be deposed, and the German
+autocracy destroyed, as part of the conditions of peace.]
+
+[Footnote 65: On November 29, 1917, the London _Daily Telegraph_
+published a letter from the Marquis of Lansdowne, which declared that
+the war had lasted too long and suggested that the British restate their
+war aims. This letter was severely condemned by the British press and by
+practically all representative British statesmen. It produced a most
+lamentable impression in the United States also.]
+
+[Footnote 66: Eugene C. Shoecraft, the Ambassador's secretary.]
+
+[Footnote 67: As related in Chapter XXII, page 267, President Wilson was
+informed of the so-called "secret treaties" by Mr. Balfour, in the
+course of his memorable visit to the White House.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+GETTING THE AMERICAN TROOPS TO FRANCE
+
+
+A group of letters, written at this time, touch upon a variety of topics
+which were then engaging the interest of all countries:
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ London, January 19, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ While your letter is still fresh in my mind I dictate the following
+ in answer to your question about Palestine.
+
+ It has not been settled--and cannot be, I fancy, until the Peace
+ Conference--precisely what the British will do with Palestine, but
+ I have what I think is a correct idea of their general attitude on
+ the subject. First, of course, they do not propose to allow it to
+ go back into Turkish hands; and the same can be said also of
+ Armenia and possibly of Mesopotamia. Their idea of the future of
+ Palestine is that whoever shall manage the country, or however it
+ shall be managed, the Jews shall have the same chance as anybody
+ else. Of course that's quite an advance for the Jews there, but
+ their idea is not that the Jews should have command of other
+ populations there or control over them--not in the least. My guess
+ at the English wish, which I have every reason to believe is the
+ right guess, is that they would wish to have Palestine
+ internationalized, whatever that means. That is to say, that it
+ should have control of its own local affairs and be a free country
+ but that some great Power, or number of Powers, should see to it
+ that none of the races that live there should be allowed to impose
+ upon the other races. I don't know just how such a guarantee can be
+ given by the great Powers or such a responsibility assumed except
+ by an agreement among two or three of them, or barely possibly by
+ the English keeping control themselves; but the control by the
+ English after the war of the former German colonies will put such a
+ large task on them that they will not be particularly eager to
+ extend the area of their responsibility elsewhere. Of course a
+ difficult problem will come up also about Constantinople and the
+ Dardanelles. The Dardanelles must be internationalized.
+
+ I have never been able to consider the Zionist movement seriously.
+ It is a mere religious sentiment which will express itself in
+ action by very few people. I have asked a number of Jews at various
+ times who are in favour of the Zionist movement if they themselves
+ are going there. They always say no. The movement, therefore, has
+ fixed itself in my mind as a Jewish movement in which no Jew that
+ you can lay your hands on will ever take part but who wants other
+ Jews to take part in it. Of course there might be a flocking to
+ Palestine of Jews from Russia and the adjoining countries where
+ they are not happy, but I think the thing is chiefly a sentiment
+ and nothing else. Morgenthau[68] is dead right. I agree with him
+ _in toto_. I do not think anybody in the United States need be the
+ least concerned about the Zionist movement because there isn't a
+ single Jew in our country such a fool as to go to Palestine when he
+ can stay in the United States. The whole thing is a sentimental,
+ religious, more or less unnatural and fantastic idea and I don't
+ think will ever trouble so practical a people as we and our Jews
+ are.
+
+The following memorandum is dated February 10, 1918:
+
+ General Bliss[69] has made a profound and the best possible
+ impression here by his wisdom and his tact. The British have a deep
+ respect for him and for his opinions, and in inspiring and keeping
+ high confidence in us he is worth an army in himself. I have seen
+ much of him and found out a good deal about his methods. He is
+ simplicity and directness itself. Although he is as active and
+ energetic as a boy, he spends some time by himself to think things
+ out and even to say them to himself to see how his conclusions
+ strike the ear as well as the mind. He has been staying here at the
+ house of one of our resident officers. At times he goes to his room
+ and sits long by the fire and argues his point--out loud--oblivious
+ to everything else. More than once when he was so engaged one of
+ his officers has knocked at the door and gone in and laid telegrams
+ on the table beside him and gone out without his having known of
+ the officer's entrance. Then he comes out and tries his conclusion
+ on someone who enjoys his confidence. And then he stands by it and
+ when the time comes delivers it slowly and with precision; and
+ there he is; and those who hear him see that he has thought the
+ matter out on all sides and finally.
+
+ Our various establishments in London have now become big--the
+ Embassy proper, the Naval and Army Headquarters, the Red Cross, the
+ War Trade Board's representatives, and now (forthwith) the Shipping
+ Board, besides Mr. Crosby of the Treasury. The volume of work is
+ enormous and it goes smoothly, except for the somewhat halting
+ Army Headquarters, the high personnel of which is now undergoing a
+ change; and that will now be all right. I regularly make the rounds
+ of all the Government Departments with which we deal to learn if
+ they find our men and methods effective, and the rounds of all our
+ centres of activity to find whether there be any friction with the
+ British The whole machine moves very well. For neither side
+ hesitates to come to me whenever they strike even small snags. All
+ our people are at work on serious tasks and (so far as I know)
+ there are now none of those despicable creatures here who used
+ during our neutrality days to come from the United States on peace
+ errands and what-not to spy on the Embassy and me (their inquiries
+ and their correspondence were catalogued by the police). I have
+ been amazed at the activity of some of them whose doings I have
+ since been informed of.
+
+ We now pay this tribute to the submarines--that we have entered the
+ period of compulsory rations. There is enough to eat in spite of
+ the food that has gone to feed the fishes. But no machinery of
+ distribution to a whole population can be uniformly effective. The
+ British worker with his hands is a greedy feeder and a sturdy
+ growler and there will be trouble. But I know no reason to
+ apprehend serious trouble.
+
+ The utter break-up of Russia and the German present occupation of
+ so much of the Empire as she wants have had a contrary effect on
+ two sections of opinion here, as I interpret the British mind. On
+ the undoubtedly enormously dominant section of opinion these events
+ have only stiffened resolution. They say that Germany now must be
+ whipped to a finish. Else she will have doubled her empire and will
+ hold the peoples of her new territory as vassals without regard to
+ their wishes and the war lord caste will be more firmly seated
+ than ever before. If her armies be literally whipped she'll have to
+ submit to the Allies' terms, which will dislodge her from
+ overlordship over these new unwilling subjects--and she can be
+ dislodged in no other way. This probably means a long war, now that
+ after a time she can get raw materials for war later and food from
+ Rumania and the Ukraine, etc. This will mean a fight in France and
+ Belgium till a decisive victory is won and the present exultant
+ German will is broken.
+
+ The minority section of public opinion--as I judge a small
+ minority--has the feeling that such an out-and-out military victory
+ cannot be won or is not worth the price; and that the enemies of
+ Germany, allowing her to keep her Eastern accretions, must make the
+ best terms they can in the East; that there's no use in running the
+ risk of Italy's defeat and defection before some sort of bargain
+ could be made about Belgium, Alsace-Lorraine, and Serbia. Of course
+ this plan would leave the German warlordship intact and would bring
+ no sort of assurance of a prolonged peace. It would, too, leave
+ European Russia at least to German mercy, and would leave the
+ Baltic and the Black Seas practically wholly under German
+ influence. As for the people of Russia, there seems small chance
+ for them in this second contingency. The only way to save them is
+ to win a decisive victory.
+
+ As matters stand to-day Lord Lansdowne and his friends (how
+ numerous they are nobody knows) are the loudest spokesmen for such
+ a peace as can be made. But it is talked much of in Asquith circles
+ that the time may come when this policy will be led by Mr. Asquith,
+ in a form somewhat modified from the Lansdowne formula. Mr. Asquith
+ has up to this time patriotically supported the government and he
+ himself has said nothing in public which could warrant linking his
+ name with an early peace-seeking policy. But his friends openly
+ and incessantly predict that he will, at a favourable moment, take
+ this cue. I myself can hardly believe it. Political victory in
+ Great Britain doesn't now lie in that direction.
+
+ The dominant section of opinion is much grieved at Russia's
+ surrender, but they refuse to be discouraged by it. They recall how
+ Napoleon overran most of Europe, and the French held practically
+ none of his conquests after his fall.
+
+ Such real political danger as exists here--if any exists, of which
+ I am not quite sure--comes not only now mainly of this split in
+ public opinion but also and to a greater degree from the personal
+ enemies of the present government. Lloyd George is kept in power
+ because he is the most energetic man in sight--by far. Many who
+ support him do not like him nor trust him-except that nobody doubts
+ his supreme earnestness to win the war. On all other subjects he
+ has enemies of old and he makes new ones. His intense and superb
+ energy has saved him in two notable crises. His dismissal of Sir
+ William Robertson[70] has been accepted in the interest of greater
+ unity of military control, but it was a dangerous rapids that he
+ shot, for he didn't do it tactfully. Yet there's a certain danger
+ to the present powers in the feeling that some of them are wearing
+ out. Parliament itself--an old one now--is thought to have gone
+ stale. Bonar Law is over-worked and tired; Balfour is often said to
+ be too philosophical and languid; but, when this feeling seems in
+ danger of taking definite shape, he makes a clearer statement than
+ anybody else and catches on his feet. The man of new energy, not
+ yet fagged, is Geddes[71], whose frankness carries conviction.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ London, March 17, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ The rather impatient and unappreciative remarks made by the Prime
+ Minister before a large meeting of preachers of the "free" churches
+ about a League of Nations reminds me to write you about the state
+ of British opinion on that subject. What Lloyd George said to these
+ preachers is regrettable because it showed a certain impatience of
+ mind from which he sometimes suffers; but it is only fair to him to
+ say that his remarks that day did not express a settled opinion.
+ For on more than one previous occasion he has spoken of the subject
+ in a wholly different tone--much more appreciatively. On that
+ particular day he had in mind only the overwhelming necessity to
+ win the war--other things, _all_ other things must wait. In a way
+ this is his constant mood--the mood to make everybody feel that the
+ only present duty is to win the war. He has been accused of almost
+ every defect in the calendar except of slackness about the war.
+ Nobody has ever doubted his earnestness nor his energy about
+ _that_. And the universal confidence in his energy and earnestness
+ is what keeps him in office. Nobody sees any other man who can push
+ and inspire as well as he does. It would be a mistake, therefore,
+ to pay too much heed to any particular utterance of this electrical
+ creature of moods, on any subject.
+
+ Nevertheless, he hasn't thought out the project of a league to
+ enforce peace further than to see the difficulties. He sees that
+ such a league might mean, in theory at least, the giving over in
+ some possible crisis the command of the British Fleet to an officer
+ of some other nationality. That's unthinkable to any red-blooded
+ son of these islands. Seeing a theoretical possibility even of
+ raising such a question, the British mind stops and refuses to go
+ further--refuses in most cases even to inquire seriously whether
+ any such contingency is ever likely to come.
+
+ The British Grand Fleet, in fact, is a subject that stands alone in
+ power and value and in difficulties. It classifies itself with
+ nothing else. Since over and over again it has saved these islands
+ from invasion when nothing else could have saved them and since
+ during this war in particular it has saved the world from German
+ conquest--as every Englishman believes--it lies in their reverence
+ and their gratitude and their abiding convictions as a necessary
+ and perpetual shield so long as Great Britain shall endure. If the
+ Germans are thrashed to a frazzle (and we haven't altogether done
+ that yet) and we set about putting the world in order, when we come
+ to discuss Disarmament, the British Fleet will be the most
+ difficult item in the world to dispose of. It is not only a Fact,
+ with a great and saving history, it is also a sacred Tradition and
+ an Article of Faith.
+
+ The first reason, therefore, why the British general mind has not
+ firmly got hold on a league is the instinctive fear that the
+ formation of any league may in some conceivable way affect the
+ Grand Fleet. Another reason is the general inability of a somewhat
+ slow public opinion to take hold on more than one subject at a time
+ or more than one urgent part of one subject. The One Subject, of
+ course, is winning the war. Since everything else depends on that,
+ everything else must wait on that.
+
+ The League, therefore, has not taken hold on the public imagination
+ here as it has in the United States. The large mass of the people
+ have not thought seriously about it: it has not been strongly and
+ persistently presented to the mass of the people. There is no
+ popular or general organization to promote it. There is even, here
+ and there, condemnation of the idea. The (London) _Morning Post_,
+ for example, goes out of its way once in a while to show the
+ wickedness of the idea because, so it argues, it will involve the
+ sacrifice, more or less, of nationality. But the _Morning Post_ is
+ impervious to new ideas and is above all things critical in its
+ activities and very seldom constructive. The typical Tory mind in
+ general sees no good in the idea. The typical Tory mind is the
+ insular mind.
+
+ On the other hand, the League idea is understood as a necessity and
+ heartily approved by two powerful sections of public opinion--(1)
+ the group of public men who have given attention to it, such as
+ Bryce, Lord Robert Cecil, and the like, and (2) some of the best
+ and strongest leaders of Labour. There is good reason to hope that
+ whenever a fight and an agitation is made for a League these two
+ sections of public opinion will win; but an agitation and a fight
+ must come. Lord Bryce, in the intervals of his work as chairman of
+ a committee to make a plan for the reorganization of the House of
+ Lords, which, he remarked to me the other day, "involves as much
+ labour as a Government Department," has fits of impatience about
+ pushing a campaign for a league, and so have a few other men. They
+ ask me if it be not possible to have good American public speakers
+ come here--privately, of course, and in no way connected with our
+ Government nor speaking for it--to explain the American movement
+ for a League in order to arouse a public sentiment on the subject.
+
+ Thus the case stands at present.
+
+ Truth and error alike and odd admixtures of them come in waves over
+ this censored land where one can seldom determine what is true,
+ before the event, from the newspapers. "News" travels by word of
+ mouth, and information that one can depend on is got by personal
+ inquiry from sources that can be trusted.
+
+ There is a curious wave of fear just now about what Labour may do,
+ and the common gossip has it that there is grave danger in the
+ situation. I can find no basis for such a fear. I have talked with
+ labour leaders and I have talked with members of the government who
+ know most about the subject. There is not a satisfactory
+ situation--there has not been since the war began. There has been a
+ continuous series of labour "crises," and there have been a good
+ many embarrassing strikes, all of which have first been hushed up
+ and settled--at least postponed. One cause of continuous trouble
+ has been the notion held by the Unions, sometimes right and
+ sometimes wrong, that the employers were making abnormal profits
+ and that they were not getting their due share. There have been and
+ are also other causes of trouble. It was a continuous quarrel even
+ in peace times. But I can find no especial cause of fear now. Many
+ of the Unions have had such advances of wages that the Government
+ has been severely criticized for giving in. Just lately a large
+ wing of the Labour Party put forth its war aims which--with
+ relatively unimportant exceptions--coincide with the best
+ declarations made by the Government's own spokesmen.
+
+ Of course, no prudent man would venture to make dogmatic
+ predictions. There have been times when for brief intervals any one
+ would have been tempted to fear that these quarrels might cause an
+ unsatisfactory conclusion of the war. But the undoubted patriotism
+ of the British workman has every time saved the situation. While a
+ danger point does lie here, there is no reason to be more fearful
+ now than at any preceding time when no especial trouble was
+ brewing. This wave of gossip and fear has no right to sweep over
+ the country now.
+
+ Labour hopes and expects and is preparing to win the next General
+ Election--whether with good reason or not I cannot guess. But most
+ men expect it to win the Government at some time--most of them
+ _after_ the war. I recall that Lord Grey once said to me, before
+ the war began, that a general political success of the Labour Party
+ was soon to be expected.
+
+ Another wave which, I hear, has swept over Rome as well as London
+ is a wave of early peace expectation. The British newspapers have
+ lately been encouraging this by mysterious phrases. Some men here
+ of good sense and sound judgment think that this is the result of
+ the so-called German "peace offensive," which makes the present the
+ most dangerous period of the war.
+
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To David F. Houston_[72]
+
+ London, March 23, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSTON:
+
+ It is very kind of you indeed to write so generously about the
+ British visitors who are invading our sacred premises, such as the
+ Archbishop of York, and it is good to hear from you anyhow about
+ any subject and I needn't say that it is quite a rare experience
+ also. I wish you would take a little of your abundant leisure and
+ devote it to good letters to me.
+
+ And in some one of your letters tell me this.--The British send
+ over men of this class that you have written about to see us, but
+ they invite over here--and we permit to come--cranks on
+ prohibition, experts in the investigation of crime, short-haired
+ women who wish to see how British babies are reared, peace cranks
+ and freaks of other kinds[73]. Our Government apparently won't let
+ plain, honest, normal civilians come over, but if a fellow comes
+ along who wants to investigate some monstrosity then one half of
+ the Senate, one half of the House of Representatives, and a number
+ of the executive offices of the Government give him the most
+ cordial letters. Now there are many things, of course, that I don't
+ know, but it has been my fate to have a pretty extensive
+ acquaintance with cranks of every description in the United States.
+ I don't think there is any breed of them that didn't haunt my
+ office while I was an editor. Now I am surely punished for all my
+ past sins by having those fellows descend on me here. I know them,
+ nearly all, from past experience and now just for the sake of
+ keeping the world as quiet as possible I have to give them time
+ here far out of proportion to their value.
+
+ Now, out of your great wisdom, I wish you would explain to me why
+ the deuce we let all this crew come over here instead of sending a
+ shipload of perfectly normal, dignified, and right-minded
+ gentlemen. These thug reformers!--Baker will be here in a day or
+ two and if I can remember it I am going to suggest to him that he
+ round them all up and put them in the trenches in France where
+ those of them who have so far escaped the gallows ought to be put.
+
+ I am much obliged to have the illuminating statement about our
+ crops. I am going to show it to certain gentlemen here who will be
+ much cheered by it. By gracious, you ought to hear their
+ appreciation of what we are doing! We are not doing it for the sake
+ of their appreciation, but if we were out to win it we could not do
+ it better. Down at bottom the Englishman is a good fellow. He has
+ his faults but he doesn't get tired and he doesn't suffer spasms of
+ emotion.
+
+ Give my love to Mrs. Houston, and do sit down and write me a
+ good long letter--a whole series of them, in fact.
+
+ Believe me, always most heartily yours,
+
+ WALTER HINES PAGE.
+
+[Illustration: From a painting by Irving R. Wiles Admiral William Sowden
+Sims, Commander of American naval forces operating in European waters
+during the Great War]
+
+[Illustration: A silver model of the _Mayflower_, the farewell gift of
+the Plymouth Council to Mr. Page]
+
+ _To Frank L. Polk_
+
+ London, March 22, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. POLK:
+
+ You are good enough to mention the fact that the Embassy has some
+ sort of grievance against the Department. Of course it has, and you
+ are, possibly, the only man that can remove it. It is this: You
+ don't come here to see the war and this government and these people
+ who are again saving the world as we are now saving them. I thank
+ Heaven and the Administration for Secretary Baker's visit. It is a
+ dramatic moment in the history of the race, of democracy, and of
+ the world. The State Department has the duty to deal with foreign
+ affairs--the especial duty--and yet no man in the State Department
+ has been here since the war began. This doesn't look pretty and it
+ won't look pretty when the much over-worked "future historian"
+ writes it down in a book. Remove that grievance.
+
+ The most interesting thing going on in the world to-day--a thing
+ that in History will transcend the war and be reckoned its greatest
+ gain--is the high leadership of the President in formulating the
+ struggle, in putting its aims high, and in taking the democratic
+ lead in the world, a lead that will make the world over--and in
+ taking the democratic lead of the English-speaking folk. Next most
+ impressive to that is to watch the British response to that lead.
+ Already they have doubled the number of their voters, and even more
+ important definite steps in Democracy will be taken. My aim--and
+ it's the only way to save the world--is to lead the British in this
+ direction. They are the most easily teachable people in our way of
+ thinking and of doing. Of course everybody who works toward such an
+ aim provokes the cry from a lot of fools among us who accuse him of
+ toadying to the English and of "accepting the conventional English
+ conclusion." They had as well talk of missionaries to India
+ accepting Confucius or Buddha. Their fleet has saved us four or
+ five times. It's about time we were saving them from this bloods
+ Thing that we call Europe, for our sake and for theirs.
+
+ The bloody Thing will get us all if we don't fight our level best;
+ and it's only by _our_ help that we'll be saved. That clearly gives
+ us the leadership. Everybody sees that. Everybody acknowledges it.
+ The President authoritatively speaks it--speaks leadership on a
+ higher level than it was ever spoken before to the whole world. As
+ soon as we get this fighting job over, the world procession toward
+ freedom--our kind of freedom--will begin under our lead. This being
+ so, can't you delegate the writing of telegrams about "facilitating
+ the license to ship poppy seed to McKesson and Robbins," and come
+ over and see big world-forces at work?
+
+ I cannot express my satisfaction at Secretary Baker's visit. It was
+ historic--the first member of the Cabinet, I think, who ever came
+ here while he held office. He made a great impression and received
+ a hearty welcome.
+
+ That's the only grievance I can at the moment unload on you. We're
+ passing out of our old era of isolation. These benighted heathen on
+ this island whom we'll yet save (since they are well worth saving)
+ will be with us as we need them in future years and centuries.
+ Come, help us heighten this fine spirit.
+
+ Always heartily yours,
+
+ WALTER HINES PAGE.
+
+ P.S. You'd see how big our country looks from a distance. It's
+ gigantic, I assure you.
+
+The above letter was written on what was perhaps the darkest day of the
+whole war. The German attack on the Western Front, which had been long
+expected, had now been launched, and, at the moment that Page was
+penning this cheery note to Mr. Polk, the German armies had broken
+through the British defenses, had pushed their lines forty miles ahead,
+and, in the judgment of many military men, had Paris almost certainly
+within their grasp. A great German gun, placed about seventy miles from
+the French capital, was dropping shells upon the apparently doomed city.
+This attack had been regarded as inevitable since the collapse of
+Russia, which had enabled the Germans to concentrate practically all
+their armies on the Western Front.
+
+The world does not yet fully comprehend the devastating effect of this
+apparently successful attack upon the allied morale. British statesmen
+and British soldiers made no attempt to conceal from official Americans
+the desperate state of affairs. It was the expectation that the Germans
+might reach Calais and thence invade England. The War Office discussed
+these probabilities most freely with Colonel Slocum, the American
+military attache. The simple fact was that both the French and the
+British armies were practically bled white.
+
+"For God's sake, get your men over!" they urged General Slocum. "You
+have got to finish it."
+
+Page was writing urgently to President Wilson to the same purpose. Send
+the men and send them at once. "I pray God," were his solemn words to
+Mr. Wilson, "that you will not be too late!"
+
+One propitious event had taken place at the same time as the opening of
+the great German offensive. Mr. Newton D. Baker, the American Secretary
+of War, had left quietly for France in late February, 1918, and had
+reached the Western Front in time to obtain a first-hand sight of the
+great March drive. No visit in history has ever been better timed, and
+no event could have better played into Page's hands. He had been urging
+Washington to send all available forces to France at the earliest
+possible date; he knew, as probably few other men knew, the extent to
+which the Allies were depending upon American troops to give the final
+blow to Germany; and the arrival of Secretary Baker at the scene of
+action gave him the opportunity to make a personal appeal. Page
+immediately communicated with the Secretary and persuaded him to come at
+once to London for a consultation with British military and political
+leaders. The Secretary spent only three days in London, but the visit,
+brief as it was, had historic consequences. He had many consultations
+with the British military men; he entered into their plans with
+enthusiasm; he himself received many ideas that afterward took shape in
+action, and the British Government obtained from him first-hand
+information as to the progress of the American Army and the American
+determination to cooperate to the last man and the last dollar. "Baker
+went straight back to France," Page wrote to his son Arthur, "and our
+whole cooeperation began."
+
+Page gave a dinner to Mr. Baker at the Embassy on March 23rd--two days
+after the great March drive had begun. This occasion gave the visitor a
+memorable glimpse of the British temperament. Mr. Lloyd George, Mr.
+Balfour, Lord Derby, the War Secretary, General Biddle, of the United
+States Army, and Admiral Sims were the Ambassador's guests. Though the
+mighty issues then overhanging the world were not ignored in the
+conversation the atmosphere hardly suggested that the existence of the
+British Empire, indeed that of civilization itself, was that very night
+hanging in the balance. Possibly it was the general sombreness of events
+that caused these British statesmen to find a certain relief in jocular
+small talk and reminiscence. For the larger part of the evening not a
+word was said about the progress of the German armies in France. Mr.
+Lloyd George and Mr. Balfour, seated on opposite sides of the table,
+apparently found relaxation in reviewing their political careers and
+especially their old-time political battles. They would laughingly
+recall occasions when, in American parlance, they had put each other "in
+a hole"; the exigencies of war had now made these two men colleagues in
+the same government, but the twenty years preceding 1914 they had spent
+in political antagonism. Page's guests on this occasion learned much
+political history of the early twentieth century, and the mutual
+confessions of Mr. Lloyd George and Mr. Balfour gave these two men an
+insight into each others' motives and manoeuvres which was almost as
+revealing. "Yes, you caught me that time," Mr. Lloyd George would say,
+and then he would counter with an episode of a political battle in which
+he had got the better of Mr. Balfour. The whole talk was lively and
+bantering, and accompanied with much laughter; and all this time shells
+from that long-distance gun were dropping at fifteen minute intervals
+upon the devoted women and children of Paris and the Germans were every
+hour driving the British back in disorder. At times the conversation
+took a more philosophic turn. Would the men present like to go back
+twenty-five years and live their lives all over again? The practically
+unanimous decision of every man was that he would not wish to do so.
+
+All this, of course, was merely on the surface; despite the laughter and
+the banter, there was only one thing which engrossed the Ambassador's
+guests, although there were not many references to it. That was the
+struggle which was then taking place in France. At intervals Mr. Lloyd
+George would send one of the guests, evidently a secretary, from the
+room. The latter, on his return, would whisper something in the Prime
+Minister's ear, but more frequently he would merely shake his head.
+Evidently he had been sent to obtain the latest news of the battle.
+
+At one point the Prime Minister did refer to the great things taking
+place in France.
+
+"This battle means one thing," he said. "That is a generalissimo."
+
+"Why couldn't you have taken this step long ago?" Admiral Sims asked Mr.
+Lloyd George.
+
+The answer came like a flash.
+
+"If the cabinet two weeks ago had suggested placing the British Army
+under a foreign general, it would have fallen. Every cabinet in Europe
+would also have fallen, had it suggested such a thing."
+
+ _Memorandum on Secretary Baker's visit_
+
+ Secretary Baker's visit here, brief as it was, gave the heartiest
+ satisfaction. So far as I know, he is the first member of an
+ American Cabinet who ever came to England while he held office, as
+ Mr. Balfour was the first member of a British Cabinet who ever went
+ to the United States while he held office. The great governments of
+ the English-speaking folk have surely dealt with one another with
+ mighty elongated tongs. Governments of democracies are not exactly
+ instruments of precision. But they are at least human. But personal
+ and human neglect of one another by these two governments over so
+ long a period is an astonishing fact in our history. The wonder is
+ that we haven't had more than two wars. And it is no wonder that
+ the ignorance of Englishmen about America and the American
+ ignorance of England are monumental, stupendous, amazing, passing
+ understanding. I have on my mantelpiece a statuette of Benjamin
+ Franklin, an excellent and unmistakable likeness which was made
+ here during his lifetime; and the inscription burnt on its base is
+ _Geo. Washington_. It serves me many a good turn with my English
+ friends. I use it as a measure of their ignorance of us. Of course
+ this is a mere little error of a statuette-maker, an error,
+ moreover, of a hundred years ago. But it tells the story of to-day
+ also. If I had to name the largest and most indelible impression
+ that has been made on me during my five years' work here, I should
+ say the ignorance and aloofness of the two peoples--not an
+ ignorance of big essential facts but of personalities and
+ temperaments--such as never occur except between men who had never
+ seen one another.
+
+ But I was writing about Mr. Baker's visit and I've got a long way
+ from that. I doubt if he knows himself what gratification it gave;
+ for these men here have spoken to me about it as they could not
+ speak to him.
+
+ Here is an odd fact: For sixty years, so far as I know, members of
+ the Administration have had personal acquaintance with some of the
+ men in power in Salvador, Costa Rica, Venezuela, Peru, etc., etc.,
+ and members of the British Government have had personal
+ acquaintance with some men in authority in Portugal, Serbia,
+ Montenegro and Monte Carlo; but during this time (with the single
+ exception of John Hay) I think no member of any Administration had
+ a real personal acquaintance while he held office with any member
+ of the British Government while he held office, and vice
+ versa--till Mr. Balfour's visit. Suspicion grows out of ignorance.
+ The longer I live here the more astonished I become at the
+ fundamental ignorance of the British about us and of our
+ fundamental ignorance about them. So colossal is this ignorance
+ that every American sent here is supposed to be taken in, to become
+ Anglophile; and often when one undertakes to enlighten Englishmen
+ about the United States one becomes aware of a feeling inside the
+ English of unbelief, as if he said, "Oh, well! you are one of those
+ queer people who believe in republican government." All this is
+ simply amazing. Poor Admiral Sims sometimes has a sort of mania, a
+ delusion that nobody at Washington trusts his judgment because he
+ said seven or eight years ago that he liked the English. Yet every
+ naval officer who comes here, I understand, shares his views about
+ practically every important naval problem or question. I don't
+ deserve the compliment (it's a very high one) that some of my
+ secretaries sometimes pay me when they say that I am the only man
+ they know who tries to tell the whole truth to our Government in
+ favour of the Englishman as well as against him. It is certain that
+ American public opinion is universally supposed to suspect any
+ American who tries to do anything with the British lion except to
+ twist his tail--a supposition that I never believed to be
+ true.--But it is true that the mutual ignorance is as high as the
+ Andes and as deep as the ocean. Personal acquaintance removes it
+ and nothing else will.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ American Embassy,
+ London, April 7, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ I daresay you remember this epic:
+
+ Old Morgan's wife made butter and cheese;
+ Old Morgan drank the whey.
+ There came a wind from West to East
+ And blew Old Morgan away.
+
+ I'm Old Morgan and your mother got ashamed of my wheyness and made
+ the doctor prescribe cream for me. There's never been such a
+ luxury, and anybody who supposes that I am now going to get fat and
+ have my cream stopped simply doesn't know me. So, you see why I'm
+ intent on shredded wheat biscuits. That's about the best form of
+ real wheat that will keep. And there's no getting real wheat-stuff,
+ pure and simple, in any other form.
+
+ There's no use in talking about starving people--except perhaps in
+ India and China. White men can live on anything. The English could
+ fight a century on cabbage and Brussels sprouts. I've given up hope
+ of starving the Germans. A gut of dogmeat or horse flesh and a
+ potato will keep them in fighting trim forever. I've read daily for
+ two years of impending starvation across the Rhine; but I never
+ even now hear of any dead ones from hunger. Cold steel or lead is
+ the only fatal dose for them.
+
+ Therefore I know that shredded wheat will carry me through.
+
+ You'll see, I hope, from the clippings that I enclose that I'm not
+ done for yet anyhow. Two speeches a day is no small stunt; and I
+ did it again yesterday--hand running; and I went out to dinner
+ afterward. It was a notable occasion--this celebration of the
+ anniversary of our coming into the war[74].
+
+ Nobody here knows definitely just what to fear from the big battle;
+ but everybody fears more or less. It's a critical time--very. I am
+ told that that long-range gunning of Paris is the worst form of
+ frightfulness yet tried. The shells do not kill a great many
+ people. But their falling every fifteen minutes gets on people's
+ nerves and they can't sleep. I hear they are leaving Paris in great
+ numbers. Since the big battle began and the Germans have needed all
+ their planes and more in France, they've let London alone. But
+ nobody knows when they will begin again.
+
+ Nobody knows any future thing about the war, and everybody faces a
+ fear.
+
+ Secretary Baker stayed with me the two days and three nights he was
+ here. He made a good impression but he received a better one. He
+ now knows something about the war. I had at dinner to meet him:
+
+ Lloyd George, Prime Minister.
+
+ Balfour, Foreign Secretary.
+
+ The Chief of Staff.
+
+ Lord Derby, War Secretary.
+
+ General Biddle, U.S.A., in command in London.
+
+ Admiral Sims, U.S.N.
+
+ The talk was to the point--good and earnest. Baker went straight
+ back to France and our _whole_ cooeperation began. With the first
+ group of four he had conferences besides for two days. His coming
+ was an admirable move.
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ London, April 13, 1918.
+
+ DEAR RALPH:
+
+ Your cheery letters about entertaining governors, planting trees
+ and shrubbery and your mother's little orchard give us much
+ pleasure. The Southern Pines paper brings news of very great damage
+ to the peach crop. I hope it is much exaggerated. Is it?
+
+ We haven't any news here, and I send you my weekly note only to
+ keep my record clear. The great battle--no one talks or thinks of
+ anything else. We have suffered and still suffer a good deal of
+ fear and anxiety, with real reason, too. But the military men are
+ reassuring. Yet I don't know just how far to trust their judgment
+ or to share their hopes. Certainly this is the most dangerous
+ situation that modern civilization was ever put in. If we can keep
+ them from winning any _great_ objective, like Paris or a channel
+ port, we ought to end the war this year. If not, either they win or
+ at the least prolong the war indefinitely. It's a hazardous and
+ trying time.
+
+ There were never such casualties on either side as now. Such a
+ bloody business cannot keep up all summer. But before everybody is
+ killed or a decisive conclusion is reached, the armies will, no
+ doubt, dig themselves in and take a period of comparative rest.
+ People here see and feel the great danger. But the extra effort now
+ _may_ come too late. Still we keep up good hope. The British are
+ hard to whip. They never give up. And as for the French army, I
+ always remember Verdun and keep my courage up.
+
+ The wounded are coming over by the thousand. We are incomparably
+ busy and in great anxiety about the result (though still pretty
+ firm in the belief that the Germans will lose), and luckily we keep
+ very well.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ London, April 7, 1918.
+
+ DEAR RALPH:
+
+ There used to be a country parson down in Wake County who, when
+ other subjects were talked out, always took up the pleasing topic
+ of saving your soul. That's the way your mother and I do--with the
+ subject of going home. We talk over the battle, we talk over the
+ boys, we talk over military and naval problems, we discuss the
+ weather and all the babies, and then take up politics, and talk
+ over the gossip of the wiseacres; but we seldom finish a
+ conversation without discussing going home. And we reach just about
+ as clear a conclusion on our topic as the country parson reached on
+ his. I've had the doctors going over me (or rather your mother has)
+ as an expert accountant goes over your books; and I tried to bribe
+ them to say that I oughtn't to continue my arduous duties here
+ longer. They wouldn't say any such thing. Thus that device
+ failed--dead. It looks as if I were destined for a green old age
+ and no _martyr_ business at all.
+
+ All this is disappointing; and I don't see what to do but to go on.
+ I can't keep from hoping that the big battle may throw some light
+ on the subject; but there's no telling when the big battle will
+ end. Nothing ends--that's the trouble. I sometimes feel that the
+ war may never end, that it may last as the Napoleonic Wars did, for
+ 20 years; and before that time we'll all have guns that shoot 100
+ miles. We can stay at home and indefinitely bombard the enemy
+ across the Rhine--have an endless battle at long range.
+
+ So, we stick to it, and give the peach trees time to grow up.
+
+ We had a big day in London yesterday--the anniversary of our entry
+ into the war. I send you some newspaper clippings about it.
+
+ The next best news is that we have a little actual sunshine--a very
+ rare thing--and some of the weather is now almost decent....
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 68: Mr. Henry Morgenthau, American Ambassador to Turkey,
+1913-16, an American of Jewish origin who opposed the Zionist movement
+as un-American and deceptive.]
+
+[Footnote 69: American member of the Supreme War Council. Afterward
+member of the American Commission to Negotiate Peace.]
+
+[Footnote 70: Sir Henry Wilson had recently succeeded Sir William
+Robertson as Chief of the Imperial General Staff.]
+
+[Footnote 71: First Lord of the Admiralty.]
+
+[Footnote 72: Secretary of Agriculture.]
+
+[Footnote 73: See Chapter XXIV.]
+
+[Footnote 74: This meeting, on April 6, 1918, was held at the Mansion
+House. Page and Mr. Balfour were the chief speakers.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+LAST DAYS IN ENGLAND
+
+
+In spite of the encouraging tone of the foregoing letters, everything
+was not well with Page. All through the winter of 1917-1918 his
+associates at the Embassy had noticed a change for the worse in his
+health. He seemed to be growing thinner; his face was daily becoming
+more haggard; he tired easily, and, after walking the short distance
+from his house to his Embassy, he would drop listlessly into his chair.
+His general bearing was that of a man who was physically and nervously
+exhausted. It was hoped that the holiday at St. Ives would
+help him; that he greatly enjoyed that visit, especially the
+westward--homeward--outlook on the Atlantic which it gave him, his
+letters clearly show; there was a temporary improvement also in his
+health, but only a temporary one. The last great effort which he made in
+the interest of the common cause was Secretary Baker's visit; the
+activities which this entailed wearied him, but the pleasure he obtained
+from the resultant increase in the American participation made the
+experience one of the most profitable of his life. Indeed, Page's last
+few months in England, though full of sad memories for his friends,
+contained little but satisfaction for himself. He still spent many a
+lonely evening by his fire, but his thoughts were now far more
+pleasurable than in the old _Lusitania_ days. The one absorbing subject
+of contemplation now was that America was "in." His country had
+justified his deep confidence. The American Navy had played a
+determining part in defeating the submarine, and American shipyards
+were turning out merchant ships faster than the Germans were destroying
+them. American troops were reaching France at a rate which necessarily
+meant the early collapse of the German Empire. Page's own family had
+responded to the call and this in itself was a cause of great
+contentment to a sick and weary man. The Ambassador's youngest son,
+Frank, had obtained a commission and was serving in France; his
+son-in-law, Charles G. Loring, was also on the Western Front; while from
+North Carolina Page's youngest brother Frank and two nephews had sailed
+for the open battle line. The bravery and success of the American troops
+did not surprise the Ambassador but they made his last days in England
+very happy.
+
+Indeed, every day had some delightful experience for Page. The
+performance of the Americans at Cantigny especially cheered him. The day
+after this battle he and Mrs. Page entertained Mr. Lloyd George and
+other guests at lunch. The Prime Minister came bounding into the room
+with his characteristic enthusiasm, rushed up to Mrs. Page with both
+hands outstretched and shook hands joyously.
+
+"Congratulations!" he exclaimed. "The Americans have done it! They have
+met the Prussian guard and defeated them!"
+
+Mr. Lloyd George was as exuberant over the achievement as a child.
+
+This was now the kind of experience that had become Page's daily
+routine. Lively as were his spirits, however, his physical frame was
+giving way. In fact Page, though he did not know it at the time, was
+suffering from a specific disease--nephritis; and its course, after
+Christmas of 1917, became rapid. His old friend, Dr. Wallace Buttrick,
+had noted the change for the worse and had attempted to persuade him to
+go home.
+
+"Quit your job, Page," he urged. "You have other big tasks waiting you
+at home. Why don't you go back?"
+
+"No--no--not now."
+
+"But, Page," urged Dr. Buttrick, "you are going to lay down your life."
+
+"I have only one life to lay down," was the reply. "I can't quit now."
+
+ _To Mary E. Page_[75]
+
+ London, May 12, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MARY:
+
+ You'll have to take this big paper and this paint brush pen--it's
+ all the pen these blunt British have. This is to tell you how very
+ welcome your letter to Alice is--how very welcome, for nobody
+ writes us the family news and nothing is so much appreciated. I'll
+ try to call the shorter roll of us in the same way:
+
+ After a miserable winter we, too, are having the rare experience of
+ a little sunshine in this dark, damp world of London. The constant
+ confinement in the city and _in the house_ (that's the worst of
+ it--no outdoor life or fresh air) has played hob with my digestion.
+ It's not bad, but it's troublesome, and for some time I've had the
+ feeling of being one half well. It occurred to me the other day
+ that I hadn't had leave from my work for four years, except my
+ short visit home nearly two years ago. I asked for two months off,
+ and I've got it. We are going down by the shore where there is
+ fresh air and where I can live outdoors and get some exercise. We
+ have a house that we can get there and be comfortable. To get away
+ from London when the weather promises to be good, and to get away
+ from people seemed a joyous prospect. I can, at any time I must,
+ come to London in two hours.
+
+ The job's too important to give up at this juncture. This, then, is
+ the way we can keep it going. I've no such hard task now as I had
+ during the years of our neutrality, which, praise God! I somehow
+ survived, though I am now suffering more or less from the physical
+ effects of that strain. Yet, since I have had the good fortune to
+ win the confidence of this Government and these people, I feel that
+ I ought to keep on now until some more or less natural time to
+ change comes.
+
+ Alice keeps remarkably well--since her influenza late in the
+ winter; but a rest away from London is really needed as much by her
+ as by me. They work her to death. In a little while she is to go,
+ by the invitation of the Government and the consent of the King, to
+ christen a new British warship at Newcastle. It will be named the
+ "Eagle." Meantime I'll be trying to get outdoor life at Sandwich.
+
+ Yesterday a regiment of our National Army marched through the
+ streets of London and were reviewed by the King and me; and the
+ town made a great day of it. While there is an undercurrent of
+ complaint in certain sections of English opinion because we didn't
+ come into the war sooner, there is a very general and very genuine
+ appreciation of everything we have done and of all that we do.
+ Nothing could be heartier than the welcome given our men here
+ yesterday. Nor could any men have made a braver or better showing
+ than they made. They made us all swell with pride.
+
+ They are coming over now, as you know, in great quantities. There
+ were about 8,000 landed here last week and about 30,000 more are
+ expected this week. I think that many more go direct to France
+ than come through England. On their way through England they do not
+ come to London. Only twice have we had them here, yesterday and one
+ day last summer when we had a parade of a regiment of engineers.
+ For the _army_ London is on a sidetrack--is an out of the way
+ place. For our navy, of course, it's the European headquarters,
+ since Admiral Sims has his headquarters here. We thus see a good
+ many of our sailors who are allowed to come to London on leave. A
+ few days ago I had a talk with a little bunch of them who came from
+ one of our superdreadnaughts in the North Sea. They had just
+ returned from a patrol across to the coast of Norway. "Bad luck,
+ bad luck," they said, "on none of our long patrol trips have we
+ seen a single Hun ship!"
+
+ About the war, you know as much as I know. There is a general
+ confidence that the Allies will hold the Germans in their
+ forthcoming effort to get to Calais or to Paris. Yet there is an
+ undercurrent of fear. Nobody knows just how to feel about it.
+ Probably another prodigious onslaught will be made before you
+ receive this letter. It seems to me that we can make no intelligent
+ guess until this German effort is finished in France--no guess
+ about the future. If the Germans get the French ports (Calais, for
+ example) the war will go on indefinitely. If they are held back, it
+ _may_ end next autumn or winter--partly because of starvation in
+ Germany and partly because the Germans will have to confess that
+ they can't whip our armies in France. But, even then, since they
+ have all Russia to draw on, they may keep going for a long time.
+ One man's guess is as good as another's.
+
+ One sad thing is certain: we shall at once begin to have heavy
+ American casualties. Our Red Cross and our army here are getting
+ hospitals ready for such American wounded as are brought over to
+ England--the parts of our army that are fighting with the British.
+
+ We have a lot of miserable politics here which interfere with the
+ public feeling. The British politician is a worse yellow dog than
+ the American--at times he is, at least; and we have just been going
+ through such a time. Another such time will soon come about the
+ Irish.
+
+ Well, we have an unending quantity of work and wear--no very acute
+ bothers but a continuous strain, the strain of actual work, of
+ uneasiness, of seeing people, of uncertainty, of great expense, of
+ doubt and fear at times, of inability to make any plans--all which
+ is only the common lot now all over the world, except that most
+ persons have up to this time suffered incomparably worse than we.
+ And there's nothing to do but to go on and on and on and to keep
+ going with the stoutest hearts we can keep up till the end do at
+ last come. But the Germans now (as the rest of us) are fighting for
+ their lives. They are desperate and their leaders care nothing for
+ human life.
+
+ The Embassy now is a good deal bigger than the whole State
+ Department ever was in times of peace. I have three buildings for
+ offices, and a part of our civil force occupies two other
+ buildings. Even a general supervision of so large a force is in
+ itself a pretty big job. The army and the Navy have each about the
+ same space as the Embassy proper. Besides, our people have huts and
+ inns and clubs and hospitals all over the town. Even though there
+ be fewer vexing problems than there were while we were neutral,
+ there is not less work--on the contrary, more. Nor will there be an
+ end to it for a very long time--long after my time here. The
+ settling of the war and the beginning of peace activities, whenever
+ these come, will involve a great volume of work. But I've no
+ ambition to have these things in hand. As soon as a natural time of
+ relief shall come, I'll go and be happier in my going than you or
+ anybody else can guess.
+
+ Now we go to get my digestion stiffened up for another long
+ tug--unless the Germans proceed forthwith to knock us out--which
+ they cannot do.
+
+ With my love to everybody on the Hill,
+
+ Affectionately yours,
+ W.H.P.
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Waldorf Astor--since become Viscount and Viscountess
+Astor--had offered the Pages the use of their beautiful seaside house at
+Sandwich, Kent, and it was the proposed vacation here to which Page
+refers in this letter. He obtained a six weeks' leave of absence and
+almost the last letters which Page wrote from England are dated from
+this place. These letters have all the qualities of Page at his best:
+but the handwriting is a sad reminder of the change that was
+progressively taking place in his physical condition. It is still a
+clear and beautiful script, but there are signs of a less steady hand
+than the one that had written the vigorous papers of the preceding four
+years.
+
+ _Memorandum_
+
+ Sandwich, Kent, Sunday, 19 May, 1918.
+
+We're at Rest Harrow and it's a fine, sunny early spring Carolina day.
+The big German drive has evidently begun its second phase. We hear the
+guns distinctly. We see the coast-guard aeroplanes at almost any time
+o'day. What is the mood about the big battle?
+
+The soldiers--British and French--have confidence in their ability to
+hold the Germans back from the Channel and from Paris. Yet can one rely
+on the judgment of soldiers? They have the job in hand and of course
+they believe in themselves. While one does not like in the least to
+discount their judgment and their hopefulness, for my part I am not
+_quite_ so sure of their ability to make sound judgments as I wish I
+were. The chances are in favour of their success; but--suppose they
+should have to yield and give up Calais and other Channel ports? Well,
+they've prepared for it as best they can. They have made provision for
+commandeering most of the hotels in London that are not yet taken
+over--for hospitals for the wounded now in France.
+
+And the war would take on a new phase. Whatever should become of the
+British and American armies, the Germans would be no nearer having
+England than they now are. They would not have command of the sea. The
+combined British and American fleets could keep every German ship off
+the ocean and continue the blockade by sea--indefinitely; and, if the
+peoples of the two countries hold fast, a victory would be won at
+last--at sea.
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ Rest Harrow, Sandwich, Kent.
+ May 19, 1918.
+
+ DEAR RALPH:
+
+ I felt very proud yesterday when I read T.R.'s good word in the
+ _Outlook_ about your book[76]. If I had written what he said
+ myself--I mean, if I had written what I think of the book--I should
+ have said this very thing. And there is one thing more I should
+ have said, viz.:--All your life and all my life, we have cultivated
+ the opinion at home that we had nothing to do with the rest of the
+ world, nothing to do with Europe in particular--and in our
+ political life our hayseed spokesmen have said this over and over
+ again till many people, perhaps most people, came really to believe
+ that it was true. Now this aloofness, this utterly detached
+ attitude, was a pure invention of the shirt-sleeve statesman at
+ home. I have long concluded, for other reasons as well as for this,
+ that these men are the most ignorant men in the whole world; more
+ ignorant--because they are viciously ignorant--than the Negro boys
+ who act as caddies at Pinehurst; more ignorant than the inmates of
+ the Morganton Asylum; more ignorant than sheep or rabbits or
+ idiots. They have been the chief hindrances of our country--worse
+ than traitors, in effect. It is they, in fact, who kept our people
+ ignorant of the Germans, ignorant of the English, ignorant of our
+ own history, ignorant of ourselves. Now your book, without
+ mentioning the subject, shows this important fact clearly, by
+ showing that our aloofness has all been a fiction. _We've been in
+ the world--and right in the middle of the world--the whole time_.
+
+ And our public consciousness of this fact has enormously slipped
+ back. Take Franklin, Madison, Monroe, Jefferson; take Hay,
+ Root--and then consider some of our present representatives! One
+ good result of the war and of our being in it will be the
+ restoration of our foreign consciousness. Every one of the half
+ million, or three million, soldiers who go to France will know more
+ about foreign affairs than all Congress knew two years ago.
+
+ A stay of nearly five years in London (five years ago to-day I was
+ on the ship coming here) with no absence long enough to give any
+ real rest, have got my digestion wrong. I've therefore got a real
+ leave for two months. Your mother and I have a beautiful house here
+ that has been lent to us, right on the Channel where there's
+ nothing worth bombing and where as much sunshine and warmth come
+ as come anywhere in England. We got here last night and to-day is
+ as fine an early spring day as you ever had in the Sandhills. I
+ shall golf and try to find me an old horse to ride, and I'll stay
+ out in the sunshine and try to get the inside machinery going all
+ right. We may have a few interruptions, but I hope not many, if the
+ Germans leave us alone. Your mother has got to go to Newcastle to
+ christen a new British warship--a compliment the Admiralty pays her
+ "to bind the two nations closer together" etc. etc. And I've got to
+ go to Cambridge to receive an LL.D. for the President. Only such
+ things are allowed to interrupt us. And we are very much hoping to
+ see Frank here.
+
+ We are in sound of the battle. We hear the big guns whenever we go
+ outdoors. A few miles down the beach is a rifle range and we hear
+ the practice there. Almost any time of day we can hear aeroplanes
+ which (I presume) belong to the coast guard. There's no danger of
+ forgetting the war, therefore, unless we become stone deaf. But
+ this decent air and sunshine are blessings of the highest kind. I
+ never became so tired of anything since I had the measles as I've
+ become of London. My Lord! it sounded last night as if we had
+ jumped from the frying pan into the fire. Just as we were about to
+ go to bed the big gun on the beach--just outside the fence around
+ our yard--about 50 yards from the house, began its thundering
+ belch--five times in quick succession, rattling the windows and
+ shaking the very foundation of things. Then after a pause of a few
+ minutes, another round of five shots. Then the other guns all along
+ the beach took up the chorus--farther off--and the inland guns
+ followed. They are planted all the way to London--ninety miles. For
+ about two hours we had this roar and racket. There was an air raid
+ on, and there were supposed to be twenty-five or thirty German
+ planes on their way to London. I hear that it was the worst raid
+ that London has had. Two of them were brought down--that's the only
+ good piece of news I've heard about it. Well, we are not supposed
+ to be in danger. They fly over us on the way to bigger game. At any
+ rate I'll take the risk for this air and sunshine. Trenches and
+ barbed wire run all along the beach--I suppose to help in case of
+ an invasion. But an invasion is impossible in my judgment. Holy
+ Moses! what a world!--the cannon in the big battle in France
+ roaring in our ears all the time, this cannon at our door likely to
+ begin action any night and all the rest along the beach and on the
+ way to London, and this is what we call rest! The world is upside
+ down, all crazy, all murderous; but we've got to stop this barbaric
+ assault, whatever the cost.
+
+ Ray Stannard Baker is spending a few days with us, much to our
+ pleasure.
+
+ With love to Leila and the babies,
+
+ Yours affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Rest Harrow, Sandwich Beach,
+ Sandwich, Kent, England.
+ May 20, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... I can't get quite to the bottom of the anti-English feeling at
+ Washington. God knows, this people have their faults. Their social
+ system and much else here is mediaeval. I could write several
+ volumes in criticism of them. So I could also in criticism of
+ anybody else. But Jefferson's[77] letter is as true to-day as it
+ was when he wrote it. One may or may not have a lot of sentiment
+ about it; but, without sentiment, it's mere common sense, mere
+ prudence, the mere instinct of safety to keep close to Great
+ Britain, to have a decent respect for the good qualities of these
+ people and of this government. Certainly it is a mere
+ perversity--lost time--lost motion, lost everything--to cherish a
+ dislike and a distrust of them--a thing that I cannot wholly
+ understand. While we are, I fear, going to have trade troubles and
+ controversies, my feeling is, on the whole, in spite of the
+ attitude of our official life, that an increasing number of our
+ people are waking up to what England has done and is and may be
+ depended on to do. Isn't that true?
+
+ We've no news here. We see nobody who knows anything. I am far from
+ strong--the old stomach got tired and I must gradually coax it back
+ to work. That's practically my sole business now for a time, and
+ it's a slow process. But it's coming along and relief from seeing
+ hordes of people is as good as medicine.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ Sandwich, May 24, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ Your speeches have a cumulative effect in cheering up the British.
+ As you see, if you look over the mass of newspaper clippings that I
+ send to the Department, or have them looked over, the British press
+ of all parties and shades of opinion constantly quote them
+ approvingly and gratefully. They have a cumulative effect, too, in
+ clearing the atmosphere. Take, for instance, your declaration in
+ New York about standing by Russia. All the allied governments in
+ Europe wish to stand by Russia, but their pressing business with
+ the war, near at hand, causes them in a way to forget Russia; and
+ certainly the British public, all intent on the German "drive" in
+ France had in a sense forgotten Russia. You woke them up. And your
+ "Why set a limit to the American Army?" has had a cheering effect.
+ As leader and spokesman of the enemies of Germany--by far the best
+ trumpet-call spokesman and the strongest leader--your speeches are
+ worth an army in France and more, for they keep the proper moral
+ elevation. All this is gratefully recognized here. Public opinion
+ toward us is wholesome and you have a "good press" in this Kingdom.
+ In this larger matter, all is well. The English faults are the
+ failings of the smaller men--about smaller matters--not of the
+ large men nor of the public, about large matters.
+
+ In private, too, thoughtful Englishmen by their fears pay us high
+ tribute. I hear more and more constantly such an opinion as this:
+ "You see, when the war is over, you Americans will have much the
+ largest merchant fleet. You will have much the largest share of
+ money, and England and France and all the rest of the world will
+ owe you money. You will have a large share of essential raw
+ materials. You will have the machinery for marine insurance and for
+ foreign banking. You will have much the largest volume of
+ productive labour. And you will know the world as you have never
+ known it before. What then is going to become of British trade?"
+
+ The best answer I can give is: "Adopt American methods of
+ manufacture, and the devil take the hindmost. There will be for a
+ long time plenty for everybody to do; and let us make sure that we
+ both play the game fairly: that's the chief matter to look out
+ for." That's what I most fear in the decades following the end of
+ the war--trade clashes.
+
+ The Englishman's pride will be hurt. I recall a speech made to me
+ by the friendliest of the British--Mr. Balfour himself: "I confess
+ that as an Englishman it hurts my pride to have to borrow so much
+ even from you. But I will say that I'd rather be in your debt than
+ in anybody else's."
+
+ _To Edward M. House_
+
+ May 27, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR HOUSE:
+
+ ... I can write in the same spirit of the Labour Group which left
+ for home last week. Nobody has been here from our side who had a
+ better influence than they. They emphatically stuck by their
+ instructions and took pleasure, against the blandishments of
+ certain British Socialists, in declaring against any meeting with
+ anybody from the enemy countries to discuss "peace-by-negotiation"
+ or anything else till the enemy is whipped. They made admirable
+ speeches and proved admirable representatives of the bone and sinew
+ of American manhood. They had dead-earnestness and good-humour and
+ hard horse-sense.
+
+ This sort of visit is all to the good. Great good they do, too, in
+ the present English curiosity to see and hear the right sort of
+ frank, candid Americans. Nobody who hasn't been here lately can
+ form an idea of the eagerness of all classes to hear and learn
+ about the United States. There never was, and maybe never will be
+ again, such a chance to inform the British and--to help them toward
+ a rights understanding of the United States and our people. We are
+ not half using the opportunity. There seems to be a feeling on your
+ side the ocean that we oughtn't to send men here to "lecture" the
+ British. No typical, earnest, sound American who has been here has
+ "lectured" the British. They have all simply told facts and
+ instructed them and won their gratitude and removed misconceptions.
+ For instance, I have twenty inquiries a week about Dr. Buttrick. He
+ went about quietly during his visit here and talked to university
+ audiences and to working-men's meetings and he captured and
+ fascinated every man he met. He simply told them American facts,
+ explained the American spirit and aims and left a grateful memory
+ everywhere. Buttrick cost our Government nothing: he paid his own
+ way. But if he had cost as much as a regiment it would have been
+ well spent. The people who heard him, read American utterances,
+ American history, American news in a new light. And most of his
+ talk was with little groups of men, much of it even in private
+ conversation. He did no orating or "lecturing." A hundred such men,
+ if we had them, would do more for a perfect understanding with the
+ British people than anything else whatsoever could do.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+ _To Arthur W. Page_
+
+ Sandwich, May 27, 1918.
+
+ DEAR ARTHUR:
+
+ ... I do get tired--my Lord! how tired!--not of the work but of the
+ confinement, of the useless things I have to spend time on, of the
+ bad digestion that has overtaken me, of London, of the weather, of
+ absence from you all--of the general breaking up of the world, of
+ this mad slaughter of men. But, after all, this is the common lot
+ now and I am grateful for a chance to do what I can. That's the
+ true way to look at it.
+
+ ... Worry? I don't worry about anything except the war in general
+ and this mad world so threatened by these devil barbarians. And I
+ have a feeling that, when we get a few thousand flying machines,
+ we'll put an end to that, alas! with the loss of many of our brave
+ boys. I hear the guns across the channel as I write--an unceasing
+ boom! boom! boom! That's what takes the stuff out of me and gets my
+ inside machinery wrong. Still, I'm gradually getting even that back
+ to normal. Golf and the poets are fine medicine. I read Keats the
+ other day, with entire forgetfulness of the guns. Here we have a
+ comfortable house, our own servants (as many as we need), a
+ beautiful calm sea, a perfect air and for the present ideal
+ weather. There's nobody down here but Scottish soldiers. We've
+ struck up a pleasant acquaintance with them; and some of the
+ fellows from the Embassy come down week ends. Only the murderous
+ guns keep their eternal roar.
+
+ Thanks, thanks, a thousand thanks, old man. It'll all work out
+ right.
+
+ ... I look at it in this way: all's well that ends well. We are now
+ doing our duty. That's enough. These things don't bother me,
+ because doing our duty now is worth a million years of past errors
+ and shortcomings.
+
+ Your mother's well and spry--very, and the best company in the
+ world. We're having a great time.
+
+ Bully for the kids! Kiss 'em for me and Mollie too.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+Make Shoecraft tell you everything. He's one of the best boys and truest
+in the world.
+
+ _To Ralph W. Page_
+
+ Rest Harrow, Sandwich, Kent.
+ June 7, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR RALPH:
+
+ ... I have all along cherished an expectation of two things--(1)
+ That when we did get an American Army by conscription, if it should
+ remain at war long enough to learn the game, it would become the
+ best army that the world ever saw, for the simple reason that its
+ ranks would contain more capable men than any other country has
+ ever produced. The proof of this comes at once. Even our new and
+ raw troops have astonished the veterans of the French and British
+ armies and (I have no doubt) of the German Army also. It'll be our
+ men who will whip the Germans, and there are nobody else's men who
+ could do it. We've already saved the Entente from collapse by our
+ money. We'll save the day again by our fighting men. That is to
+ say, we'll save the world, thank God; and I fear it couldn't have
+ been saved in any other way. (2) Since the people by their mood
+ command and compel efficiency, the most efficient people will at
+ last (as recent events show) get at the concrete jobs, in spite of
+ anybody's preferences or philosophy. And this seems at last to be
+ taking place. What we have suffered and shall suffer is not failure
+ but delays and delays and bunglings. But they've got to end by the
+ sheer pressure of the people's earnestness. These two things, then,
+ are all to the good.
+
+ I get the morning papers here at noon. And to-day I am all alone.
+ Your mother went early on her journey to launch a British
+ battleship. I haven't had a soul to speak to all day but my
+ servants. At noon, therefore, I was rather eager for the papers. I
+ saw at a glance that a submarine is at work off the New Jersey
+ coast! It's an awful thing for the innocent victims, to be
+ drowned. But their deaths have done us a greater service than 100
+ times as many lives lost in battle. If anybody lacked earnestness
+ about the war, I venture to guess that he doesn't lack it any
+ longer. If the fools would now only shell some innocent town on the
+ coast, the journey to Berlin would be shortened.
+
+ If the Germans had practised a chivalrous humanity in their war for
+ conquest, they'd have won it. Nothing on earth can now save them;
+ for the world isn't big enough to hold them and civilized people.
+ Nor is there any room for pacifists till this grim business is
+ done.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ W.H.P.
+
+The last piece of writing from Sandwich is the following memorandum:
+
+ Sandwich, Kent.
+ June 10, 1918.
+
+ The Germans continue to gain ground in France--more slowly, but
+ still they gain. The French and British papers now give space to
+ plans for the final defense--the desperate defense--of Paris. The
+ Germans are only forty miles away. Slocum, military attache, thinks
+ they will get it and he reports the same opinion at the War
+ Office--because the Germans have taken such a large number of guns
+ and so much ammunition. Some of these guns were meant for the
+ American troops, and they cannot now be replaced in time if the
+ German advance continues. But I do not know enough facts at first
+ hand to form an opinion. But, if Paris be taken, the war will go on
+ a long time--unless the English-speaking rulers make a compromise.
+ And, then, in another form--and forms--it'll go on
+ indefinitely.--There has been no more perilous or uncertain or
+ anxious time than now.
+
+ The United States too late, too late, too late: what if it should
+ turn out so?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But it did not turn out so. Even while Page was penning these lines
+great events were taking place in France and the American troops were
+having a large share in them. In June the Americans stopped the German
+troops at Belleau Wood--a battle which proved the mettle of these fresh
+levies not only for the benefit of the Germans but of the Allies as
+well. Thus Page had the great satisfaction of returning to London while
+the city was ringing with the praise of these achievements. He found
+that the atmosphere had materially changed since he had last been in the
+British capital; when he had left for Sandwich there had been a general
+expectation that the Germans would get Paris or the Channel ports; now,
+however, there was every confidence of victory. Greatly as Page rejoiced
+over the new prospect, however, the fight at Belleau Wood brought him
+his last great sorrow. His nephew, Allison M. Page, of Aberdeen, North
+Carolina, the son of his youngest brother, Frank, lost his life in that
+engagement. At first the young man was reported "missing"; the
+investigation set afoot by the Ambassador for some time brought no
+definite information. One of the most pathetic of Page's papers is a
+brief note addressed by him to Allison Page, asking him for news: "It's
+been a long time since we heard from you," Page wrote his nephew. "Write
+how it goes with you. Affectionately, Uncle Wat." After travelling over
+a considerable part of France, this note found its way back to the
+Embassy. The boy--he was only 19--had been killed in action near Belleau
+Wood, on June 25th, while leading his detachment in an attack on a
+machine gun. Citations and decorations for gallantry in action were
+given posthumously by General Pershing, Marshal Petain, Major-General
+Omar Bundy, and Major-General John A. LeJeune.
+
+And now the shadows began to close in rapidly on Page. In early July
+Major Frank C. Page, the Ambassador's youngest son, came over from
+France. A brief glance at his father convinced him that he was dying. By
+this time the Ambassador had ceased to go to the Chancery, but was
+transacting the most imperative business propped up in a chair at home.
+His mind was possessed by two yearnings: one was to remain in London
+until the end of the war, the other was to get back to his childhood
+home in North Carolina. Young Page urged his father to resign, but the
+weary invalid insisted on sticking to his post. On this point it seemed
+impossible to move him. Knowing that his brother Arthur had great
+influence with his father, Frank Page cabled, asking him to come to
+England immediately. Arthur took the first boat, reaching London late in
+July.
+
+The Ambassador's two sons then gently pressed upon their father the fact
+that he must resign. Weak as he was, the Ambassador was still obdurate.
+
+"No," he said. "It's quitting on the job. I must see the war through. I
+can't quit until it's over."
+
+But Sir William Osler, Page's physician and devoted friend, exercised
+his professional authority and insisted on the resignation. Finally Page
+consented.
+
+ _To the President_
+
+ American Embassy, London,
+ August 1, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR MR. PRESIDENT:
+
+ I have been struggling for a number of months against the necessity
+ to write you this note; for my doctors now advise me to give up all
+ work for a period--my London doctor says for six months. I have a
+ progressive digestive trouble which does not yield to the usual
+ treatment. It's the war, five London winters, and the unceasing
+ labour which is now the common lot. I am ashamed to say that these
+ have brought me to something near a breakdown. I have had Sir
+ William Osler as well as two distinguished London physicians for
+ several months. The digestive trouble has brought other ills in its
+ train; and I am assured that they will yield to freedom from
+ responsibility and complete rest for a time in a dry, warm climate
+ and that they are not likely to yield to anything else.
+
+ I see nothing else to do then but to bow to the inevitable and to
+ ask you to be kind enough to relieve me and to accept my
+ resignation to take effect as soon as I can go to Washington and
+ make a somewhat extended report on the work here, which, I hope,
+ will be of some use to the Department; and I ought to go as soon as
+ possible--say, in September. I cannot tell you how great my
+ disappointment is that this request has become necessary.
+
+ If the world and its work were so organized that we could do what
+ we should like to do, I should like a leave of absence till winter
+ be broken and then to take up my duties here again till the war
+ end. But that, of course, is impracticable. And it is now a better
+ time to change Ambassadors than at any time since the war began. My
+ five years' service has had two main phases--the difficult period
+ of our neutrality and the far easier period since we came into the
+ war. But when the war ends, I fear that there will be again more or
+ less troublesome tasks arising out of commercial difficulties.
+
+ But for any reasonable period the Embassy's work fortunately can
+ now go on perfectly well with Mr. Laughlin as Charge--until my
+ successor can get here. The Foreign Office like him, he is _persona
+ grata_ to all other Departments of the Government, and he has had
+ a long experience; and he is most conscientious and capable. And
+ the organization is in excellent condition.
+
+ I venture to ask you to have a cable message sent to me (to be
+ deciphered by me alone). It will require quite a little time to
+ pack up and to get away.
+
+ I send this, Mr. President, with more regret than I can express and
+ only after a struggle of more than six months to avoid it.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+Arthur Page took his father to Banff, in Scotland, for a little rest in
+preparation for the voyage. From this place came Page's last letter to
+his wife:
+
+ _To Mrs. Page_
+
+ Duff House, Banff, Scotland.
+ Sunday, September 2, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR:
+
+ ... I've put the period of our life in London, in my mind, as
+ closed. That epoch is ended. And I am glad. It was time it ended.
+ My job (_that_ job) is done. From the letters that Shoecraft has
+ sent me and from what the papers say, I think I couldn't have ended
+ it more happily--or at a better time. I find myself thinking of the
+ winter down South--of a Thanksgiving Day dinner for the older folks
+ of our family, of a Christmas tree for the kids, of frolics of all
+ sorts, of Rest, of some writing (perhaps not much), going over my
+ papers with Ralph--that's what he wants, you know; etc., etc.,
+ etc.--
+
+ And I've got to eat more. I myself come into my thinking and
+ planning in only two ways--(1) I'm going to have a suit like old
+ Lord N.'s and (2) I'm going to get all the good things to eat that
+ there are!
+
+ Meantime, my dear, how are you? Don't you let this getting ready
+ wear you out. Let something go undone rather. Work Miss Latimer and
+ the boys and the moving and packing men, and Petherick and the
+ servants. Take it very easy yourself.
+
+ Nine and a half more days here--may they speed swiftly. Comfortable
+ as I am, I'm mortal tired of being away from you--dead tired.
+
+ Praise God it's only 9-1/2 days. If it were 9-3/4, I should not
+ stand it, but break for home prematurely.
+
+ Yours, dear Allie, with all my love,
+ W.H.P.
+
+On August 24th came the President's reply:
+
+ I have received your communication of August 1st. It caused me
+ great regret that the condition of your health makes it necessary
+ for you to resign. Under the circumstances I do not feel I have the
+ right to insist on such a sacrifice as your remaining in London.
+ Your resignation is therefore accepted. As you request it will take
+ effect when you report to Washington. Accept my congratulations
+ that you have no reason to fear a permanent impairment of your
+ health and that you can resign knowing that you have performed your
+ difficult duties with distinguished success.
+
+ WOODROW WILSON.
+
+The news of Page's resignation inspired tributes from the British press
+and from British public men such as have been bestowed upon few
+Americans. The London _Times_ headed its leader "A Great Ambassador" and
+this note was echoed in all sections of Great Britain. The part of
+Page's career which Englishmen chiefly recalled was his attitude during
+the period of neutrality. This, the newspapers declared, was Page's
+great contribution to the cause. The fact that it had had such
+far-reaching influences on history was the one especially insisted on.
+His conciliatory and skillful behaviour had kept the United States and
+Great Britain friends at a time when a less tactful ambassador might
+easily have made them enemies; the result was that, when the time came,
+the United States could join forces against the common enemy, with
+results that were then daily unfolding on the battlefields of France. "I
+really believe," wrote the Marquess of Crewe, "that there were several
+occasions when we might have made it finally impossible for America to
+join us in the war; that these passed by may have been partly due to
+some glimmering of common sense on our part, with Grey as its main
+exponent; but it was more largely owing to your patience and courtesy
+and to the certainty which the Foreign Office always enjoyed that its
+action would be set before the Secretary of State in as favourable a
+light as it conscientiously could be." That, then, was Page's
+contribution to the statesmanship of this crisis--that of holding the
+two countries together so that, when the time came, the United States
+could join the Allies. A mass of private letters, all breathing the same
+sentiment, began to pour in on Page. There was hardly an illustrious
+name in Great Britain that was not represented among these
+leave-takings. As illustrating the character and spirit animating them,
+the following selections are made:
+
+ _From the King_
+
+ The information communicated to me yesterday through Mr. Laughlin
+ of Your Excellency's resignation of the Post of Ambassador and the
+ cause of this step fill me with the keenest regret. During your
+ term of office in days of peace and of war your influence has done
+ much to strengthen the ties of friendship and good-will which unite
+ the two English-speaking nations of the world. I trust your health
+ will soon be restored and that we may have the pleasure of seeing
+ you and Mrs. Page before your departure.
+
+ GEORGE R.I.
+
+ _From the Prime Minister_
+
+ 10, Downing Street, Whitehall, S.W. 1.
+ 30th August, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR AMBASSADOR:
+
+ It is with the deepest regret that my colleagues and I have
+ received the news that you have been forced by ill health to resign
+ your office and that the President has consented to your
+ relinquishing your ambassadorial duties. We are sorry that you are
+ leaving us, all the more because your tenure of office has
+ coincided with one of the greatest epochs in the history of our two
+ countries and of the world, and because your influence and counsel
+ throughout this difficult time have been of the utmost value to us
+ all.
+
+ The power for good or evil which can be exerted by the occupant of
+ your high position is at all times necessarily very great. That our
+ peoples are now fighting side by side in the cause of human freedom
+ and that they are manifesting an ever growing feeling of cordiality
+ to one another is largely attributable to the exceptional wisdom
+ and good-will with which you have discharged your duties. For the
+ part you have played during the past five years in bringing about
+ this happy result we owe you our lasting gratitude.
+
+ May I add that while you have always firmly presented the point of
+ view of your own country, you have succeeded in winning, not only
+ the respect and admiration of official circles, but the confidence,
+ and I can say without hesitation, the affection of all sections of
+ our people? It will be with universal regret that they will learn
+ that, owing to the strain of the great responsibilities you have
+ borne, you are no longer to remain among us. I earnestly trust that
+ a well-earned rest will speedily restore you to complete health,
+ and that you have many years of public service still in store for
+ you.
+
+ I should like also to say how much we shall miss Mrs. Page. She has
+ won a real place in all our hearts. Through her unfailing tact, her
+ genuine kindliness, and her unvarying readiness to respond to any
+ call upon her time and energy, she has greatly contributed to the
+ success of your ambassadorship.
+
+ Ever sincerely,
+ D. LLOYD GEORGE.
+
+ _From Viscount Grey of Fallodon_
+
+ Glen Innerleithen, Scotland.
+ September 2, 1918.
+
+ DEAR MR. PAGE:
+
+ I have been out of touch with current events for a few days, but
+ yesterday I read the two articles in the _Times_ on your
+ retirement. I am very grieved to think that you are going. There
+ was not a word of eulogy in the _Times_ articles that was not under
+ rather than over-stated, and reflecting thus I thought how rare it
+ is in public life to have an occasion that justifies the best that
+ can be said. But it is so now, and I am filled with deep regret
+ that you are going and with deep gratitude that you came to us and
+ were here when the war broke out and subsequently. If the United
+ States had been represented here by any one less decided as to the
+ right and wrong of the war and less firm and courageous than
+ yourself, the whole of the relations between your country and ours
+ would have been in peril. And if the two countries had gone apart
+ instead of coming together the whole fate of the world would be
+ very different from what I hope it will now be.
+
+ I have often thought that the forces behind public affairs are so
+ tremendous that individuals have little real, even when much
+ apparent, influence upon the course of events. But in the early
+ years of the war I think everything might have gone wrong if it had
+ not been that certain men of strong moral conviction were in
+ certain places. And you were preeminently one of these. President
+ Wilson I am sure was another, though I know him only through you
+ and Colonel House and his own public utterances. Even so your
+ influence must have counted in his action, by your friendship with
+ him as well as by the fact of your being the channel through which
+ communications passed between him and us.
+
+ I cannot adequately express what it was to me personally in the
+ dark days of 1914, 1915, and 1916 to know how you felt about the
+ great issues involved in the war.
+
+ I go to Fallodon at the end of this week and come to London the
+ first week of September--if you and Mrs. Page have not left by then
+ I hope I may see you. I long to do so before you go. I wish you may
+ recover perfect health. My eyesight continues to fail and I shall
+ soon be absolutely dependent upon other eyes for reading print.
+ Otherwise I feel as well as a schoolboy, but it is depressing to be
+ so well and yet so crippled in sight.
+
+ Please do not trouble to answer this letter--you must have too many
+ letters of the kind to be able to reply to them separately--but if
+ there is a chance of my seeing you before you go please let me
+ have a message to say when and where.
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ GREY OF F.
+
+A few months before his resignation Page had received a letter from
+Theodore Roosevelt, who was more familiar than most Americans with
+Page's work in London. This summed up what will be probably the judgment
+of history upon his ambassadorship. The letter was in reply to one
+written to the Ex-President, asking him to show hospitality to the
+Archbishop of York[78], who was about to visit the United States.
+
+ (Office of the Metropolitan Magazine)
+ 342 Fourth Ave., New York,
+ March 1st, 1918.
+
+ MY DEAR MR. AMBASSADOR:
+
+ I am very much pleased with your letter, and as soon as the
+ Archbishop arrives, he will be addressed by me with all his titles,
+ and I will get him to lunch with me or dine with me, or do anything
+ else he wishes! I shall do it for his own sake, and still more, my
+ dear fellow, I shall do it for the sake of the Ambassador who has
+ represented America in London during these trying years as no other
+ Ambassador in London has ever represented us, with the exception of
+ Charles Francis Adams, during the Civil War.
+
+ Faithfully yours,
+ THEODORE ROOSEVELT.
+
+The seriousness of Page's condition was not understood in London;
+consequently there were many attempts to do him honour in which he was
+unable to participate. Custom demands that a retiring Ambassador shall
+go to Windsor Castle to dine and to sleep; but King George, who was very
+solicitous about Page's health, offered to spare the Ambassador this
+trip and to come himself to London for this leave-taking. However, Page
+insisted on carrying out the usual programme; but the visit greatly
+tired him and he found it impossible personally to take part in any
+further official farewells. The last ceremony was a visit from the Lord
+Mayor and Council of Plymouth, who came to the Ambassador's house in
+September to present the freedom of the city. Ever since Page's speech
+of August 4, 1917, Plymouth had been planning to do him this honour;
+when the Council heard that the Ambassador's health would make it
+impossible for him to visit Plymouth, they asked if they might not come
+to London. The proceeding was most impressive and touching and the
+Ambassador's five-minute speech, the last one which he made in England,
+had all his old earnestness and mental power, though the physical
+weakness of the man saddened everybody present. The Lord Mayor presented
+the freedom of the ancient borough in a temporary holder, explaining
+that a more permanent receptacle would follow the Ambassador to America.
+When this arrived, it proved to be a beautiful silver model of the
+_Mayflower_. Certainly there could have been no more appropriate
+farewell gift to Page from the English town whose name so closely links
+the old country with the United States.
+
+The last scene took place at Waterloo Station. Sir Arthur Walsh came
+representing the King, while Mr. Balfour, Lord Robert Cecil, and other
+ministers represented the cabinet. The Government had provided a special
+railway carriage, and this was stationed at a convenient place as Page's
+motor drew up. So weak was the Ambassador that it was with difficulty
+that his companions, the ever devoted Mr. Laughlin, on one side, and
+Page's secretary, Mr. Shoecraft, on the other, succeeded in supporting
+him to his chair. Mr. Balfour, Lord Robert Cecil and the others then
+entered the carriage, and, with all that sympathetic dignity in which
+Englishmen of this type excel, said a few gracious and affectionate
+words of good-bye. They all stood, with uncovered heads, as the train
+slowly pulled out of the station, and caught their final glimpse of Page
+as he smiled at them and faintly waved his hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Perhaps the man most affected by this leave-taking was Mr. Balfour. He
+knew, as did the others, that that frail and emaciated figure had been
+one of the greatest friends that Britain had had at the most dreadful
+crisis in her history. He has many times told of this parting scene at
+Waterloo Station and always with emotion.
+
+"I loved that man," he once said to an American friend, recalling this
+event. "I almost wept when he left England."
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+[Footnote 75: Of Aberdeen, N.C., the Ambassador's sister.]
+
+[Footnote 76: "Dramatic Moments in American Diplomacy," by Ralph W.
+Page, 1918.]
+
+[Footnote 77: The reference is to a letter written in 1823 by Thomas
+Jefferson to President Monroe at the time when the Holy Alliance was
+threatening the independence of South America. "With Great Britain,"
+Jefferson wrote, "we should most sedulously cherish a cordial friendship
+and nothing would tend more to knit our affections than to be fighting
+once more, side by side, in the same cause."]
+
+[Footnote 78: See Vol. II, page 307.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+THE END
+
+
+Page came home only to die. In fact, at one time it seemed improbable
+that he would live to reach the United States. The voyage of the
+_Olympic_, on which he sailed, was literally a race with death. The
+great-hearted Captain, Sir Bertram Hayes, hearing of the Ambassador's
+yearning to reach his North Carolina home, put the highest pressure upon
+his ship, which almost leaped through the waves. But for a considerable
+part of the trip Page was too ill to have much consciousness of his
+surroundings. At times he was delirious; once more he lived over the
+long period of "neutrality"; again he was discussing intercepted cargoes
+and "notes" with Sir Edward Grey; from this his mind would revert to his
+English literary friends, and then again he was a boy in North Carolina.
+The _Olympic_ reached New York more than a day ahead of schedule; Page
+was carried down the gangplank on a stretcher, propped up with pillows;
+and since he was too weak then to be taken to his Southern home, he was
+placed temporarily in St. Luke's Hospital. Page arrived on a beautiful
+sunshiny October day; Fifth Avenue had changed its name in honour of the
+new Liberty Loan and had become the "Avenue of the Allies"; each block,
+from Forty-second Street north, was decorated with the colours of one of
+the nations engaged in the battle against Germany; the street was full
+of Red Cross workers and other picturesquely clad enthusiasts selling
+Liberty Bonds; in its animated beauty and in its inspiring significance
+it formed an appropriate setting for Page's homecoming.
+
+The American air seemed to act like a tonic on Page; in a short time he
+showed such improvement that his recovery seemed not impossible. So far
+as his spirits and his mind were concerned, he became his old familiar
+self. He was able to see several of his old friends, he read the
+newspapers and discussed the international situation with his customary
+liveliness. With the assistance of his daughter, Mrs. Loring, he even
+kept track of his correspondence. Evidently the serious nature of his
+illness was not understood, for invitations to speak poured in from all
+quarters. Most of these letters Mrs. Loring answered, but there was one
+that Page insisted on attending to himself. The City of Cleveland was
+organizing some kind of a meeting dedicated to closer relations with
+Great Britain, and the Mayor wrote Page asking him to speak. The last
+thing which Page wrote with his own hand was his reply to this
+invitation; and it is an impressive fact that his final written word
+should have dealt with the subject that had been so close to his heart
+for the preceding five years.
+
+ _To Harry L. Davis, Mayor of Cleveland, Ohio_
+
+ I deeply regret my health will not permit me to attend any public
+ function for some time to come; for I deeply appreciate your
+ invitation on behalf of the City of Cleveland for the meeting on
+ December 7th, and have a profound sympathy with its purpose to
+ bring the two great English-speaking worlds as close together as
+ possible, so that each shall thoroughly understand the courage and
+ sacrifice and ideals of the other. This is the greatest political
+ task of the future. For such a complete and lasting understanding
+ is the only basis for the continued, progress of civilization. I
+ am proud to be associated in your thought, Mr. Mayor, with so
+ fitting and happy an occasion, and only physical inability could
+ cause absence.
+
+ Sincerely,
+ WALTER H. PAGE.
+
+Page's improvement was only temporary; a day or two after this letter
+was written he began to sink rapidly; it was therefore decided to grant
+his strongest wish and take him to North Carolina. He arrived in
+Pinehurst on December 12th, so weak that his son Frank had to carry him
+in his arms from the train.
+
+"Well, Frank," said Page, with a slightly triumphant smile, "I did get
+here after all, didn't I?"
+
+He lingered for a few days and died, at eight o'clock in the evening, on
+December 21st, in his sixty-fourth year. He suffered no pain. He was
+buried in the Page family plot in the Bethesda Cemetery near Aberdeen.
+
+He was as much of a war casualty as was his nephew Allison Page, who
+lost his life with his face to the German machine guns in Belleau Wood.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX
+
+SCRAPS FROM UNFINISHED DIARIES
+
+
+Page was not methodical in keeping diaries. His documents, however,
+reveal that he took many praiseworthy resolutions in this direction.
+They include a large number of bulky books, each labelled "Diary" and
+inscribed with the year whose events were to be recorded. The outlook is
+a promising one; but when the books are opened they reveal only
+fragmentary good intentions. Entries are kept up for a few days, and
+then the work comes to an end. These volumes contain many scraps of
+interesting writing, however, which are worth preserving; some of them
+are herewith presented in haphazard fashion, with no attempt at order in
+subject matter.
+
+
+1913
+
+PETHERICK
+
+Petherick: may he be immortal; for he is a man who has made of a humble
+task a high calling; and without knowing it he has caused a man of a
+high calling to degrade it to a mean level. Now Petherick is a humble
+Englishman, whose father many years ago enjoyed the distinction of
+carrying the mail pouch to and from the post office for the American
+Embassy in London. As father, so son. Petherick succeeded Petherick. In
+this remote period (_the_ Petherick must now be 60) Governments had
+"despatch agents," men who distributed mail and whatnot, sent it on
+from capital to capital--were a sort of general "forwarding" factotums.
+The office is really out of date now. Telegraph companies, express
+companies, railway companies, the excellent mail service and the like
+out-despatch any conceivable agent--except Petherick. Petherick has
+qualities that defy change, such as an unfailing courtesy, a genuine joy
+in serving his fellows, the very genius of helpfulness. Well, since a
+governmental office once established acquires qualities of perpetuity,
+three United States despatch agents have survived the development of
+modern communication, one in London, one in New York, and the third (I
+think) in San Francisco. At any rate, the London agent remains.
+
+Now in the beginning the London despatch agent was a mail messenger (as
+I understand) for the Embassy. He still takes the pouch to the post
+office, and brings it back. In ordinary times, that's all he does for
+the Embassy, for which his salary of about ---- is paid by the State
+Department--too high a salary for the labour done, but none too high for
+the trustworthy qualities required. If this had been all that Petherick
+did, he would probably have long ago gone to the scrap heap. It is one
+mark of a man of genius that he always makes his job. So Petherick. The
+American Navy came into being and parts of it come to this side of the
+world. Naval officers need help when they come ashore. Petherick was
+always on hand with despatches and mail for them, and Petherick was a
+handy man. Did the Captain want a cab? Petherick had one waiting. Did
+the Captain want rooms? Such-and-such a hotel was the proper one for
+him. Rooms were engaged. Did the Captain's wife need a maid? Petherick
+had thought of that, too. Then a Secretary from some continental
+legation wished to know a good London tailor. He sought Petherick. An
+American Ambassador from the continent came to London. London yielded
+Petherick for his guidance and his wants. Petherick became omni-present,
+universally useful--an American institution in fact. A naval officer who
+had been in Asiatic waters was steaming westward to the Mediterranean.
+His wife and three babies came to London, where she was to meet her
+husband, who was to spend several weeks here. A telegram to Petherick:
+they needed to do nothing else. When the lady arrived a furnished flat,
+a maid and a nurse and a cook and toys awaited her. When her husband
+arrived, a pair of boots awaited him from the same last that his last
+pair had been made on, in London, five years before. At some thoughtful
+moment $1,000 was added to Petherick's salary by the Navy Department;
+and a few years ago a handsome present was made to Petherick by the
+United States Naval Officers all over the world.
+
+But Petherick, with all his virtues, is merely an Englishman, and it is
+not usual for an Englishman to hold a $3,000 office under appointment
+from the United States Government. The office of despatch agent,
+therefore, has been nominally held by an American citizen in London.
+This American citizen for a good many years has been Mr. Crane, a
+barrister, who simply turns over the salary to Petherick; and all the
+world, except the Secretary of State, knows that Petherick is Petherick
+and there is none other but him.
+
+Now comes the story: Mr. Bryan, looking around the world for offices for
+his henchmen, finds that one Crane has been despatch agent in London for
+many years, and he writes me a personal and confidential letter, asking
+if this be not a good office for some Democrat!
+
+I tell the story to the Naval Attache! He becomes riotous. He'll have
+to employ half a dozen clerks to do for the Navy ill what Petherick does
+well with ease, if he's removed. Life would not be worth living anyhow.
+I uncover Petherick to the Secretary and show him in his glory. It must
+be said to the Secretary's credit that he has said nothing more about
+it. Petherick, let us hope, will live forever. The Secretary's
+petty-spoils mind now works on grand plans for Peace, holy Peace, having
+unsuccessfully attacked poor Petherick. And Petherick knows nothing
+about it and never dreams of an enemy in all the world, and in all naval
+and diplomatic life he has only fast friends. If Mr. Bryan had removed
+him, he might have made a temporary friend of one Democrat from
+Oklahoma, and lasting enemies of all that Democrat's rivals and of the
+whole naval and diplomatic service.
+
+
+_November, 1914._
+
+We have to get away from it--or try to--a minute at a time; and the
+comic gods sometimes help us. Squier[79] has a junior officer here to
+hold his desk down when he's gone. He's a West Point Lieutenant with a
+German name. His study is ordnance. A new kind of bomb gives him the
+same sort of joy that a new species would have given Darwin. He was over
+in France--where the armies had passed to and from Paris--and one day he
+found an unexploded German bomb of a new sort. The thing weighed half a
+ton or thereabouts, and it was loaded. Somehow he got it to London--I
+never did hear how. He wrapped it in blankets and put it under his bed.
+He went out of town to study some other infernal contraption and the
+police found this thing under his bed. The War Office took it and began
+to look for him--to shoot him, the bomb-harbouring German! They soon
+discovered, of course, that he was one of our men and an officer in the
+United States Army. Then I heard of it for the first time. Here came a
+profuse letter of apology from the Government; they had not known the
+owner was one of my attaches. Pardon, pardon--a thousand apologies. But
+while this letter was being delivered to me one of the under-secretaries
+of the Government was asking one of our secretaries, "In Heaven's name,
+what's the Ambassador going to do about it? We have no right to molest
+the property of one of your attaches, but this man's room is less than
+100 yards from Westminster Abbey: it might blow up half of London. We
+can't give the thing back to him!" They had taken it to the Duck Pond,
+wherever that is. About that time the Lieutenant came back. His pet bomb
+gone--what was I going to do about it?
+
+The fellow actually wanted to bring it to his office in the Embassy!
+
+"Look here, Lieutenant, besides the possibility of blow-up this building
+and killing every mother's son of us, consider the scandal of the
+American Embassy in London blown up by a German bomb. That would go down
+in the school histories of the United States. Don't you see?" No, he
+didn't see instantly--he does so love a bomb! I had to threaten to
+disown him and let him be shot before he was content to go and tell them
+to unload it--he _would_ have it, unloaded, if not loaded.
+
+Well, I had to write half a dozen letters before the thing was done for.
+He thinks me a chicken-livered old coward and I know much more about him
+than I knew before; and we are at peace. The newspapers never got the
+story, but his friends about town still laugh at him for trying first to
+blow up Westminster Abbey and then his own Ambassador. He was at my
+house at dinner the other night and one of the ladies asked him:
+"Lieutenant, have you any darling little pet lyddite cartridges in your
+pocket?" Think of a young fellow who just loves bombs! Has loaded bombs
+for pets! How I misspent my youth!
+
+
+_February, 1915._
+
+This is among the day's stories: The British took a ship that had a
+cargo of 100,000 busts of Von Hindenburg--filled with copper.
+
+Another: When Frederick Watts was painting Lord Minto he found it hard
+to make the portrait please him. When he was told that Lord Minto liked
+it and Lady Minto didn't and that So-and-So praised it, he exclaimed: "I
+don't care a d--n what anyone thinks about it--except a fellow named
+Sargent."
+
+And the King said (about the wedding[80]): "I have the regulation of the
+dress to be worn at all functions in the Chapel Royal. I, therefore,
+declare that the American Ambassador may have any dress worn that he
+pleases!"
+
+E.M. House went to Paris this morning, having no peace message from this
+Kingdom whatever. This kind of talk here now was spoken of by the Prime
+Minister the other day "as the twittering of a sparrow in a tumult that
+shakes the world."
+
+Lady P. remarked to me to-day, as many persons do, that I am very
+fortunate to be Ambassador here at this particular time. Perhaps; but it
+isn't easy to point out precisely wherein the good fortune consists.
+This much is certain: it is surely a hazardous occupation now. Henry
+James remarked, too, that nobody could afford to miss the experience of
+being here--nobody who could be here. Perhaps true, again; but I confess
+to enough shock and horror to keep me from being so very sure of that.
+Yet no other phenomenon is more noticeable than the wish of every sort
+of an American to be here. I sometimes wonder whether the really
+well-balanced American does. Most of them are of the overwrought and
+excitable kinds.
+
+A conservative lady, quite conscientious, was taken down to dinner by
+Winston Churchill. Said she, to be quite frank and fair: "Mr. Churchill,
+I must tell you that I don't like your politics. Yet we must get on
+together. You may say, if you like, that this is merely a matter of
+personal taste with me, as I might not like your--well, your moustache."
+"I see no reason, Madam, why you should come in contact with either."
+
+My talk with Bonar Law: He was disposed to believe that if England had
+declared at once that she would go to war with Germany if France was
+attacked, there would have been no war. Well, would English opinion,
+before Belgium was attacked, have supported a government which made such
+a declaration?
+
+Mr. Bonar Law thinks that President Wilson ought to have protested about
+Belgium.
+
+He didn't agree with me that much good human material goes to waste in
+this Kingdom for lack of opportunity. (That's the Conservative in him.)
+
+
+_Friday, April 30, 1915._
+
+Sir Edward Grey came to tea to talk with Mr. House and me--little talk
+of the main subject (peace), which is not yet ripe by a great deal. Sir
+Edward said the Germans had poisoned wells in South Africa. They have
+lately used deadly gases in France. The key to their mind says Sir
+Edward, is this--they attribute to other folk what they are thinking of
+doing themselves.
+
+While Sir Edward was here John Sargent came in and brought Katharine the
+charcoal portrait of her that he had made--his present to her for her
+and Chud to give to W.A.W.P.[81] and me. A very graceful and beautiful
+thing for him to do.
+
+
+_April 30, 1915._
+
+Concerning Peace: The German civil authorities want peace and so does
+one faction of the military party. But how can they save their face?
+They have made their people believe that they are at once the persecuted
+and the victorious. If they stop, how can they explain their stopping?
+The people might rend them. The ingenious loophole discovered by House
+is--mere moonshine, viz., the freedom of the seas in war. That is a
+one-sided proposition unless they couple with it the freedom of the land
+in war also, which is nonsense. Nothing can be done, then, until some
+unfavourable military event brings a new mind to the Germans. Peace
+talk, therefore, is yet mere moonshine. House has been to Berlin, from
+London, thence to Paris, then back to London again--from Nowhere (as far
+as peace is concerned) to Nowhere again.
+
+
+_May 3, 1915._
+
+Why doesn't the President make himself more accessible? Dismiss X and
+get a bigger man? Take his cabinet members really into his confidence?
+Everybody who comes here makes these complaints of him!
+
+We dined to-night at Y's. Professor M. was there, etc. He says we've got
+to have polygamy in Europe after the war to keep the race up.
+
+
+_Friday, May 21, 1915._
+
+Last night the Italian Parliament voted to give the Government
+war-powers; and this means immediate war on the side of the Allies.
+There are now eight nations fighting against Germany, Austria, and
+Turkey; viz., Great Britain, France, Russia, Italy, Japan, Belgium,
+Serbia, Montenegro. And it looks much as if the United States will be
+forced in by Germany.
+
+The British Government is wrestling with a very grave internal
+disruption--to make a Coalition Government. The only portfolios that
+seem absolutely secure are the Prime Minister's and the Foreign
+Secretary's (Sir Edward Grey's)--for which latter, many thanks. The
+two-fold trouble is--(1) a difference between Churchill (First Lord of
+the Admiralty) and Lord Fisher--about the Dardanelles campaign and (I
+dare say) other things, and (2) Lord Kitchener's failure to secure
+ammunition--"to organize the industries of the Kingdom." Some even
+declare K. of K. (they now say Kitchener of Kaos) is a general colossal
+failure. But the prevailing opinion is that his raising of the new army
+has been good work but that he has failed with the task of procuring
+munitions. As for Churchill, he's too restless and erratic and
+dictatorial and fussy and he runs about too much. I talked with him at
+dinner last night at his mother's. He slips far down in his chair and
+swears and be-dams and by-Gods his assertions. But his energy does
+interest one. An impromptu meeting in the Stock Exchange to-day voted
+confidence in K. of K. and burned up a copy of the _Daily Mail_, which
+this morning had a severe editorial about him.
+
+Washington, having sent a severe note to Germany, is now upbraided for
+not sending another to England, to match and pair it. That's largely
+German influence, but also the Chicago packers and the cotton men. These
+latter have easy grievances, like the Irish. The delays of the British
+Government are exasperating, but they are really not so bad now as they
+have been. Still, the President can be influenced by the criticism that
+he must hit one side every time he hits the other, else he's not
+neutral! I am working by every device to help the situation and to
+prevent another note. I proposed to-day to Sir Edward Grey that his
+Government make an immediate advance payment on the cotton that it
+proposes to buy.
+
+Unless Joffre be a man of genius--of which there are some
+indications--and unless French also possibly have some claim to this
+distinction and _perhaps_ the Grand Duke Nikolas, there doesn't yet seem
+to be a great man brought forth by the war. In civil life, Sir Edward
+Grey comes to a high measure. As we yet see it from this English corner
+of the world, no other statesman now ranks with him.
+
+
+_March 20, 1916._
+
+I am sure I have the best secret service that could be got by any
+neutral. I am often amazed at its efficiency. It is good because it is
+not a secret--certainly not a spy service at all. It is all aboveboard
+and it is all done by men of high honour and good character--I mean the
+Embassy staff. Counting the attaches there are about twenty good men,
+every one of whom moves in a somewhat different circle from any other
+one. Every one cultivates his group of English folk, in and out of
+official life, and his group in the diplomatic corps. There isn't a week
+but every man of them sees his particular sources of information--at
+their offices, at the Embassy, at luncheon, at dinner, at the
+clubs--everywhere. We all take every possible occasion to serve our
+friends and they serve us. The result is, I verily believe, that we hear
+more than any other group in London. These young fellows are all keen as
+razors. They know when to be silent, too; and they are trusted as they
+deserve to be. Of course I see them, singly or in pairs, every day in
+the regular conduct of the work of the Embassy; and once a week we all
+meet together and go over everything that properly comes before so large
+a "cabinet" meeting. Thus some of us are on confidential terms with
+somebody in every department of the Government, with somebody in every
+other Embassy and Legation, with all the newspapers and
+correspondents--even with the censors. And the wives of those that are
+married are abler than their husbands. They are most attractive young
+women--welcome everywhere--and indefatigable. Mrs. Page has them spend
+one afternoon a week with her, rolling bandages; and that regular
+meeting always yields something else. They come to my house Thursday
+afternoons, too, when people always drop in to tea-visitors from other
+countries, resident Americans, English--everybody--Sometimes one
+hundred.
+
+Nobody in this company is a "Spy"--God forbid! I know no more honourable
+or attractive group of ladies and gentlemen. Yet can conceive of no
+organization of spies who could find out as many things. And the loyalty
+of them all! Somebody now and then prefaces a revelation with the
+declaration, "This is in strict confidence--absolutely nobody is to hear
+it." The answer is--"Yes, only, you know, I have no secrets from the
+Ambassador: no member of his staff can ever have."--Of course, we get
+some fun along with our tragedies. If I can find time, for instance, I
+am going to write out for House's amusement a verbatim report of every
+conversation that he held in London. It has all come to me--from what he
+said to the King down; and it all tallies with what House himself told
+me. He went over it all himself to me the other day at luncheon.--I not
+only believe--I am sure--that in this way I do get a correct judgment
+of public feeling and public opinion, from Cabinet Ministers to
+stock-brokers.
+
+
+_December 11, 1916._
+
+The new Government is quite as friendly to us in its intentions as the
+old, and much more energetic. The old Government was a spent force. Mr.
+Balfour is an agreeable man to deal with, with a will to keep our
+sympathy, unless the dire need of ships forces him to unpleasantness.
+The Prime Minister is--American in his ways. Lord Robert has the old
+Cecil in him, and he's going to maintain the blockade at any cost that
+he can justify to himself and to public opinion, and the public opinion
+is with him. They are all eager to have American approval--much more
+eager, I think, than a large section of public opinion, which has almost
+ceased to care what Americans think or do. The more we talk about peace,
+the more they think about war. There is no vindictiveness in the
+English. They do not care to do hurt to the German people: they regard
+them as misguided and misled. But no power on earth can stop the British
+till the German military caste is broken--that leadership which attacked
+Belgium and France and would destroy England. Balfour, Lloyd George, the
+people, the army and the navy are at one in this matter, every labouring
+man, everybody, except a little handful of Quakers and professors and
+Noel Buxton. I think I know and see all the peace men. They feel that
+they can talk to me with safety. They send me their pamphlets and
+documents. I think that all of them have now become warlike but three,
+and one of them is a woman. If you meet a woman you know on the street
+and express a sympathy on the loss of her second son, she will say to
+you, "Yes, he died in defence of his country. My third son will go next
+week. They all die to save us." Doubtless she sheds tears in private.
+But her eyes are dry in public. She has discarded her luxuries to put
+money in the war loan. Say "Peace" to her? She would insult you.
+
+
+_May 10, 1917._
+
+We dined at Lambeth Palace. There was Lord Morley, whom I had not seen
+since his long illness--much reduced in flesh, and quite feeble and
+old-looking. But his mind and speech were most alert. He spoke of Cobden
+favouring the Confederate States because the constitution of the
+Confederacy provided for free trade. But one day Bright informed Cobden
+that he was making the mistake of his life. Thereafter Cobden came over
+to the Union side. This, Morley heard direct from Bright.
+
+The Archbishop spoke in high praise of Charnwood's Lincoln--was
+surprised at its excellence, etc. Geoffrey Robinson[82] asked who wrote
+the _Quarterly_ articles in favour of the Confederacy all through the
+war--was it Lord Salisbury? Nobody knew.
+
+The widow of the former Archbishop Benson was there--the mother of all
+the Bensons, Hugh, A.C., etc., etc.--a remarkable old lady, who talked
+much in admiration of Balfour.
+
+The Bishop of--Winchester(?)--was curious to know whether the people in
+the United States really understood the Irish question--the two-nation,
+two-religion aspect of the case. I had to say no!
+
+There is an orphan asylum founded by some preceding Archbishop, by the
+sea. The danger of bombardment raised the question of safety. The
+Archbishop ordered all the children (40) to be sent to Lambeth Palace.
+We dined in a small dining room: "The children," Mrs. Davidson
+explained, "have the big dining room." Each child has a lady as
+patroness or protector who "adopts" her, i.e., sees that she is looked
+after, etc. Some of the ladies who now do this were themselves orphans!
+
+At prayers as usual at 10 o'clock in the chapel where prayers have been
+held every night--for how many centuries?
+
+At lunch to-day at Mr. Asquith's--Lord Lansdowne there; took much
+interest in the Knapp farm work while I briefly explained.
+
+Lord Morley said to Mrs. Page he had become almost a Tolstoyan--Human
+progress hasn't done much for mankind's happiness, etc. Look at the
+war--by a "progressive" nation. Now the mistake here is horn of a
+class-society, a society that rests on privilege. "Progress," has done
+everything (1) in liberating men's minds and spirits in the United
+States. This is the real gain; (2) in arraying all the world _against_
+Germany.
+
+
+_Tuesday, January 22, 1918._
+
+Some days bring a bunch of interesting things or men. Then there
+sometimes come relatively dull days--not often, however. To-day came:
+
+General Tasker H. Bliss, Chief-of-Staff, now 64--the wisest (so I judge)
+of our military men, a rather wonderful old chap. He's on his way to
+Paris as a member of the Supreme War Council at Versailles. The big
+question he has struck is: Shall American troops be put into the British
+and French lines, in small groups, to fill up the gaps in those armies?
+The British have persuaded him that it is a military necessity. If it
+were less than a necessity, it would, of course, be wrong--i.e., it
+would cut across our national pride, force our men under another flag,
+etc. It is not proposed to deprive Pershing of his command nor even of
+his army. The plan is to bring over troops that would not otherwise now
+come and to lend these to the British and French armies, and to let
+Pershing go on with his army as if this hadn't been done. Bliss is
+inclined to grant this request on condition the British bring these men
+over, equip and feed them, etc. He came in to ask me to send a telegram
+for him to-morrow to the President, making this recommendation. But on
+reflection he decided to wait till he had seen and heard the French
+also, who desire the same thing as the British.
+
+General Bliss is staying with Major Warburton; and Warburton gave me
+some interesting glimpses of him. A telegram came for the General.
+Warburton thought that he was out of the house and he decided to take it
+himself to the General's room. He opened the door. There sat the General
+by the fire talking to himself, wrapped in thought. Warburton walked to
+the middle of the room. The old man didn't see him. He decided not to
+disturb him, for he was rehearsing what he proposed to say to the
+Secretary of State for War or to the Prime Minister--getting his ears as
+well as his mind used to it. Warburton put the telegram on the table
+near the General, went out, and wasn't discovered.
+
+Several nights, he sat by the fire with Warburton and began to talk,
+again rehearsing to himself some important conclusions that he had
+reached. Every once in a while he'd look up at Warburton and say: "Now,
+what do you think of that?"
+
+That's an amazing good way to get your thought clear and your plans well
+laid out. I've done it myself.
+
+I went home and Kipling and Carrie[83] were at lunch with us. Kipling
+said: "I'll tell you, your coming into the war made a new earth for me."
+He is on a committee to see that British graves are properly marked and
+he talked much about it. I could not help thinking that in the back of
+his mind there was all the time thought of his own dead boy, John.
+
+Then in the afternoon Major Drain brought the copy of a contract between
+the United States Government and the British to build together 1500
+tanks ($7,500,000). We took it to the Foreign Office and Mr. Balfour and
+I signed it. Drain thinks that the tanks are capable of much development
+and he wishes our army after the war to keep on studying and
+experimenting with and improving such machines of destruction. Nobody
+knows what may come of it.
+
+Then I dined at W.W. Astor's (Jr.) There were Balfour, Lord Salisbury,
+General and Lady Robertson, Mrs. Lyttleton and Philip Kerr.
+
+During the afternoon Captain Amundsen, Arctic explorer came in, on his
+way from Norway to France as the guest of our Government, whereafter he
+will go to the United States and talk to Scandinavian people there.
+
+That's a pretty good kind of a full day.
+
+
+_April, 19, 1918._
+
+Bell[84], and Mrs. Bell during the air raid took their little girl
+(Evangeline, aged three) to the cellar. They told her they went to the
+cellar to hear the big fire crackers. After a bomb fell that shook all
+Chelsea, Evangeline clapped her hands in glee. "Oh, mummy, what a _big_
+fire cracker!"
+
+FOOTNOTES:
+
+
+[Footnote 79: Colonel (now Major General) George O. Squier, Military
+Attache at the American Embassy.]
+
+[Footnote 80: The wedding of Mr. Page's daughter at the Chapel Royal.]
+
+[Footnote 81: Mrs. Page.]
+
+[Footnote 82: Editor of the London _Times_.]
+
+[Footnote 83: Mrs. Kipling.]
+
+[Footnote 84: Mr. Edward Bell, Second Secretary of the American
+Embassy.]
+
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+_Age_, Louisville, connection with, I 32
+
+Aid to stranded Americans in Europe on outbreak of war, I 304, 307, 329
+
+_Alabama_ claims, the framed check for, in British Foreign Office,
+ I 390, II 78
+
+Alderman, Dr. Edwin A., early efforts in behalf of public education,
+ I 73, 78;
+ stricken with tuberculosis, but recovers health, I 120;
+ on committee to lecture in England, II 346.
+ _Letters to_: expressing fear and hope of Wilson, I 121;
+ on meeting of the Southern and the General Education Boards, I 125;
+ after Wilson's inauguration, I 128;
+ while enroute to port as Ambassador, I 129;
+ on changed world conditions, II 142
+
+Ambassador, some activities of an, I 159;
+ as a preventer of calamities, I 166
+
+America and Great Britain, only free countries in the world, II 121
+
+American Government, slight regard for by British, I 145, 152, 190, II 153;
+ strong feeling against uncourteous Notes of, II 74;
+ on handling of _Lusitania_ case, II 79;
+ on being under German influence, II 80, 97
+
+American Luncheon Club, could not adhere to neutrality, II 230
+
+American Navy, its aid in combatting the submarine, II 294
+
+American supremacy, a before-the-war prophecy, I 144;
+ why the British will acknowledge, I 170
+
+_Ancona_, torpedoed, II 79 _note_
+
+Anderson, Chandler P., counsel for Committee for relief of stranded
+ Americans, I 307;
+ backs up Ambassador in neutrality letter to Wilson, I 373;
+ gives reasons why unwise to demand adoption of Declaration of London,
+ I 387
+
+Anglo-American-German "pact," planned by Wilson and House, I 281
+
+Anglomania, charged against ambassadors, I 257
+
+Anti-Imperialists, protest declaration of war against Spain, I 62
+
+_Arabic_, sinking of, thought surely to bring on war, II 26
+
+Arbitration Treaty, renewal of, I 285;
+ significance of Germany's refusal to sign, I 294
+
+Archbold, John D., attempts to explain Foraker letters, I 88
+
+Archibald, James, trapped by British secret service, II 101
+
+Asquith, H.H., opposition to the House of Lords, I 137;
+ at state dinner to King Christian, I 167;
+ hint to, on Mexican situation, I 185;
+ conciliatory remarks at Guildhall banquet, I 210;
+ explains Dardanelles preparations, I 430;
+ his ministry suspected of pacifist or "defeatist" tendencies, I 430;
+ aged by the war, II 141;
+ conversation with, regarding Casement case, and relations between
+ Great Britain and America, II 168;
+ refuses to discuss Wilson's peace note, II 207;
+ in House of Commons speech welcomes America as ally, II 230;
+ inclined toward seeking peace, II 353
+
+Astor, Mr. and Mrs. Waldorf, at the home of, II 380
+
+_Atlantic Monthly_, editor of, I 53
+
+Atlantic Ocean, a blessing to America, I 162, 170, 310; II 117
+
+Austrian Embassy, left in charge of American Ambassador, I 305, 321;
+ difficulties incident to, I 345
+
+Aycock, Gov. Charles B., efforts in educational reform, I 85;
+ commendatory letter from, I 86
+
+
+Babcock, Commander, arrival in England, II 274
+
+Bacon, Senator Augustus O., declared he would have blocked Page's
+ Ambassadorship had he known he was author of "The Southerner,"
+ I 93, 226
+
+Baker, Secretary Newton D., sees the war at first-hand, II 364;
+ dinner at Embassy to, II 364, 370;
+ Page's memorandum of his visit, II 366
+
+Baker, Ray Stannard, visit at Sandwich, II 384
+
+Balfour, aged by the war, II 141;
+ drafts reply to Wilson's peace note, II 212;
+ reply to question how best America could help, II 219;
+ on the disposition of the German colonies, II 246;
+ friendliness toward United States averts crisis in Venezuela dispute,
+ II 249;
+ much concerned at feeling toward British in the United States, II 251;
+ his home life, II 257;
+ conference with Bonar Law and, over financial help from America, II 261;
+ satisfactory conference with Mr. Polk over blacklist and blockade,
+ II 265;
+ explains "secret
+treaties" to President Wilson, II 267;
+ conference with McAdoo on financial situation, II 267;
+ sends dispatch to President Wilson substantiating previous reports
+ of Page and Sims on submarine peril which were not taken seriously,
+ II 284;
+ indignant over misunderstanding with Brazilian Navy, II 304;
+ at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370;
+ at train to bid good-bye, II 402;
+ most affected at leave-taking, 403
+
+Balfour Mission to the United States, II 249 _et seq._
+
+Barclay, Esther, Mr. Page's maternal grandmother, I 6
+
+Bayard, Thomas F., accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257
+
+Beckendorff, Count, talk with, II 82
+
+Belgium, violation of, the cause of Great Britain's participation in
+ the war, I 315;
+ sending food supplies to aid starving, I 346
+
+_Benham_, misunderstanding over American destroyer's action during
+ submarine operations off Nantucket, II 253
+
+Benton, William S., Englishman, murdered in Mexico, I 285
+
+Beresford, Lord Charles, complains of attitude of Foreign Office in
+ pacifying America, I 365;
+ makes speech in House of Lords on attitude of U.S. Destroyer
+ _Benham_, II 253
+
+Bernstorff, Count von, objectionable activities of, I 335;
+ efforts to secure intercession of the United States toward peace, I 403;
+ at the Speyer dinner, I 404;
+ instructed to start propaganda for "freedom of the seas," I 436;
+ gives pledge that liners would not be submarined without warning,
+ II 30 _note_;
+ thought in England to dominate our State Department, II 80;
+ cable proposing suspending of submarine war, II 149;
+ threatens President Wilson with resumption of submarine sinkings
+ unless he moves for peace, II 200;
+ news of his dismissal received in London, II 215
+
+Bethmann-Hollweg, not seen by Colonel House, I 289;
+ tells King of Bavaria peace must be secured, II 181
+
+Biddle, General, at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370
+
+Bingham School, studies and environment at, I 16;
+ selected for honour prize by Ambassador, I 17
+
+Blacklist, feeling in America over the, II 184;
+ conditions change on American entry into war, II 264, 265, 266
+
+Blanquet, General, in Mexican uprising, I 175
+
+Bliss, General Tasker, wisdom and tact impress the Allies, II 351
+
+Blockade, British, compared to our blockade in Civil War, II 55 _et seq._;
+ the American Note protesting against, II 69
+
+Blockade, strong feeling in America against, II 184
+
+Bolling, Thomas, at President Wilson's luncheon, II 171
+
+Bones, Miss, at President Wilson's luncheon, II 171
+
+Boy-Ed, dismissal of, II 108
+
+Brazilian Navy, ships join American unit in European waters, II 304
+
+Breitung, E.N., makes test case with _Dacia_ registry, I 393
+
+British Navy League, activity in keeping up the navy, I 284
+
+Bryan, William Jennings, uncomplimentary editorial on, in _World's
+ Work_, I 87;
+ attitude toward concession holders in Mexico, I 181;
+ refuses to consider intervention in Mexico, I 193;
+ an increasing lack of confidence in, I 193;
+ tirade against British, to Sir William Tyrrell, I 202,
+ to Col. House, I 206;
+ Asquith's opinion of, 236;
+ Page's appeal to Colonel House that he be kept out of Europe, I 235, 236;
+ regards Ambassador as un-neutral, I 362;
+ insists that Great Britain adopt the Declaration of London, I 373, 377;
+ interested in the Straus peace proposal, I 407;
+ resignation after _Lusitania_ notes, II 6;
+ proposes going to England and Germany to try peace negotiations, II 12
+
+Bryan, comments on his political activity but diplomatic laxity,
+ I 194, 225, 236;
+ crank once, crank always, II 27;
+ democratic party wrecked by his long captaincy, II 190
+
+Bryce, Lord, hopeless of the two countries ever understanding one
+ another, II 39;
+ concern at our trivial notes, II 67;
+ conversation with, on misunderstandings between America and Great
+ Britain, and the peace settlement, II 165;
+ depressed at tenor of Wilson's note proposing peace, sends him
+ personal letter, II 207;
+ in House of Lords speech welcomes America as ally, II 230;
+ frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315;
+ attitude toward a League of Nations, II 357
+
+Burns, John, resigns from British Cabinet on declaration of war, I 316
+
+Buttrick, Dr. Wallace, intimacy with, I 85;
+ efforts in building up Southern agriculture, I 94;
+ in hookworm eradication, I 99;
+ lectures on the United States throughout Great Britain, II 291;
+ his speeches a source of inspiration to British masses, II 345;
+ asked to organize a committee of Americans to extend the work, II 345;
+ informed by Colonel House of Wilson's disapproval, II 348;
+ warns Page of breakdown if he does not at once return to America, II 375;
+ beneficial effects of his lectures, II 388
+
+
+Canterbury, Archbishop of, in House of Lords speech welcomes America as
+ ally, II 231;
+ on gratitude shown to America, II 245
+
+Carden, Sir Lionel Edward Gresley, his being sent to Mexico, a British
+ mistake, I 187;
+ anti-American propaganda in Cuba, I 196;
+ as British Minister to Mexico shows great hostility to the United
+ States, I 197;
+ formally advises Huerta to abdicate, I 209;
+ Page's part in recall from Mexican post, I 215 _et seq._
+
+Carlyle, Thomas, new letters from, discovered in Canada, I 60
+
+Carnegie, Andrew, visit to, at Skibo, I 142
+
+Carranza, Venustiano, thought by Wilson to be a patriot, I 227, 228
+
+Carson, Sir Edward, resists the Home Rule Bill, I 137;
+ at Bonar Law dinner, II 119;
+ tells Lloyd George submarines must be settled before Irish question,
+ II 260
+
+Casement, Sir Roger, trial and conviction inspire movement from
+ Irish-Americans resulting in Senate resolution, II 166
+
+Cecil, Lord Robert, incident of the "Boston Tea Party," I 392;
+ receives German proposal from Page as "German Ambassador," II 201;
+ letters to Sir C. Spring Rice on Germany's peace proposal, II 201, 202;
+ Page's interview with to explain Wilson's peace communication, II 208;
+ at train to bid good-bye, II 402
+
+Chamberlain, Senator, presents petition demanding Ambassador's removal,
+ I 259;
+ demands Senate be furnished with copy of Panama tolls speech, I 260
+
+Chancery, removal of, to better quarters, I 341
+
+Children, crusade for education of, I 72
+
+China case, the, satisfactorily settled, II 154, 155
+
+Choate, Joseph H., understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242;
+ accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257
+
+Christian, King, royal reception to, I 167
+
+Christmas in England, 1915, II 103
+
+Churchill, Winston, proposal for naval holiday, I 277, 278, 279, 298
+
+Civil War, first contact with, I 1;
+ his father's attitude toward, I 5;
+ early recollections of Sherman's invasion, II 10;
+ the aftermath, I 13
+
+Clark, Champ, opponent of repeal of Panama Tolls Bill, I 264
+
+Cleveland, President, an influence in formation of ideals, I 40;
+ conversation with, I 40
+
+Cotton, the question of contraband, I 267
+
+Country Life Commission, appointed on, by President Roosevelt, I 89
+
+Court, presentations at, I 156, 172
+
+Courtesies in diplomatic intercourse, necessity for, I 147, 190
+
+Cowdray, Lord, head of British oil concessions in Mexico, I 181;
+ withdraws request for Colombian oil concession, I 217;
+ long talk with on intervention in Mexico, I 225;
+ great monetary loss in giving up oil concessions, I 227
+
+Cradock, Admiral, does not approve American policy toward Mexico, I 230
+
+Crewe, Marquis of, on Page's tact as Ambassador, II 397
+
+Criticisms and attacks on Ambassador Page;
+ the "knee-breeches" story, I 133;
+ Hearst papers watching for opportunity, I 149, 261;
+ furor over "English-led and English-ruled" phrase, I 258;
+ speech before Associated Chambers of Commerce, on Panama tolls, I 259
+
+Cuba, a problem, I 176
+
+Curzon, Lord, in House of Lords speech welcomes America as ally, II 230
+
+
+_Dacia_ incident, the, a serious crisis averted, I 392, II 4
+
+Daniels, Josephus, protest made against his appointment to
+ Secretaryship of Navy, I 119
+
+Dardanelles:
+ Asquith explains preparations, I 430
+
+Daughters of the Confederacy, considered not helpful to Southern
+ regeneration, I 44
+
+Davis, Harry L., Mayor of Cleveland, letter to, expressing regret at
+ not being able to attend meeting for purpose of bringing England and
+ America closer together, II 405
+
+Davis, Jefferson, call on, I 37
+
+Declaration of London, Bryan insists on adoption by Great Britain,
+ I 373, 377;
+ history of the articles, I 375;
+ the solution of the difficulty, I 385
+
+Declaration of War, America's, and its effect in Great Britain,
+ II 230 _et seq._
+
+Delcasse, Kaiser makes proposal to, to join in producing "complete
+ isolation" of the United States, II 192
+
+De Kalb, Courtney, congratulations from, I 59
+
+Dent, J.M., loses two sons in the war, II 111;
+ opinion of Asquith, II 116
+
+Depression in England, the dark days of the war, II 64, 81, 94
+
+Derby, Lord, "excessive impedimenta," II 344;
+ at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, I 365, 370
+
+Dernburg, Bernhard, instructed to start propaganda for "freedom of the
+ seas," I 436
+
+Desart, Earl of, formulates Declaration of London, I 375
+
+Diaz, Porfirio, authority maintained by genius and force, I 175
+
+Dilettanti, Society of, dinners at, II 312
+
+Doubleday, Frank N., joins in publishing venture with S.S. McClure,
+ I 64;
+ the Harper experiment, I 65;
+ has "business" visit from a politician, I 88
+ _Letters to_: impressions of England, I 138;
+ anent the Christmas holidays, etc., I 164;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 110;
+ impressions of Europeans, II 132;
+ on America's programme after declaration of war, II 224;
+ on wartime conditions and duties, II 240;
+ on the good showing of the Americans in war preparation, II 324;
+ depressed at long continuation and horrors of the war, II 325
+
+Doubleday, Page & Co., founding of the firm, I 66;
+ attains great influence and popularity, I 86
+
+Dumba, Dr. Constantin, given his passports, II 30 _note_
+
+Duncan, Dr., president of Randolph-Macon College, I 20
+
+
+Education:
+ efforts in behalf of Southern child, I 72;
+ church system declared a failure, I 78;
+ organization of Southern Educational Conference, I 83;
+ Southern Education Board organized, I 84;
+ General Education Board founded by John D. Rockefeller, I 84;
+ the South's awakening, I 85
+
+England, why unprepared for war, II 35;
+ changed and chastened, II 342
+
+Englishwoman's letter from Berlin giving Germany's intentions toward
+ England, America, and the world, I 347
+
+"English-led and English-ruled," furor over phrase, I 258
+
+"Excoriators," disregarded, I 80-83
+
+
+Falkenhayn, cynical toward proposals of Colonel House, I 289
+
+Farming, love of, and home in South, I 115, 127, 128
+
+Field, Eugene, succeeds to desk of, on St. Joseph _Gazette_, I 36
+
+Fisher, Lord, remark that Balfour was "too much of a gentleman" for
+ First Lord of the Admiralty, II 101
+
+Flexner, Dr. Abraham, cites Page as greatest educational statesman, I 85
+
+Flexner, Dr. Simon, interested in hookworm campaign, I 100
+
+Foraker, Senator Joseph B., career destroyed by exposure of
+ Archbold-Standard Oil letters, I 88
+
+Forbes, Cameron, fails to see President Wilson on his return from
+ Philippines, II 174
+
+Ford, Henry, the venture in the peace ship, II 110 _note_
+
+Forgotten Man, The, address at Greensboro, I 74
+
+_Forum_, The, made of great influence and a business success,
+ under editorship, I 49
+
+Fosdick, Harry Emerson, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Fowler, Harold, in London, I 134;
+ sent to Belgium, I 338;
+ enlists in British Army, I 358
+
+France, not in favour of England reducing naval programme, I 284;
+ a gift of a billion dollars to, proposed, II 218
+
+"Freedom of the seas," Colonel House's proposed reform, I 435
+
+French, Field Marshal Sir John, informs Page of undiplomatic methods of
+ State Departments in peace proposals, I 425, 427;
+ aged by the war, II 141
+
+Frost, W.G., writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60
+
+Fryatt, Captain, execution of, hardens British people to fight to
+ finish, II 182
+
+
+Garfield, President, assassination deplored throughout the South, I 39
+
+Gates, Dr. Frederick T., interested in hookworm campaign, I 99
+
+Gaunt, Captain, sends news from Washington of Bernstorff's dismissal,
+ II 215
+
+General Education Board, organized by John D. Rockefeller, I 84;
+ assists Dr. Knapp in agricultural demonstration work, I 96
+
+George V, received by, I 135;
+ very likeable, I 157;
+ overwrought condition in speaking with Page on declaration of war, I 309;
+ much distressed at tenor of Wilson's note proposing peace, II 207;
+ as a "human being," II 235;
+ night spent with, II 236, 240;
+ luncheon to General Pershing, II 237;
+ telegram of regret at resignation of Mr. Page and ill-health that
+ occasioned it, II 397
+
+German Embassy, left in charge of American Ambassador, I 306;
+ difficulties incident to, I 306, 345, 359
+
+Germany:
+ ridicules idea of naval holiday, I 279;
+ would have been victorious in World War had she signed arbitration
+ treaty with United States, I 294;
+ attempts to embroil the United States and Great Britain, I 393, 400;
+ move for peace, 1916, II 179
+
+Germany, travels in, in 1877, I 30
+
+Gildersleeve, Professor, Basil L., at Johns Hopkins University
+ I 24, 25;
+ Page a favourite pupil of, in Greek, II 299
+
+Gilman, Daniel Coit, constructive work as president of Johns Hopkins
+ University, I 23
+
+Godkin, E.L., writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60
+
+Grady, Henry, kindness of, I 34, 37
+
+Great Britain and the United States only free countries in the world,
+ II 121
+
+Great Britain's participation in the war, the cause of, I 315
+
+Greek, proficiency in, I 21, 24, 25, 30; II 299
+
+Grey, Lord, ex-Governor-General of Canada, I 150
+
+Grey, Sir Edward, credentials presented to, I 135;
+ high regard for, I 150;
+ his fairness facilitates diplomatic business, I 155;
+ talks with on Mexican situation, I 184, 185, 188, 199;
+ informed as to Carden's activities, I 219, 220;
+ asked to meet Colonel House at luncheon, I 245;
+ note to Sir C. Spring Rice on Wilson's address to Congress on
+ Tolls Bill, I 254;
+ criticized for "bowing too low to the Americans," I 261;
+ depressed at extent of Anglophobia in the United States, I 266;
+ evinces satisfaction at clearing up of problems, I 285;
+ weeps as he informs Page of ultimatum to Germany, I 309, 315;
+ "subservience" to American interests, I 364;
+ accepts Declaration of London with modifications, I 384;
+ joking over serious affairs, I 390;
+ welcomes Page's solution of the _Dacia_ tangle, I 394;
+ letter to Sir Cecil Spring Rice regarding Speyer-Straus peace
+ proposal, I 408;
+ states war could be ended more quickly if America ceased protests
+ against seizure of contraband, I 421;
+ talk on detained shipping and Wordsworth poems, II 103;
+ "a God's mercy for a man like him at his post," II 118;
+ aged by the war, II 141;
+ satisfactory settlement of the _China_ case, II 155;
+ speech in House of Commons on Peace, II 157;
+ nothing but praise heard of him, II 159;
+ memorandum of conversation with, on conditions of peace, II 160;
+ receives Senate Resolution asking clemency for Sir Roger Casement,
+ II 167;
+ forced to resign, because he refused to push the blockade and risk
+ break with America, II 233;
+ guest with Mr. and Mrs. Page at Wilsford Manor, II 288;
+ walk to Stonehenge with, II 292;
+ serious blockade questions give way to talks on poets, II 305;
+ promises government support of Belgian Relief plan, II 310;
+ frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+ _Letters from_: congratulations on Wilson's address to Congress
+ advising declaration of war, II 234;
+ expressing grief at Page's departure and citing his great help, II 400
+
+
+Haldane, Viscount, at Thanksgiving Dinner of the American Society, I 213;
+ discussion with Von Tirpitz as to relative sizes of navies, I 278;
+ knew that Germany intended war, II 35
+
+Hall, Admiral William Reginald, brings news of Bernstorff's dismissal,
+ II 215
+
+Hanning, Mrs. Robert, sister of Thomas Carlyle, I 60
+
+Harcourt, Right Honourable Lewis, eulogizes work of International
+ Health Board, I 101
+
+Harden, Maximilian, says Germany must get rid of its predatory
+ feudalism, II 193
+
+Harper & Brothers, difficulties of, I 64
+
+Harrow, visit to, and talk to schoolboys, I 17
+
+Harvey, George, succeeds Page as editor of Harper's, I 66
+
+Hay, John, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242;
+ accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257
+
+Hays, Sir Bertram, captain of the _Olympic_, races ship to hasten
+ Page's homecoming, II 404
+
+Hearst, William Randolph, used by Germans in their peace propaganda,
+ I 410, 411
+
+Hearst papers, antagonism of, I 149, 256, 264, 286
+
+_Hesperian_, submarined in violation of Bernstorff's pledges, II 30
+
+Hewlett, Maurice, his son among the missing, II 115
+
+Home Rule Bill, Carson threatens resistance to, I 137;
+ "division" in house of Lords, I 138
+
+Hookworm eradication, efforts in, I 98
+
+Hoover, Charles L., war relief work while American Consul at Carlsbad,
+ I 334
+
+Hoover, Herbert C., relief work at beginning of war, I 333;
+ selected by Page for Belgian Relief post, II 310
+
+House, Colonel Edward M., wires Page to come North, expecting to offer
+ Secretaryship of Interior, I 118;
+ transmits offer of Ambassadorship, I 130;
+ on Cowdray and Carden, I 218, 220;
+ meets Sir Edward Grey to talk over Panama Tolls question, I 246;
+ mission to the Kaiser a disappointment, I 289;
+ no success in France, I 297;
+ fancied security in England, thinks his mission unnecessary, I 298;
+ telegrams, to and from Wilson on proffering good offices to avert
+ war, I 317, 318;
+ declares bill admitting foreign ships to American registry "full of
+ lurking dangers," I 392;
+ declares America will declare war on Germany after _Lusitania_
+ sinking, II 2;
+ sees "too proud to fight" poster in London, II 6;
+ recommends Page's appointment as Secretary of State, II 11;
+ fails to alter Wilson's opposition to Taft Committee visiting
+ England, I 348
+ _Letters from_: reporting progress in Panama Tolls matter, I 253;
+ plans to visit Kaiser and bring about naval holiday between nations,
+ I 277;
+ cites further plans for visiting Germany, I 281;
+ respecting proposed trip to Germany, I 285, 286,
+ en route, I 288;
+ note from Berlin, I 296;
+ from Paris, I 297;
+ on the outbreak of the war, I 299;
+ transmitting Wilson's warning to adhere more strictly to neutrality,
+ I 362;
+ explains the toning down of demands that Declaration of London be
+ adhered to, I 378;
+ on German peace proposals, and giving his ideas for a settlement,
+ I 413;
+ proposing that Wilson start peace parleys, I 416;
+ thinks Germany ready for peace proposals, I 424, 425;
+ decides to visit combatants in interests of peace, I 425, 429;
+ talks in Berlin with Zimmermann and others regarding peace parleys,
+ I 432, 433, 434;
+ on appointment of Lansing to succeed Bryan, II 11;
+ on Bryan's intentions of going to England and Germany to try peace
+ negotiations, II 12;
+ reporting success of Balfour Mission, II 263
+ _Letters to_: comparing the Civil War with the World War, I 5;
+ on the Mexican situation, I 189;
+ asked personally to deliver memorandum to President on intervention
+ in Mexico, I 194;
+ on visit of Sir William Tyrrell to the United States, I 201;
+ letters to Page on Mexican situation, I 205, 206;
+ on Mexican question, I 210, 211;
+ on Lord Cowdray and oil concessions in Mexico, etc., I 216;
+ protesting publication of secret information respecting Carden, I 223;
+ suggesting intervention in Mexico, I 230;
+ on serious disadvantage in not having suitable Embassy, I 233;
+ on rashness of Bryan's visit to Europe, I 235;
+ appeal for attention to cables and letters by State Department, I 239;
+ on necessity of repeal of Panama Tolls Bill, I 247;
+ on the prevention of wars, I 270;
+ asked to further plan to have Wilson visit England, as a
+ preventative of European war, I 275;
+ favouring alliance of English-speaking peoples, I 282;
+ on French protest against reduction of British naval programme, I 283;
+ transmitting pamphlets on "federation" and disarmament, I 284;
+ told he will have no effect on Kaiser, I 287;
+ reply to note as to prevention of the war, I 300;
+ describing conditions in second month of the war, I 327;
+ on the horrors of war, and the settlement, I 340;
+ on difficulties of Sir Edward Grey with Army and Navy officers in
+ releasing American cargoes, I 365;
+ on evil of insisting on Declaration of London adoption, I 380;
+ regarding the Straus peace proposal, I 410;
+ explaining there can be no premature peace, I 417;
+ on harmlessness of Bryan on proposed peace visit and cranks in
+ general, II 13;
+ commenting on slowness of Wilson in _Lusitania_ matter, II 26;
+ on sinking of _Arabic_, II 27;
+ not interested in "pleasing the Allies," II 28;
+ on Dumba's intrigues, and Wilson's "watchful waiting and nothing
+ doing," II 30, 31, 37, 38;
+ on the lawyer-like attitude of the State Department, II 54;
+ the best peace programme--the British and American fleets, II 69;
+ on uncourteous notes from State Department, II 72;
+ on British adherence to the blockade, and an English Christmas,
+ 1915, II 103;
+ on the conditions of peace and the German militarism, II 134, 157;
+ on prophecy as to ending the war by dismissal of Bernstorff, II 197;
+ on the beneficial visit of the Labour Group and others, II 387
+
+Houston, David F., suggested to Wilson for Secretary of Agriculture,
+ II 114; has proper perspective of European situation, II 176
+ _Letters to_: impressions of diplomatic life, II 151;
+ suggesting vigorous action of Administration in prosecuting the war,
+ II 226;
+ on American cranks being sent to England, others prevented, II 359
+
+Houston, Herbert S., letters to, giving impressions of England, I 139
+
+Huerta, General Victoriano, seizes presidency of Mexico, I 175;
+ attitude of Great Britain and the United States toward recognition,
+ I 180;
+ an epochal figure, I 183;
+ rejects proposals submitted by Lind, I 193;
+ proclaims himself dictator, I 197
+
+Huxley, Thomas H., delivers address at opening of Johns Hopkins
+ University, I 25
+
+
+International Health Commission, endowed by John D. Rockefeller, I 100;
+ cooeperation by British Government, I 101
+
+Irish Question, the, British difficulties with, I 159;
+ cause of feeling against British in the United States, II 251;
+ Wilson requests Great Britain to settle, II 255;
+ Lloyd George striving for solution, II 259
+
+
+James, Henry, frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+
+Jeanes Board, appointment to, I 89
+
+Jellicoe, Admiral Sir John, vigilance in war time, I 335;
+ after battle of Jutland, II 141;
+ reply to question how best America could help, II 219;
+ drafts dispatch explaining seriousness of submarine situation which
+ Balfour sends to President Wilson, II 285
+
+Johns Hopkins University, teaching on new lines, I 23
+
+Johnston, Miss Mary, noted serial of, in _Atlantic Monthly_, I 56, 61
+
+Judson, Harry Pratt, on proposed Committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Jusserand, opinion of the Straus peace proposal, I 407
+
+
+Keller, Helen, persuaded to write "Story of My Life," I 90
+
+Kent, Mr., forms American Citizens Relief Committee in London at
+ outbreak of war, I 304, 307
+
+Kerr, Philip, conversation with on future relations of the United
+ States and Great Britain, II 84
+
+Kipling, Rudyard, loses his son in the war, II 115
+
+Kitchener, Lord, speech in House of Lords a disappointment, II 96;
+ criticism of, II 120;
+ Memorandum after attending service in memory of, II 140
+
+Knapp, Dr. Seaman A., his "Demonstration Work" in Southern agriculture,
+ I 95;
+ his funeral, I 96
+
+Kropotkin, Prince Peter, writes Memoirs for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 61
+
+
+Lane, Secretary Franklin, comment on feeling against British for
+ conduct in Huerta affair, I 198
+
+Lansdowne, Marquis of, letter favouring premature peace severely
+ criticized, II 327, 353
+
+Lansing, Robert, regards Ambassador as un-neutral, I 362;
+ a lawyer, not a statesman, I 369;
+ insistence that Great Britain adopt Declaration of London, I 378 _et seq._;
+ attitude of lawyer, not statesman, II 53;
+ arguments against British blockade, II 62;
+ mind running on "cases", not diplomacy, II 176;
+ answers Page's letter of resignation, transmitting President Wilson's
+ request to reconsider and stay at his post, II 199
+
+Lassiter, General, encouraged on trip to the front, II 245
+
+Laughlin, Irwin, First Secretary of the Embassy, I 133;
+ requested to ascertain Great Britain's attitude toward recognition of
+ Huerta, I 180;
+ tells Colonel House he will have no success with Kaiser, I 285;
+ on Germany's intentions toward America, I 351 _note_;
+ as to depressing effect of the war on Page, I 357;
+ backs up Ambassador in neutrality letter to Wilson, I 373;
+ gives opinion that persistence is unwise in demanding acceptance of
+ Declaration of London, I 387;
+ Wilson's comment to, on Page's letters, II 22;
+ diplomatically presents to Sir Edward Grey the Senate Resolution
+ asking clemency' for Casement, II 167;
+ letters from, on occasion of Germany's 1916 peace movement, II 180;
+ commended to President Wilson in letter of resignation, II 394
+
+Law, Ponar, gives depressing news from the Balkans, II 104;
+ dinner with, II 119;
+ reply to question how best America could help, II 219;
+ conference with Balfour and, over financial help from America, II 261
+
+Lawrence, Bishop, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Leadership of the world, American, II 105, 110, 145, 254
+
+League to Enforce Peace, Page's opinion of, II 144;
+ Sir Edward Grey in sympathy with objects of, II 163;
+ Lord Bryce, remarks as to favourable time for setting up such a
+ league, II 165
+
+Leaks in diplomatic correspondence, gravity of,
+ I 147, 148, 151, 222, 223, 224, 235, II 7, 276
+
+Lichnowsky, German Ambassador at London, almost demented at breaking
+ out of the war, I 306, 309, 315;
+ places blame for war on Germany, I 322
+
+Lincoln, Abraham, monument to, erected at Westminster, I 274
+
+Lind, John, failure of mission to Mexico, I 193
+
+Literary style and good writing, advice on, II 341
+
+Lloyd George, his taxing of the aristocracy, I 137;
+ landowners fear of, I 158;
+ at state dinner to King Christian, I 167;
+ on the necessity of reducing navy programme, I 283;
+ holding up under strain of war, II 83;
+ aged by the war, II 141;
+ in House of Commons speech welcomes America as ally, II 230;
+ has the touch of genius in making things move, II 259;
+ working for solution of Irish question, II 259;
+ too optimistic regarding submarine situation, II 287;
+ his energy keeps him in power, II 354;
+ at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370;
+ congratulates Mr. and Mrs. Page on American success at Cantigny, II 375;
+ letter expressing sorrow at Mr. and Mrs. Page's departure and
+ reviewing their good work, II 398
+
+Loring, Charles G., marries Miss Katharine Page, II 87;
+ in service on western front, II 375
+
+Loring, Mrs. Charles G., letters to, on travelling-and staying at home,
+ II 88;
+ autumn, gardens, family, and war news, II 92;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 117;
+ from St. Ives, II 332, 339
+
+Lowell, James Russell, accused of Anglomania while Ambassador, I 257
+
+_Lusitania_, torpedoed, I 436;
+ bulletins of the tragedy received at the dinner given in honour of
+ Colonel and Mrs. House, II 1;
+ distress and disillusionment of the Wilson notes, II 6
+
+
+Madero, Francisco, overthrown as president of Mexico, and assassinated,
+ I 175
+
+_Mayflower_ Pilgrims, dedication of monument to, at Southampton, I 258
+
+Mayo, Admiral, sent to Europe to study naval situation, II 322
+
+McAdoo, Secretary, conference with Balfour Mission on financial
+ situation, II 267
+
+McClure, S.S., joins forces with F.N. Doubleday, I 64;
+ the Harper experiment, I 65;
+ anecdote of, II 303
+
+McCrary, Lieut.-Commander, on Committee for relief of stranded
+ Americans, 307
+
+McIver, Dr. Charles D., educational statesman, I 73, 74, 78;
+ as the character, Professor Billy Bain, in "The Southerner," I 93
+
+McKinley Administration endorsed on measures against Spain, by
+ _Atlantic Monthly_, I 63
+
+Mary, Queen, received by, I 136
+
+Mensdorf, Austrian Ambassador, marooned in London, at outbreak of war.
+ I 305, 309;
+ the war a tragedy to, I 321
+
+Mersey, Lord, comments on the tariff, I 150;
+ at dinner of Dilettanti Society, II 312
+
+Mexico, "policy and principle" in, I 175 _et seq._;
+ difficulties of self-government, II 177;
+ progress due to foreign enterprise, I 178;
+ the problem of oil concessions, I 179, 181;
+ intervention believed by Page the only solution,
+ I 188, 193, 194, 200, 230, 273
+
+Mims, Professor Edwin, letter to, on attacks of Southern theologians, I 80
+
+Monroe Doctrine, the Kaiser's proposal to smash it, II 192
+
+Moore, John Bassett, suggestion that he be put in charge of
+ American-British affairs, I 239
+
+Morley, John, at state dinner to King Christian, I 167;
+ resigns from British cabinet on declaration of war, I 316;
+ visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+
+Morley, Lord, on reforms, I 141
+
+Morgan, J.P., account of Allies with, greatly overdrawn at time of
+ America's entrance into war, II 272;
+ this paid by proceeds of Liberty Loans, II 273
+
+Morgan, J.P. & Co., in control of Harper & Brothers, I 64
+
+"Mummy" theme applied to the unawakened South, I 45, 75
+
+Munitions, American, importance of to the Allies, I 368
+
+Munsterberg, Prof. Hugo, pro-German activities of, I 335
+
+
+Navy Department, ignores urgent recommendations of Admiral Sims that
+ destroyers be sent, II 276, 284
+
+Negro, the, the invisible "freedom", I 12;
+ wrong leadership after the Civil War, I 14;
+ fails to take advantage of university education during
+ Reconstruction, I 18
+
+Negro education, and industrial training advocated, I 43
+
+Neutrality, strictly observed, I 358, 360;
+ the mask of, II 230
+
+New York _Evening Post_, connection with, I 48
+
+New York _World_, correspondent for, at Atlanta Exposition, I 34;
+ on editorial staff, I 35
+
+Northcliffe, Lord, illness from worry, II 66;
+ "saving the nation from its government", II 116;
+ attitude on Wilson's peace note, II 207
+
+Norway, shipping destroyed by submarines, II 281
+
+Nicolson, Harold, the silent toast with, II 301
+
+
+Ogden, Robert C., organizes Southern Educational Conference, I 83;
+ after twenty years of zealous service, I 126
+
+O'Gorman, Senator, active in Panama Tolls controversy, I 243, 283
+
+"O. Henry," on Page's "complimentary" rejection of manuscripts, II 303
+
+Osler, Sir William, Page's physician, insists on the return home, II 393
+
+
+Pacifism, work of the "peace spies," II 210
+
+Pact of London, binding the Allies not to make a separate peace, I 409 _note_
+
+Page, Allison Francis, a builder of the commonwealth, I 4;
+ attitude toward slavery and the Civil War, I 5;
+ ruined by the war, I 13
+
+Page, Allison M., falls at Belleau Wood, II 392, 406
+
+Page, Anderson, settles in Wake County, N.C., I 4
+
+Page, Arthur W., Delcasse in conversation with tells of Kaiser's
+ proposal to join in producing "complete isolation" of the United
+ States, II 192;
+ called to London in hopes of influencing his father to resign and
+ return home before too late, II 393
+ _Letters to_;
+ on the motor trip to Scotland, I 142;
+ on conditions in second month of the war, I 335;
+ a national depression and the horrors of war, I 344;
+ emotions after _Lusitania_ sinking, II 5;
+ on the tendency toward fads and coddling, II 10;
+ on the future relations of the United States and Great Britain, II 84;
+ on the vicissitudes of the "German Ambassador to Great Britain," 1190;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 121;
+ on the attitude in the United States toward Germany, II 129;
+ on the effect of the war on future of America, and the world, II 217;
+ never lost faith in American people, II 223;
+ on America's entrance into the war, II 238;
+ on grave conditions, submarine and financial, II 287;
+ on the occasion of the Plymouth speech, and the receptions, II 317;
+ on the Administration's lack of confidence in British Navy, Wilson's
+ reply to Pope, etc., II 322;
+ Christmas letter, 1917, depicting a war-weary world, II 328;
+ on pacifists-from the President down, II 337;
+ views on Palestine, II 350;
+ on personal diet, and the benefit of Secretary Baker's visit, II 369;
+ on the anti-English feeling at Washington, II 385;
+ while resting at Sandwich, II 388
+
+Page, Mrs. Catherine, mother and close companion, I 7;
+ Christmas letter to, I 8
+
+Page, Frank C. in London, I 134;
+ with his father in Rowsley when news of _Arabic_ sinking was
+ received, II 26;
+ in service with American troops, II 375;
+ realizes his father is failing fast and insists on his returning home,
+ II 393
+ _Letters to_: on building up the home farm, and the stress of war, I 353;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 121
+
+Page, Henry A., letters to, stating a government might be neutral, but
+ no _man_ could be, I 361;
+ on illusions as to neutrality and the peace proposals, II 152
+
+Page, Miss Katharine A., arrival in London, I 134;
+ married in the chapel Royal, II 87;
+ _see also_, Loring, Mrs. Charles G.
+
+Page, Lewis, leaves Virginia to settle in North Carolina, I 3
+
+Page, Logan Waller, has proper perspective of European situation, II 176
+
+Page, Mary E., letter to, II 376
+
+Page, Ralph W., letters to;
+ impressions of London life, I 161;
+ on wartime conditions, I 352;
+ Christmas letter, 1915, II 121;
+ on longings for fresh Southern vegetables and fruits and farm life,
+ II 335;
+ on style and good writing, II 340;
+ on the big battle, etc., II 371, 372;
+ in praise of book on American Diplomacy, II 381;
+ on success of our Army and Navy, II 390
+
+Page, Mrs. Ralph W., Christmas letter to, 163
+
+Page, Robert N., letters to, impressions of social London, I 153
+
+Page, Thomas Nelson, Colonel House confers with in regard to peace
+ parleys, I 434
+
+Page, Walter Hines, impressions of his early life, 1;
+ family an old one in Virginia and North Carolina, 3;
+ maternal ancestry, 6;
+ close sympathy between mother and son, 8, 11;
+ birthplace, and date of birth, 9;
+ recollections of the Civil War, 10;
+ finds a market for peaches among Northern soldiers, 14;
+ boyhood and early studies, 16;
+ intense ambition, 20;
+ Greek Fellowship at Johns Hopkins University, 24;
+ renewed for the next year, 27;
+ early prejudices against Yankees, 28;
+ travels in Germany, 1877, 30;
+ lectures on Shakespeare, 30;
+ teacher of English at Louisville, Ky., 32;
+ enters journalism, 32;
+ experience with Louisville _Age_, 32;
+ reporter on, then editor of, _Gazette_, at St. Joseph, Mo., 33;
+ a free lance, 34;
+ correspondent for N.Y. _World_ at Atlanta Exposition, 34;
+ on the staff of N.Y. _World_, 35;
+ married, 37;
+ first acquaintance with Woodrow Wilson, 37;
+ Americanism fully developed, 40;
+ regard for President Cleveland, 40;
+ founds _State Chronicle_ at Raleigh, 42;
+ a breaker of images--of the South, 44;
+ the "mummy letters," 45;
+ instrumental in establishment of State College, Raleigh, 47;
+ with N.Y. _Evening Post_, 48;
+ makes the _Forum_ of great influence and a business success, 49;
+ a new type of editor, 50;
+ editor of _Atlantic Monthly_, 53;
+ discovers unpublished letters of Thomas Carlyle, 60;
+ attitude toward Spanish American War, 62;
+ the Harper experiment, 65;
+ joins in founding Doubleday, Page & Co., 66;
+ his policy for the _World's Work_, 66;
+ public activities, 72;
+ in behalf of education, 72;
+ his address, "The Forgotten Man," 74;
+ his Creed of Democracy, 78;
+ work with General Education Board, 85;
+ independence as an editor, 87;
+ severely criticizes John D. Archbold for Foraker bribery, 88;
+ appointed by Roosevelt on Country Life Commission, 89;
+ other public services, 89;
+ author of "the Southerner" 90;
+ activities in behalf of Southern agriculture and Hookworm
+ eradication, 94;
+ his interest in Wilson's candidacy and election, 102, _et seq._;
+ discourages efforts to have him named for Cabinet position, 113;
+ why he was not named, 118;
+ protests against appointment of Daniels, 119;
+ love for farming, 127, 128;
+ offered Ambassadorship, 130;
+ impressions of London and the Embassy, 132, 144;
+ impressions of Scotland, 142;
+ handling of the Mexican situation, 183;
+ belief in intervention in Mexico, 193, 194;
+ complimented by President Wilson, Bryan, and Sir William Tyrrell, 208;
+ his part in the removal of Sir Lionel Carden from Mexican post, 215;
+ commended by Wilson, 219, 221;
+ suggested for Secretary of Agriculture, 232, 286;
+ why he wished to remain in London, 240;
+ work in behalf of Panama Tolls Bill repeal, 244;
+ assailed for certain speeches, 258, 259;
+ opposed to including Germany in international alliance, favouring
+ understanding between English-speaking peoples, 282;
+ difficulties at outbreak of the war, 301 _et seq._;
+ asked to take over Austrian Embassy, 305, German Embassy, 306;
+ varied duties of war time, 337;
+ difficulties in charge of German and Austrian and Turkish embassies, 345;
+ relief work in starving Belgium, 346;
+ ageing under the strain and the depressing environment, 357;
+ difficulties of maintaining neutrality, 358;
+ warned from Washington, 362;
+ tactful handling of the demands that Declaration of London be
+ adopted, 370, 373;
+ writes Colonel House that he will resign if demands are insisted on, 383;
+ memorandum of the affair, 385;
+ his solution of the _Dacia_ puzzle, 394;
+ attitude toward a premature peace, 417;
+ learns through General French of the undiplomatic methods of State
+ Department in peace proposals, 425, 427
+
+ VOL. II
+
+ Humiliations from Washington's failure to meet the situation, 5;
+ remarks on Bryan's resignation, 10;
+ considered for appointment as Secretary of State, 11;
+ his feeling toward policies of Wilson, 18;
+ boldness of his criticism, 21;
+ Wilson and Lansing express anxiety that he may resign, 24;
+ describes Zeppelin attack on London, 34, 38;
+ Christmas in England, 1915, 103;
+ perplexed at attitude of the United States, 128;
+ his impressions of Europeans, 132;
+ summoned to Washington, 148;
+ memorandum of his visit to Washington, 171;
+ Impressions of President Wilson, 172;
+ waits five weeks before obtaining interview, 183;
+ disappointing interview at Shadow Lawn, 184;
+ letter of resignation seat to Wilson, 189;
+ and the reply, 199;
+ delivers Germany's peace proposal to Lord Robert Cecil, 201;
+ comments to Secretary of State on "insulting words" of President
+ Wilson's peace proposal, 207;
+ implores Wilson to leave out the "peace without victory" phrase
+ from his speech, 213;
+ learns of Bernstorff's dismissal, 215;
+ memorandum of his final judgment of Wilson's foreign policy to
+ April 1, 1917, 222;
+ memorandum written on April 3, the day after Wilson advised Congress
+ to declare war, 228;
+ on friendly footing with King George, 234;
+ joins with Admiral Sims in trying to waken the Navy Department to
+ seriousness of the submarine situation, 278;
+ Page--the man, 295-320;
+ moves for relief of Belgium, 310,
+ and delegates Hoover, 311;
+ Speech at Plymouth, 316;
+ goes to St. Ives for brief rest, 332;
+ heatedly referred to as "really an Englishman" by President Wilson, 348;
+ memorandum on Secretary Baker's visit, 366;
+ failing health, 374;
+ resignation in obedience to physicians orders, 393;
+ representatives from King, and Cabinet at train to bid good-bye, 402;
+ rallies somewhat on arrival in America, 405;
+ the end--at home, 406
+
+Page, Walter H. Jr., Christmas letter from his "granddaddy," II 124
+
+Page, Mrs. Walter H., arrival in London, I 134;
+ plays part in diplomacy, I 215, 224, 226;
+ her great help to the Ambassador, II 315;
+ the last letter, II 395
+
+Palestine and Zionism, views on, II 351
+
+Panama Tolls, a wrong policy, I 190;
+ Sir William Tyrrell's talk with President Wilson, I 207, 209
+
+Panama Tolls Bill, Wilson writes of hopes for repeal, I 222;
+ repeal of, I 232 _et seq._, the bill a violation of solemn treaties, I 242;
+ the contest before Congress, I 255
+
+Paris, capture of city thought inevitable, I 401
+
+Parliament, holds commemorative sessions in honour of America's
+ participation in the war, II 230
+
+Pasha, Tewfik, leaves Turkish Embassy in charge of American
+ Ambassador, I 345
+
+Peace, Germany's overtures, I 389;
+ her first peace drives, I 398;
+ Wilson's note to warring powers, received with surprise and
+ irritation, II 205
+
+"Peace without Victory" speech, of President Wilson, and its
+ reception in Great Britain, II 212
+
+Peace Centennial, plans being formed for, I 236, 274
+
+Pershing, General, at luncheon with King George, II 237;
+ his presence of moral benefit to French Army, II 290
+
+Philippines, a problem, I 176
+
+Pinero, Sir Arthur, reminiscences of Page at Dilettante gatherings, II 313
+
+Plymouth, Mayor and Council, present the freedom of the city, II 402
+
+Plymouth Speech, inspires confidence in American cooeperation, II 316
+
+Polk, Frank L., invited by British Foreign Office to consultation in
+ England, II 248;
+ "could not be spared from his desk," II 256
+ _Letter from_: on wonderful success of Balfour Mission, II 263
+ _Letters to_: on Balfour and his Mission to the United States, II 252;
+ on Secretary Baker's visit, II 361
+
+Price, Thomas R., noted professor at Randolph-Macon, I 22
+
+Probyn, Sir Dighton, calls at Embassy, I 339
+
+
+Raboteau, John Samuel, Mr. Page's maternal grandfather, I 6
+
+Randolph-Macon College, studies at, I 20
+
+Rawnsley, Rev. Hardwicke Drummond, a subject of conversation, I 149
+
+Rayleigh, Lady, political ability, II 257, 258
+
+Rayleigh, Lord Chancellor of Cambridge University, II 145
+
+Reconstruction, more agonizing than war, I 14;
+ effects of, upon State University, I 18
+
+Reed, John, account of Mexican conditions influences Wilson's policy, I 228
+
+Religion, deepest reverence for, I 80
+
+Rues, Jacob, writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60
+
+Rockefeller, John D., organizes General Education Board, I 84;
+ publication of Reminiscences, I 88;
+ founds Hookworm Commission and International Health Commission, I 100
+
+Roosevelt, Theodore, writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60;
+ appoints Country Life Commission, I 89
+ _Letter to_: introducing the Archbishop of York, II 307
+ _Letter from_: praising the Ambassador's services, II 401
+
+Root, Elihu, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242
+
+Rose, Dr. Wickliffe, dinner to, in London, as head of International
+ Health Board, I 101;
+ hookworm work, I 127
+
+Round Table, The, organization for study of political subjects, II 84;
+ _Round Table, The_, organ of above, a quarterly publication, II 84, 105
+
+Royal Institution of Great Britain, address before, I 191
+
+Royce, Josiah, associate at Johns Hopkins, I 25
+
+Russian Collapse, effect on the Allies, II 353
+
+Rustem Bey, Turkish Ambassador, given passports, II 49 _note_
+
+
+St. Ives, Cornwall, seeking rest at, II 332
+
+St. Joseph _Gazelle_, connection with, I 33, 37,
+ succeeds to Eugene Field's desk, on I 36
+
+Sackville-West, Sir Lionel, handed his passports by Cleveland, II 33 _note_
+
+Sargent, John, frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+
+Saw-mill units, favourable reception of, II 291
+
+Sayre, Mr. and Mrs., hearty reception in London, I 213, 222, 275
+
+Schrippenfest, celebration of, in Berlin, I 291
+
+Schwab, Charles M., supplying war material to Allies, I 341
+
+Scotland, impressions of, I 142
+
+Scudder, Horace E., succeeded as editor of _Atlantic Monthly_, I 53
+
+Secret treaties, explained to President Wilson by Mr. Balfour, II 267
+
+Sedgwick, Ellery, recollections of Mr. Page, as editor of _Atlantic
+ Monthly_, I 55;
+ on the high regard in which Page was held, II 298
+
+Shakespeare, lectures on, I 30
+
+Sharp, Ambassador, his mention of peace resented by the French, I 389;
+ at President Wilson's luncheon, II 171
+
+Sherman's army, cavalry troop camp at Page home, ransack, and destroy
+ contents, I 10
+
+Shoecraft, Mr., receives news of Bernstorff's dismissal, II 215
+
+Sihler, Prof. E.G., reminiscences of Page at Johns Hopkins, I 27
+
+Simon, Sir John, frequent visitor at the Embassy, II 315
+
+Sims, Admiral, with Ambassador Page, dines with Lord Beresford, II 254;
+ advised of terrible submarine situation, II 273, 275;
+ arrival and welcome in England, II 274;
+ recommendations ignored by Washington, II 276;
+ backed up by Page in strong dispatch, II 278;
+ praised in letter to Wilson, II 281;
+ in command of both English and American naval forces at Queenstown,
+ II 282;
+ letters from, on submarine situation, II 282;
+ in high regard with British Admiralty, II 290;
+ at the Embassy dinner to Secretary Baker, II 365, 370
+
+Shaler, Millard, reports on destitution in Belgium, II 310
+
+Skinner, Consul-General, on Committee for relief of stranded
+ Americans, I 307
+
+Slocum, Colonel, urged to hasten arrival of American troops, II 363
+
+Smith, C. Alphonso, an exchange professor to Germany, II 145
+
+Smith, Senator Hoke, "friendly deportation" of, suggested, II 17;
+ campaign against British Blockade, II 56, 61, 63;
+ urging embargo on shipments to Allies, II 211
+
+South, the, efforts in behalf of, I 38, 43, 74;
+ three "ghosts" which prevent progress, I 91
+
+Southampton speech, press comments on, I 41
+
+Southern Education Board, active work with, I 84
+
+Southern Educational Conference, organization of, I 83
+
+"Southerner, The," only effort at novel writing, I 90
+
+Spanish-American War, attitude toward, I 62
+
+Speyer, James, connected with German peace move, I 403
+
+Spring Rice, Sir Cecil, notifies Washington of British change of
+ attitude toward recognition of Huerta, I 181;
+ confidentially consulted by Cot. House regarding demands that
+ Declaration of London be adopted, I 379;
+ notifies Washington that _Dacia_ would be seized, I 393;
+ opinion of Straus peace proposal, I 407;
+ letters from Lord Robert Cecil on Germany's peace proposal, II 201, 202
+
+Squier, Colonel, American military attache in London at outbreak of the
+ war, I 301
+
+Standard Oil Co., editorial against, in Archbold-Foraker scandal,
+ I 88
+
+_State Chronicle_, connection with, I 42;
+ editorially a success, I 48
+
+State College, Raleigh, N.C., instrumental in establishment of,
+ I 47, 48
+
+State Department, leaks of diplomatic correspondence through,
+ I 147, 148, 151, 223, 224
+
+State Dept., ignores official correspondence,
+ I 94, 213, 219, 224, 225, 232, 238, 239, II 7, 55, 217, 253;
+ not properly organized and conducted, II 8;
+ trivial demands and protests, II 54, 68;
+ uncourteous form of Notes, I 72
+
+Stiles, Dr. Charles W., discovers hookworm, I 98;
+ work in combatting, I 127
+
+Stone, Senator William J., spokesman of pro-German cause, I 380
+
+Stovall, Pleasant A., Colonel House confers with, regarding peace
+ parleys, I 434
+
+Straus, Oscar S., used as a tool in German peace propaganda,
+ I 389, 403 _et seq._
+
+Submarine sinkings, Germany threatens to resume, unless Wilson moves
+ for peace, II 200;
+ German military chieftains at Pless conference decide to resume
+ unrestricted warfare, II 212;
+ the most serious problem at time of American entry into war,
+ II 273, 275, _et seq._
+
+Sulgrave Manor, ancestral home of the Washingtons, restoration and
+ preservation, I 274;
+ plan to have President Wilson at dedication of, I 274, 275, II 248
+
+_Sussex_ "pledge", a peace move of Germany, II 150
+
+
+Taft, William H., fails in having Carden removed from Cuba,
+ I 196, 215, 219;
+ accepts British invitation to head delegation explaining America's
+ purposes in the war, II 346;
+ Wilson's strong disapproval interferes with the project, II 347
+
+Tariff Commission, travelling with, for N.Y. _World_, I 35
+
+Teaching democracy to the British Government, I 187, 211
+
+_Tennessee_, sent to England on outbreak of war with gold for
+ relief of stranded Americans, I 307
+
+Thayer, William Roscoe, disappointed in policy of the _World's Work_, I 66;
+ letter to, in explanation, I 67
+
+Tillett, Wilbur Fisk, friend at Randolph-Macon College, I 20
+
+Towers, Lieutenant, shown remnant of torpedo from _Hesperian_, II 40
+
+Trinity College, studies at, I 19
+
+Turkish Embassy left in charge of American Ambassador, I 346
+
+Tyrrell, Sir William, significance of his visit to the United States,
+ I 201;
+ unsatisfactory consultation with Bryan, I 202;
+ explains to President Wilson the British policy toward Mexico,
+ I 204, 207;
+ conversation with Colonel House, I 206;
+ Colonel House informs him of plan to visit Kaiser in behalf of
+ naval holiday plan, I 277;
+ advises House not to stop in England on way to Germany, I 289;
+ expresses relief on withdrawal of demands that Declaration of
+ London be adopted, I 387;
+ comment on Dumba's dismissal, and Bernstorff, II 101
+
+
+Underwood Tariff Bill, impressions of in Great Britain, 150, 172
+
+
+Van Hise, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Vanderlip, Frank A., at the Speyer "peace dinner", I 404
+
+Villa, Pancho, thought by Wilson to be a patriot, I 227, 228
+
+Vincent, George, on proposed committee to lecture in England, II 346
+
+Von Jagow, offers no encouragement to Colonel House's proposals, I 289
+
+Von Papen, dismissal of, II 108
+
+Von Tirpitz, discussion with Viscount Haldane as to relative sizes of
+ navies, I 278;
+ hostile to Colonel House's proposals, I 289
+
+
+Waechter, Sir Max, efforts for "federation" and disarmament, I 284
+
+"Waging neutrality", policy of, I 362
+
+Wallace, Henry, letters to:
+ on Wilson's candidacy, I 105;
+ on backing up new Secretary of Agriculture, etc., I 115
+
+Wallace, Hugh C., accompanies Colonel House to Europe, I 288;
+ joins "assemblage of immortals" at Embassy, II 315
+
+Walsh, Sir Arthur, Master of the Ceremonies, I 135;
+ at train to bid good-bye, II 402
+
+Walsh, Senator Thomas, anti-English attitude, II 61
+
+War, American efforts to prevent the, I 270 _et seq._
+
+War, memorandum at outbreak of the, I 301
+
+Washington, Booker T., writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60;
+ induced to write "Up From Slavery", I 90
+
+Wantauga Club, activities of the, I 47;
+ crusade for education of Southern child, 73
+
+Wheeler, Benjamin Ide, gives Colonel House information of conditions
+ in Germany, I 281
+
+White, Henry, understanding of Hay-Pauncefote Treaty, I 242
+
+White, William Allen, writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60
+
+Whitlock, Brand, eulogized, I 334
+
+Willard, Joseph E., Colonel House confers with, in regard to peace
+ parleys, I 434
+
+Williams, Senator John Sharp, demonstrates blockade against Germany
+ not an injury to cotton-producing states, II 63
+
+Wilhelm II, nullifies Hague Conferences, I 280;
+ Colonel House disappointed in mission to, I 289;
+ derides American arbitration treaty, I 294;
+ Colonel House's impressions of, I 295;
+ asks President Wilson to transmit peace offer to Great Britain, I 426;
+ makes proposal to Delcasse to join in producing "complete isolation"
+ of the United States, II 192
+
+Wilson, Miss Willia Alice, married to Page, I 37
+
+Wilson, Dr. William, father of Mrs. Page, I 37
+
+Wilson, Sir Henry, succeeds Sir William Robertson as Chief of Imperial
+ General Staff, II 354 _note_
+
+Wilson, Woodrow, first acquaintance with, I 37;
+ writes for _Atlantic Monthly_, I 60;
+ Page greatly interested in his candidacy and election, I 102, _et seq._;
+ Colonel House introduced to, I 107;
+ memorandum of interview with, soon after election, I 110;
+ offers Ambassadorship, I 130;
+ attitude toward recognition of Huerta, I 180;
+ formulates new principle for dealing with Latin American republics,
+ I 182;
+ refuses to consider intervention in Mexico, I 193;
+ suggestion that he officially visit Sulgrave Manor, the ancestral
+ home of the Washingtons, I 195;
+ explains attitude on Panama Toll question to Sir William Tyrrell, I 207;
+ expresses gratification in way Page has handled Mexican situation, I 208;
+ letter giving credit for Carden's recall from Mexico, and for
+ constructive work, I 221;
+ addresses Congress asking repeal of Panama Tolls Bill, I 253;
+ plan to visit England on occasion of restoration of Sulgrave Manor,
+ 1274, 275, II 248;
+ requested by resolution of the Senate to proffer his good offices
+ for mediation between Austria and Serbia, I 317;
+ telegrams to and from Colonel House on proffering good offices to
+ avert war, I 317, 318;
+ message to King George proffering good offices to avert war, I 320;
+ neutrality letter to the Senate, I 360;
+ desires to start peace parleys, I 416;
+ insists on pressing the issue, I 423;
+ the "Too proud to fight" speech derided and denounced in England, II 6;
+ the _Lusitania_ notes, II 6;
+ Page's feeling toward policies of, II 8;
+ appreciation of Page letters, II 22;
+ peace activities after Sussex "pledge", II 148;
+ his reply to the German note concerning the submarine cessation,
+ II 150, 156;
+ reluctant to speak on foreign matters with his ambassadors, II 171, 172;
+ lived too much alone, no social touch, II 173;
+ addresses Congress on threatened railroad strike, II 172;
+ refuses to send high ranking officers as military attaches, II 177;
+ interview with Ambassador Page at Shadow Lawn, II 185;
+ sends peace communication to all the warring Powers, II 204;
+ reception in Great Britain of the "Peace without Victory" speech, II 212;
+ answer to the Pope's peace proposal, II 321, 323;
+ coldness toward the Allies, II 345;
+ his strong disapproval of closer relations with Great Britain,
+ prevents visit of Taft and noted committee, II 346
+ _Letters from_:
+ on "mistaken" opinion of British critics of Carranza and Villa,
+ I 227, 228;
+ expressing gratitude and regard of and hopes for repeal of Toll
+ Bill, I 254;
+ regarding the criticized speeches, I 262, 265;
+ reply to proposal to visit England, I 276;
+ acceptance of Page's resignation, II 396
+ _Letters to_:
+ congratulations and suggestions on Election Day, I 108;
+ as to best man for Secretary of Agriculture, I 114;
+ impressions of the British people, I 144;
+ on royal reception to King Christian of Denmark, I 167;
+ on the Mexican situation, I 184, 185, 188;
+ memorandum sent through Colonel House on intervention in Mexico, I 194;
+ on feeling in England toward Panama Tolls question, I 248;
+ recapitulating events bringing the two countries more in unity, I 251;
+ explanation of speech before Associated Chambers of Commerce, I 260, 263;
+ suggests speech attacking Anglophobia, I 264;
+ on the outbreak of war, I 303;
+ on German atrocities, I 325;
+ on agreement of nations not to make peace separately, etc., I 338;
+ attempts to enlighten on the real nature of the war, I 370;
+ "Rough notes toward an explanation of the British feeling toward the
+ United States," I 373;
+ on liability of Paris being captured and German peace drive being
+ launched, I 401;
+ on feeling of English toward American inaction after _Lusitania_
+ notes, II 40, 41, 43, 44, 45;
+ told that if he broke diplomatic relations with Germany he would end
+ the war, II 51;
+ on the military situation, fall of 1915, and the loss of American
+ prestige, II 94;
+ while waiting for interview sends notes of conversations with Lord
+ Grey and Lord Bryce, II 183;
+ letter of resignation--with some great truths, II 190;
+ regarding success of Balfour Mission, etc., II 256;
+ on financial situation among the Allies and the necessity of
+ American assistance, II 269;
+ on seriousness of submarine situation, II 280, 283, 286;
+ on slow progress of war and comments on Lord Lansdowne's peace
+ letter, II 327;
+ on British opinion on subject of League of Nations, II 355;
+ on the cheering effect of his war speeches and letters, II 385;
+ the resignation in obedience to physician's orders, II 393
+
+Wilson Doctrine, the, I 217
+
+Wood, Gen. Leonard, methods in Cuba an object lesson, I 177
+
+_World's Work_, founding of, I 66
+
+Worth, Nicholas, nom de plume in writing "The Southerner", I 90
+
+
+York, Archbishop of, letter commending him to Roosevelt, II 401
+
+
+Zeppelin attack on London, II 34, 38
+
+Zionism, view of, II 350
+
+Zimmermann, German under Foreign Secretary in communication with
+ Colonel House regarding peace proposals to Great Britain, I 426;
+ talk with House on peace terms, I 432
+
+Zimmermann, says Germany must apply for armistice, II 182
+
+Zimmermann-Mexico telegram influence on the United States declaration
+ of war, II 214.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Letters of Walter H.
+Page, Volume II, by Burton J. Hendrick
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF ***
+
+***** This file should be named 17018.txt or 17018.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/7/0/1/17018/
+
+Produced by Rick Niles, Charlie Kirschner and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+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
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+*** END: FULL LICENSE ***
+
diff --git a/17018.zip b/17018.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..12ce66e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/17018.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2f1dd52
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #17018 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/17018)