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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Clemenceau, by H. M. Hyndman
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Clemenceau
- The Man and His Time
-
-Author: H. M. Hyndman
-
-Release Date: August 1, 2019 [EBook #60036]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CLEMENCEAU ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David T. Jones, Al Haines, Ron Tolkien & the
-online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at
-http://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CLEMENCEAU
-
-
-
-
- _ By the same Author_:--
- England for All
- The Historical Basis of Socialism
- Commercial Crises of the Nineteenth Century
- The Bankruptcy of India
- The Record of an Adventurous Life
- Further Reminiscences
- The Future of Democracy
- Etc.
-
-[Illustration: GEORGES CLEMENCEAU
-
-1918]
-
-
-
-
- CLEMENCEAU
- THE MAN AND HIS TIME
-
- BY H · M · HYNDMAN
-
- GRANT RICHARDS, LTD.
- ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON, W.C.2
-
-
-
-
- _First Printed_ 1919
-
- Printed in Great Britain by W. H. Smith & Son.
- The Arden Press, Stamford Street, London.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
- INTRODUCTION 7
-
- I. EARLY LIFE 13
-
- II. PARIS UNDER THE EMPIRE 22
-
- III. DOWNFALL AND RECONSTRUCTION 29
-
- IV. THE COMMUNE 41
-
- V. CLEMENCEAU THE RADICAL 53
-
- VI. FROM GAMBETTA TO CLEMENCEAU 64
-
- VII. THE TIGER 80
-
- VIII. THE RISE AND FALL OF BOULANGER 95
-
- IX. PANAMA AND DRAGUIGNAN 106
-
- X. PHILOSOPHER AND JOURNALIST 127
-
- XI. CLEMENCEAU AS A WRITER 141
-
- XII. CLEMENCEAU AND THE DREYFUS AFFAIR 151
-
- XIII. THE DREYFUS AFFAIR (II) 162
-
- XIV. AS ADMINISTRATOR 171
-
- XV. STRENGTH AND WEAKNESS OF CLEMENCEAU 202
-
- XVI. END OF CLEMENCEAU'S MINISTRY 220
-
- XVII. CLEMENCEAU AND GERMANY 233
-
- XVIII. THE GREAT WAR 247
-
- XIX. THE ENEMY WITHIN 257
-
- XX. "LA VICTOIRE INTÉGRALE" 281
-
- XXI. CONCLUSION 295
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
-I began to write this book in June. We were then holding our breath as
-we looked on, after the disasters of Cambrai and St. Quentin, upon the
-British troops still fighting desperately against superior numbers and
-defending the Channel Ports "with their backs to the wall" and barely
-left with room to manœuvre. The enemy was at the same time seriously
-threatening Amiens and Epernay, and the possible withdrawal of the
-French Government from Paris was being again discussed. It was a trying
-four months on both sides of the Channel. But England and France never
-despaired of the future. Both nations were determined to fight on to
-the last.
-
-In July came the second great victory of the Marne, followed by the
-wonderful triumphant advance of the Allied Armies all along the line,
-side by side with our brethren of the United States, who were pouring
-into France at the rate of 300,000 men a month. And now I finish when
-the all-important matter of discussion is what shall be the terms of
-permanent peace imposed upon Germany, what shall be the punishment
-inflicted upon her and, so far as is possible, the compensation exacted
-from her for her unforgivable crimes against our common humanity. The
-transformation scene of the huge world war within four months has been
-one of the most astounding episodes in the history of mankind, and the
-tremendous struggle on the West Front has proved, as it was bound to
-prove from the first, the crisis of the whole conflict.
-
-Throughout the terrible period from November, 1917, when for the
-second time in his long political career he took office as Premier
-of the French Republic, Georges Clemenceau has borne the full burden
-of political responsibility in his war-worn and devastated country.
-It has been no light task for any man, especially for one within
-easy hail of eighty years of age. When he became President of Council
-and Minister of War the prospect of anything approaching to complete
-success seemed remote indeed. It was a thankless post he assumed, and
-neither friends nor enemies believed at first that physically, mentally
-or politically could he bear the strain and overcome the intrigues
-which were at once set on foot against him. But those who had the
-advantage of knowing Clemenceau well took a much more hopeful view of
-his chances of remaining Prime Minister until the close of the war.
-His mind as well as his body has been in strict training all his life.
-The one is as alert and as vigorous as the other. In the course of his
-stirring career his lightness of heart and gaiety of spirit, his power
-of taking the most discouraging events as part of the day's work, have
-carried him triumphantly through many a difficulty. Personally, I felt
-confident that nothing short of unforeseen disease, or a bomb from the
-foreign or domestic enemy, would bring him down before he had done his
-work. For below his exterior vigour and his brilliancy of conversation
-he possesses the most relentless determination that ever inspired a
-human being. Moreover, a Frenchman may be witty and light-hearted and
-very wise at the same time. The world of the Middle Ages found that out.
-
-I read, therefore, with some amusement in Mrs. Humphry Ward's recent
-book of Victorian Recollections that, having met Clemenceau at dinner,
-in the 'eighties, she came to the conclusion that he was "too light a
-weight to ride such a horse as the French democracy." A very natural
-mistake, no doubt, for one of us staid and solemn Victorians to make,
-according to the young cynics and jesters of to-day who gird at us!
-It is precisely this inexhaustible fund of animal spirits and his
-never-failing cheerfulness and brilliancy which have given Clemenceau
-the power over France which he possesses to-day. Frenchmen have felt
-the more assured confidence in themselves and their future when they
-saw, day after day, their own representative and ruler full of go and
-of belief in himself at the time when the issue for them all was
-hanging in the balance. No real leader of men can ever afford to be a
-pessimist. He must assume a certitude if he have it not. There was no
-need for Clemenceau to assume anything. It was all there.
-
-I have known this great Frenchman at many critical stages in his
-exciting life. What I most admire about him, is that he is always the
-same man, no matter what his personal position at the moment may be.
-Never excessively elated: never by any chance cast down. Good or bad
-fortune, success or failure, made no difference to him. The motto of
-the Tenth Legion might well be taken as his own. "_Utrinque paratus_"
-has been the watchword of this indefatigable and undaunted political
-warrior throughout. It is well to recall, also, that he has invariably
-told his country the full truth about the situation as it appeared
-to him at the time, alike in opposition and in office, as deputy, as
-senator, and as journalist at large.
-
-Beginning his political career as the intimate friend and almost pupil
-of the out-and-out Radical Republican, Etienne Arago, a sympathiser
-with the nobler men of the Commune, whom he endeavoured to save from
-the ruthless vengeance of the reactionaries headed by Thiers, he had
-previously voted at Bordeaux in the minority of genuine Republicans
-who were in favour of continuing the war against Germany when all but
-enthusiastic patriots held that further resistance was hopeless. Many a
-time of late those events of _l'Année Terrible_ must have come back to
-his mind during these still more terrible four years. His attitude now
-is but the continuation and fulfilment of the policy he advocated then.
-Thereupon, five years devoted to service on the Municipal Council of
-Paris and to gratuitous ministrations as a doctor to the poor of one of
-the poorest districts of the French metropolis: a continuous endeavour
-to realise, in some degree, by political action, the practical ends
-for which the Communards had so unfortunately and injudiciously
-striven. Then political work again on the floor of the Assembly at one
-of the most stirring periods of French history: supporting Gambetta
-vigorously in his fight as the head of the Republican Party against
-the dangerous reactionism of the Duc de Broglie and Marshal MacMahon,
-and opposing and denouncing the fiery orator whom he succeeded as
-the leader of the Left, when that statesman adopted trimming and
-opportunism as his political creed.
-
-The long fight against colonisation by conquest, the exposure of
-shameless traffic in decorations, the support and overthrow of
-Boulanger, the Panama scandal, the denunciation of the alliance with
-despotic Russia, the advocacy of a close understanding with England.
-In each and all of these matters Clemenceau was well to the front.
-Then came the crash of exclusion from political life, due to the many
-enemies he had made by his inconvenient honesty and bitter tongue
-and pen. Once more, after the display of almost unequalled skill and
-courage as a journalist, exceptionally manifested in the championship
-of Dreyfus, a return to political life and unexpected acceptance of
-office.
-
-From first to last Clemenceau has been a stalwart Republican and a
-thoroughgoing democratic politician of the advanced Left, with strong
-tendencies to Socialism. These tendencies I begged him more than once
-to turn into actual realities and to join, or at least to act in
-complete harmony with, the Socialists. This seemed possible towards
-the close of the Dreyfus affair. But I must admit here that, much as
-I regret that Socialism has never enjoyed the full advantage of his
-services, Clemenceau, as an avowed member of the Socialist Party, could
-not have played the glorious part for France as a whole which he has
-played since the beginning of the war. It was far more important, at
-such a desperate crisis, to carry with him the overwhelming majority of
-his countrymen, including even the reactionaries, than to act with a
-minority that has shown itself at variance with the real sentiments of
-the Republic, when France was fighting for her existence.
-
-That Clemenceau has, at one time or another, made great mistakes is
-beyond dispute. It could not be otherwise with a man of his character
-and temperament. But this, as he himself truly writes me, is "all of
-the past." At no moment, in any case, has he ever failed to do his best
-for the greatness, the glory, the dignity of France as they presented
-themselves to his mind. This is incontestable. In the following pages
-I have endeavoured not to write a biography of the statesman who has
-been constantly in public life for more than fifty years, but to give
-a study of the growth of a commanding personality, who is an honour to
-his country, and of the surroundings in which his great faculties were
-developed.
-
-[Illustration: page of letter]
-
-[Illustration: page of letter]
-
-[Illustration: page of letter]
-
-
-
-
- [Translation]
-
-
- Le Président du Conseil, Ministere de la Guerre. Paris, July 1st, 1918.
-
- Dear Mr. Hyndman,
-
- I can really only thank you for your too flattering letter, inspired
- by our old friendship. I have nothing to say about myself, except
- that I am doing my best, with the feeling that it will never be
- enough. France is making incredible sacrifices every day. No effort
- will be considered too high a price to ensure the triumph of a nobler
- humanity. Success is certain when all free peoples are in array
- against the last convulsions of savagery.
-
- In so vast a drama, my dear friend, my personality does not count.
- Whether I was right or wrong at this time or that interests me no
- longer, since it all belongs to the past. I have kept nothing of what
- I have said or written. It is impossible for me to furnish you with
- details or to mention anyone who would be able to do so. I can but
- express to you my gratitude for your friendly intention. I desire only
- to witness the day of the great victory, then I shall be rewarded far
- beyond my merits, especially if you add thereto the continuance of
- your fraternal feelings towards myself.
-
- Very affectionately yours,
-
- G. CLEMENCEAU.
-
-
- [_This letter was written seventeen days before the commencement of
- the great Franco-British offensive._]
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- EARLY LIFE
-
-
-We are all accustomed to think of La Vendée as that Province of France
-which is most deeply imbued with tradition, legend and religion. Even
-in this period of almost universal scepticism and free thought, the
-peasants of La Vendée keep tight hold of their ancient ideas, in which
-the pagan superstitions of long ago are curiously interwoven with the
-fading Catholicism of to-day. Nowhere in France are the ceremonies of
-the Church more devoutly observed; nowhere, in spite of the spread
-of modern education, are the people as a whole more attached to the
-creed of their forefathers. Here whole crowds of genuine believers can
-still display that fervour of religious enthusiasm which moved masses
-of their countrymen to such heroic self-sacrifice for a losing and
-hopeless cause more than four generations since. Even men who have
-little sympathy with either theological or social conventions of the
-past are stirred by the simple piety of these people, uplifted for the
-moment out of the sordid and monotonous surroundings of their daily
-toil by the collective inspiration of a common faith.
-
-Here, too, in the Bocage of La Vendée amid the heather and the forest,
-interspersed with acres of carefully tilled soil, the fays and
-talismans and spirits of days gone by delightedly do dwell. But below
-all this vesture of fancy and fable we find the least pleasing features
-of the life of the small proprietors and labourers on the land and
-fishermen by the sea. Their feelings of human sympathy are stunted, and
-even their family relations are, in too many instances, rendered brutal
-by their ever-present greed for gain. The land is a harsh taskmaster,
-when its cultivation is carried on under such conditions as prevail in
-that portion of France which abuts on the Bay of Biscay. The result is
-a harsh people, whose narrow individualism and whole-hearted worship
-of property in its least attractive guise seem quite at variance with
-any form of sentiment, and still more remote from the ideals of poesy
-or the dreams of supernatural agencies which affect the imagination.
-But there is the contrast and such are the people of the Bocage of La
-Vendée.
-
-Here, on September 28th, 1841, at the village of Mouilleron-en-Pareds,
-near Fontenay le Comte, on the Bay of Biscay, Georges Benjamin
-Clemenceau was born. His family came of an old stock of La Vendée who
-had owned land in the province for generations. His father was a doctor
-as well as a landowner; but his practice, I judge, from what his son
-told me, was confined to gratuitous services rendered to the peasants
-of the neighbourhood. M. le Dr. Clemenceau, however, was scarcely
-the sort of man whom one would expect to find in a remote village of
-such a conservative, not to say reactionary, district as La Vendée. A
-thorough-going materialist and convinced Republican, he was the leader
-of the local party of extreme Radicals.
-
-But he seems to have been a great deal more than that. Science, which
-took with him the place of supernatural religion, neither hardened
-his heart nor cramped his appreciation of art and poetry. Philosopher
-and philanthropist, an amateur of painting and sculpture, inflexibly
-devoted to his political principles, yet ever ready to recognise
-ability and originality wherever they appeared, this very exceptional
-medical man and country squire had necessarily a great influence upon
-his eldest son, who inherited from his father many of the qualities
-and opinions which led him to high distinction throughout his career.
-Hatred of injustice, love of freedom and independence of every kind,
-brought the elder Clemenceau into conflict with the men of the Second
-Empire, who clapped him in prison after the _coup d'état_ of December
-1851. Liberty in every shape was, in fact, an essential part of
-this stalwart old Jacobin's political creed, while in the domain of
-physiology and general science he was a convinced evolutionist long
-before that conception of the inevitable development of the universe
-became part of the common thought of the time.
-
-With all this the young Clemenceau was brought into close contact from
-his earliest years. A thoroughly sound physique, strengthened by the
-invigorating air of the Biscayan coast, laid the foundations of that
-indefatigable energy and alertness of disposition which have enabled
-him to pass triumphantly through periods of overwork and disappointment
-that would have broken down the health of any man with a less sound
-constitution. Georges Clemenceau owed much to the begettings and
-surroundings, to the vigorous country life and the rarefied mental
-atmosphere in which his earlier years were passed. Seldom is it
-possible to trace the natural process of cause and effect from father
-to son as it is in this case. From the wilds of La Vendée and the rough
-sea-coast of Brittany circumstances of the home and of the family life
-provided France with the ablest Radical leader she has ever possessed.
-
-At first, it appeared little likely that this would be so. Clemenceau,
-entering upon his father's profession, with the benefit of the paternal
-knowledge and full of the inculcated readiness to probe all the facts
-of life to the bottom, took up his medical studies as a serious
-business, after having gone through the ordinary curriculum of a school
-at Nantes. It was in the hospital of that city that he first entered
-as a qualified student. After a short stay there he went off to Paris,
-in 1860, at the age of nineteen, to "walk the hospitals," as we phrase
-it, in the same capacity. It was a plunge into active life taken at a
-period in the history of France which was much more critical than it
-seemed.
-
-The year which saw Clemenceau's arrival in Paris saw also the Second
-Empire at the height of its fame and influence. As we look back to
-the great stir of 1848, which, so far as Paris and France were
-concerned, was brought about by the almost inconceivable fatuity of
-Louis Philippe, we marvel at the strange turn of events which got rid
-of Orleanist King Log in order to replace him by a Napoleonist King
-Stork. But we may wonder still more at the lack of foresight, capacity
-and tact of Louis Philippe himself, who had been in his youth the
-democrat Citoyen Egalité, and an excellent general, with all the hard
-experience of his family misfortune and personal sufferings in exile as
-a full-grown man, possessed, too, of a thorough knowledge of the world
-and an adequate acquaintance with modern thought in several departments
-of science and literature. Yet, enjoying all these qualifications for a
-successful ruler, Louis Philippe failed to understand that a democratic
-monarchy, and a democratic monarchy alone, could preserve France from a
-republic or a military dictatorship. This was astounding. He refused to
-agree to the democratic vote claimed by the people, and then ran away.
-So the House of Orleans joined the House of Bourbon in the array of
-discrowned Heads of the Blood Royal. The short-lived Republic of 1848
-existed just long enough to scare the bourgeoisie by the installation
-of the National Workshops, which might well have succeeded but for
-their unintelligent opposition, and the peasantry by the fear of
-general Communism, into a demand for a ruler who would preserve them
-from those whom they considered the maniacs or plunderers of Paris.
-
-It is one of the ironies of history that the French Revolution which
-promulgated ideas of Liberty, Equality and Fraternity that shook
-the whole civilised world should have been unable to furnish France
-herself with a democratic republic for well-nigh a hundred years after
-the overthrow of Louis XVI. For scarcely had the Republic of 1848,
-with Louis Blanc, Ledru Rollin, Albert, and others as its leaders,
-been founded than the Buonapartist intrigues were successful. Louis
-Napoleon, who just before had been the laughing-stock of Europe,
-with his tame eagle at Boulogne that would persist in perching on a
-post instead of on his head, with his queer theories of Imperialist
-democracy and his close association with the Italian Carbonari, was
-elected President of the French Republic.
-
-This was the outcome of an overwhelming plebiscite in his favour. There
-could be no doubt about the voice of France on this occasion. Paris may
-possibly have been genuinely Republican at that time. The Provinces,
-whose antagonism to Paris and the Parisians was very marked, then and
-later, were undoubtedly Buonapartist. From President to Emperor was
-no long step. Louis Napoleon, though a man of no great capacity, did
-at any rate believe in himself, in his democratic Imperialism and his
-destiny. The set of adventurers and swindlers around him believed only
-in full purses and ample opportunities for gratifying their taste
-for luxury and debauchery. Having obtained control of the army by
-the bribery of some and the imprisonment of others of the Republican
-generals, all was ready for the infamous butchery of peaceful citizens
-which cowed Paris and established the Empire at the same time. Once
-more the plebiscite was resorted to with equal success on the part of
-the conspirators. The hero of the _coup d'état_, with his familiar
-coterie of Morny, Flahault, Persigny, Canrobert and other rogues and
-murderers of less degree, became Napoleon III and master of Paris and
-of France in December, 1852.
-
-The French threw their votes almost solid in favour of the Empire,
-and thus tacitly condoned the hideous crime committed when it was
-established. Whenever the Emperor's right to his throne was challenged
-he could point triumphantly to that crushing vote of the democracy
-constituting him the duly elected Emperor of the French and hereditary
-representative--however doubtful his parentage--of that extraordinary
-Corsican genius who, when Chateaubriand and other detractors sneered at
-his origin, boldly declared, "_Moi je suis ancêtre._"
-
-From that day to this, democrats and Republicans have had a profound
-distrust of the vote of the mass of the people as recorded under a
-plébiscite, or a referendum, of the entire male population. This lack
-of confidence in the judgment of the majority, when appealed to on
-political issues, though natural under the circumstances, is obviously
-quite illogical on the part of men who declare their belief in popular
-government. It amounts to a permanent claim for the highly educated
-and well-to-do sections of an intellectual oligarchy, on the ground
-that they must know better what is good for the people than the people
-know for themselves. This might conceivably be true, if no pecuniary
-interests or arrogance of social superiority were involved. But as
-this state of things cannot be attained until production for profit,
-payment of wages and private property cease to exist, democrats and
-Republicans place themselves in a doubtful position when they denounce
-a reference to the entire population as necessarily harmful. All that
-can be safely admitted is that so long as the mass of men and women
-are economically dependent, socially unfree and very imperfectly
-educated, the possibility of their being able to secure good government
-by a plébiscite is very remote. But this applies as well to universal
-suffrage used to obtain parliamentary elections, and the argument
-against reposing any trust in the mass of the people may thus be
-pushed to the point of abrogating the vote altogether save for a small
-minority. And this would land us in the position of beginning with an
-autocracy or aristocracy and ending there.
-
-At the time I am speaking of it is indisputable that a considerable
-majority of intelligent and educated Frenchmen were Republicans.
-What they meant by a Republic comprised many different shades of
-organised democracy. But Republic, as Republic, in opposition and
-contradistinction to Monarchy or Empire, was a name to conjure with
-among all the most distinguished Frenchmen of the time. How did it come
-about, then, that this minority, which should have been able to lead
-the people, was distrusted and voted down by the very same populace
-whose rights of self-government they themselves were championing
-on behalf of their countrymen? There was nothing in the form of a
-Republic, as was shown little more than twenty years afterwards, which
-was of necessity at variance with the interests or the sentiments of
-Frenchmen. Even the antagonism between Paris and the Provinces, already
-referred to, was not so marked as to account for the fact that twice in
-succession Louis Napoleon should have obtained an overwhelming personal
-vote in his favour as the man to be trusted, above all other Frenchmen,
-to control the destinies of France.
-
-It is by no means certain that Paris herself was hostile, before the
-_coup d'état_, to the Napoleonic régime with its traditions not only
-of military glory but of capable civic administration. For the double
-plébiscite was more than a vote of acquiescence: it was a vote of
-enthusiasm: first for Louis Napoleon as President, and then for Louis
-Napoleon as Emperor. It is not pleasing to have to admit this; but
-the truth seems to be that, as Aristotle pointed out more than two
-thousand years ago, great masses of men are much more easily led by a
-personality than they are roused by a principle. That the plébiscite
-had been carefully worked up by assiduous propaganda; that many of the
-ignorant peasants believed they were voting for the Napoleon of their
-childhood in spite of the impossible; that there was a great deal of
-bribery and not a little stuffing of the ballot boxes by officials
-with a keen sense of favours to come; that the army was imbued with
-Napoleonic sympathies and helped to spread the spurious ideals of
-Imperialism--all this may be perfectly true. Yet, when all is said and
-every allowance is made, the fact remains that, even so, the success of
-the Napoleonic plébiscites is imperfectly explained. The main features
-of the vote were obvious: The French people were sick of hereditary
-monarchy: the Republican leaders were out of touch with the people: the
-ideals of the past overshadowed the hopes of the future: Napoleon was a
-name to conjure with: the Republicans had no name on their side to put
-against it: the "blessed word" Republic had no hold upon the peasantry
-of rural France. So plébiscite meant one-man rule. That is not to say,
-as so many argue nowadays, that the complete vote of the democracy on
-such an issue must of necessity be wrong; but it does affirm that a
-thoroughly educated, responsible democracy, accustomed to be appealed
-to directly on all matters of importance, is a necessity before we
-can have any certainty that the people will go right. Even if they
-go wrong, as in this case of Napoleon III, it is better in the long
-run that they should learn by their own errors than that the blunders
-of the dominant classes should be forced upon them. Great social and
-political problems can rarely be solved even by the greatest genius.
-And the genius himself, supposing him to exist, cannot rely upon
-providing his country with a successor. On the whole, consequently,
-it is less dangerous to human progress that we should risk such a
-reactionary vote as that which seated Napoleon III at the Tuileries
-than give no peaceful outlet whatever to popular opinion.
-
-But the democrats and republicans, radicals and socialists of Paris,
-who saw all their most cherished ideals crushed by the voice of the
-people whom they were anxious to lead to higher things, and beheld a
-travesty of Napoleonic Imperialism suppressing all freedom of political
-thought and writing, were not disposed to philosophise about the
-excuses for a popular decision which led to such unpleasant results
-for them. They had welcomed the abdication of Louis Philippe and the
-installation of the Republic as the beginning of a new era not only for
-Paris but for all France, after the reactionary clericalism of Louis
-XVIII and Charles X, followed by the chilly middle-class rule of the
-Orleanist monarch. But now a pinchbeck Napoleonism, with much sterner
-repression, weighed upon all that was most progressive and brilliant in
-the capital city. It was a bitter disappointment, not to be softened by
-the reflection that France herself was still far from the economic and
-social stage where their aspirations could be realised.
-
-Thus Napoleon III was master of France and, feeling that war was
-advisable in order to strengthen his position at home, gladly joined
-with Great Britain in a joint campaign against Russia. This was wholly
-unnecessary, as has since been clearly shown. But, by promoting a
-better feeling between France and England than had previously existed,
-some good came out of the evil brought about by the treacherous
-suppression of the Emperor Nicholas's agreement with the English
-Cabinet. The foolish bolstering up of Ottoman incapacity and corruption
-at Constantinople when the Western Powers could easily have enforced a
-more reasonable rule was a miserable result of the whole war. But that
-the Crimean adventure helped to consolidate the position of the Emperor
-there is no doubt.
-
-When also the affair of the Orsini bomb, thrown by one of his old
-Carbonari fellow-conspirators, impelled Louis Napoleon into the Italian
-campaign which won for Italy Lombardy and for France Savoy and Nice,
-the French people felt that their gain in glory and in territory had
-made them once more the first nation in Europe. Magenta and Solferino
-were names to conjure with. The Army had confidence in the Emperor
-and his generals. So the prospect for republicans and the Republic
-eight years after the _coup d'état_ was less promising than it had
-been since the great revolution. Napoleon III was generally regarded
-as the principal figure in Europe. He was delivering those New Year
-proclamations which men awaited with bated breath as deciding the
-question of peace or war for the ensuing twelvemonth. His Empress
-dominated the world of fashion as her consort did the world of
-politics. Every effort was made to render the Court as brilliant as
-possible, and to attract to it some of the old nobility, who were, as a
-whole, little inclined to recognise by their presence the power of the
-man whom they both despised and hated. But the Second Empire was for a
-time a success in spite of the reactionists and the republicans alike.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- PARIS UNDER THE EMPIRE
-
-
-Paris of the early sixties was a very different city from the Paris of
-to-day. It was still in great part the Paris of the old time, on both
-banks of the Seine. Its Haussmannisation had barely begun. The Palais
-Royal retained much of its ancient celebrity for the cuisine of its
-restaurants and the brilliancy of its shops. But to get to it direct
-from what is now the Place de l'Opéra was a voyage of discovery. You
-went upstairs and downstairs, through narrow, dirty streets, until,
-after missing your way several times, you at last found yourself in the
-garden dear to the orators of the French Revolution, and since devoted
-to nursemaids and their babes. Much of Central Paris was in the same
-unregenerate state. Even portions of famous streets not far from the
-Grands Boulevards, which were then still French, could scarcely be
-described as models of cleanliness. The smells that arose from below
-and the water of doubtful origin that might descend upon the unwary
-passerby from above suggested a general lack of sanitary control which
-was fully confirmed in more remote districts.
-
-Napoleon III was a man of mediocre ability. His _entourage_ was
-extravagantly disreputable. But he and his did clear out and clean
-up Paris. The new quarters since built owe their existence in the
-first instance to the initiative of the Emperor's chief edile, Baron
-Haussmann, and his compeers. The great broad streets which now traverse
-the slums of old time were due to the same energetic impulse. Whether
-such spacious avenues and boulevards were constructed in order to
-facilitate the operations of artillery and enable the new mitrailleurs
-more conveniently to massacre the "mob," whether the architecture
-is artistic or monotonous, Clemenceau the doctor must for once be
-at variance with Clemenceau the man of politics, and admit that the
-monarch who, as will be seen, imprisoned him in 1862, did some good
-work for Paris during his reign of repression. At any rate Napoleonic
-rule at this period represented general prosperity. Business was good
-and the profiteers were doing well. The bourgeoisie felt secure and
-international financiers enjoyed a good time. Nearly all the great
-banking and financial institutions of Paris had their origin in the
-decade 1860-1870. Law and order, in short, was based upon comfort and
-accumulation for the well-to-do.
-
-But the peasantry and the workers of the cities were also considered in
-some degree, and the reconstruction of the capital provided, directly
-and indirectly, both then and later, for what were looked upon as "the
-dangerous classes"--men and women, that is to say, who thought that the
-wage-slave epoch meant little better for them and their children than
-penal servitude for life. Constant work and decent pay softened the
-class antagonism, conciliating the proletariat without upsetting the
-middle class or bourgeoisie. Such a policy, following upon two fairly
-successful wars, was not devoid of dexterity. A curbed or satisfied
-Paris meant internal peace for all France. Neither the miserable
-fiasco in Mexico nor the idiotic abandonment of Austria to Prussia
-had yet shaken the external stability of the Empire. Napoleon III and
-his Vice-Emperor Rouher were still great statesmen. There was little
-or nothing to show on the surface that the whole edifice was even
-then tottering to its fall. The keen satire of Rochefort, of the Duc
-d'Aumale, and the full-blooded denunciations of Victor Hugo failed to
-produce much effect. Some genuine and capable opponents were beguiled
-into serving the Government under the impression that the Empire
-might be permanent, and in this way alone could they also serve their
-country. Nor can we wonder at such backsliding.
-
-Such was the Paris, such the France that saw the young medical student,
-Georges Clemenceau, enter upon his preparation for active life as
-doctor and physiologist. He devoted himself earnestly to his studies in
-the libraries, to his work in the hospitals, and to careful observation
-of the social maladies he saw around him, which made a deep and
-permanent impression on his mind. But, determined as he was to master
-the principles and practice of his profession, the bright, active and
-vivacious republican from La Vendée brought with him to Paris too clear
-a conception of his rights and duties as a democrat to be able to avoid
-the coteries of revolt who maintained the traditions of radicalism in
-spite of systematic espionage and police persecution. Clemenceau shared
-his father's opinions in favour of free speech and a free press.
-
-That was dangerous in those days. _La Ville Lumière_ was obliged
-to hide its light under a bushel. Friends of democracy and
-anti-imperialistic speakers and writers were compelled, in order
-to reach their public, to adopt a style of suppressed irony not
-at all to the taste of the vivacious republican recruit from
-Mouilleron-en-Pareds. Then, as ever thereafter, he spoke the truth
-that was in him, regardless of consequences. In this course he had
-the approbation and support of his father's friend, Etienne Arago,
-brother of the famous astronomer. Arago the politician was also a
-playwright, an ardent republican who had taken his full share in all
-the agitations of the previous period, an active and useful member of
-the Republican Government of 1848 as Postmaster-General, and a vigorous
-opponent of the policy of Louis Napoleon. He was sent into exile prior
-to the _coup d'état_. Both then and nearly a generation later this
-stalwart anti-Imperialist was exceedingly popular with the Parisians,
-and, having returned to Paris, was able to aid Clemenceau in forming a
-correct judgment of the situation, at a time when a less clear-sighted
-observer might have striven to cool his young friend's enthusiasm.
-
-As it was, Clemenceau contributed to some of the Radical fly-sheets
-and then fêted the 24th of February. No date dear to the memory of
-Republicans could be publicly toasted without conveying a reflection
-upon the Empire, and as all important events in French history, from
-July 14th onwards, are duly calendared according to the month and
-day of the month, Clemenceau's crime in celebrating February 24th by
-speech and writing was obvious. He therefore fell foul of the Imperial
-police. The magistrate could admit no point in his favour, and there
-was in fact no defence. Consequently Georges Clemenceau, _interne de
-l'hôpital_, had the opportunity given him of reflecting for two months
-upon the advantages and drawbacks of his political creed, during a
-period of Buonapartist supremacy, in the prison of Mazas. This was in
-1862.
-
-Three years later he took his doctor's degree. His formal essay on
-this occasion gained him considerable reputation. It was entitled _De
-la Génération des Éléments Anatomiques_, and proved not only that he
-had worked hard on the lines of his profession but that he was capable
-of taking an original view of the subjects he had mastered. This
-work has been throughout the basis of Clemenceau's medical, social,
-political and literary career. I got the book not long ago from the
-London Library, and on the title-page of this first edition I read in
-the author's own bold handwriting, "_A Monsieur J. Stuart Mill hommage
-respectueux de l'auteur G. Clemenceau_": a tribute to that eclectic
-philosopher and thinker which he followed up shortly afterwards by
-translating Mill's study of Auguste Comte and Positivism into French.
-Clemenceau was no great admirer of Comte, and specially disapproved
-of the attempt of some of that author's pupils and followers to
-limit investigation and cultivate agnosticism on matters which they
-considered fell without the bounds of their master's theories and
-categories.
-
-"We are not of those," writes Clemenceau, "who admit with the
-Positivist that science can give us no information on the enigma of
-things." This seems scarcely just to the modern Positivists, for
-although Comte himself wished to restrict mankind from the study of
-astronomy, for example, outside of the solar system, they have been as
-ready as the rest of the world to take advantage of discoveries beyond
-that system which throw light upon some of the difficult material
-problems nearer at hand. And Clemenceau, too, appears to fall into the
-line of reasoning with which he reproaches Comte; for, as will be seen
-later, he views nature as a mass of matter evolving and differentiating
-and organising and vivifying itself with the interminable antagonisms
-and mutual devourings of the various forms of existence on this
-planet, and possibly on other worlds of the infinitely little, and
-then, when the great suns die out, disappearing and beginning all over
-again as two of these huge extinguished luminaries collide in space.
-This material philosophy, when carried to its ultimate issue, still
-answers no question and furnishes no clue to the strange inexplicable
-movement of the universe in which man is but a sentient and partially
-intelligent automaton. What explanation does this give of any of the
-problems of social or individual ethic, or of the impulse which led
-Clemenceau the doctor to treat his patients in Montmartre gratuitously,
-instead of building up a valuable practice in a rich quarter? and urged
-Clemenceau the politician to pass the greater part of his life in an
-uphill fight against the domination of the sordid minority and the
-timid acquiescence of the apathetic masses rather than accept the high
-positions which were pressed upon him time after time?
-
-Such reflections would be out of place at this point, but for the fact
-that Clemenceau has invariably contended that his career has been all
-of a piece, maintaining that the vigorous young physiologist and doctor
-of twenty-four and twenty-five held the same opinions and was moved
-by the same aspirations that have guided the mature man throughout.
-Whether heredity and surroundings fully account in every particular for
-all that he has said, done and achieved is a question which Clemenceau
-also might decline to answer with the definiteness he considers
-desirable in general philosophy. But that his doctor's thesis of 1865
-did in the main give the scientific basis of his material creed can
-scarcely be disputed.
-
-The following year, 1866, was the year of the Prusso-Italian war
-against Austria. The success of Prussia, which would quite probably
-have been a failure but for the incredible fatuity of the Imperial
-clique at Vienna, was one of the chief causes, unnoted at the time,
-of the downfall of Napoleon III. Few now care to recall the manner in
-which the Austrian Commander-in-Chief, Marshal Benedek, was compelled
-to abandon his entire strategy in deference to the pusillanimous orders
-of the Emperor, or how Benedek, with a loyalty to the House of Hapsburg
-which it has never at any period deserved, took upon himself the blame
-of defeats for which Francis Joseph, not himself, was responsible.
-But Louis Napoleon was equally blind to his own interests and those
-of France when he stood aside and allowed the most ambitious and most
-unscrupulous power in the world to become the virtual master of Central
-Europe. It was a strange choice of evils that lay before the Radical
-and Republican parties in all countries during this war. None could
-wish to see upheld, still less strengthened, the wretched rule of
-reactionary, tyrannous and priest-ridden Austria; yet none could look
-favourably on the growth of Prussian power.
-
-The further conquest by Italy of her own territory and the annexation
-of Venice to the Italian crown were therefore universally acclaimed.
-But those who knew Prussia and its military system, and watched the
-nefarious policy which had crushed Denmark as a stage on the road
-to the crushing of Austria, even thus early began to doubt whether
-the substitution of Prussia for Austria in the leadership of the
-old Germanic Bund might not speedily lead to a still more dangerous
-situation. Either this did not suggest itself to Napoleon III and his
-advisers, or they thought that Austria might win, or, at worst, that
-a bitterly contested campaign would enable France to interpose at
-the critical moment as a decisive arbiter in the struggle. Probably
-the last was the real calculation. It was falsified by the rapid and
-smashing Prussian victories of Königgratz and Sadowa, and Napoleon
-could do nothing but accept the decisions of the battlefield. But from
-this moment the Second Empire was in serious danger, and any far-seeing
-statesman would have set to work immediately to bring the French army
-up to the highest possible point of efficiency and prepare the way for
-alliances that might help the Empire, should help be needed in the
-near future. Neither Louis Napoleon nor his councillors and generals,
-however, understood what the overthrow of Austria meant for France.
-They turned a deaf ear then and afterwards to the warnings of their
-ablest agents abroad, and thus drifted into the crisis which four years
-later found them without an ally and overwhelmed them.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- DOWNFALL AND RECONSTRUCTION
-
-
-Early in 1866, Clemenceau, after a visit to England, crossed the
-Atlantic for a somewhat prolonged stay in the United States. He could
-scarcely have chosen a better time for making acquaintance with America
-and the Americans. The United States had but just emerged from the
-Civil War, which, notwithstanding the furious bitterness evoked on both
-sides during the struggle, eventually consolidated the Great Republic
-as nothing else could; though, owing to the behaviour of "society"
-in England, the tone of our leading statesmen and the action of the
-_Alabama_, the feeling against Great Britain was naturally very strong.
-This animosity--it was no less--of course did not extend to the young
-French physician of republican views who had already suffered for his
-opinions in Paris, and whose sympathies were with the North against the
-South throughout. He was well received in the Eastern States, and wrote
-several letters to the _Temps_ on the industrial and social conditions
-of America which were then of value, and still serve to show how marked
-is the contrast between the self-contained nation of fifty years
-ago and the Anglo-Saxon world power that has successfully tried her
-strength in the international struggle against Germanic infamy to-day.
-What is not so easy to comprehend is M. le Dr. Clemenceau, as we know
-him, acting as professor of French in a young ladies' college at the
-village of Stanford, in the neighbourhood of New York. His record in
-that capacity is amusingly described by one of his friends[A] in a
-bright little sketch of his early experiences.
-
-"An admirable horseman, the young Frenchman accompanied the still
-younger American misses in their rides. There were free and delightful
-little tours on horseback, charming excursions along the shady roads
-which traverse the gay landscape of Connecticut. Such years carried
-with them for Clemenceau ineffaceable memories of a period during
-which his temperament accomplished the task of gaining strength and
-acquiring refinement. At the same time that he enriched his mind with
-solid conceptions of Anglo-Saxon philosophy, and perfected his general
-cultivation, he took his first lessons in the delicacies of American
-flirtation. It was in the course of these pleasing jaunts, where
-the fresh laughter of these young ladies echoed through the bright
-scenery, that it was his lot to become betrothed to one of them, Miss
-Mary Plummer. Henceforth, in consequence of the sound, independent
-and many-sided education which he had, so to say, imposed upon
-himself, Clemenceau had completed the last stage of his intellectual
-development. He was ripe to play great parts. For the rest, events were
-not destined long to delay the throwing into full relief his versatile,
-intrepid and powerful characteristics."
-
-And so Clemenceau, thus prepared to meet what the future might have
-in store for him, returned to Paris. There are cities in the history
-of the human race which have taken unto themselves a personality, not
-only for their own inhabitants, but for succeeding ages, and for the
-world at large. Babylon, Athens, Jerusalem, Rome, Bagdad, Florence,
-each and all convey to the mind a conception of chic individuality and
-collective achievement which brings them within the range of our own
-knowledge, admiration and respect, which raises them also to the level
-of ideals of culture for men living in far different civilisations.
-They are still oases of brightness and greenery amid the wilderness
-of unconscious growth. The wars of old time, the cruelty of long-past
-days, the records of brutality and lust are forgotten: only the memory
-of greatness or beauty remains.
-
- "Terror by night, the flaming battle-call,
- Fire on the roof-tree, dreadful blood and woe!--
- They cease for tears, yet joyful, knowing all
- Is over, long ago.
-
- Knowing, the melancholy hands of Time
- Weave a slow veil of beauty o'er the place
- Of blood-stained memory and bitter crime
- Till horror fades in grace.
-
- The mournful grace of long-forgotten woe
- And long-appeased sorrows of the dead,
- The deeper silence of those streams that flow
- Where ancient highways led."
-
-Among the great cities of the past which is still the present Paris
-takes her undisputed place. In youth, in maturity, in age, the charm
-of intellectual and artistic Paris ever affects not merely her own
-citizens, but the strangers within her gates. And the young Vendéen
-Clemenceau was from the first a Parisian of Parisians. The attraction
-of Paris for him was permanent. From his arrival in 1860 until the
-present time practically his whole life has been spent in the French
-capital. Many years afterwards he gave expression to the influence
-Paris had upon him. Paris for Clemenceau is the sun of the world of
-science and letters, the source of light and heat from whose centre art
-and thought radiate through space. "Intuition and suggestion spreading
-out in all directions awake dormant energy, sweep on from contact to
-contact, are passed on, dispersed, and finally exhausted in the inertia
-of material objects. Here is the radiance of humanity, more or less
-powerful, more or less durable as time and place may decree."
-
-It is this impatience of Paris with results already achieved, this
-desire to reach out and to embrace new forms in all departments of
-human achievement, which give the French city her position as an
-indispensable entity in the cosmos of modern life. "Boldness and
-boldness and boldness again" was Danton's prescription for the orator,
-and it might be taken as the motto of intellectual and artistic Paris.
-There is no hesitation, no contentment, no waiting by the wayside. New
-ideas and new conceptions must ever be replacing the old. Experience
-may teach what to avoid: experiment alone can teach what to attempt.
-And this not incidentally or as a passing phase of endeavour, but as a
-principle to be applied in every region of human effort. "The Rights
-of Man," "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity," "Property is robbery" are
-as thought-provoking (though they solve no problem) in the domain
-of sociology as Pasteur's achievements in physiology and medicine.
-Whatever changes the future may have in store for us, we who are not
-Frenchmen cannot dispense with the leadership and inspiration that come
-to us from Paris.
-
-On his return to France from America Clemenceau renewed his
-acquaintance and friendship with those who shared his political
-and social opinions, especially Etienne Arago, now an old man, and
-practised as a doctor in the working-class district of Montmartre.
-Here, by his gratuitous medical advice to the people and his steady
-adherence to his democratic principles, he gained an amount of
-popularity and personal devotion from the men and women of Montmartre
-which, in conjunction with Arago's advice and support, prepared the way
-for the positions which he afterwards attained. Meanwhile the Second
-Empire was going slowly downhill. The change which had already taken
-place was not generally recognised. Nevertheless, the failure of the
-ill-fated Mexican Expedition with its Catholic support, its sordid
-financial muddling and the degrading system of plunder carried on in
-Mexico itself by Marshal Bazaine, the effect on Paris of the murder of
-Victor Noir by a member of the Buonaparte family, and the Government's
-growing incapacity to handle domestic and foreign affairs all told
-against the prestige of Napoleon. Only a successful diplomatic stroke
-or a victorious war could rehabilitate the credit of the Empire. The
-time had gone by for either. Bismarck's disgraceful forgery at Ems was
-as unnecessary as it was flagitious. Sooner or later the Second Empire
-would have collapsed from its own incompetence. But that waiting game
-did not suit the grim statesman of Berlin. He knew that the French army
-by itself could not hold its own against the Prussian and other German
-forces; he felt convinced also that Austria would not move without
-much clearer assurances of success than Napoleon could supply; while
-Italy was still tied to her Ally of 1866, and England was devoted to
-a policy of profitable non-intervention. So Napoleon was half driven,
-half tricked into a hopeless campaign, and every calculation on which
-Bismarck relied was verified by the results. Nay, the plébiscite which
-Louis Napoleon risked eighteen years after the _coup d'état_ went
-entirely in his favour, and it was in reality quite unnecessary, from
-the point of view of internal politics, that any risk of war should
-be run. The Empress, however, has always had the discredit of not
-having been of that opinion. Hence steps were taken which played into
-Bismarck's hands.
-
-At first, as I have heard Clemenceau say himself, it was almost
-impossible for a patriotic Republican to desire victory for the
-French armies. That would only have meant a new life for the decadent
-Empire. Sad, therefore, as was the long succession of disasters, and
-terrible the devastation wrought by German ruthlessness, not until
-the culminating defeat of Sedan, the surrender of Napoleon and the
-decree of Imperial overthrow pronounced by the people of Paris, could
-men feel that French soldiers were really fighting for their country.
-Thenceforward the struggle was between democratic and progressive
-France and autocratic and reactionary Prussia. The Empire for whose
-humiliation the King of Prussia had gone to war existed no longer. A
-Republic was at once declared in its place. Any fair-minded enemy would
-directly have offered the easiest possible terms for peace to the new
-France. But that was not the view of Prussia. France, not merely the
-Second Empire, was to be defeated and crushed down, because she stood
-in the way of that permanent policy of aggression and aggrandisement
-to which the House of Hohenzollern, with its Junker supporters, has
-always been devoted. This was the moment when England should have
-interfered decisively on the side of her old rival. It was not only
-our interest but our duty to do so, and the whole nation would have
-enthusiastically supported the statesmen who had given it a vigorous
-lead in the right direction. Unfortunately Queen Victoria, then as
-ever bitterly pro-German, was utterly unscrupulous in enforcing her
-views upon her Government: the men then in office were essentially
-courtiers, who combined servility at home with pusillanimity abroad:
-the _laissez-faire_ school of parasitical commercialism which regards
-the accumulation of wealth for the few as the highest aspiration of
-humanity held the trading classes in its grip. Consequently, the
-monarch and the ruling class of the day thought it was cheaper, and
-therefore better, to leave France to her fate, and make a good cash
-profit out of the business, rather than courageously to withstand the
-beginnings of evil and uphold the French Republic against the brutality
-and greed of Berlin. It is sad, nearly fifty years later, to reflect
-upon the results of this mistaken and cowardly policy. The war was
-continued, owing chiefly to English indifference, until France lay at
-the feet of the conquerors.
-
-No sooner did the news of the defeat and surrender of Sedan reach
-Paris than a general shout for the overthrow of the Empire went up
-from the people throughout the French capital. The collapse of the
-Second Empire was in fact even more sudden and dramatic than its rise.
-The whole imperial machinery fell with a crash. There was not a man
-in Paris among the friends of the Emperor in good fortune who had the
-courage and capacity to come to the front in the time of his distress.
-The bigoted Catholic Empress, against whom Parisians cherished an
-animosity scarcely less bitter than that which their forbears felt for
-Marie Antoinette, was with difficulty got safely out of the city, and
-Paris at once took control of her own destinies. A Republic having
-been proclaimed, Republicans, Radicals and Socialists, harried and
-proscribed the day before, rushed to the front the day after, and
-forthwith became masters of the city. Clemenceau as one of them was
-immediately chosen Mayor of Montmartre, at the instance of his old
-friend Etienne Arago.
-
-It was a period for action, not for argument, or reflection, or
-propaganda. Clemenceau understood that. In his capacity as Mayor of
-Montmartre, by no means an easy district to manage, he exhibited
-marvellous energy, as well as sound judgment, in every department of
-public affairs. Everything had to be reorganised at once. There was
-no time to respect the inevitable details of democratic authorisation
-and delay. Clemenceau with his natural rapidity of decision was the
-very man for the post. Patriotic and revolutionary excitement seethed
-all round him. Society seemed already to be in the melting-pot.
-The enthusiasm evoked by eloquent orations in favour of Socialism
-was accompanied by the discharges of cannon and the rumbling of
-ammunition-wagons. But public business had to be carried on all the
-same. Clemenceau was indefatigable and ubiquitous. He prevented the
-priests from intriguing in the municipal schools, he established purely
-secular education, hurried on the arming of the battalions and kept a
-sharp eye on the defences of the city. Simultaneously he set on foot a
-series of establishments for giving warmth, food and general help to
-the number of people who had sought refuge on the heights. He acted
-throughout practically as municipal dictator, raising, arming and
-drilling recruits for the new republican army, as well as organising
-and administering all the local services.
-
-It was a fine piece of work. Having been so closely in touch with the
-bulk of the population of Montmartre, he was able to act entirely in
-their interests and with their concurrence throughout. They therefore
-warmly supported him against the reactionists and religionists who,
-then as always, were his most virulent enemies. It was no easy task to
-maintain order and carry out systematic organisation at this juncture.
-The downfall of the Empire occurred on September 4th, the Republic,
-with General Trochu--the man of the undisclosed strategical "plan"--as
-President and Jules Favre as Vice-President, being declared the same
-day. On September 19th Paris was invested by the Germans. Seeing that
-there were then no fewer than 400,000 armed men, at various stages of
-training, in the capital, with many powerful forts at their disposal,
-while the Germans could spare at the beginning of the siege no more
-than 120,000 men for the attack, the French having still several armies
-in the field, successful resistance by the Republic seemed by no means
-hopeless. Paris might even have had her share in turning the tide of
-victory. Clemenceau was of that opinion.
-
-But it was not to be. France failed to produce a great general, and the
-"bagman Marshal," as Bazaine was called in Mexico, by shutting himself
-up with 175,000 men in Metz, rendered final defeat certain; though if
-Marshal MacMahon's advice had been followed, and if General Trochu had
-later sufficiently organised the forces at his disposal in Paris to
-break through the German lines, a stouter fight might have been fought.
-As it was, one French army after another was defeated in the field,
-and Paris and Metz were forced to surrender by literal starvation. On
-January 28th, 1871, an armistice was signed between Bismarck and Jules
-Favre and the revictualling of the famine-stricken Parisians began, the
-siege having lasted a little over four months. A National Assembly was
-summoned to decide the terms of a definite peace or in what manner it
-might be possible to continue the war.
-
-So well satisfied were the voters of Montmartre with the conduct of
-their Mayor during all this trying time that they decided to send him
-as their representative to Bordeaux and polled just upon 100,000 votes
-in his favour. To Bordeaux, therefore, Clemenceau went, on February
-12th, as deputy for one of the most radical and revolutionary districts
-of Paris. Though neither then nor later an avowed Socialist, no
-Socialist could have done more for practical democratic and Socialist
-measures than Clemenceau had done. That, of course, was the reason why
-he was elected by so advanced a constituency.
-
-He found himself strangely out of his element when he took his seat
-in the National Assembly. Perhaps no more reactionary body had ever
-met in France. The majority of the members were thorough-going
-Conservatives who at heart were eager to restore the monarchy. They
-were royalists but slightly disguised, dug up out of their seclusion,
-from all parts of the country, who thought their time had come to
-revenge themselves not so much upon the Buonapartists who had governed
-France for twenty years as upon Paris and the Parisians who had chased
-Charles X and Louis Philippe out of France. They well knew that the
-capital would never consent to the restoration of the candidate of
-either of the Bourbon factions. These fitting champions of a worn-out
-Legitimism or Orleanism were old men in a hurry to resuscitate the
-dead and galvanise the past into fresh life. Their very heads betrayed
-their own antiquity. So much so that a favourite pastime of young
-ladies of pleasure in the Galleries, who had flocked to Bordeaux,
-was what was irreverently called "bald-headed loo." This consisted
-in betting upon the number of flies that would settle within a given
-period upon a devoted deputy's hairless occiput. Unfortunately these
-ancient gentlemen found in M. Thiers a leader who could scarcely have
-been surpassed for ingenuity and unscrupulousness. He deliberately
-traded upon prejudices, and his main political assets were the fear
-and distrust which he awakened in one set of his countrymen against
-another. In modern as in ancient society there is an economic and
-almost a personal antagonism between country and town.
-
-The man of the Provinces, living always in the rural districts, the
-tiller, the producer, the indefatigable toiler, the parsimonious
-accumulator of small gains, the respecter of ancestral traditions and
-the devotee of old-world methods and well-tried means of gaining a poor
-livelihood, profoundly affected likewise by his inherited religion,
-has, in most cases, a deep-seated contempt, strangely enough not
-wholly divorced from fear, for the man of the town, and especially
-for the man of Paris. This animosity, which has by no means wholly
-disappeared to-day, was keenly in evidence forty and fifty years ago.
-There is an economic cause at the bottom of the antipathy, but this
-does not account for its many-sided manifestation. The countryman
-naturally desires to sell his produce at as high a price as possible.
-It is for him almost a matter of life and death to do so. The townsman,
-on his side, the artisan or labourer or even the _rentier_ of the great
-cities, is naturally anxious to obtain the necessaries of life which he
-gets from the rural districts at as low a rate as he may be able to buy
-them having regard to his wages or his income. Hence any expenditure
-which tends to benefit the country is regarded with suspicion by the
-townsman and contrariwise as between town and country, except such
-outlay as cheapens the cost of transportation, where both have an
-identical interest.
-
-But this general divergence of economic advantage, which has existed
-for many centuries does not wholly account for the ill-feeling which
-too often appears. There is a psychological side to the matter as well.
-Thus the peasant, even when he is getting satisfactory prices for his
-wares, despises his own customers when they pay too much for small
-luxuries which they could easily do without. Moreover, he considers
-the cleverness of his fellow-countrymen of the city, their readiness
-to change their opinions and adopt new ideas, their doubts as to the
-super-sanctity of that individual property, property which is the small
-landowner's god, as evidences of a dangerous disposition to upset all
-that ought to be most solemnly upheld. The townsman, on the other
-hand, too often looks down upon the peasant and the rural provincial
-generally as an ignorant, short-sighted, narrow-minded, grasping
-creature, full of prejudices and eaten up with superstition, who, out
-of sheer obstinacy, stands immovably in the way of reforms that might,
-and in many cases certainly would, benefit them both.
-
-It is the task and the duty of the true statesman to bridge over these
-differences as far as possible, to try to harmonise interests and
-assuage feelings which under existing conditions are apt to conflict
-with one another. Thus only can the whole country be well and truly
-served. M. Thiers pursued precisely the contrary course. In order to
-foster reaction and to strengthen the position of the bourgeoisie, he
-and his supporters set to work deliberately to excite the hatred of the
-country-folk against their brethren of the towns. They were willing to
-accept the Republic only on the distinct understanding that it should
-be, as Zola expressed it, a bourgeoised sham. The bogey of the social
-revolution was stuck up daily to frighten the timid property-owners.
-Above all, Paris was pointed out as the danger spot of order-respecting
-France. Paris ought to be muzzled and kept under even more strictly by
-the self-respecting Republic than by the Empire. That way alone lay
-safety. Thus the dislike of the provincials for the capital was fanned
-to so fierce a heat that the very title of capital was denied to her.
-As a result of this unpatriotic and traitorous policy Paris herself
-was unfortunately forced to the conviction that the reactionists of
-Bordeaux were determined to deprive her of all her rights, and that the
-great city which founded the Republic would be made to suffer dearly
-for her presumption. Nearly all that followed was in reality due to
-this sinister policy of provocation, adopted and carried out by M.
-Thiers and his bigoted followers.
-
-Clemenceau's position was a difficult one. Knowing both peasants and
-Parisians intimately well, he saw clearly the very dangerous situation
-which must inevitably be created by such tactics of exasperation. As
-one of the deputies of Radical Republican Paris, he did his utmost
-at Bordeaux to maintain the independence of his constituents and to
-resist the fatal action of the majority. As the son of a landowner in
-La Vendée, he understood clearly the views of the provincials and how
-necessary it was that they should be thoroughly informed as to the
-aims of the Parisians. But Paris had first claim on his services. He
-therefore associated himself with Louis Blanc, voted with him against
-the preliminaries of peace and in favour of the continuance of the war.
-There was a strong opinion at this time that many of the Buonapartists
-in high military command, as well as in important civil posts, were
-traitors to the Republic and had acted, as Bazaine unquestionably
-did, in the interest of the Imperial prisoner instead of on behalf
-of France. These factionists too were hostile to Paris, and a demand
-was made, in which Clemenceau joined, for a full investigation of the
-conduct of such men during the siege. Unfortunately, affairs in the
-capital were now becoming so critical and the probability of another
-revolution there seemed so great that Clemenceau felt his duties as
-Mayor of Montmartre were still more urgent than his votes and speeches
-at Bordeaux, as deputy for that district. Consequently, after less than
-a month's stay at Bordeaux, he returned to Paris on the evening of
-March 5th. The Commune of Paris was set on foot within a fortnight of
-that date, on March 18th, 1871.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- THE COMMUNE
-
-
-Unquestionably, the revolt was brought about by the ill-judged and
-arbitrary conduct of the agents of the National Assembly. To attempt
-to seize the guns of the National Guard as a preliminary to disarming
-the only Citizen force which the capital had at its disposal was as
-illegal as it was provocative. It was virtually a declaration of civil
-war by the reactionaries in control of the national forces. The people
-of Paris were in no humour to put up with such high-handed action on
-the part of men who, they knew, were opposed even to the Republic which
-they nominally served. They resisted the attempt and captured the
-generals, Lecomte and Thomas, who had ordered the step to be taken.
-
-So far they were quite within their rights, and Clemenceau at first
-sympathised wholly with the Federals. The Parisians had undergone
-terrible privations during the siege, they were exasperated by the
-denunciations that poured in upon them from the provinces, they saw
-no hope for their recently won liberties unless they themselves were
-in a position to defend them, they had grave doubts whether they had
-not been betrayed within and without during the siege itself. It is no
-wonder that, under such circumstances, they should resent, by force of
-arms, any attempt to deprive them of the means of effective resistance
-to reactionary repression.
-
-There was also nothing in the establishment of the Commune itself which
-was other than a perfectly legitimate effort to organise the city
-afresh, after the old system had proved utterly incompetent. But the
-attempt to disarm the population of Montmartre roused passions which
-it was impossible to quell. Clemenceau, as Mayor of the district, did
-all that one man could do to save the two generals, Lecomte and Clément
-Thomas, from being killed. With his sound judgment he saw at once that,
-whether their execution was justifiable or not, it would be regarded as
-murder by many Republicans whom the cooler heads in Paris desired to
-conciliate. As was proved afterwards, he exerted all his power to check
-even the semblance of injustice. But his final intervention to prevent
-the tragedy of the Château Rouge came too late, and Lecomte and Thomas,
-who had not hesitated to risk the massacre of innocent citizens on
-behalf of a policy of repression, were regarded as the first victims of
-an infuriated mob.
-
-The outcome of Clemenceau's own endeavours to save these misguided
-militarists was that he himself became "suspect" to the heads of the
-Central Committee of the Commune sitting at the Hôtel de Ville, which
-had taken control of all Paris. He was the duly elected and extremely
-popular Radical-Socialist--to use a later designation--Mayor of perhaps
-the most advanced arrondissement in the capital, he had been sent to
-Bordeaux by a great majority of his constituents to sit on the extreme
-left, and, in that capacity, had stoutly defended the rights of Paris;
-he was strongly in favour of most of the claims made by the leaders of
-the Commune. But all this went for nothing. The new Committee wanted
-their own man at Montmartre, and Clemenceau was not that man.
-
-So Mayor of Montmartre he ceased to be, but earnest democrat and
-devoted friend of the people he remained. Unfortunately, having a wider
-outlook than most of those who had suddenly come to the front, he could
-not believe that mere possession of the capital meant attainment of
-the control of France by the Parisians, or the freeing of his country
-from German occupation. For once he advocated prudence and suggested
-compromise. A reasonable arrangement between the administrators of
-Paris with their municipal forces and the National Assembly with
-its regular army seemed to Clemenceau a practical necessity of
-the situation. He therefore urged this policy incessantly upon the
-Communists. It was an unlucky experience. Pyat, Vermorel and others so
-strongly resented his moderate counsels that they issued an order for
-his arrest, with a view to his hasty, if judicial, removal. Failing to
-lay hold upon Clemenceau himself, they captured a speaking likeness of
-the Radical doctor in the person of a young Brazilian. Him they were
-about to shoot, when they discovered that their proposed victim was
-the wrong man. Possibly these personal adventures in revolutionary
-democracy under the Commune may have influenced Clemenceau's views
-about Socialism in practical affairs in after life.
-
-It is highly creditable to Clemenceau that a few years later one of his
-greatest speeches was delivered in the National Assembly to obtain, the
-liberation and the recall from exile of the very same men who would
-gladly have silenced him for good and all when they were in power.
-However, he escaped their well-meant attentions, and, leaving Paris,
-went on a tour of vigorous Radical propaganda through the Provinces.
-
-This was a most important self-imposed mission. Clemenceau, as he
-showed by his vote at Bordeaux, was strongly in favour of continuing
-the war and bitterly opposed to any surrender whatever. At the same
-time he was a thoroughgoing Republican who did not forget that the mass
-of Frenchmen must have voted for the Empire a few months before, or
-Napoleon's plébiscite, of course, could not have been so successful,
-even with the whole of the official machinery in the hands of the
-Imperialists. Differing from Gambetta afterwards on many points, the
-coming leader of the advanced Radicals was at this period entirely at
-one with the man who had not despaired of France when all seemed lost.
-But in order to carry on the war with any hope of success and to keep
-the flag of the Republic flying, it was essential that the people of
-the provincial towns and the peasants should be kept in touch with
-Paris and be convinced that the only chance of safety and freedom
-lay in sinking all internecine differences for the sake of unity. No
-man, not even Gambetta himself, was better qualified for this service.
-Throughout his tour he kept the independence, welfare and freedom of
-France as a whole high above all other considerations. But the risks he
-ran were not trifling. The local reactionists were by no means ready
-to accept his views. The police was set upon his trail, with great
-inconvenience to himself. But at no period of his life has Clemenceau
-considered his personal safety of any account. He had set himself to
-accomplish certain work which he deemed to be necessary, and he carried
-it through without reference to the dangers around him. Nor must the
-success of this propaganda be measured by its immediate results. The
-great thing in those days of defeat and despair was to keep up the
-national spirit and to declare that, though the French armies might
-be beaten again and again, the France of the great Revolution and
-the Republic should never be crushed down. Believing, as Clemenceau
-did, in the religion of patriotism and the sacred watchwords of the
-eighteenth-century upheaval, he spoke with a sincerity that gave to his
-utterances the value of the highest oratory. The speeches produced a
-permanent impression on those who heard them, and their effect was felt
-for many years afterwards.
-
-But this was quite as objectionable to Thiers and the case-hardened
-reactionists as his previous conduct had been to Pyat and the
-extremists of the Commune. Men of ability and judgment are apt to be
-caught between two fires when prejudice and passion take control on
-both sides. It was, in fact, little short of a miracle that the future
-Prime Minister of France did not complete his services to his country
-by dying in the ditch under the wall of Père-la-Chaise at the early age
-of thirty-one.
-
-Few movements have been more grotesquely misrepresented than the
-Commune of Paris. For many a long year afterwards almost the whole of
-the propertied classes in Europe spoke of the Communists as if they had
-been a gang of scoundrels and incendiaries, without a single redeeming
-quality; while Socialists naturally enough refused to listen to
-virulent abuse of men most of whom they well knew were inspired by the
-highest ideals and sacrificed themselves for what they believed to be
-the good of mankind. At the beginning Paris assuredly had no intention
-whatever of courting a struggle with the supporters of the Republic at
-Bordeaux, however reactionary they might be. Such men as Delescluze,
-Courbet, Beslay, Jourde, Camélinat, Vaillant, Longuet, to speak only
-of a few, were no mere hot-headed revolutionaries regardless of all
-the facts around them. Paris was admirably administered under their
-short rule--never nearly so well, according to the testimony of two
-quite conservative Englishmen who were there at the time. One of these
-was the famous Oxford sculler and athlete, E. B. Michell, an English
-barrister and a French _avocat_; the other was my late brother, Hugh,
-a Magdalen man like Michell. They both knew Paris well, and both were
-of the same opinion as to the municipal management under the Commune.
-Michell in an article in _Fraser's Magazine_, then an important review,
-wrote as follows:
-
- "It is extremely important that the serious lesson which the world
- may read in the history of the Revolution should not be weakened in
- its significance or interest by any ill-grounded contempt either
- for the acts of the Communal leaders or for the sincerity of their
- motives. We have seen that the army on which the Revolutionists
- relied, and by means of which they climbed to power, was not, as
- certain French statesmen pretended, and some English papers would
- have had us believe, a 'mere handful of disorderly rebels,' but
- a compact force, well drilled, well organised, and valiant when
- fighting for a cause that they really had at heart. It is equally
- false and unfair to regard the Communal Assembly as a crew of
- unintelligent and mischievous conspirators, guided by no definite
- or reasonable principle, and seeking only their own aggrandisement
- and the destruction of all the recognised laws of order. Yet it is
- certain that such an idea respecting the Commune is very generally
- entertained by ordinary English readers. It may be shown that the
- policy of this Government, though defaced by many gross abuses and
- errors, had much in it to deserve the consideration, and even to
- extort the admiration, of an intelligent and practical statesman. . . .
-
- "Foreign writers have delighted to represent the purposes of the
- Commune as vague and unintelligible. Even in Paris and at Versailles
- writers and talkers affected at first to be ignorant of the real
- projects and principles entertained by the Revolutionists. But the
- Commune of 1871 has itself destroyed all possibility of mistake upon
- the subject. It has put to itself and answered the question in the
- most explicit terms. The _Journal Officiel_ (of Paris) contained, on
- April 20th, a document worthy of the most careful perusal. It appears
- in the form of a declaration to the French people, and explains fully
- enough the main principles and the chief objects which animated the
- men of the Commune. Without bestowing on this address the ecstatic
- eulogies to which certain Utopian philosophers have deemed it
- entitled, we may credit it as being a straightforward, manly, and not
- altogether unpractical _exposé_ of the ideas of modern Communists.
-
- ". . . 'It is the duty of the Commune to confirm and determine the
- aspirations and wishes of the people of Paris; to explain, in its
- true character, the movement of March 18th--a movement which has been
- up to this time misunderstood, misconstrued, and calumniated by the
- politicians at Versailles. Once more Paris labours and suffers for
- the whole of France, for whom she is preparing, by her battles and
- her devoted sacrifices, an intellectual, moral, administrative, and
- economic regeneration, an era of glory and prosperity.
-
- "'What does she demand?
-
- "'The recognition and consolidation of the Republic as the only form
- of government compatible with the rights of the people and the regular
- and free development of society; the absolute independence of the
- Commune and its extension to every locality in France; the assurance
- by this means to each person of his rights in their integrity, to
- every Frenchman the full exercise of his faculties and capacities as
- a man, a citizen, and an artificer. The independence of the Commune
- will have but one limit--the equal right of independence to be enjoyed
- by the other Communes who shall adhere to the contract. It is the
- association of these Communes that must secure the unity of France.
-
- "'The inherent rights of the Commune are these: The right of voting
- the Communal budget of receipts and expenditure, of regulating and
- reforming the system of taxation, and of directing local services; the
- right to organise its own magistracy, the internal police and public
- education; to administer the property belonging to the Commune; the
- right of choosing by election or competition, with responsibility and
- a permanent right of control and revocation, the communal magistrates
- and officials of all sorts; the right of individual liberty under an
- absolute guarantee, liberty of conscience and liberty of labour; the
- right of permanent intervention by the citizens in communal affairs by
- means of the free manifestation of their ideas, and a free defence of
- their own interests, guarantees being given for such manifestations
- by the Commune, which is alone charged with the duty of guarding and
- securing the free and just right of meeting and of publicity; the
- right of organising the urban defences and the National Guard, which
- is to elect its own chiefs, and alone provide for the maintenance of
- order in the cities.
-
- "'Paris desires no more than this, with the condition, of course,
- that she shall find in the Grand Central Administration, composed
- of delegates from the Federal Communes, the practical recognition
- and realisation of the same principles. To insure, however, her own
- independence, and as a natural result of her own freedom of action,
- Paris reserves to herself the liberty of effecting as she may think
- fit, in her own sphere, those administrative and economic reforms
- which her population shall demand, of creating such institutions as
- are proper for developing and extending education, labour, commerce,
- and credit; of popularising the enjoyment of power and property in
- accordance with the necessities of the hour, the wish of all persons
- interested, and the data furnished by experience. Our enemies deceive
- themselves or deceive the country when they accuse Paris of desiring
- to impose its will or its supremacy upon the rest of the nation, and
- of aspiring to a Dictatorship which would amount to a veritable attack
- against the independence and sovereignty of other Communes. They
- deceive themselves or the country when they accuse Paris of seeking
- the destruction of French unity as established by the Revolution.
- The unity which has hitherto been imposed upon us by the Empire,
- the Monarchy, and the Parliamentary Government is nothing but a
- centralisation, despotic, unintelligent, arbitrary, and burdensome.
- Political unity as desired by Paris is a voluntary association of
- each local initiative, a free and spontaneous co-operation of all
- individual energies with one common object--the well-being, liberty,
- and security of all. The Communal Revolution initiated by the people
- on the 18th of March inaugurated a new political era, experimental,
- positive, and scientific. It was the end of the old official and
- clerical world, of military and bureaucratic _régime_, of jobbing in
- monopolies and privileges, to which the working class owed its state
- of servitude, and our country its misfortunes and disasters.'"
-
-The two Englishmen, coming straight to my house from Paris, gave me a
-favourable account of the administration of municipal Paris, especially
-at the time when Cluseret held command.
-
-Others who were there at the same time were similarly impressed. Paris
-ceased even to be the Corinth of Europe, since all prostitutes had been
-ordered out of the city. The leaders set an example of moderation in
-their style of living, which was the more remarkable as they had no
-authority but their own sense of propriety to limit their expenditure.
-How little they regarded themselves as relieved from the ordinary rules
-of the strictest bourgeois social order is apparent, also, from the
-fact that Jourde and Beslay, who were responsible for the finances of
-the Commune, actually borrowed £40,000 from the Rothschilds in order
-to carry on the ordinary business of the Municipality. Yet at the
-time not less than £60,000,000 in gold, apart from a huge store of
-silver, was lying at their mercy in the Bank of France; enough, as some
-cynically said, if judiciously used, to have bought up all M. Thiers'
-Government and his army to boot. The fact that the Communists left
-these vast accumulations untouched proves conclusively that they were
-the least predatory, some might say the least effective, revolutionists
-who ever held subversive opinions. In all directions they showed the
-same spirit. Every department was managed as economically and capably
-as they could organise it. But always on the most approved bourgeois
-lines. Many of the reforms they introduced, notably those by Camélinat
-at the Mint, are still maintained.
-
-How, then, did it come about that people of this character and capacity
-were regarded almost universally as desperate enemies of society,
-from the moment when they came to the front in their own city? It is
-the old story of the hatred of the materialist property-owner and
-profiteer for the idealist who is eager at once to realise the new
-period of public possession and co-operative well-being. The fact
-that such an indomitable anarchist-communist as the famous Blanqui,
-who spent the greater part of his life in prison, took an active part
-in the Commune and that others of like views were associated with
-the rising scared all the "respectable" classes, who regarded any
-attack upon the existing economic and social forms as a crime of the
-worst description. A tale current at the time puts the matter in a
-humorous shape. A number of communists, when arrested, were put in
-gaol with a still larger number of common malefactors. These latter
-greatly resented this intrusion, boycotted the political prisoners,
-and, it is said, would have gone so far as to attack their unwelcome
-companions but for the intervention of the warders. Asked why they
-exhibited such animosity towards men who had done them no harm, the
-ordinary criminals took quite a conservative, bourgeois view of their
-relations to the new-comers. "We," they said, "have some of us taken
-things which belonged to other people; but we have never thought for a
-moment of abolishing the right of property in itself. Not having enough
-ourselves, we wanted more and laid hands upon what we could get. But
-these men would take everything and leave nothing for us." So even the
-gaol-birds embraced the bourgeois ethic of individual ownership.
-
-Moreover, the International Working Men's Association had been founded
-in London in 1864, just seven years before. Although the late Professor
-Beesly, certainly as far from a violent revolutionist as any man could
-be, took the chair at the first meeting and English trade unionists
-of the most sober character constituted the bulk of the members in
-London, the terror which this organisation inspired in the dominant
-minority all over Europe was very far indeed in excess of the power
-which it could at any time exercise. But the names of Marx, the learned
-German-Jew philosopher, and Bakunin, the Russian peasant-anarchist,
-were words of dread to the comfortable classes in those days. Marx
-with Engels had written the celebrated "Communist Manifesto," at the
-last period of European disturbance, in 1848, analysing the historic
-development and approaching downfall of the entire wage-earning system,
-with a ruthless disregard for the feelings of the bourgeoisie. Its
-conclusion appealing to the "Workers of the World" to unite was not
-unnaturally regarded as a direct incitement to combined revolt. Though,
-therefore, few had read the Manifesto this appeal had echoed far and
-wide, and the organisation of the International itself was credited
-with the intention to use the Commune of Paris as the starting-point
-for a world-wide conflagration. Thus the movement in Paris, which
-at first had no other object than to secure the stability of the
-democratic Republic, was regarded as an incendiary revolt, and the
-brutal outrages of M. Thiers, aided by the mistakes of the Communists
-themselves, gradually forced extremists to the front. Some were like
-Delescluze, noble enthusiasts who knew success was impossible, and
-courted death for their ideal as sowing the seed of success for their
-great cause of the universal Co-operative Commonwealth in the near
-future; others were such as Félix Pyat, a furious subversionist of the
-most ruffianly type, who mixed up personal malignity and individual
-hatred with his every action, and brought discredit on his own
-comrades. Victory for the Socialist ideals, with the Germans containing
-one side of Paris and the Versailles troops attacking the other,
-was impossible--would have been impossible even if the Communists
-had suppressed their truly fraternal hatreds and had developed a
-military genius. They did neither. Cluseret showed some inkling of
-the necessities of the case, but Dombrowski, Rossel and other leaders
-exhibited no capacity. The wonderful thing about it all was that during
-the crisis, which lasted two months, Paris was so well administered.
-The sacrifice of the hostages and the tactics of incendiarism pursued
-at last, not by the Communist leaders, but by the Anarchist mob broken
-loose from all control, have hidden from the public at large, who read
-only the prejudiced accounts of the capitalist press, the real truth
-about the Commune of Paris.
-
-But whatever may have been done in resistance to the invasion of M.
-Thiers' army of reaction, nothing could possibly justify the horrible
-vengeance wreaked upon the people of Paris by the soldiery and their
-chiefs. It was a martyrdom of the great city. The _coup d'état_ of
-Louis Napoleon was child's play to the hideous butchery ordered and
-rejoiced in by Thiers, Gallifet and their subordinates. There was not
-even a pretence of justice in the whole massacre. Thousands of unarmed
-and innocent men and women were slaughtered in cold blood because
-Paris was feared by the bloodthirsty clique who regarded her rightly
-as the main obstacle to their reactionary policy. It was but too
-clear evidence that, when the rights of property are supposed to be
-imperilled, all sense of decency or humanity will be outraged by the
-dominant minority as it was by the slave-owners of old or the nobles
-of the feudal times.
-
-But the Commune itself, as matters stood, was as hopeless an attempt to
-"make twelve o'clock at eleven" as has ever been seen on the planet.
-John Brown's raid on Harper's Ferry was not more certainly foredoomed
-to failure than was the uprising of the Communists of Paris in 1871.
-But the Socialists of Europe, like the abolitionists, have celebrated
-the Commune and deified its martyrs for many a long year. The brave
-and unselfish champions of the proletariat who then laid down their
-lives in the hope that their deaths might hasten on the coming of a
-better day hold the same position in the minds of Socialists that John
-Brown held among the friends of the negro prior to the great American
-Civil War. It was an outburst of noble enthusiasm on their part to
-face certain failure for the "solidarity of the human race." But those
-who watched what happened then and afterwards can scarcely escape from
-the conclusion that the loss of so many of its ablest leaders, and the
-great discouragement engendered by the horrors of defeat, threw back
-Socialism itself in France fully twenty years.
-
-Recent experience in several directions has shown the world that
-enthusiasm and idealism for the great cause of human progress, and the
-co-ordination of social forces in the interest of the revolutionary
-majority of mankind, cannot of themselves change the course of events.
-Unless the stage in economic development has been reached where a new
-order has already been evolved out of the previous outworn system, it
-is impossible to realise the ideals of the new period by any sudden
-attack. Men imbued with the highest conceptions of the future and
-personally quite honest in their conduct may utterly fail to apply
-plain common sense to the facts of the present. Dublin, Petrograd and
-Helsingfors, nearly forty years later, did but enforce the teachings of
-the Commune of Paris.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- CLEMENCEAU THE RADICAL
-
-
-All this Clemenceau, though not himself a Socialist, saw by intuition.
-His powers of organisation and capacity for inspiring confidence among
-the people might have been of the greatest service to Paris at that
-critical juncture in her history--might even have averted the crash
-which laid so large a portion of the buildings of the great city in
-ruins and led to the infamous scenes already referred to. This was not
-to be, and Clemenceau was fortunate to escape the fate of many who were
-as little guilty of terrorism or arson as himself.
-
-The trial of the men responsible for the death of Generals Lecomte
-and Thomas was held on November 29th, 1871. Clemenceau himself was
-accused of not having done enough to save their lives. He was in no
-wise responsible for what had occurred, was strongly opposed to their
-execution, and, as has been seen, did all that he could do to prevent
-the two assailants of his own friends and fellow-citizens from being
-killed. That, however, was no security that he would have escaped
-condemnation if the evidence in his favour had not been so conclusive
-that even the prejudiced court could not decide against him. He was
-completely cleared from the charge by the evidence of Colonel Langlois,
-and given full credit for his efforts on behalf of the militarists who
-certainly could be reckoned among his most bitter enemies. Scarcely,
-however, was his life relieved from jeopardy under the law than he was
-compelled to risk it, or so he thought, on the duelling ground. Here
-Clemenceau was quite at home. He used his remarkable skill in handling
-the pistol with moderation and judgment, being content to wound his
-adversary, Commandant Poussages, in the leg. None the less, the result
-of his encounter was that he was fined and committed to prison for a
-fortnight as a lesson to him not to act in accordance with the French
-code of honour in future.
-
-But the truth is, M. Thiers did not wish to make a peaceful settlement
-with the people of the capital of France. Conciliation itself was
-branded as a crime as much by the political leaders and military chiefs
-on his side as it was by the Communist extremists on the other. The
-Versaillais aimed at the conquest of Paris by force of arms: they did
-not desire to enter peacefully by force of agreement. And having won,
-Paris was treated by the Republican Government as a conquered city. All
-sorts of exceptional laws, such as Napoleon III himself never enacted,
-were registered against the liberties of her inhabitants, and she was
-deprived of her fair share of representation in the National Assembly.
-The capital of France was a criminal city.
-
-Clemenceau on March 21st, 1871, had brought into the National Assembly
-at Versailles a measure which established the Municipal Council of
-Paris with 80 members. This was a valuable service to the capital and
-one of which the man himself was destined to take advantage. For,
-having failed to bring about a reasonable compromise between the
-Versailles chiefs and the leaders of the Commune, and having also lost
-his seat for Montmartre in the Assembly as well as the Mayoralty of
-that district, he gave up general politics and after the fall of the
-Commune accepted his election as Municipal Councillor for Clignancourt.
-He devoted the next five years of his life to his doctor's work, giving
-gratuitous advice as before to her poor around him, and to constant
-attendance as a Municipal Councillor, where he was the leader of the
-radical section. He thus gained a knowledge of Parisian life and the
-needs of Parisians which no other experience could have given him.
-
-As one of the municipal representatives he never ceased to protest
-against the shameful legislation which deprived Paris of its rights.
-But he did more. The man who is regarded by many, even to-day, as
-essentially a political destroyer with no idea of a constructive policy
-in any department made himself master of the details of municipal
-administration and was a most valued colleague of all who, acting on
-the extreme left of the Council, endeavoured, while upholding the
-dignity of the city against the repressive policy of the Government, to
-improve the management of city affairs in every department. In this he
-was as successful as the circumstances of the time permitted. He became
-in turn Secretary, Vice-President and President of the Council.
-
-Though this portion of Clemenceau's career is little known, the
-continuous unrecognised municipal service he rendered to Paris during
-those eventful years gave him a hold not only upon Montmartre but
-upon the whole city which has been of great service to him at other
-times. He had, in fact, become a thorough Parisian from the age of
-nineteen onwards, which can by no means always be said of men who
-have afterwards taken a leading part in French politics. It is very
-difficult to say what qualities are those which entitle a man to this
-distinguished appellation. I have myself known Frenchmen able, witty,
-brilliant and original, good speakers and clever writers, who somehow
-never seemed to be at home with Parisians and Parisian audiences.
-Critical and cynical, though at times enthusiastic and idealist, the
-Parisian crowd takes no man at his own valuation and is no less fickle
-than crowds in cities generally are. But Clemenceau has never failed
-to be on good terms with them. I attribute this to the fact that in
-addition to his other higher qualities, which impress all people of
-intelligence, Clemenceau has in him a vein of sheer humorous mischief
-that savours of the Parisian _gamin_ rather than of the hard-working
-student from La Vendée. There is something in common between him and
-the young rogues of the Parisian streets who are not at all averse from
-enjoying life at the cost of poking fun at other people and even at
-themselves. This spirit of Paris early got hold of Clemenceau and he of
-it.
-
-However this may be, on February 26th, 1876, he was again elected
-deputy to the National Assembly. He now began the active and continuous
-political life which had been broken off at its commencement by the
-second revolution followed by the gruesome tragedy just recounted.
-
-That he had never lost his sympathy for the men and women of the
-Commune, little reason as he personally had for good feeling towards
-them, was, proved by his delivery of his speech in favour of the
-Amnesty of the Communists, some of whom had been so eager to get
-rid of him for good and all when they had been in power for a short
-time themselves. The speech at once put Clemenceau among the first
-Parliamentary orators of the day. At this time a man of such capacity
-was greatly needed on the extreme left. Others, who had lost much of
-their energy and fervour in the long struggle against repression,
-were little inclined to run further risks for the sake of a really
-democratic Republic, still less for a set of people who in their
-misguided efforts for complete freedom had endangered the establishment
-of any Republic at all. They were content with what they had done
-before and with the positions they occupied then. It was greatly to
-Clemenceau's credit that he did not hesitate a moment as to the line he
-should take. Popular or unpopular, fair play and freedom for all were
-his watchwords.
-
-When the Amnesty question came up again in 1879 Clemenceau's speech in
-favour of the release of the indefatigable Communist Blanqui was, like
-his appeal for the amnesty of the members of the Commune generally,
-very creditable to him, for it was an unpopular move and gained him
-little useful political support from any party. Perhaps no man in
-the whole history of the revolutionary movement ever devoted himself
-so entirely and with such relentless determination to the spread of
-subversive doctrines as Auguste Blanqui. He began early and finished
-late. He was first imprisoned at the age of twenty-one and spent more
-than half of his seventy-six years of existence in gaol or exile. He
-was a strong believer in organised violence as a means of bringing
-about the realisation of his communist ideals. Insurrection against
-the successive French Governments he regarded as a duty. It was a duty
-which he faithfully fulfilled. In 1827 he was an active fighter in the
-insurrection of the Rue St. Denis. It was suppressed and Blanqui was
-wounded. He was one of the leaders of the successful rising against
-Charles X in 1830, in which he was again wounded. In the reign of
-Louis Philippe, which followed the failure to establish a Republic, he
-speedily went to work again. Insurrection, conspiracy, establishment of
-illegal societies, accumulation of weapons and explosives for organised
-attacks, attempts to constitute a communist republic, were followed by
-the usual penalties, and after his participation in the insurrection
-of the Montagnards, by condemnation to death commuted to imprisonment
-for life. Such was Blanqui's career up to 1848. Then the revolution
-of that year set him free again. No sooner was he released than he
-began afresh, forming a revolutionary combination which led to another
-three days of insurrection, with the result that he was sentenced to a
-further ten years of imprisonment. In 1858, under the Second Empire,
-he returned to Paris, his birthplace, but was soon ejected and passed
-eight years more in exile. In 1870 and 1871 Blanqui took part in the
-overthrow of Napoleon III, and in the Commune which followed, was
-captured by the Versaillais troops and sentenced to transportation to
-New Caledonia, after the Communards had offered to exchange for him the
-Archbishop of Paris, then held by them as a hostage. Instead of being
-shipped off to New Caledonia he was imprisoned at Clairvaux, where he
-remained until 1880, when he was elected, while still in gaol, deputy
-for Bordeaux, was not allowed to take his seat but was released, and
-died in Paris in 1881.
-
-This brief summary gives but a poor idea of Blanqui's activities and
-sufferings. At the period when Clemenceau pleaded for his release he
-was still, at seventy-one, the most dangerous revolutionary leader in
-France. From the first and throughout he was absolutely uncompromising
-in his adherence to his communist theories, and, being at the same time
-of dictatorial tendencies, he was an extremely difficult man to work
-with. None the less Blanqui represented the highest type of educated
-anarchist. He never considered himself for a moment. So long as he was
-able to keep the flag of revolution flying, and thus to prepare the
-way, by constant attempts at direct action, for the period when the
-people would be strong enough and well-organised enough to achieve
-victory for themselves, he was satisfied. A leader of his knowledge and
-capacity must have known and did know that his views could not possibly
-be accepted and acted upon, even if scientifically correct for a later
-date, at the stage of evolution which France had reached in his day.
-But, like Raspail, Delescluze, Amilcare Cipriani, Sophie Perovskaia,
-and more than one of the French dynamitical anarchists, he deliberately
-sacrificed his whole career, as he also risked his life time after
-time, in desperate efforts to uplift the mass of the people from
-their state of economic and social degradation. Nothing daunted him.
-His courage was of that exceptional quality which is strengthened by
-defeat. Even his bitterest enemies respected his devotion to his cause,
-his disregard of danger and the spirit he maintained, in spite of years
-upon years of confinement. He hated and despised the bourgeoisie, with
-their capitalist wage-earning, profit-making system, even more than he
-did monarchy and aristocracy. He revolted against the slow processes
-of social evolution, as he did against the inherited wrongs of class
-repression. No weapon of agitation came amiss to him. Journalist,
-pamphleteer, author, orator, organiser, conspirator, he covered in his
-own person the whole of the ground open to a convinced revolutionist.
-The suppressive order of to-day must be smashed up to give an outlet
-to the liberative order of to-morrow. Such a programme was in direct
-opposition to the ideas of Clemenceau, who, individualist as he is,
-has always regarded political action and trade organisation of a
-peaceful nature as the best means of attaining thorough reform and
-social reconstruction without running the risk of provoking monarchist
-or imperialist repression. Blanqui to him was an idealist who, by
-his very honesty and singleness of purpose, played into the hands of
-reaction, when he spent so much of his life as he lived outside of a
-prison in one broken but relentless effort to overthrow the existing
-society of inequality and wage-slavery by the same forcible methods
-that capitalist society itself uses to maintain the system in being.
-On the other hand, the right to freedom of person and freedom of
-expression was erected by the Radical leader into something not far
-from an intellectual religion. On this ground, therefore, he argued
-strongly in favour of Blanqui's release, though quite possibly, and
-indeed probably, Blanqui's freedom, had it been secured, would have
-been vigorously used against Clemenceau and his party--whom the great
-Anarchist-Communist would have regarded as mere trimmers--to the
-advantage of the reactionists themselves. But in this case as in that
-of the amnesty to the Communists, the Clemenceau of the Rights of Man
-and Liberty, Equality and Fraternity overcame Clemenceau the practical
-politician. That he failed to get Blanqui out of prison could only have
-been expected, having regard to the character of the Assembly to which
-his appeal is addressed.
-
-His Amnesty speech made a fine beginning for Clemenceau's active
-Parliamentary life. It put him on a very different level from that
-occupied by the mere political adventurers and intriguers whose main
-objects were either to help on the reconstitution of some form of
-monarchy or to secure for themselves posts under the Republic of much
-the same kind as existed under the Empire. Men who but yesterday had
-been champions of a genuine Republic in which the interests of the
-majority of the French people should be considered first, foremost and
-all the time had now become mere plotters for reaction, or opportunists
-anxious never to find an opportunity. They were Republicans in name
-but not in spirit. They were convinced that the most important portion
-of their policy consisted henceforth not in organising the factor of
-democracy for general progress but in reassuring their conservative
-opponents and the propertied classes generally, from the plutocrat to
-the peasant proprietor, that the Republic meant only a convenient form
-of government, in which all classes should agree harmoniously together
-to stand at ease for the next few generations. Their arguments in
-favour of such a scheme of permanent repose were unfortunately only
-too striking. They had but to recall the downfall of the Commune and
-to point to the ruins of fine public buildings to appeal effectively
-to the feelings of a large and influential portion of the people.
-Enthusiasm had become suspect, idealism the antechamber to violent
-mania, even Radicalism a vain thing.
-
-Gambetta himself, regarded in England as the most eloquent and capable
-leader of the Republican party, invented an excuse for the existence
-of the Republic which he had taken an active part in creating, by the
-formula, "It is that which divides us the least." Indifference on
-every important question except colonial expansion became the highest
-political wisdom. It was, in fact, hesitating opportunism and cowardly
-compromise which then dominated France. Such tactics evoked no loyalty
-and solved no problem. The old became cynical, the young contemptuous.
-To attack such flabby consistency in doing nothing seemed as bootless
-an enterprise as entering into conflict with a feather-bed. The early
-years of the French Republic constituted a period of apathy led,
-with one or two exceptions, by mediocrity. Even the scathing sarcasm
-and biting irony of Rochefort failed to produce any serious effect
-upon the smug stolidity of the rest-and-be-thankful representatives
-of the French middle class. Hence arose "a divorce between politics
-and thought," and men of capacity became disgusted with the form of
-government itself. All this played directly into the hands of reaction
-and was preparing the way for a series of attempts against the Republic.
-
-It was at this unhopeful period of stagnation, compromise and
-mediocrity that Clemenceau came to the front as leader of the
-Left in the National Assembly. He at once showed that he had every
-qualification for this important position--never more important than
-when there was a conspiracy afoot to prove to the world that there
-was no Radical Left at all. At the time he entered the Assembly in
-1876 Clemenceau was thirty-five years of age, with an irreproachable
-past behind him and the full confidence of the Republicans of Paris
-around him. In his work in Montmartre and on the Municipal Council the
-people had come to know what manner of man he was. Without their steady
-support it would have been difficult, if not impossible, for him to
-carry on the uphill fight he fought for so many years. His principles
-upon every subject of public policy were from the first clear and well
-defined.
-
-Freedom of person, of speech and of the press were cardinal points
-in his programme. He demanded that Paris should be released from
-all exceptional measures of repression inflicted by the so-called
-Conservatives upon the whole of the inhabitants of the capital as
-revenge for the rash action of a small number of fanatical idealists
-and as a means of keeping down any agitation against their own
-corruption and incompetence. He claimed also that no perpetual
-disability, in the shape of imprisonment and exile, should attach to
-the members of the Commune of Paris, and he called for the fullest
-pardon and freedom even for the irreconcilable Anarchist, Blanqui.
-On questions of political rights, universal secular education, the
-separation of Church and State, the generous treatment of the rank and
-file of the army, the prevention of the intrigues of the Catholics,
-and the expulsion of the Jesuits, Clemenceau took the line of an
-out-and-out democrat. So, likewise, in regard to the treatment of the
-working classes. Though not really a Socialist, the Radical leader
-recognised clearly the infinite hardships suffered by the wage-earners
-under the capitalist system, and proposed and supported palliative
-legislation to lessen and redress their wrongs. In foreign affairs
-he was a man of peace, never forgetting the outrages committed by
-the German armies in the war nor the territory seized and the huge
-indemnity exacted by the German Government at the peace; but hoping
-always that the friendly development of the peoples of both France and
-Germany might avert further antagonism and eventually lead to a full
-understanding which would assuage the hatreds of the past and lay the
-foundations of mutual good feeling in the future. To colonisation by
-conquest and colonial adventures generally Clemenceau was steadfastly
-opposed. The entire policy of expansion he regarded as injurious to the
-true interests of the country, diverting to doubtful enterprises abroad
-resources which were required for the development of Republican France
-at home. Such colonial schemes also were apt to create difficulties and
-even to risk wars with other nations which could in no wise benefit the
-people, while they might strengthen the financiers whose malefic power
-was already too great.
-
-Such in brief was the general policy which Clemenceau set himself to
-formulate and put to the front on behalf of the only party which at
-that moment could exercise any serious influence in the political
-world. The whole programme was closely knit together, and for
-many years stood the brunt of the bitterest Parliamentary warfare
-conceivable. It was a conflict of ideas that Clemenceau entered upon.
-He conducted it throughout on the most approved principle of all
-warfare: Never fail to attack in order to defend. The advice of the
-American banker, "David Harum," might have been enunciated as the motto
-of Georges Clemenceau the French statesman: "Do unto others as they
-would do unto you, and do it _first_."
-
-But the main point of all, that which assured and confirmed and
-strengthened his leadership under the most difficult and dangerous
-circumstances, was his resolute opposition to compromise. This was
-contrary to all the ideas of political strategy and tactics which then
-prevailed in France. "Men became Ministers solely on condition that
-they refused when in power to do that which they had promised when
-in opposition"--quite the English method, in fact. He himself never
-failed to denounce nominal Republicans who set themselves stubbornly
-against reform and progress in every shape, as mere reactionists in
-disguise. They were, in fact, the staunch buttresses of that bourgeois
-Republic of which Clemenceau not long afterwards said to me, "_La
-République, mon ami, c'est l'Empire républicanisé_." It was indeed a
-republicanised Empire which best suited the leading French politicians
-of that day. For at first bourgeois domination of the narrowest and
-meanest kind, leading, so the reactionaries hoped, to the restoration
-of the monarchy, had its will of Paris and all that Paris at its best
-stood for. As we look back upon that period of pettifoggery in high
-places, the wonder is that the Royalists were not successful. If they
-had had a king worth fighting for they might have been; for more than
-one President was certainly not unfavourable to the monarchy or empire.
-Prime Ministers were similarly tainted with reaction, and the army was
-none too loyal to the Republic.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- FROM GAMBETTA TO CLEMENCEAU
-
-
-Medici, Mazarin, Riquetti-Mirabeau, Buonaparte, Gambetta--these names
-recall the great influence which Italians have had upon French affairs.
-Few, if any, nations have allowed persons of foreign extraction to lead
-them as France permitted the five recorded above. Much, too, as these
-Italians were affected by their French surroundings, there is something
-in them all quite different from what we regard as distinctively French
-intelligence and general capacity. Possibly that gave them their power
-of control. They had that faculty of detachment, of looking at the
-situation from without, which is so invaluable to anyone who has to
-play a great part in the world. Some of them could so far survey, as
-well as enter into, the peculiarities of the French mind that they
-could play upon its weaknesses as well as call forth its strength.
-Yet, with all their genius, the four men named failed to accomplish
-what they set out to achieve, and none left behind him amid his own
-immediate followers those who were capable of carrying on his work.
-
-Léon Gambetta had but fourteen years of active political life, and
-during only eleven of those years was he in a position to make himself
-seriously felt. But what an amazing career this was of the grocer's boy
-of Cahors who stirred all France to enthusiastic support or ferocious
-denunciation between 1871 and 1882! When William Morris died, the
-doctor who attended him was asked what he died of. "He died of being
-William Morris," was the reply. Although Gambetta's death was due to a
-pistol-shot received under circumstances never fully explained, it may
-be said that he also died of being Léon Gambetta. For his inner fires
-had burnt the man out. He crowded all the excitement and passions of a
-long lifetime into those stormy eleven years, and without some account
-of him and his efforts for the foundation of the Republic the story of
-Clemenceau is not complete.
-
-Born in 1848 and enabled to come to Paris by the touching
-self-sacrifice of a maiden aunt who believed that her nephew's
-confidence in his destiny to do great things would be realised,
-Gambetta was soon regarded as a leader among the young men of the
-Quartier Latin, who were in full revolt against the Empire. He
-distinguished himself by his easy-going, rough-and-tumble mode of life,
-his carelessness about study of the law which was to be his means of
-earning a livelihood, and his perfervid eloquence in the political
-circles which he frequented. Lawyer, journalist, bohemian orator of
-the clubs, strongly anti-Imperialist, he had much personal magnetism,
-but was not generally recognised as a man of exceptional ability. The
-few cases he had had in the Courts did not give him any considerable
-standing. Such was Gambetta when a number of Republican journalists
-were arrested on November 12th, 1868, for starting a subscription to
-erect a monument to M. Baudin, the Republican deputy who had been shot
-down in cold blood during Louis Napoleon's massacre of the people
-of Paris on December 2nd, 1851--seventeen years before. Among these
-prisoners was the famous Delescluze, then editor of the _Réveil_. His
-counsel was Léon Gambetta. Gambetta's speech was not merely a defence
-of his client, it was a scathing indictment of the Empire, from its
-foundation on the ruin of the Republic of 1848 by the _coup d'état_
-onwards. "Who," the advocate asked, "were the men who 'saved' France
-at the cost of the death or transportation or exile of all her most
-eminent citizens? They were, to quote Corneille, 'un tas d'hommes
-perdus de dettes et de crimes.' These are the sort of people who for
-centuries have slashed down institutions and laws. Against them the
-human conscience is powerless, in spite of the sublime march-past of
-the martyrs who protest in the name of religion destroyed, of morality
-outraged, of equity crushed under the jackboot of the soldier. This is
-not salvation: it is assassination." And this was no longer a press
-prosecution: it was the Emperor and his set of scoundrels who were now
-on their trial before the people of France and Europe.
-
-The speech gave Gambetta great popularity and the opening into public
-life he desired. The cause itself was lost before the trial began.
-Delescluze was fined and imprisoned. "You may condemn us, but you can
-neither dishonour us nor overthrow us," cried Gambetta. From that time
-forward he was regarded as a new force on the side of the Republic.
-His behaviour in the Corps Législatif, to which he was soon afterwards
-elected, justified this opinion. When the disasters of the Empire came
-Gambetta was one of the first to cry for Napoleon's abdication and the
-establishment of the Republic, taking an active part in the foundation
-of the new order in Paris. It may be said that he worked side by side,
-though never hand in hand, with Clemenceau.
-
-But those scenes of the downfall of the Empire in the capital, dramatic
-and exciting as they were, could bear no comparison with his bold
-escape from beleaguered Paris in a balloon and the magnificent effort
-he made to rouse the Provinces against the invaders. He failed to turn
-the tide of German victories, but he prevented the shameful surrender
-without a fight for the French Republic which many would have been glad
-to accept, and he, more than any other man, kept the flag flying, when
-Legitimists, Orleanists and Buonapartists were all doing their utmost
-to set on foot a reactionary government against the best interests
-of France. All this is part of the common history of the time. But
-we are apt, in looking back over that period of his activities, to
-underrate the almost superhuman energy he displayed, to attach too much
-importance to the mistakes he inevitably made, and to forget that his
-own countrymen were among his worst enemies in the work he undertook.
-Also, if the Empire had left the Republic one single really first-rate
-general at the disposal of France, the result might have been very
-different from what it was. There is such a thing as luck in human
-affairs, and luck was dead against Gambetta. All the more credit to him
-for never losing heart even in the face of continuous disasters and
-even betrayals. First as leading member of the Government of Defence,
-and then as virtual Dictator of France, Gambetta bridged over for the
-time being the bitter antagonism which separated Paris, the besieged
-seat of government, from the rest of France. Immediately on his arrival
-at Tours he created a new National Government out of the unpromising
-elements gathered together almost accidentally there. The fall of Metz
-and the threatened starvation of Paris, which might lead to surrender
-at any moment, made Gambetta's own position desperate. The Paris
-Government, which apparently looked only to Paris, had failed to make
-a resolute effort to break through the lines of the German investment
-before Metz fell, and then lost heart altogether, refusing even to
-listen to any remonstrance from outside against a humiliating peace.
-Gambetta never gave way. Arrived at Bordeaux, he stuck to his text
-of carrying on the war, having in the meantime vigorously denounced
-the Government in Paris for its weakness. He and his fellow-delegates
-were deaf to the counsels of despair brought red-hot by members of the
-Government; but at last, overwhelmed by circumstances he could not
-control, the young Dictator resigned. After Paris had surrendered there
-was really no further hope, and those who voted in the new Assembly, as
-did Louis Blanc, Clemenceau and others, for the continuance of the war,
-did so more by way of protest against the apathy which pervaded the
-whole Assembly, and because foreign intervention in favour of France
-and against Germany seemed possible even thus late in the day, than
-because they saw at the moment any prospect of success.
-
-Thus France lay prostrate at the feet of Germany, but at least Gambetta
-and the Republicans who acted with him showed their confidence that she
-would rise again. They were not responsible for the collapse of the
-French nation: undismayed by defeat they believed in Republican France
-of the near future.
-
-Gambetta had created new armies out of disarray and disorder, and
-he had also aroused a fresh spirit which rose superior to disaster.
-The victory of the Republic in years to come over all the forces of
-reaction was largely due to the work done during Gambetta's four months
-of dictatorship.
-
-Universal Suffrage, General Secular Education, No Second Chamber,
-the Republican form of Government: those were the principal measures
-advocated by the extreme Left of the National Assembly, and these were
-advocated by Gambetta both at Bordeaux and when he took his seat at
-Versailles as one of the Deputies for Paris. But the Royalists were
-still in a majority, and were determined to take every advantage of
-their position while power still remained in their hands. Their object
-was to render Republicanism hateful. The object of their opponents
-was to show that no other form of government was possible and to
-prevent any other form from being established. Now that the Republic
-has been maintained for more than forty-seven years, under all sorts
-of difficult and dangerous circumstances, the obstacles which stood
-in its way at the start are sometimes under-estimated. Continuous
-agitation was needed to keep the country fully alive to the intrigues
-of the Royalists and Catholics. It was essential to put the misdeeds of
-the Empire and the real objects of the monarchists constantly before
-the public. No man in France was better qualified for this work than
-Gambetta, and he did it well, so well that the whole reactionary party
-was infuriated against him. There was no opportunism about him at
-this period, beyond the necessary adaptation of means to ends under
-circumstances which rendered immediate success impossible.
-
-M. Thiers, in consequence of his horrible suppression of the Commune,
-was by far the most powerful public man in the country. He was acting,
-though a Constitutional Monarchist, as trustee for a provisional form
-of government which could not be distinguished from a conservative
-Republic. The longer this continued the better the chance of obtaining
-a Government which would not be conservative. It was of great
-importance, therefore, to keep M. Thiers on the Republican side, and
-this was made easier by the action of M. Thiers' own old friends.
-So antagonistic was their attitude to the former Minister of Louis
-Philippe that, even when Gambetta supported the ex-Mayor of Lyons,
-a fervid Radical, M. Barodet, against M. Thiers' eminent friend and
-coadjutor M. de Rémusat, as representative of Paris, and the former won
-by 40,000 votes, Thiers never wavered in his decision to keep away from
-any direct connection with the monarchists. They therefore determined
-to upset the President, did so by a majority of 26 votes in the
-Assembly, and elected a President of their own in the person of Marshal
-MacMahon. This was on May 24th, 1873.
-
-Reaction had won at Versailles. It remained to be seen whether it would
-win in the country. A "Ministry of Combat" for reaction, headed by
-the Duc de Broglie, was formed, and a Ministry of Combat it certainly
-proved to be. They were allowed no peace by their opponents, who
-never ceased to attack them all round, and they met these persistent
-assaults by attempts secretly to cajole and suborn public opinion. So
-the great combat went on. The majority remained a majority and rejected
-the Republic. It was useless. But in his anxiety to win speedily
-in conjunction with M. Thiers, Gambetta himself and his followers
-practised that very opportunism which he had previously denounced. A
-non-democratic Senate, which had always been opposed by Republicans,
-was enacted as an essential part of the Republican Constitution, and on
-February 25th, 1875, the French Republic was firmly established as the
-legal form of government by the very same majority that, in the hope of
-rendering any such disaster to monarchy impossible, had made Marshal
-MacMahon President and the Duc de Broglie Premier.
-
-But it was a truncated Republic that Gambetta had thus obtained. What
-he had gained by political compromise he had lost in the enthusiasm
-of principle. A leader who desires to achieve great reforms must
-always keep in close touch with the fanatics of his party. They alone
-can be relied upon in periods of crisis, they alone refuse to regard
-politics merely as a remunerative profession. The compromise--for men
-of principle compromise spells surrender--of February 25th, 1875, was
-destined to be fatal to the democratic parliamentary dictatorship
-which Gambetta might have achieved by common consent of his party, had
-he pursued his original policy of democratic Republicanism through
-and through. He stunted the growth of his own progeny by helping to
-establish a Republicanised Empire. No doubt this averted friction for
-the time being, but it slackened the rate of progress, placed obstacles
-in the path of democracy, and destroyed public enthusiasm. By one of
-the strange ironies of political life, however, it so chanced that,
-nearly thirty years later, Clemenceau himself owed his return to
-Parliament to the institution of that same Senate the creation of which
-he had always resolutely opposed.
-
-But during these years of reconstruction from 1871 to 1875 Clemenceau
-had been excluded from the Assembly and actively engaged in the work
-of the Municipal Council of Paris. There he did admirable service in
-consolidating the organisation of Parisian municipal life to which he
-had been instrumental in giving expression in legal shape as Deputy for
-Montmartre. Paris had become the bugbear of all the reactionists and
-law-and-order men. The capital was constantly referred to by them as if
-the last acts of despair of the irresponsible extremists of the Commune
-were the habitual diversions of the Parisian populace when allowed
-free play for the realisation of their own aspirations. The Parisians,
-in fact, according to these persons, were burning with the desire
-to destroy their own city in order to avenge themselves upon their
-provincial detractors and enemies. It was important to show, therefore,
-not only that Paris could manage her own affairs coolly and capably,
-but also that she could take a progressive line of her own which might
-give the lead to other French cities in more than one direction. This
-was precisely what the Municipal Council did, and Clemenceau, by his
-constant attendance and the continuous pressure he exerted as an active
-member of the Left of that body, prevented the Council from being used
-at any time as a centre of reactionist intrigue. By this means also he
-strengthened his personal influence in his own democratic district as
-well as in Paris as a whole. He took care likewise all the world should
-know that on the matter of the full restitution of Parisian rights and
-the return of the Assembly to the capital he was as determined as ever,
-and that in the affairs of general politics he was and always would be
-a thoroughgoing Radical Republican. Thus he was building up for himself
-outside the Chamber a reputation as a capable municipal administrator
-as well as a fearless champion of the public rights of the great city
-he had made his home. At the same time his local popularity, due to his
-thorough knowledge of social conditions and his advocacy of municipal
-improvements of every kind, added to his gratuitous service as doctor
-of the poor, gave him an indisputable claim upon the votes of the
-people when, after having become President of the Municipal Council, he
-should decide to offer himself for re-election to the Assembly.
-
-And from February 25th, 1875, onwards, matters were taking such a turn
-that the presence of a thoroughly well-informed, determined, active
-and fearless representative of Paris became necessary. A leader was
-wanted on the extreme Left who should loyally support the moderate
-Republicans when they were going forward and have the courage to
-attack them when they seemed inclined to hesitate or go back. The
-success of the conservative compromise in the constitution of the
-Republic had strengthened the belief of the reactionary majority in
-the Assembly in their own power under the new conditions. Gambetta's
-own moderation deceived them as to the real position in the country.
-They began to think that the Republicans were afraid not only of how
-they would fare in the elections to the newly constituted Senate, but
-that the result of the General Elections which must shortly be held
-would be unfavourable to their cause. The Prime Minister, M. Buffet,
-aided and abetted by the President, MacMahon, who never forgot that
-the members of the Right were his real friends, made full use of the
-Exceptional Laws and the State of Siege, which was still in force, to
-show the Republicans plainly what a reactionary majority would mean.
-The "Conservatives" and Imperialists had things all their own way.
-Democracy became a byword and Radicalism a vain thing.
-
-With the Ministry at their command and the President in their hands,
-they needed only to obtain the control of the Senate to have the people
-of France entirely at their mercy. Then, with the army favourable,
-with whole cohorts of anti-Republican officials at their service, they
-might postpone the General Elections, maintain the state of siege
-permanently, and prepare everything for a monarchical restoration or a
-Buonapartist plébiscite. _L'Empire républicanisé_ indeed!
-
-M. Buffet, within a few months of the declaration of the Republic as
-the real form of government of France, spoke quite in this sense.
-Happily the forces of reaction fell out among themselves. They could
-not trust one another in any sharing of the booty which might fall
-to the general lot. Therefore, when the time came for nomination and
-election of the seventy-five members of the Senate to be elected by the
-Assembly, their intestine differences lost them the battle: one portion
-of their motley group even went over to the enemy. So the Republicans
-actually obtained a majority by the votes of their opponents. In
-this way the danger of the Senate as a whole being used against the
-Republic was averted and the Radicals had secured the first point in
-the political game. Yet, in spite of this preliminary success, the
-reactionists had a majority of the Senate of 300 when the limited
-votes of the country had been polled. But the Republicans in revenge
-gained a surprising majority at the General Elections for the National
-Assembly, such a majority that it might have been thought any further
-serious effort on the part of the anti-Republicans would be impossible
-and even that Gambetta's previous policy of opportunism was unnecessary.
-
-It was at this election of 1876 that Clemenceau was returned again for
-the 18th Electoral District of Paris to the National Assembly as a
-thoroughgoing Radical Republican, and took his seat on the extreme Left
-under the leadership of Gambetta.
-
-Marshal MacMahon, the President, was a good honest soldier who
-served his country as well as he knew how, but was quite incapable
-of understanding the new forces that were coming into action around
-him. The Parisians were never tired of inventing humorous scenes in
-which he invariably figured as the well-meaning pantaloon. Everybody
-trusted his honour, but all the world doubted his intelligence. He was
-by nature, upbringing and surroundings a conservative in the widest
-sense of the word. Radical Republicanism was to him the accursed thing
-which would bring about another Commune of Paris, if its partisans
-were given free rein. Although, therefore, incapable of plotting
-directly for the overthrow of the Constitution he had pledged himself
-to uphold, he was liable to yield to influences the full tendency of
-which he did not discern. Thus it happened that he allowed himself
-unconsciously to become the tool of the highly educated and clever
-Duc de Broglie, who was undoubtedly a monarchist and, what was still
-worse, a statesman imbued with the ideals of clericalism and of the
-Jesuits--precisely those powers which the growing spirit of democracy
-and Republicanism most feared. It was this growing spirit and its
-expression in the National Assembly that the Prime Minister, M. Jules
-Simon, who succeeded de Broglie had to recognise and deal with.
-Gambetta was still the leader of the Republican Party, and with him for
-this struggle were all the more advanced men, including Clemenceau, who
-afterwards stoutly opposed his policy of opportunism and compromise.
-M. Jules Simon, finding the majority of the Assembly in favour of
-steady progress towards the Left, was quite unable to check the
-movement in this direction or to refuse the legislation to which the
-Republican demands of necessity impelled him. The President could not
-see that an extremely moderate man, such as Jules Simon undoubtedly
-was, would not have taken this course unless he had been convinced
-that the Republic had to be in some degree republicanised if serious
-trouble were to be averted. In short, Marshal MacMahon felt that the
-floodgates of revolution were being opened, and forthwith knocked
-down the lock-keeper. In other words, he sent for M. Jules Simon and
-talked to him in such a manner as gave the Premier no option but to
-resign. Resign he did. Thereupon France was thrown into that turmoil of
-peaceful civil war ever afterwards known as the _Coup du Seize Mai_.
-The Duc de Broglie, with a trusty phalanx of seasoned reactionaries
-and devotees of priestcraft, again took office, regardless of the fact
-that the majority of the Chamber was solid against them all. Even
-with the most strenuous support of the President of the Republic,
-the de Broglie Ministry never had a chance from the first. They were
-in a hopeless minority, and their attempt to govern, on the basis of
-MacMahon's reputation and the support of the priests, could not but
-result in failure, unless the Marshal himself were prepared to risk a
-_coup d'état_. This the Duc de Broglie and his followers were ready to
-attempt, but it was useless to embark upon anything of the kind so long
-as the President held back.
-
-Then came the famous division, following up a most violent discussion,
-which for many a long year formed a landmark in the history of the
-Republic. Three hundred and sixty-three Republicans declared against
-the President's Ministry of reaction and all its works. But Marshal
-MacMahon still would not understand that in his mistaken attempt to
-override the National Assembly in order to save France from what he
-believed would be an Anarchist revolution, he himself, with his group
-of monarchists and clericals, was steadily impelling the country into
-civil war. The action taken against Gambetta, then at the height of his
-vigour and influence, for declaring in his famous phrase that, in view
-of the attitude of the Chamber, the President must either "give in or
-get out," made matters still worse. The President's manifestoes to the
-Assembly and the country also only confirmed the growing impression
-that a sinister plot was afoot against the Republic itself, in the
-interest of the Orleanists.
-
-This was a much more serious matter than appeared on the surface.
-In the six years which had passed since the withdrawal of the
-German armies and the suppression of the Commune, France had become
-accustomed to the Republic and to the use of universal suffrage as a
-democratic instrument of organisation. Great as were its drawbacks in
-many respects, the Republic was, as Gambetta phrased it, the form of
-government which divided Frenchmen the least. The people, who comprised
-not only the enlightened Radical Republicans of the cities, but the
-easily frightened small bourgeoisie and the peasantry, could now make
-the Assembly and the Senate do what they pleased. They were not as yet
-prepared to push those institutions very fast or very far, but they
-were unquestionably moving forward and were in no mind whatever to
-go back either to Napoleonism, Orleanism or Legitimism. France as a
-Republic was becoming the France of them all.
-
-When, therefore, the 363 deputies who voted against the Duc
-de Broglie's rococo restoration policy and Marshal MacMahon's
-constitutional autocracy stood firmly together, sinking all differences
-in the one determination to safeguard and consolidate the Republic,
-there could be no real doubt as to the result. Those 363 stalwarts
-issued a vigorous appeal to the country, and the issue was joined in
-earnest at the General Elections. Gambetta, meanwhile, was the hero of
-the hour, straining every nerve for victory, exhausting himself by his
-furious eloquence, and the other advanced leaders did their full share
-of the fighting. In all this political warfare Clemenceau was as active
-and energetic as the fiery tribune himself, and as one of the framers
-and signatories of the great Republican appeal identified himself
-permanently with the document which recorded, as events proved, the
-decision of France to be and to remain a Republic.
-
-Although it did not seem so at the time, the President played
-completely into the hands of the Republicans by the Message he sent
-to the Assembly and the Senate just before the prorogation he had so
-autocratically decreed. Here is a portion of it:--
-
- "Frenchmen,--You are about to vote. The violence of the opposition
- has dispelled all illusions. . . . The conflict is between order and
- disorder. You have already announced you will not by hostile elections
- plunge the country into an unknown future of crises and conflicts. You
- will vote for the candidates whom I recommend to your suffrages. Go
- without fear to the poll.
-
- (Signed) "MARÉCHAL MACMAHON."
-
-The elections followed. It is difficult to exaggerate the advantage
-which is given in a French General Election to the party in power at
-the time. An unscrupulous Minister of the Interior has at his disposal
-all sorts of devices and machinery for helping his own side to victory.
-He can bring pressure of every kind to bear upon individuals directly
-or indirectly dependent on the Government of the day, and the whole
-official caste may be enlisted on behalf of the administration in
-control. This is the case ordinarily and in quiet times. But here was
-a direct stand-up fight between Reaction and Clericalism on the one
-side and Republicanism and Secularism--for that was at stake too--on
-the other. Both Marshal MacMahon and the Duc de Broglie honestly
-believed that they were doing their very utmost to preserve France
-from rapine and ruin. Every Radical Republican of the old school or
-the new was to them a bloody-minded Communard in disguise, veiling
-his instincts for plunder with eloquent appeals for patriotism and
-humanity. It is easy for the fanatics of conservatism and reaction thus
-to delude themselves. And once self-deceived they lose no chance of
-imposing their own wise and sober views upon the misguided people! So
-it happened in this case. Never were the powers of the Government in
-office strained to the same extent as in these elections of 1877--the
-elections which followed on the "_Seize Mai_" stroke of MacMahon. Not
-an opportunity for coercing, cajoling and intimidating the voters was
-missed. In every urban district and rural village throughout France
-the State, the Church, the Municipality, the Commune were used to
-the fullest extent possible to obtain a vote favourable to the de
-Broglie Ministry. Swarms of priests and Jesuits buzzed around the
-constituencies, and promises of an easy time of it in this life and
-the next if things went the right way were made in profusion. If the
-Republic could be beaten by the forces of reaction it would be beaten
-now! Gambetta had predicted that the 363 would return to the Assembly
-as 400. This was not to be. But in view of the tremendous efforts made
-to stem the tide of progress, not only by promises, but by serious
-threats wherever threats might tell, the wonder is the Republicans were
-so successful as they proved to be. In spite of all that the President
-and the Prime Minister and the Catholic Church and the Jesuits--who
-were fighting for the right to remain in France--and the curés and
-the State functionaries, and all that the agencies of aristocratic,
-monarchist and Buonapartist--more particularly Buonapartist--corruption
-could do, the Republicans returned to the Chamber with a substantial
-majority of upwards of 100 votes. This victory was universally
-recognised not only in France but throughout Europe as irrefragable
-evidence that the French people had finally decided for a Republic, and
-had dealt at the same time a serious blow to the Church.
-
-But, obvious as this was to everybody else, the respectable old
-soldier who had been a party to all this reactionary turmoil was still
-unconvinced of the error of his ways! He repeated the formula of the
-Malakoff fortress: _J'y suis, j'y reste_. But the Republicans were more
-tenacious than the Russians. They resolved to dislodge him, political
-Marshal though he was. A resolution was passed by the Assembly to
-inquire into corrupt practices during the election. It was a challenge
-to battle, and signed by such men as Albert Grévy, H. Brisson, Jules
-Ferry, Léon Gambetta, Floquet, Louis Blanc and Clemenceau.
-
-A great debate, lasting several days, followed, in which de Broglie
-defended himself in a high-handed manner against the fervid
-denunciations of Gambetta. A Committee of Inquiry was nominated and
-the arena of the struggle changed to the Senate, which presently, as
-might have been expected from its reactionary character, gave a small
-vote of confidence in the Marshal and his Ministers. Nevertheless the
-feeling in the country was such that even MacMahon could not hold on.
-De Broglie resigned, and the Marshal evolved--almost from the depths of
-his inner consciousness--an "extra-Parliamentary Cabinet" which might
-have been called "The Cabinet of Men of No Account." But these were so
-unknown and so incompetent that all France made fun of them; and the
-will of the old Marshal, which nothing else could conquer, was broken
-by ridicule. In December, 1877, the President of the Republic saw that
-unless he appealed to the army, as the Buonapartists vigorously incited
-him to do, an appeal which more than probably the army itself would
-have rejected, there was no course open to him but the alternative
-which Gambetta had pointed out as being the Marshal's inevitable
-destiny if he kept within the limits of law and order--to give in or
-get out. The old soldier of the Empire gave in, and did his country
-a service by accepting the rebuff which he had courted: a moderate
-Republican Ministry under the Premiership of M. Dufaure took office.
-MacMahon himself remained President of the Republic until January,
-1879 (when he was succeeded by Jules Grévy), but his reactionary
-power was broken and France entered on a moderately peaceful era of
-recognised Republicanism. Gambetta was the acknowledged leader of
-the Republican majority; and Clemenceau, after this first taste of
-victory, now began that fine career of destructive, anti-opportunist
-Radicalism and semi-Socialist democracy which made him for many
-years the most redoubtable politician and orator in the Republic.
-The Radical-Socialist Clemenceau stood next in succession to the
-Opportunist Gambetta.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- THE TIGER
-
-
-When a political leader in the course of some fifteen years of
-Parlamentary life has upset, or has helped to upset, no fewer than
-eighteen administrations and has always refused to take office himself,
-that leader is likely to have created a few enemies. When, in addition
-to these feats of destruction, he has during the same period secured
-the nomination and election of three Presidents of the Republic and
-has thus proved an insuperable obstacle to the realisation of the
-legitimate ambitions of the most important public men in France who
-were not elected, it is clear that personal popularity was not the
-object he had in view. It is impossible for the ordinary politician
-or journalist to judge fairly a man of this sort. Politics in modern
-Europe is an interesting game and, quite frequently, a remunerative
-profession. Party interests sap all principle and the attainment of
-personal aims and ambitions in and out of Parliament is, as a rule,
-quite incompatible with common honesty. Instead of Court intrigues and
-backstair cabals there are nowadays lobby "transactions" and convenient
-sales of titles and positions arranged, for value received, at private
-meetings. That is as far as democracy has got yet. It is all an
-understood business, often complicated with more flagitious pecuniary
-dealings outside.
-
-Republican Government, or Constitutional Government, means, therefore,
-the success or failure of vote-catching and advantage-grabbing schemes,
-quite irrespective, from the public point of view, of the merits of the
-proposals which are put forward. Honest enthusiasts, who really wish
-to get something done for the benefit of the present or the coming
-generation, are only useful in so far as they act as stokers-up of
-public opinion for the profit of the political promoter of this or that
-faction. Steam is needed to drive the machine of State. Men of real
-convictions furnish that steam. But they are fools for their pains, all
-the same. Half the amount of energy used in the right direction would
-gain for them place, pelf, and possibly power, which is all that any
-man of common sense goes into politics for. Anybody who carries high
-principle and serious endeavour into political life is not playing the
-game. Everybody around him wants to know what on earth he is driving
-at. The only conceivable object of turning a Ministry out is to get
-in. To turn a Government out in order to keep out yourself is an
-unintelligible and therefore dangerous form of political mania, or a
-persistent manifestation of original sin.
-
-Clemenceau was found guilty on both counts. But he was the ablest
-public man in all France. Moreover, he was successful in the diabolical
-combinations he set on foot. The thing was uncanny. That he should
-begin by overthrowing other politicians was all in the way of business.
-But that he should go on at it, time after time, for year after year,
-while other and inferior men took the posts he had opened for them, was
-not to be explained by any known theory of human motives. If he had
-been a cranky religionist, now, that would conceivably have met the
-case. He might have been "possessed" from on high or from below. But
-Clemenceau was and is a free-thinker of free-thinkers: neither Heaven
-nor Hell has anything to say to him. Clearly it is a case of malignant
-atavism: Clemenceau has thrown back to his animal ancestry. What is
-the totem of the tribe which has entered into him, whose instinct of
-depredation pervades his every political action? We have it! He is of
-the jungle, jungly. His spring is terrific. His crashing attack fatal.
-He looks as formidable as he is. In short, he is a Tiger, and there you
-are. That accounts for everything!
-
-When Clemenceau was re-elected Deputy for the 18th Arrondissement
-to the National Assembly, on October 14th, 1877, and took the active
-part in the renewed struggle with Marshal MacMahon already spoken of,
-Gambetta was the leader at the height of his power and influence, with
-a solid Republican majority of more than a hundred votes. But from
-this period he became steadily more and more Opportunist, which gained
-him great credit in Great Britain, and Clemenceau was thenceforth the
-recognised leader of the advanced Left. MacMahon having resigned, M.
-Grévy was elected President with the support of Gambetta.
-
-From the first Clemenceau had vigorously opposed the establishment
-of a Second Chamber in the shape of a Senate divorced from a direct
-popular vote. This was a step calculated to hamper progress at every
-turn, and at critical moments to intensify those very antagonisms which
-it was Gambetta's intention, no doubt, to compose entirely, or at any
-rate to mitigate. Clemenceau did not view the matter from Gambetta's
-point of view. The Monarchists and Buonapartists were the domestic
-enemy, as the Germans had been and might be again the foreign enemy.
-The only sound policy for strengthening the Republic to resist both
-was to favour those measures political and social which would make
-that Republic, which they had established with so much difficulty and
-at such great cost, a genuinely democratic Republic. Any surrender to
-the reactionists and the clericals must inevitably dishearten those
-parties, now shown to be the majority of the whole French people, who
-were for the Republic and the Republic alone. Opportunism also gave
-the anti-democrats and intriguers a false notion of their own power,
-virtually helped them to carry on their underground agitations for a
-change of the new constitution, and provided them in the undemocratic
-Senate with a political force that might be turned to their own purpose.
-
-It was more important all through, thought Clemenceau, to inspire
-your own side with confidence than to placate your opponents by
-half-measures. It was, in fact, not enough to eject officials who were
-known to be hostile to the Republic; it was still more essential to
-give such shape to the political forms and so vivify political opinion
-that even the most unscrupulous officials could not turn them to the
-account of reaction. Both steps were necessary to carry out a thorough
-democratic programme. In fact, the whole scheme of administration in
-France could not be permanently improved merely by substituting one set
-of bureaucrats for another. Much more drastic measures of a peaceful
-character were indispensable, and these Opportunism thwarted. Gambetta
-may not have given up his desire to carry these Radical measures in
-1877 and 1878: he still retained and expressed his old opinions upon
-clericalism and its sinister influence. But he was no longer the
-vehement champion of the advanced party at Versailles, and the position
-which he had abandoned Clemenceau took up and pushed further to the
-front.
-
-There was no matter on which the lines of cleavage between the
-Republicans and the reactionists were more definitely and clearly drawn
-than on the question of the Amnesty of the Communists. No man in the
-Assembly was stronger in favour of their complete amnesty by law than
-Clemenceau. This he showed in 1876, and in his powerful advocacy of the
-release of the great agitator and conspirator Blanqui in 1879. Every
-reactionary and trimming man of moderate views was bitterly opposed to
-a policy of justice towards the victims of the wholesale measures of
-repression formulated by M. Thiers and so frightfully carried out by
-General Gallifet and the Versailles troops in 1871. Even when measures
-of partial amnesty were passed, their application was nullified as
-far as possible by Ministers. It was part of an organised policy
-to frighten the bourgeoisie and peasants into another Empire. The
-reprisals of the Bloody Week and the transportations to Cayenne and New
-Caledonia had not by any means fully satisfied the enemies alike of the
-Commune and the Republic. So Clemenceau and his friends never ceased
-their attacks upon M. Waddington and others who took the rancorous
-conservative view of unceasing persecution of the men and women who,
-after all, were the first to declare the Republic. M. Waddington, as
-Premier, got a resolution passed by the Chamber in his favour. But this
-did not silence either Clemenceau's friends or himself. Here, in fact,
-was a crucial case of his power of getting rid of an obnoxious Ministry
-even in the face of a Ministerial majority. The Tiger showed his
-claws and made ready to spring. But first he gave fair warning of his
-intentions. Nothing could be plainer than this: "Why has the Minister
-of Justice demanded a partial amnesty? Because he is anxious that the
-country should not forget the horrors of the Commune. But then, if you
-do not wish it to forget the horrors of the Commune, why do you desire
-that those who have been condemned should forget the horrors of its
-repression? Because for eight long years we have kept under cover the
-abominable facts at our disposal, you have thought yourselves in a
-position to trample on us! You say: We shall not forget the hostages
-and the conflagrations. Very well. I who speak here tell you: If you
-forget nothing, your opponents will remember too."
-
-The speech from which that passage is an excerpt was regarded as
-a distinct menace on Clemenceau's part. It was followed up by the
-extreme Left with a series of interruptions, interrogations and
-denunciations which ended in the retirement of M. Waddington. He had
-his majority but he had no Clemenceau. So out went Waddington and his
-colleagues. In came M. Freycinet--"the white mouse." "We have had,"
-said Clemenceau's organ, _La Justice_, "in the Waddington cabinet a
-Dufaure cabinet without M. Dufaure. To-day we have a Waddington cabinet
-without M. Waddington. It is a botch upon a botch." A nice welcome for
-M. Freycinet! A pleasing congratulation for the President, M. Grévy!
-The administration was regarded as a political monstrosity. It had two
-heads, M. Freycinet and M. Jules Ferry, one looking to the right and
-the other to the left. The friends of Freycinet could not stand Ferry:
-the friends of Ferry abhorred Freycinet. This new political marriage
-not only began but went on with mutual aversion. It stood at the
-mercy, therefore, of Clemenceau, who was less inclined to be merciful
-since the Premier declared himself bitterly hostile to the plenary
-amnesty proposed by the famous old Republican, M. Louis Blanc. Also on
-account of clerical tendencies. Out goes Freycinet, therefore, in his
-turn, and in comes M. Jules Ferry, with various clerical, educational
-and other troubles of his own hatching to clear up. Ministries, in
-short, were going in and out on the dial of Presidential favour like
-the figures of a Dutch clock. Clemenceau was getting his claws well
-into the various political personages all the time. As none of them
-had any blood to lose in the shape of principles there was no great
-harm done--except to the Republic! It was the perpetual immolation
-of a sawdust brigade. A keen critic of the period said of the Ferry
-Ministry--which was beaten on its proposal to postpone on behalf of
-education the reform of the magistracy and all that this carried with
-it in regard to the amnesty--that it wished to die before it lived.
-Down it went for the moment, and returned to place out of breath and
-half-ruined. But there the Ministry still was, and that by itself was
-something in those days of political topsy-turveydom, with Clemenceau
-and his party ever ready to assert themselves.
-
-Thus the Republic stumbled rather than marched on, from the date
-of Marshal MacMahon's resignation and the installation of M. Grévy
-as President up to the period of the declaration of July 14th, in
-remembrance of July 14th, 1789, and the Fall of the Bastille, as the
-fête day of the Republic after the passage of a practically complete
-amnesty. This was really a great triumph for all Republicans, as it put
-the Republic in its true historic relation to the past, the present
-and the future. With such a national fête day, with the certainty that
-Republicans, if they chose to keep united, could always command a large
-majority in the Assembly, the elections of 1881 might well have been
-a first step towards a thorough political and social reorganisation
-of the Republic. Unfortunately there were several causes of disunion.
-President of the Assembly though he was, and therefore excluded by
-his position as well as by M. Grévy's prejudice against him from
-coming into immediate competition with M. Ferry for the Premiership,
-Gambetta was actively supporting the _scrutin de liste_, or political
-appeal to the whole country, against _scrutin d'arrondissement_, or
-local elections. This was regarded as a bid on his part for a clear
-Parliamentary dictatorship. Already on October 20th, 1880, Clemenceau
-had denounced the hero of the dictatorship of despair of 1871, fine as
-his effort had then been, as aiming at personal power ten years later.
-A victory at the polls gained through _scrutin de liste_ would probably
-ensure him success in this venture.
-
-Nevertheless, in spite of open and secret opposition, Gambetta had
-sufficient influence to carry the _scrutin de liste_ through the
-National Assembly. But with the curious irony of fate he was defeated
-by a majority of 32 in the Senate which he himself had been so largely
-instrumental in forcing upon the Republic! This was on June 9th, 1881.
-Three months before, M. Barodet had brought forward a resolution
-backed by 64 deputies which, if carried, would have abolished the
-equality of rights between the Senate and the National Assembly, would
-have withdrawn the right of the former to dissolve Parliament, would
-have made the Chamber permanent like the Senate, would have modified
-the system of election of the second House; would have prevented the
-re-enactment of the _scrutin de liste_ by again making the electoral
-law for the deputies part of the Constitution; and lastly would have
-summoned a Constituent Assembly in order to carry out these reforms.
-This whole project was discussed in the Assembly on May 31st. There
-was no mistake about Clemenceau's attitude. He formulated a vigorous
-indictment against the Constitution of 1875 and attacked the Senate
-with great violence. The Constitution of 1875 was, he declared, a
-powerful weapon of war expressly forged for use against the Republic.
-The Senate with its anti-democratic method of election was a permanent
-danger to the State. It was not in any sense an element of stability
-but an element of resistance. "What is the use of talking of a brake
-on the machine or a weight to counterbalance popular opinion? Does not
-universal suffrage provide its own brake, its own regulator?" This
-time, however, Clemenceau missed his _coup_. M. Barodet's motion was
-rejected and the conservative Republic rumbled on comfortably, though
-Clemenceau shortly afterwards very nearly toppled M. Ferry's Cabinet
-over, the Ministers only securing a vote in their favour by a majority
-of 13 made up by their own votes.
-
-Looking back to that period when the whole Constitution seemed almost
-certain to go into the melting-pot and come out again in a thoroughly
-democratic shape, it is remarkable to notice how, in spite of the
-efforts of Clemenceau, M. Naquet and other democrats, the Republic of
-compromise has steadily adhered to its old machinery. Why the cumbrous
-and often reactionary Senate, elected in such wise as to exclude
-democratic influence, should have been maintained for more than forty
-years is difficult to explain. But nations, as our own belated and
-unmanageable Constitution proves, when once they have become accustomed
-to a form of government, are very slow indeed to adapt it to rapidly
-changing economic and social developments. This, it may be said,
-suits the English turn of mind with its queer addiction to perpetual
-compromise. But the French are logical and apparently restless. Yet
-their Constitution remains an unintelligible muddle. Their real
-conservatism overrides their revolutionary tendencies except in periods
-of great perturbation. Thus the Opportunist Republic of Gambetta,
-which ought to have been a mere makeshift, has held on, with partial
-revision, for more than forty years. Fear of the monarchists on one
-side and of the Communists, afterwards the Socialists, on the other has
-kept Humpty-Dumpty up on his wall.
-
-The elections of 1881, conducted as they were amid much excitement,
-gave the Republicans of all parties a crushing majority--a majority in
-the Assembly greatly out of proportion even to the total vote. There
-were five millions of votes for Republicans against 1,700,000 for
-the various sections of monarchists. The Republican deputies in the
-Chamber, however, numbered 467 to only 90 "conservatives." According
-to the returns, this was a victory for the Government and its chief,
-M. Jules Ferry, especially as the Prime Minister had arrived at some
-understanding with Gambetta, who at this time had become extremely
-unpopular with the democracy of Paris. But those who were of this
-opinion reckoned without the question of Tunis and, above all, without
-taking account of the difficulty of facing the criticisms of the
-irreconcilable Clemenceau. Clemenceau had always opposed a policy of
-colonial adventure. This of Tunis was from his point of view not only
-adventurous but dangerous. Tunis had been offered to France in an
-indefinite way at the Peace-with-Honour Congress of Berlin in 1878.
-But the policy of expansion pushed on by financial intrigues did not
-take shape at once. When it did it was serious enough, for France not
-only had to deal with troubles in Algeria itself, with the natural
-opposition of the Bey of Tunis to French interference and annexation,
-but Italy took umbrage at the advance, regarding Tunis as specially
-her business, Turkey was by no means favourable, and there was even
-a possibility that Germany might stir up trouble for purposes of her
-own. Moreover the whole business had been extremely ill-managed, not
-only by the Government itself but by M. Albert Grévy, the brother of
-the President, who was the Governor-General of Algeria. This personage,
-on account of his Presidential connections, could neither be censured
-nor replaced. So credits were asked for, troops were moved, a railway
-concession granted--everything as usual, in short, when annexation is
-being prepared.
-
-Clemenceau quite rightly denounced the whole mischievous business as
-the policy of intriguers and plutocrats, and demanded an inquiry into
-the affair from the first. He did not measure his phrases at all.
-French blood and French money, sadly needed at home, were being wasted
-abroad. M. Ferry, to do him justice, fought hard for his policy of
-colonisation by force of arms. His attacks upon the extremists who
-criticised him did not lack point or bitterness. Discharged officials
-from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and returned Communards from
-Noumea who composed the public meetings and irregular assizes that
-condemned him, M. Ferry, "as is fitting, kicked aside with his boot."
-As to Clemenceau, if he had allowed matters to take their own course
-in Tunis, what a tornado of malediction would have raged around them
-from that orator! "I can hear even now the philippics of the honourable
-M. Clemenceau." Clemenceau did not get the inquiry he demanded. But
-on November 10th M. Ferry retired, so badly had he been mauled in
-the fray. It was a win, that is to say, for Clemenceau, who by his
-speech on November 9th again overthrew the Government in spite of the
-cordial support of Gambetta. What made this victory of Clemenceau and
-the extreme Left the more astounding was the fact that the Treaty
-concluding the "first pacification" of Tunis had been confirmed on May
-23rd by a majority of 430 to 1. Clemenceau was that one. Six months
-later, therefore, he had his revenge. The _expédition de vacances_,
-which had developed into a _guerre de conquête_, cost M. Jules Ferry
-his Premiership, notwithstanding this unheard-of majority. The Tiger at
-work indeed!
-
-So now at last, in spite of M. Grévy's ungrateful conduct towards him,
-in spite likewise of the rejection of the _scrutin de liste_, Gambetta
-became President of the Council instead of President of the Chamber.
-He was still at this time in the eyes of all foreigners the most
-eminent living French statesman. In England particularly his accession
-to office was received with jubilation in official circles. It meant,
-so said Liberals like Sir Charles Dilke, who were then in power, a
-permanently close understanding between France and England, a joint
-settlement of the troublesome and at times even threatening Egyptian
-question, as well as a fair probability of the arrangement of other
-thorny problems between the two countries. But in order to accomplish
-all this Gambetta must carry the Assembly, the Senate and the bulk of
-his countrymen with him, and control a solid Republican party, even
-if Clemenceau and his squadrons still hung upon his flank. Gambetta,
-however, had shaken the confidence of the country. It was no longer
-Clemenceau and his friends only who accused him of aiming at supreme
-dictatorial power. The public in general suspected him too. Nor did
-his immediate friends, either old or young, do much to destroy this
-unfortunate impression.
-
-Truth to tell, Gambetta was not the man he had been a few years
-before. He looked fat, even bloated, unhealthy and sensual. His
-magnificent frame had undergone deterioration. A brilliant French
-journalist cruelly comparing him to Vitellius, as a man of gluttony
-and debauchery combined, summed up his career against that of the
-extraordinary Roman general and Emperor who had played so many parts
-successfully, as soldier in the field and as courtier in the palace,
-and wound up in derision of Gambetta with the terrible phrase, "_Je
-te demande pardon, César!_" And over against this self-indulgent and
-fiery man of genius was a very different personage, who had taken up
-the rôle which had once been that of the great tribune of the French
-people. Spare, alert, vigorous, always in training, despising ease and
-never taken by surprise; equal, as he had just shown, to fighting a
-lone hand victoriously, yet never despising help in his battles even
-from the most unexpected quarters--what chance had Gambetta against
-such a terrible opponent as Clemenceau? None whatever. Down he went,
-after a Premiership of but sixty-six days. Many believe that, finding
-the situation too complicated, and relying still upon obtaining the
-_scrutin de liste_ later--as indeed came about some time after his
-death--Gambetta deliberately rode for a fall. Certain it is that M.
-Spüller, who had Gambetta's complete confidence, gave this explanation
-of his intentions three weeks before his defeat in the Assembly.
-
-Gambetta, with all his great reputation, being overthrown, straightway
-his old Secretary of 1871, de Freycinet, came again to the front.
-The affairs of Egypt, always with Clemenceau's genial assistance,
-made short work of him. The Anglo-French Condominium having fallen
-through and England having thought proper to suppress a people "rightly
-struggling to be free," de Freycinet was anxious to reassert the claims
-of France in Egypt after a fashion which threatened unpleasantness
-with Great Britain. Whatever Clemenceau may have thought privately
-of English policy at this juncture, he would have none of that. His
-arguments convinced the Assembly that French intervention in Egypt
-against England would be dangerous and unsuccessful. France, said
-Clemenceau, had neither England's advantages nor England's direct
-interests in Egypt. France is a continental, not a great sea power. Her
-apprehensions are from the East. Do nothing which may drive England
-into the arms of Germany.
-
-What was much worse, the same colonial expansion which had been carried
-out in Tunis was now followed up in Tonquin, Annam and Madagascar, at
-great expense and to little or no advantage. Clemenceau still opposed
-this entire policy on principle. Ferry thought France would recompense
-herself for the disasters of 1870-71 by these adventures: Clemenceau
-was absolutely convinced to the contrary. "Why risk £20,000,000 on
-remote expeditions when we have our entire industrial mechanism to
-create, when we lack schools and country roads? To build up vanquished
-France again we must not waste her blood and treasure on useless
-enterprises. But there are much higher reasons even than these for
-abstaining from such wars of depredation. It is all an abuse, pure and
-simple, of the power which scientific civilisation has over primitive
-civilisation to lay hold upon man as man, to torture him, to squeeze
-everything he has in him out of him for the profit of a civilisation
-which itself is a sham." There could be no sounder sense, no higher
-morality, no truer statesmanship than that. Clemenceau had aspirations
-that France should lead the world, not by unjustifiable conquests
-over semi-civilised populations, but by displaying at home those
-great qualities which she undoubtedly possesses. His attacks were
-inspired, therefore, not by personal animosity against Jules Ferry or
-any other politician, but against a megalomania that was harmful to
-his country and the world. Unfortunately, Clemenceau could not, this
-time, persuade the Assembly or his countrymen to recognise the dangers
-and disadvantages of expansion by conquest in the Far East, until the
-disaster of Lang Son and the demand for additional credits enabled him
-to push the perils of such a policy right home. Then M. Ferry was once
-more discharged, practically at Clemenceau's behest.
-
-So matters went on, Clemenceau striving his utmost, in opposition, to
-enforce the genuine democratic policy of abstention from Imperialism
-abroad and strengthening of the forces of the Republic at home which
-the successive Opportunist Administrations in power refused to
-accept. In each and every case, Tunis, Tonquin, Annam, Madagascar
-and Egypt, he considered first, foremost and all the time what would
-most benefit Frenchmen in France, and refused to be led astray by any
-will-o'-the-wisps of Eastern origin, however gloriously they might
-disport themselves under the sun of finance. But now came a still more
-awkward matter close at home. There are not the same facilities for
-shutting down inquiries into the financial peccadilloes or corrupt
-malversations of public men in France as there are in England. Monetary
-scandals will out, though political blunderings may be glossed over, as
-in the cases of the Duc de Broglie, M. Jules Ferry and M. Albert Grévy.
-The President, M. Grévy, was very unfortunate in his relations. His
-brother, the Governor-General of Algeria, had shown himself dreadfully
-incompetent in that capacity. But M. de Freycinet, M. Jules Ferry and
-the whole Ministerial set had entered into a conspiracy of silence and
-misrepresentation, throwing the blame of his mistakes upon anybody but
-the Governor-General himself, in order to uphold the dignity of the
-President quite uninjured. Now, however, the President's son-in-law,
-M. Wilson, was found out in very ignoble transactions. He was actually
-detected in the flagitious practice of trading in decorations, the
-Legion of Honour and the like, not for what are considered on this
-side of the Channel as perfectly legitimate purposes, the furtherance,
-namely, of Party gains or Ministerial advantages, but in order to
-increase his own income. The thing became a public scandal. Those
-who could not afford to buy the envied distinctions were specially
-incensed. But out of regard for the President, out of consideration
-for their personal advancement in the future, because when you start
-this sort of thing you never know how far it will go, because other
-Ministers in and out of office had had relations of their own addicted
-to similar trading in other directions--for all these reasons, good and
-bad, nobody cared to take the matter up seriously.
-
-Nobody, that is to say, except that tiger Clemenceau. He actually
-thought that the honour of the Republic was at stake in the business:
-was of opinion that a President should be more careful than other
-people in keeping the doubtful characters of men and women of his
-own household under restraint. And he not only thought but spoke and
-acted. M. Rouvier, who was then Premier, felt himself bound to stand
-by the President and exculpated him from any share in the affair.
-This made matters worse. For M. Grévy, when the whole transaction was
-fully debated, could not withstand the pressure of public opinion
-against him; Clemenceau carried his point and the President resigned.
-Thereupon M. Rouvier thought it incumbent upon him to retire too,
-though Clemenceau took pains to tell him that this was a concern
-purely personal to the President and not a political issue at all.
-There was consequently a Presidential Election and a new Ministry at
-the same time. So great was Clemenceau's influence at this juncture
-that although three of the most prominent politicians in the Republic
-were eager for the post, he, out of fear of the election of the
-irrepressible expansionist M. Ferry, persuaded the electors to favour
-the appointment of the able and cool but popularly almost unknown
-M. Sadi-Carnot--who turned out, it may be said, quite an admirable
-President up to his outrageous assassination.
-
-By this time Clemenceau had fully justified his claim to the
-distinction of being the most formidable and relentless political
-antagonist known in French public life since the great Revolution.
-As he would never take office himself and was moved by few personal
-animosities, he stood outside the lists of competers for place. He
-had definite Radical Republican principles and during all these years
-he acted up to them. He was throughout opposed, as I have said, to
-compromise. He fought it continuously all along the line. Moreover, he
-had a profound contempt for politicians who were merely politicians.
-"I have combated," he said, "ideas, not persons. In my fight against
-Republicans I have always respected my party. In the heat of the
-conflict I have never lost sight of the objects we had in common, and I
-have appealed for the solidarity of the whole against the common enemy
-of all."
-
-As, also, he triumphantly declared in a famous oration against those
-who were engaged in sneering at Parliamentary Government and the
-tyranny of words, he was ever in favour of the greatest freedom of
-speech, and even stood up for the commonplace debates which often
-must have terribly bored him. "Well, then, since I must tell you so,
-these discussions which astonish you are an honour to us all. They
-prove conclusively our ardour in defence of ideas which we think right
-and beneficial. These discussions have their drawbacks: silence has
-more. Yes, glory to the country where men speak, shame on the country
-where men hold their tongues. If you think to ban under the name of
-parliamentarism the rule of open discussion, mind this, it is the
-representative system, it is the Republic itself against whom you are
-raising your hand."
-
-A great Parliamentarian, a great political Radical was Clemenceau the
-Tiger of 1877 to 1893. He, more than any other man, prevented the
-Republic from altogether deteriorating and kept alive the spirit of the
-great French Revolution in the minds and in the hearts of men.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- THE RISE AND FALL OF BOULANGER
-
-
-The relations of Clemenceau to General Boulanger form an important
-though comparatively brief episode in the career of the French
-statesman. Boulanger was Clemenceau's cousin, and in his dealings with
-this ambitious man he did not show that remarkable skill and judgment
-of character which distinguished him in regard to Carnot and Loubet,
-whose high qualities Clemenceau was the first to recognise and make use
-of in the interest of the Republic. Boulanger was a good soldier in the
-lower grades of his profession, and owed his first important promotion
-to the Duc d'Aumale. This patronage he acknowledged with profound
-gratitude and even servility at the time; but repaid later, when he
-turned Radical, by what was nothing short of treacherous persecution of
-the Orleanist Prince. Boulanger went even so far as to deny that he had
-ever expressed his obligations to the Duke for aid in his profession, a
-statement to which the publication of his own letters at once gave the
-lie.
-
-The General was, in fact, vain, ostentatious and unscrupulous. But
-having gained popularity among the rank and file of the French army
-by his good management of the men under his command and his sympathy
-with their grievances, he was appointed Director of Infantry, and
-in that capacity introduced several measures of military reform and
-suggested more. A little later, circumstances led him into close
-political harmony with the Radicals and their leader. At this juncture
-Clemenceau seems to have convinced himself that good use could be made
-of the general, who owed his first great advance to Orleanist favour,
-without any danger to the Republic. Having, as usual, upset another
-short-lived Cabinet, Clemenceau therefore exercised his influence to
-secure his relation the post of War Minister in the new Administration
-of M. Freycinet. This was in January 1886. At first he was true to his
-Radical friends and carried out the programme of army reforms agreed
-upon between himself and Clemenceau, thus justifying that statesman's
-choice and support. The general treatment of the French conscript was
-taken in hand. His food was improved, his barrack discipline rendered
-less harsh, his relations to his officers made more human, his spirit
-raised by better prospects of a future career. All this was good
-service to the country at a critical time and should have redounded
-to the credit of the Radical Party far more than to Boulanger's own
-glorification. This, however, was not the case. All the credit was
-given to the General himself. Hence immense personal influence from one
-end of the country to the other.
-
-Practically every family in France was beneficially affected, directly
-or indirectly, by Boulanger's measures of military reform, and thanked
-the brave General for what had been done. Not a young man in the army,
-or out of it, but felt that his lot, when drawn for service or actually
-serving, had been made better by the War Minister himself. So it ever
-is and always has been. The individual who gives practical expression
-to the ideas which are forced upon him by others is the one who is
-regarded as the real benefactor: the real workers, as in this instance
-Clemenceau and his friends, are forgotten.
-
-One of the incidents which helped to enhance Boulanger's great
-popularity was what was known as the Schnäbele affair. This person
-was a French commissary who crossed the French frontier into
-Alsace-Lorraine to carry out some local business with a similar German
-official which concerned both countries. He was arrested by the German
-military authorities as not being in possession of a passport. This
-action may possibly have been technically justifiable, but certainly
-was a high-handed proceeding conducted in a high-handed way. At that
-time France was constantly feeling that she was in an inferior position
-to Germany, and her statesmen were slow to resent small injuries,
-knowing well that France was still in no position to make head against
-the great German military power, still less to avenge the crushing
-defeats of 1870-71. When, therefore, Boulanger took a firm stand in
-the matter and upheld in a very proper way the dignity of France, the
-whole country felt a sense of relief. France, then, was no longer a
-negligible quantity in Europe. M. de Bismarck could not always have
-his way, and Boulanger stood forth as the man who understood the real
-spirit of his countrymen. That was the sentiment which did much to
-strengthen the General against his opponents when he began to carry out
-a purely personal policy. He had inspired the whole nation with a sense
-of its own greatness.
-
-He was then the most popular man in the country. He stood out to the
-people at large as a patriotic figure with sound democratic sympathies
-and an eminent soldier who might lead to victory the armies of France.
-
-Thenceforth Boulanger gradually became a personage round whom every
-kind of social and reactionary influence and intrigues of every
-sort were concentrated. To capture the imposing figure on the black
-horse, to fill him with grandiose ideas of the splendid part he could
-play, if only he would look at the real greatness and glory of his
-country through glasses less tinted with red than those of his Radical
-associates, to inspire him with conceptions of national unity and
-sanctified religious patriotism which should bring France, the France
-of the grand old days, once more into being, with himself as its noble
-leader--this was the work which the fine ladies of the Boulevard St.
-Germain, hand in hand with the Catholic Church, its priests and the
-cultivated reactionaries generally, set themselves to accomplish.
-From this time onwards the _mot d'ordre_ to back Boulanger went round
-the _salons_. Legitimists, Orleanists and Buonapartists were, on this
-matter, temporarily at one. Each section hoped at the proper moment
-to use the possible dictator for the attainment of its own ends.
-Thus Boulanger was diverted from the Radical camp and weaned from
-Radical ideas even during his period as War Minister in M. Freycinet's
-Cabinet. So subtle is the influence of "society" and ecclesiastical
-surroundings upon some natures, so powerful the effect of refined
-and charming conversation and genial flattery delicately conveyed,
-that men of far stronger character than Boulanger have now and then
-succumbed to it. Only devotion to principle or ruthless personal
-ambition can hold its own against such a combination of insidious
-forces dexterously employed--and women of the world and Jesuits are
-both very dexterous--when once the individual to be artistically
-trepanned permits himself to be experimented upon. Boulanger, though
-not devoid of cleverness, was at bottom that dangerous description of
-designing good fellow who all the time means well; and he fell a victim
-to the delightful women and clever adventurers around him. He himself
-was probably not aware that he had passed over to the enemy until the
-irresistible logic of events and his changed relations with his old
-friends proved to him how far he had gone.
-
-M. Rouvier, a shrewd and cynical politician of the financial school,
-saw through the General, understood how dangerous he might become, and
-refused to accept the ex-Minister of War into the Cabinet he formed on
-the fall of Freycinet. But Boulanger had now so far established himself
-personally that neither a political check nor even general ridicule
-affected his career. Even his duel with M. Floquet, a farce in which
-General Boulanger made himself the clown, could not shake him. Floquet
-was a well-known Radical of those days, who had been a fellow-member
-of the League of the Rights of Man with Clemenceau at the time of the
-Commune. Boulanger was a soldier, accustomed to the use of arms all
-his life, and reported to be a good fencer. Floquet, quite unlike his
-old friend of years before, scarcely knew which end of his weapon to
-present to his opponent, so inexperienced was he in this sort of lethal
-exercise. When, therefore, the duel between the two men was arranged,
-the only point discussed was how small an injury would Boulanger, in
-his generosity, deign to inflict upon his Radical antagonist, in order
-that the seconds might declare that "honour is satisfied." No doubt
-Clemenceau himself, who acted as one of Floquet's seconds on this
-occasion, took that view of the matter.
-
-What actually occurred was quite ludicrous. Floquet, duly instructed
-thereto by his own friends, stood, good harmless bourgeois as he was,
-like a waxwork figure, with his rapier stuck out at arm's length
-straight in front of him. No science there. But there was still less on
-the other side. Boulanger, to the amazement of Clemenceau and everybody
-on the ground, in what appeared to be a sudden stroke of madness,
-immediately rushed at Floquet and his rigid skewer and, without any
-such elaborate foolishness as the laws of fence enjoin, carefully
-spitted his own throat on the point of Floquet's weapon. Honour was
-thus satisfied and ridicule began. But ridicule did not kill.
-
-No sooner was Boulanger cured of his self-inflicted wound than he went
-on much as he did before. Having ceased to be Minister for War, he
-was sent down to command an army corps at Clermont-Ferrand. According
-to all discipline, and regulations duly to be observed by generals at
-large, this kept the man appointed out of Paris. Not so Boulanger. He
-visited the capital at least twice. Thereupon he was deprived of his
-command and his name was removed from the Army List. That, by the rules
-of war and politics, ought to have finished him. But it didn't. The
-Radicals and Republicans had still no idea what an ugly Frankenstein
-they had created for themselves. True, Clemenceau had declared
-definitely against his own protégé the moment he saw the line he was
-taking; but he underrated entirely the position to which Boulanger had
-attained, not only among the reactionaries but in the hearts and minds
-of the French people. For Boulanger, now gifted with a free hand, went
-into the political arena at once, and was a candidate simultaneously
-for the Nord and the Dordogne: provincial districts with, of course, a
-totally different sort of electorate from that of the capital, where
-the _brav' Général_ with his fine figure on horseback was already the
-hero of the Parisians. He was elected and sat for the Nord.
-
-Still Clemenceau, far-seeing and sagacious as he generally is in
-his judgment of political events and personal character, failed
-to appreciate what his cousin had drifted into rather than had
-deliberately worked for. Nor perhaps did he estimate highly enough
-either the cleverness or the unscrupulousness of the men and women
-who were backing him. Certain it is that, although Boulangism was now
-becoming a powerful political cult, Clemenceau and other advanced men,
-such as my old friend Paul Brousse, President of the Paris Municipal
-Council, were still of opinion that Boulanger was going down rather
-than up. It was a mistake that might have cost not only the Radicals
-but the French Republic as a whole very dear. For the General had the
-qualities of his defects. Agreeable, good-natured, frank, accessible
-and friendly to all who approached him, with enough ability to gauge
-fairly well what was going on around him, loving display for its own
-sake, and ever ready to pose in dignified and pleasing attitude, before
-a populace by no means averse from well-managed advertisement, while
-not apparently bent upon forcing his own will or dictatorship upon the
-country--Boulanger, both before and after his election for the Nord,
-was much more formidable than he looked to those who only measured his
-power from the standpoint of wide intelligence. This the rather because
-there was no lack of money to push his pretensions to high place.
-
-Boulanger came to the front also at a time when the bourgeois Republic
-(owing to the weakness, incapacity and instability of the bourgeois
-politicians themselves) was discredited and was believed to be
-tottering. Clemenceau's own unceasing campaign against widespread
-abuses and incapable Ministers was largely responsible for this. There
-was a general sense of insecurity and unsettlement, engendered by the
-fall of Administration after Administration, due to political or
-financial proceedings of doubtful character, exposed and denounced
-by Clemenceau and the Radicals themselves. Some of the Radicals and
-intellectuals even now supported Boulanger as an alternative to
-perpetual upsets. Disgusted with lawyers, professional politicians
-and place-hunters of high and low degree, the people likewise were
-again on the look-out for a saviour of France who should secure for
-them democracy without corruption, and honest leadership devoid of
-Socialism. The old story, in fact.
-
-At this particular moment, too, the organised forces in Paris, the army
-and the gendarmerie, were Boulangists almost to a man. The danger,
-therefore, of the Boulangist agitation now being carried on alike
-in Paris and in the Departments seemed to a looker-on to be growing
-more serious every day. This, however, continued not to be the view
-of Clemenceau and his party. They thought, in spite of the voting in
-the Nord and the Dordogne and the apparent popularity of the General
-in Paris, that the whole thing would prove a mere flash in the pan;
-that the good sense and Republican conservatism of the French people
-would display itself when peril really threatened the Republic; and
-that Boulanger would be even less successful than the Duc de Broglie.
-Then came the General Elections. Boulanger was candidate for Paris.
-Once more the obvious evidence of his great popularity was overlooked
-by the Clemenceau group, the Boulangist fervour went on unrecognised,
-and it seemed that it might depend upon the General himself at any
-moment--as indeed proved to be the case--whether he should follow in
-the footsteps of Louis Napoleon and accomplish a successful _coup
-d'état_, or fall permanently into the background. But up to the last
-moment his opponents could not believe that a general with no great
-military career behind him, a citizen with no great name to conjure
-with, a politician with no great programme to attract voters, could win
-Paris or become master of France.
-
-The crisis really was the more acute since there was no rival
-personality, no Republican of admitted ability and distinction ready
-to stake his reputation against Boulanger. Though Clemenceau, as
-the preparations for the election proceeded and Boulanger's growing
-strength became manifest, now did his utmost to stem the tide, there
-was no doubt that, failing a really powerful opponent, Boulanger would
-hold the winning place at the close of the poll. He took up a bold
-position. He was the hero of the hour. The whole contest was admirably
-stage-managed and advertised on his side. He rode through the city on
-his black horse, a fine figure of a man, full of confidence of victory,
-the halo of a coming well-earned triumph around him. It was universally
-felt that the previous votes of the provinces would be quite eclipsed
-by the vote of the capital. Parisians, peasants and miners, small
-owners and proletariat would for once be together.
-
-This was the unshaken opinion of his friends and followers, who seemed
-in those exciting days to have with them the great majority of the
-people. On the other side a wave of incapacity was actually flooding
-the intelligence of his opponents. Instead of putting forward a really
-representative man, either Republican or Socialist, with a fine
-democratic record behind him, they made an absolutely contemptible
-choice for their champion. One Jacques, an obscure liquor-dealer, whom
-nobody ever heard of before the election, or gave a thought to after
-it, was chosen to fight for Paris against the General. This man had
-never done or said or written anything that anybody could remember,
-or would remember if he could. If no Radical Republican was ready to
-stand, Joffrin, an old member of the Commune and a skilled artisan most
-loyal to his principles, always returning at once to his trade when
-he failed to be elected for the National Assembly, would have been a
-far better and more worthy candidate in every way. The election then
-would have been a conflict between the enthusiasm of social revolution
-and the fervour of chauvinist reaction. As it was, the Boulangists
-could say and did say with truth that the General would represent the
-citizens of Paris much more genuinely than Jacques. The result of this
-error of tactics could, have been foreseen from the first. General
-Boulanger won by a heavy majority.
-
-That evening saw the crisis of the whole Boulangist agitation. Such
-a victory at such a time called for immediate and decisive action.
-That was the universal opinion. A political triumph so dramatic and so
-conclusive could only find a fitting climax in the victor proclaiming
-himself to be a Cromwell, a Monk or a Napoleon. Nothing less was hoped
-for by the reactionists: nothing less was feared by the Republicans.
-The figures of the poll were welcomed with enthusiastic cheering all
-along the boulevards, and the Boulangist anthem, "_En revenant de la
-Revue_," was played from one end of Paris to the other. The ball was
-at the General's feet. He might have failed to win his goal, but all
-Paris expected he would make a good try for it. This meant that the
-very same night he should either go straight to the Elysée himself or
-make some bold stroke for which he had prepared beforehand, that would
-fire the imagination of the people. Such was the prevailing impression.
-The General celebrated his election for the City of Paris at dinner at
-Durand's famous restaurant, surrounded by his intimate supporters. The
-excitement outside was tremendous. Hour after hour passed. Nothing was
-done, nothing apparently had been made ready. The strain of waiting
-became almost unbearable. The crowd gradually got weary of anticipating
-the opening of a drama whose prologue had so roused their expectations.
-At last, instead of staying to watch the first scenes of a revolution,
-they took themselves off quietly to bed. Boulanger's chance of
-obtaining supremacy was gone.
-
-It was always said that, backed by the Radicals, and supported by
-the President, the Minister of the Interior, M. Constans, a most
-resolute and unscrupulous man, who was himself in the crowd outside
-the restaurant, was the main cause of this miserable fiasco. Strong
-precautions had been taken against any attempt at violence. Powerful
-forces whose loyalty to the Republic was beyond question had been
-substituted for brigades of known Boulangist tendencies. That M.
-Constans would not, under the conditions, have stuck at trifles was
-well known. He was kept at a distance from France for years afterwards,
-on account of his ugly character, in the capacity of French Ambassador
-at Constantinople, a city where at that time such a trifling peccadillo
-as murder was scarcely noticed. So Boulanger knew what to expect.
-Moreover, Clemenceau and the Radical Republicans, as well as Jaurès and
-Socialists of every shade of opinion, had become thoroughly alarmed by
-what they had heard and seen during the election, and would not have
-given way without a fight to the death. The jubilant group at Durand's,
-intimidated by these assumed facts, and Boulanger with his lack of
-determination and easy self-indulgence, let the opportunity slip.
-
-All sorts of excuses and explanations were made for the hesitation of
-the General to provoke civil war. But on that one night he should have
-made his position secure or have died in the attempt. Success was, so
-far as a foreigner on the spot could judge, quite possible. It might
-even have been achieved without any forcible action. There was no
-certainty that, when the move decided upon was actually made, either
-troops or the people would have sided against the hero of the day. But
-that hero failed to rise to the level of the occasion, and the result
-was fatal to the immediate prospects of himself and his followers.
-A warrant was issued for his arrest and he ran away from Paris. He
-now became an object of pity rather than of alarm. He was condemned
-in his absence, and not long afterwards his suicide on the grave of
-his mistress, in Brussels, ended his career. Thus the estimate which
-Clemenceau had formed of his permanent influence was justified. But it
-was a narrow escape. The three pretenders who had come to France to
-watch the final development soon found their way across the frontier.
-Nevertheless, General Boulanger, with all his weakness and hesitation,
-was for many months the most dangerous enemy the Republic ever faced.
-His downfall helped also to add to the number of Clemenceau's bitter
-enemies, and was partly instrumental in bringing about the political
-disaster which befell him later. For the Radicals who had been deceived
-by Boulanger cherished animosity against the Radical leader for reasons
-which, though quite incompatible, were decisive for them.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- PANAMA AND DRAGUIGNAN
-
-
-The great Panama Canal Affair was only one of many financial scandals
-which seriously damaged the good fame of the French Republic founded
-upon the fall of the Empire, and consecrated by the collapse of the
-Commune of Paris. But this Panama scandal was by far the most important
-and most nefarious, alike in respect to the amount of money involved,
-the position and character of the people mixed up in it, and the wide
-ramifications of wholesale corruption throughout the political world
-that were in the end revealed.
-
-M. Ferdinand de Lesseps, the originator and organiser of the Suez
-Canal, was a man of quite exceptional ability, energy and force
-of character. He carried through his great project in the face of
-obstacles, political and financial, that would certainly have broken
-the heart and frustrated the purpose of a weaker personality. At no
-period did he show any disposition to keep the canal under harmful
-restrictions, and the Khedive Ismail Pasha, though a Turk of no
-scruples, who backed him throughout, also took a very wide view of the
-services which the canal would render to the world at large. It was
-to be neutral and open under the same conditions to the ships of all
-nations. Unfortunately, England, whose commerce has chiefly benefited
-by the canal, bitterly opposed its construction, going so far at one
-time as actually to prohibit the Khedive from carrying on the canal
-works in his own territory, thus occasioning considerable delay. As
-it happened, however, this delay itself was turned by de Lesseps to
-the advantage of the Canal Company, as he used the time to create new
-engines for excavation which in the end expedited the completion of the
-waterway.
-
-The result of this ignorant British opposition was that the finance
-of the great enterprise was chiefly provided in France, and, when the
-canal was first opened in 1869, it was considered, as in fact it was,
-a triumph of French sagacity and foresight over the obstructionist
-jealousy of England. This view was accompanied also by natural
-jubilation at the consequent increase of French influence in Egypt
-itself. Count Ferdinand de Lesseps, therefore, became a great French
-hero who, by his capacity, persistence and diplomacy, had not only
-gained glory for France and extended her power, but had also furnished
-his countrymen with an excellent investment for their savings, on
-which British commerce was paying the interest. His popularity in
-France was well earned and unbounded. The work of de Lesseps was, in
-fact, regarded as the one great and indisputable success of the French
-Empire. Anything which he took in hand thereafter was certain to prove
-of great value to the country and an assured benefit to those who
-followed his financial lead. He was also a lucky man. He and his set
-had won against heavy odds.
-
-It is true the cost of the Suez Canal had been more than double his
-original estimate, even up to the time when it was first opened, and
-many millions sterling had been expended since; it was likewise the
-fact that his great idea had taken fully ten years to realise in the
-shape of a completed enterprise. But this was the larger tribute to
-his foresight and power of overcoming obstacles due either to natural
-causes or to the malignity of enemies. Thus Ferdinand de Lesseps, ten
-years after the Suez Canal had been made available for shipping between
-the Mediterranean and the Red Sea, held an unequalled position in the
-eyes of French engineers, French bankers and, what was more important,
-French investors.
-
-Early in the year 1879 M. de Lesseps, following the course adopted
-by him in the case of the isthmus of Suez, called a Congress of the
-nations to consider the entire project of a Panama Canal. There was
-nothing new in the matter. The line of the canal had been surveyed
-by a capable French engineer nearly forty years before. The Congress
-estimated the actual cost of the construction of the canal at about
-£25,000,000, or a little more than the highest sum thought sufficient
-by the English engineer of the Panama Railroad. But the mere figures
-are of little importance. That they were quite insufficient, as the
-business was managed, has since been abundantly proved. But at first
-there is no reason to believe that de Lesseps was other than quite
-straightforward. He had bought the concession for the canal from
-Mr. Buonaparte Wyse, who had acquired it from the United States of
-Colombia, through whose territory the canal as surveyed ran. That
-this concession itself had previously been found very difficult to
-finance in any shape was a matter of common knowledge; that also the
-canal, when constructed, might prove far less valuable in every way
-than was calculated for world commerce was the opinion of many skilled
-engineers. But then the same things had been said about Suez. So the
-French public rushed in to subscribe the money required for the French
-Company immediately formed by M. de Lesseps to exploit the concession.
-
-The great name of de Lesseps covered the whole risk and rendered
-criticism quite useless. But the management of the excavation was
-wildly incapable and inconceivably extravagant. It was very soon
-discovered that the original estimates were absurdly at variance
-with the cost of the real work to be done. The entire enterprise, as
-undertaken in 1884, was entered upon possibly in good faith, but in
-a wholly irresponsible and ignorant manner. In spite of warnings as
-to the certainty of encountering exceptional obstacles, no steps were
-taken to provide against contingencies, to inform the shareholders
-as to the position, or to revise the plans in accordance with the
-facts. The canal was inspected by M. Rousseau at the end of 1885. This
-engineer gave a most unfavourable report in regard to the excavations
-and constructions already carried out at vast expense, and the
-enormous additional sum needed to give any chance of completing the
-works. Instead of honestly facing this most unpromising situation and
-disclosing to the shareholders the real state of the case, or declaring
-that at least three times the amount would be required to bring the
-project to a satisfactory conclusion, and calling for this huge sum
-at once, the directors resorted to all the worst tactics of the
-unscrupulous promoter. This part of the matter went into the hands of
-M. Jacques Reinach and M. Cornelius Herz, names and persons afterwards
-covered with obloquy in connection with the whole affair. They set to
-work systematically, and were restrained by no inconvenient scruples.
-Strong political influence in both Chambers was needed in order to
-obtain the passing of the Panama Lottery Bill. Strong political
-influence was bought, though the Bill itself was not carried. From
-1885-86 onwards this wholesale bribery was continued on an enormous
-scale.
-
-The company was as careless of men's lives as it was of shareholders'
-money. Labourers from all parts of the world had been gathered
-together in what was then a deadly climate, without proper sanitation
-or reasonable medical attendance. Some time prior to the financial
-troubles it was known that such anarchy and horror prevailed on
-the Isthmus that intervention by the French Government, or even by
-an international commission, was called for. Nothing but the great
-reputation of de Lesseps could possibly have upheld such a state of
-things, or have obtained more and still more money to perpetuate the
-chaos. Even when the truth as to the frightful mortality of the men
-employed and the incredible waste, due to incompetence and corruption,
-must have been known to the President of the Company (M. de Lesseps
-himself) and his fellow-directors, when, likewise, they must have been
-convinced that the company was drifting into a hopeless position, they
-still appealed to their countrymen for more and more and more money
-to throw into the bottomless quagmire at Panama, and sink of French
-savings in Paris, to which the whole company had been reduced.
-
-By the year 1888 no less than 1,400,000,000 francs had been expended in
-one way or another, while not one-third of the necessary work had been
-done. Of that £55,000,000 nominal amount not a few millions sterling
-found their way into the pockets of deputies, senators, and even
-Academicians, to say nothing of commissions and brokerages of more or
-less legitimate character.
-
-Politicians in France are no worse than politicians in other countries.
-But the proportion of well-to-do men among them is less than elsewhere.
-There was consequently a margin of them always on the look-out for an
-opportunity of adding to their income, and this margin was much larger
-in the National Assembly before payment of members than it is to-day.
-For such men the Panama finance was a glorious opportunity. Nobody
-could suspect de Lesseps of being consciously a party to a fraud. To
-make a French venture like the Panama a great success, in spite of
-all difficulties, was a patriotic service. To receive good pay for
-doing good work was a happy combination of circumstances none the less
-gratifying that, the work being honestly done, remuneration followed or
-preceded in hard cash. The extent to which this form of corruption was
-carried and the high level in the political world to which streams from
-the Panama Pactolus were forced up is only partially known even now.
-But so wide was the flow and so deep the stream that, when the outcry
-against the Company began in earnest, statesmen whose personal honour
-had never been challenged were afflicted with such alarm, on the facts
-being laid before them, that they did their very utmost to suppress
-full investigation.
-
-This, however, was not easy to accomplish. For there were no fewer
-than 800,000 French investors in the Panama Company. All of these were
-voters and all had friends. It became a question, therefore, whether it
-was more dangerous to the Republic and its statesmen--for personal as
-well as political considerations came in--to compel full publicity, or
-to hush the whole thing up as far as possible. Meanwhile, the public,
-and important journals not suspected of Panamism, took the whole thing
-down from the Cabinet and the Bureaux into the street.
-
-For the opponents of the Republic it was a fine opening. That enormous
-sums out of the £55,000,000 subscribed had been paid away to senators,
-deputies and Academicians, for services rendered, was certain. Who
-had got the money, and under what conditions? Imputations of the most
-sinister character were made all round. Paris rang with accusations
-of fraud. That more than a hundred deputies were concerned in Panama
-corruption is a matter of common knowledge. One who was in a position
-to know all the facts declared that more than a hundred who were mixed
-up in other nefarious transactions used Panama to divert attention from
-their own malfeasances. However that may be, public opinion, excited by
-the clamour and denunciations of eight hundred thousand shareholders
-and electors, clove to Panama. It became an instrument of political
-warfare as well as of personal delation. The obvious determination of
-Presidents Carnot and Loubet to prevent a clear statement from being
-issued and the Directors prosecuted only rendered the sufferers more
-determined to get at the facts and wreak vengeance on somebody.
-
-There were two views as to Count de Lesseps--to give him his title,
-which had its value in the Affair--and his conduct in the Panama Canal
-Company. There were those who held that de Lesseps, beginning as an
-enthusiast, and believing himself perhaps to be inspired in everything
-he undertook, no sooner found that his carelessness, in disregarding
-real natural difficulties and in organising the excavations on the
-spot, must result in failure, unless he could obtain unlimited
-resources, and doubtful of ultimate success even then, began at once
-to display the worst side of his character. The successful adventurer
-became, by degrees, the desperate gambler with the savings of his
-countrymen. Instead of regarding himself as the trustee of the people
-who, on the strength of his reputation and character, had risked their
-money, he deliberately shut his eyes to the real facts. He resorted to
-all the tricks of an unscrupulous charlatan, misrepresented the truth
-in every respect and had no thought for any other consideration than
-to get in more funds. For this purpose he paraded the country, making
-the utmost use of his personal and social advantages, and losing no
-opportunity for unworthy advertisement. All this time he knew perfectly
-well that his enterprise was doomed. Consequently, there was little
-to choose between de Lesseps and Reinach, Herz and the rest of them,
-except that he was perhaps the greatest criminal of all. Such was the
-view of the promoter-in-chief taken by lawyers and men of business who
-looked upon the whole matter as a venture standing by itself, to be
-judged by the ordinary rules of financial probity.
-
-On the other side a capable and influential minority regarded
-de Lesseps as an enthusiast, a man of high character and noble
-conceptions, quite devoid of the power of strict analysis of any matter
-presented to him, and destitute of common sense. His financial methods
-and commercial obliquities were due to his overweening confidence in
-his own judgment and faith in his good fortune to pull him through
-against all probabilities. The one great success he had achieved
-rendered him a man not to be argued with or considered on the plane of
-ordinary mortals. He saw the object he was aiming at, felt convinced
-he would accomplish it, regarded all who differed from him as ignorant
-or malignant, and went straight ahead to get money, not for his own
-purposes but in order to carry out the second magnificent scheme to
-which he had committed himself. Corruption and malversation by others
-were no concern of his.
-
-President Sadi-Carnot, a cold, silent, upright man, little given to
-allow his feelings to inflame him at any time, warmly took this view of
-de Lesseps' character. M. Carnot had been brought into close contact
-with de Lesseps on another of his vast projects. The President, like
-many others, refused to look at the Panama matter from the point of
-view of fraud or imposture. Money was for de Lesseps always a means,
-never an end. When the whole matter was brought before him, and one of
-the legal personages whose duty it was to investigate the whole of the
-facts came to a very harsh conclusion as to de Lesseps' responsibility
-for the waste, corruption and malversation, M. Carnot said with some
-vivacity: "No, no; M. de Lesseps is not a man of bad faith. I should
-rather consider him punctilious. Only his natural vehemence carries
-him away; he is a bad reasoner, and has no power of calculation. Hence
-many regrettable acts on his part, done without any intention of
-injuring anybody. I knew him well, having seen him very close, when his
-imagination suggested to him the scheme for excavating an inland sea in
-Africa. A commission of engineers, of whom I was one, was appointed to
-hear him and study his proposal. We had no difficulty in showing that
-the whole thing was a pure chimera. He seemed very much astonished, and
-we saw that we had not convinced him. Take it from me as a certainty
-that he would have spent millions upon millions to create his sea, and
-that with the best of good faith in the world."
-
-This was probably the truth, so far as de Lesseps himself was
-personally concerned. Promoters, discoverers and inventors of genius
-are men of mighty faith in their respective enterprises. As a great
-anarchist once said of his own special nostrum for regenerating
-humanity at a blow: "All is moral that helps it, all is immoral that
-hinders it." So with de Lesseps. All was moral that got in money to
-construct his canal: all was immoral that checked the flow of cash
-to the Isthmus. But an enthusiast of this temper, "without power of
-calculation," is a very dangerous man, not only to the subscribers
-to his shares, but to the Republican politicians who confined their
-enthusiasm to the acquisition of hard cash for use not in Panama but in
-Paris.
-
-In 1888 the Panama Canal Company collapsed, and the thing was put into
-liquidation. But that was not the end of it. All sorts of schemes were
-afoot for carrying on the works and completing the canal before the
-concession expired in 1893. Although, however, from the date of the
-breakdown onwards--when it was stated that fully £70,000,000 would be
-needed in addition to the amount already expended or frittered away to
-carry out the canal--most virulent attacks were continually made upon
-prominent politicians and financiers, as well as upon the Directors of
-the Company, neither the political nor the legal consequences of the
-disaster were felt to the full extent until four years later. Judicial
-investigations, it is true, were going on. But it was an open secret
-that, in spite of the losses and complaints of the shareholders, and
-the strong desire of the public that the whole vast transaction should
-be exposed in every detail, the anxiety of men in high place was to
-calm down natural feeling in the matter. What made this attitude more
-suspicious was the fact that the Government had certainly not shown
-itself unfavourable to the scheme, but on the contrary had helped it,
-even when the gravest doubts had been thrown upon its practicability,
-at a cost vastly exceeding anything contemplated by the Company. In
-fact, an atmosphere of general distrust pervaded Paris and the whole
-of France. Yet Panama still had its friends, and it was believed that
-somehow or other the affair would be tided over.
-
-But there was a good deal more to come. Things, in fact, now took
-that dramatic turn which seems the rule in France with affairs which
-directly or indirectly influence high politics and high finance. There
-were people who believed that the entire enterprise could be set on
-its legs, although parts of the recent excavations were deteriorating
-and some of them had been covered already with luxuriant tropical
-growths which one imaginative critic spoke of as "forests." Either the
-Government, they thought, could be forced to take up the enterprise
-itself, or at any rate would think it best, in view of what had
-already been done, to support de Lesseps in a fresh scheme, should the
-concession be renewed. This, no doubt, was the opinion of M. Gauthier,
-who urged the Government in the Assembly to appoint a commission to
-prepare plans for the completion of the Canal. This, he declared, was
-the only means of safeguarding the interests of the shareholders and
-the many hundreds of millions of francs sunk by poor French investors
-in this great enterprise.
-
-Such a daring proposal necessarily raised the whole question of the
-responsibility for the serious engineering and financial fiasco. The
-Government was at once charged from several quarters, not as being
-answerable for past mistakes in supporting the Panama Company, but with
-present obliquity in screening and protecting delinquents who should
-long since have been brought to justice. One deputy vehemently declared
-that the only reason why no adequate action was taken was that "men
-possessed of great names and high positions" checked any attempt to
-handle the scandal boldly. Other deputies declaimed with equal warmth
-against throwing good money after bad. Meanwhile rumours floated round
-the Chamber as to the number of deputies who had put their services at
-the disposal of the Company for money received. Later, this accusation
-took definite shape as a formal accusation that fifty deputies had
-received among them the sum of £120,000. Senators and Academicians were
-in the same galley. Exaggeration was imputed, but the figures were
-proved afterwards to be less than the truth. Then everybody concerning
-whose position there could be the slightest doubt was accused of having
-"touched."
-
-Even MM. Rouvier and Floquet were taunted with having accepted large
-sums. The Chamber passed a resolution "calling for prompt and vigorous
-action against all who have incurred responsibilities in the Panama
-affair." This might mean anything or nothing. It was pointed out,
-however, by a high authority that a judicial inquiry was proceeding all
-the time. But the public became impatient because nothing was done to
-stop the campaign of vilification on the one hand or to prosecute the
-Directors on the other; though de Lesseps was being denounced daily in
-the press as a fraudulent adventurer. Excitement ran very high. The
-shareholders and some of the deputies cried aloud for justice.
-
-Matters being thus exceptionally perturbed, Baron Jacques Reinach,
-the chief agent in the manipulation of political corruption, committed
-suicide by apoplexy. That was the gruesome explanation given in the
-press of this financier's sudden death. His fellow Semite, Cornelius
-Herz, survived the tragedy. Just at this moment, when everybody thought
-that something must be done, the Panama Concession was extended for a
-year. The Panamists took heart again and believed all would blow over.
-So the ups and downs of public expectation went on.
-
-Then, quite suddenly and without any general notification, all the
-Directors of the Panama Canal Company, Count Ferdinand de Lesseps,
-M. C. de Lesseps, M. Fontane, M. Eiffel and M. Cottu were formally
-charged in court with having resorted to fraudulent methods in order to
-engender confidence in chimerical schemes, and with obtaining credits
-on imaginary facts, squandering the money of the shareholders and
-lending themselves to most nefarious practices. A terrible indictment!
-
-By this time all who cherished a political or personal grudge against
-any public man of note had no better or surer means of discrediting
-him than by imputing to him some connection with the Panama affair.
-Mud of that sort was warranted to stick. Never was there a greater
-scandal. Never were people more credulous. Never did political feeling
-run higher, and never certainly was there a keener anxiety to connect
-leading Republicans with the seamy side of the concern. The more
-that could be done in this way the better for the Conservatives and
-anti-Republicans who still constituted a very formidable combination
-in Parliament and in the press. It was not likely, therefore, that
-Clemenceau would be able to escape criticism and calumny if he had been
-in any way connected with men some of whom were then rightly regarded
-as malefactors.
-
-In a time of so much excitement it was easy to mix up truth and fiction
-to an extent which would render it extremely difficult for Clemenceau
-to clear the public mind of allegations made against him, however false
-they might be. All Clemenceau's enemies, and he had not a few, took
-advantage of the situation to try and overwhelm him with obloquy. Now
-was the opportunity to pay off many old scores; and they set to work
-to do it with whole-souled zest and vitriolic acrimony. Circumstances
-aided them. They did not stick at trifles in their efforts to crush
-the Radical leader who had fought the good fight against reaction and
-Imperialism with such vigour and success for so many long years. M.
-Clemenceau was at this time editor of _La Justice_, a journal founded
-by himself and written by men of ability, most of whom are still his
-friends. The tone of the paper and the style of the contributions were
-no more calculated to bring over recruits from his adversaries than
-were his speeches and tactics in the Assembly. He was ever a fighter
-with tongue and with pen. Though he wrote little, if anything, in _La
-Justice_ himself, the inspiration came from its editor. One thing he
-lacked, and always has lacked--money. If now they could only get hold
-of evidence that Clemenceau was contaminated with Panama, the worst foe
-of French obscurantism would be put out of action and his influence
-permanently destroyed. So they calculated. And not without good reason,
-as afterwards appeared.
-
-Cornelius Herz, the co-corrupter of political impeccables, with
-Jacques Reinach, his "apoplectic" fellow-Jew, had subscribed £1,000
-to _La Justice_ in its early days. What could be better? A Semite of
-Semites, a Panamist of Panamists, he it was who with sinister features
-and corrupt record stood forth as the dexterous wire-puller of the
-malignant marionette, Georges Clemenceau. If _La Justice_ had been
-tainted with the accursed thing, Clemenceau had had his share, and
-the lion's share, too, in this wretched swindle. Did anybody really
-care what a journal of small circulation like _La Justice_ published
-or stood for? Certainly not. But Clemenceau, the terrible leader of
-the Left, the upsetter of Ministries, the creator of Presidents,
-the overthrower of the Church and the enemy of all religion, here
-was a man worth buying; and beyond all question Clemenceau had been
-bought--bought by Reinach and Herz, whose tool, therefore, he was and
-had been! The calumnies were credible; for if senators and Academicians
-had succumbed to the wiles of the serpents of Old Jewry, why should
-not the Aristides of Draguignan have fallen a victim to the astute
-de Lesseps and his "_entourage du Ghetto_"? Nor did this wind up the
-indictment. There was more to come. A group of rascals of the Titus
-Oates type were set to work, to put incriminating facts on record in
-writing, behind the scenes. They forged the endorsement as well as the
-bill. Documents of this character proved to the complete satisfaction
-of all who wished to believe it that Clemenceau was corrupt. The very
-fact that he was known not to be well-off strengthened the case against
-him. The empty sack could not stand upright! The _Petit Journal_, a
-paper of great circulation, was foremost in all this business, and its
-editor, M. Judet, distinguished himself by his exquisite malignity amid
-the crowd of Clemenceau's detractors.
-
-It was an ugly experience. Panama was dinned into Clemenceau's ears
-daily. And there was enough to go upon to make the attacks most
-galling. Herz had been a large subscriber to the funds of Clemenceau's
-organ. Moreover, Reinach and Herz had called upon him, though not
-he upon them. That was quite enough. The assailants did not stop to
-inquire when Herz ceased to have anything to do with _La Justice_,
-neither did they investigate who sent Reinach and Herz to the Radical
-leader, nor what passed between Clemenceau and the two Jewish
-financiers. They were only too glad to be able to take the whole thing
-for granted and to strengthen any weak links in the chain of evidence
-by the suborned perjuries of M. Norton and his colleagues.
-
-So it went on. The fact that first the murdered President Carnot,
-who could not believe that de Lesseps was worse than a misguided
-enthusiast, and then President Loubet, who wished to deal with the
-entire matter in a thoroughly judicial fashion, had owed their
-positions to Clemenceau's nomination and support rendered the hunting
-down of their political friend a delightful pastime for the whole
-reactionary combination. Things had come to such a pass that the
-common opinion grew that there was "something in it." People actually
-believed that Clemenceau really had wrecked his entire career and ruled
-himself out of public life by taking bribes like the hundred other
-deputies, when he had refused to accept time after time positions which
-would have given him control of the national treasury and of France.
-
-Clemenceau was quite unmoved by the storm of detraction which raged
-around him. He bided his time with a coolness that could scarcely
-have been expected from a man of his character. At length his chance
-came. The whole affair was brought up again before the National
-Assembly. Clemenceau rose to defend himself against this long campaign
-of successful misrepresentation. So great had been the effect of the
-attacks upon him that rarely, if ever, has a favourite orator stood
-up to address a more hostile audience. It seemed as if he had not a
-single friend in the whole House. Not a sound of greeting was heard.
-He was met with cold and obviously hostile silence. Clemenceau dealt
-in his most telling manner with his own personal conduct throughout.
-He completely immolated his accusers and dissipated their calumnies.
-When he sat down, the whole Assembly, which had received him as if
-persuaded of his guilt, cheered him enthusiastically as a much wronged
-man. A greater triumph could hardly be. The condemnation in open court
-of the forgers, whose nefarious malpractices had built up the edifice
-of calumny and misrepresentation upon which Clemenceau's enemies relied
-for the proof of their case, cleared the atmosphere so far as his
-personal integrity was concerned.
-
-But, unfortunately for Clemenceau, there were other charges against
-him from which he could not hope to clear himself, and would not have
-cleared himself if he could. Now all his political crimes were recited
-against him at once. He had been the means of bringing to naught M.
-Jules Ferry's great schemes of colonial expansion in the East. He had
-opposed running the risk of war for the sake of Egypt. He had been
-largely instrumental in causing the failure of General Boulanger, whom
-not only reactionists but many vigorous Radicals admired and believed
-in. He had never lost a chance of pointing to the danger of priestly
-influence and the anti-Republican attitude of the heads of the Catholic
-Church. By his action in favour of the strikers at Carmaux, whom he
-went down himself specially to encourage and support, he had alienated
-a large section of the bourgeoisie.
-
-Not the least weighty of the charges brought against him, and one which
-perhaps had as much effect as any in bringing about the crushing result
-of the poll, was that Clemenceau had steadily opposed the alliance with
-Russia. This was regarded as still further and more conclusive evidence
-of downright treachery to France. Those were the days when France felt
-the need for an ally who could give her powerful military support, and
-her people were not disposed to inquire too closely into the character
-of the Czar's Government. Clemenceau regarded the connection as
-immoral, injurious, calculated to reduce France's democratic influence
-and to lessen the probability of a close _Entente_ with England. But
-Clemenceau's adversaries had no concern whatever with the Radical
-leader's reasons for his action, which all democrats and Socialists,
-at any rate, must have cordially approved. All they wanted was another
-ugly weapon wherewith to discredit and defeat the man who, though he
-had not gone so far as the extreme Socialists desired, had done enough
-to hinder and rout reactionaries with their monarchist or Buonapartist
-restorations. At the moment Clemenceau's anti-Czarist policy injured
-him as a politician, but it certainly did him great credit as a man.
-
-But, worse than all, he had steadily pursued his policy of a lifetime
-as a close and constant friend of England and of the English _Entente_.
-That was still more criminal than Panamism or anti-Imperialism. For
-England at that time was, and to a large extent naturally, very
-unpopular in France. Clemenceau, therefore, was overwhelmed with
-charges of being in the pay of Great Britain and working for Great
-Britain as well as for Panama. Broken English was used to hurl insults
-at him, which lost none of their fervour by being uttered in a foreign
-tongue. He had escaped from the obloquy of Panama, but it should go
-hard if one or other of these counts did not ruin him. The political
-warfare became more bitter than ever. His persecutors were relentless:
-_la politique n'a pas d'entrailles_.
-
-It was at this time that I begged Clemenceau to make some terms with
-the Socialists, who were gaining ground rapidly and appeared to be
-the coming party in France. His recent tactics had been decidedly
-favourable to Socialist views. And again I express my surprise that
-Clemenceau, while holding fast to his opinions as to the necessity for
-maintaining "law and order" in every sense, should never have seen his
-way to adopting the definite Socialist view as to the necessary and
-indeed inevitable policy of collective social progress. But his strong
-personal individualism has prevented him from embracing our principles.
-
-The statesman may quite honestly accept the theories of economists
-and sociologists, while compelled to adapt their application to the
-circumstances of his time. No really capable Socialist who has taken
-an active part in public life has ever attempted to do anything else.
-In France the Guesdists, who are certainly the most thoroughgoing
-Marxists in the country, have always proceeded on these lines in their
-municipal, and not unfrequently in their State, policy. Jaurès was a
-specially fine example of the opportunist in public affairs; so much
-so that he was taunted by more extreme men with being a Ministerialist
-before he was a Minister. Vaillant the Blanquist, in theory at least an
-advocate of a physical force revolution where possible, was in favour
-of an eight-hour law, compensation for injury to workmen, and so on.
-One and all, that is to say, were ready to use the social and political
-forms of to-day in order to prepare the way for the complete revolution
-tomorrow. All Clemenceau's speeches and writings, before and after the
-Panama crash and its consequences to him, contain many passages which
-every convinced Socialist would accept. I always felt, nevertheless,
-that I was arguing with a man deaf of both ears when I put forward my
-well-meant suggestions. Socialism, Clemenceau then declared--this,
-of course, was now nearly a generation ago--would never become an
-effective political power in France. France, and above all rural
-France, which is the real France, constituting the bulk of Frenchmen,
-is and will always remain steadfastly individualist--"founded on
-property, property, property." That was their guiding principle in
-every relation in life, and, he added, "I have seen them close at
-every stage of existence from birth to death. It is as useless to base
-any practical policy upon Socialist principles as it is chimerical to
-repose any confidence in Socialist votes." "But," I urged, "extremes
-meet: the Catholics and Socialists, both of whom are your opponents,
-may combine with the men whose minds have been poisoned by the Panamist
-and Anglophobe imputations of the _Petit Journal_ and turn you out
-of your constituency in the Var for which you now sit as deputy." He
-laughed at the very idea of such a defeat.
-
-But the persistence and malignity of monarchists and men of God of the
-Catholic persuasion are hard to beat. Socialists with an anarchist
-twist in their mental conceptions are not far behind them. So the
-fight for the constituency of Draguignan, which Clemenceau had chosen
-in preference to a Paris district at the previous election, developed
-into a personal tussle unequalled in bitterness at that period. Every
-incident of the candidate's life was turned to his discredit. The
-Panama scandal and his relations with Semitic masters of corrupt
-practices were only a portion of an atheist record unparalleled for
-infamy. All the Ministries he had destroyed, all the true lovers of
-France whom he had gibbeted, all the patriotic colonial policies he had
-frustrated were brought up against him, embroidered with every flaming
-design the modern votaries of the Inquisition could invent! He had been
-guilty, in fact, of the unpardonable offence of making too many enemies
-at once. What might have been counted to him for righteousness by one
-faction was blazoned forth as the blackest iniquity by another. His
-anti-Imperialism with his friendly attitude to the strikers incensed
-the reactionaries. His refusal to make common cause with them in an
-out-and-out programme against bourgeois Republicanism infuriated the
-extremists. All his energy, all his oratory, all his genuine love for
-and services to France in days gone by went for nothing. The friends of
-Jules Ferry, too, were eager for their revenge. Clemenceau had thought
-his loss of the seat was impossible. Nevertheless the impossible
-occurred. He was thrown out of Draguignan at this General Election of
-1893, and after more than seventeen years of arduous and extremely
-useful service was compelled to retire from Parliamentary life. It was
-a complete break in his career.
-
-Clemenceau at this period was fifty-two, and still in the prime
-of a vigorous life. He looked what he was, active, alert, capable
-and highly intelligent. His face was an index to his character. It
-gave an impression of almost barbarous energy, which induced his
-Socialist detractors, long afterwards, to speak and write of him as
-"The Kalmuck." But this was merely caricature. Refinement, mental
-brilliancy, deep reflection and high cultivation shone out from his
-animated features. A teetotaller, abstemious in his habits, and
-always in training, Clemenceau, with his rapidity of perception,
-quickness of retort and mastery of irony combined with trenchant wit,
-was a formidable opponent indeed. Add to this that he was invariably
-well-informed--_très bien documenté_--in the matters of which he
-treated. It is quite inconceivable that he should refer to or deal
-with any speech, or convention, or treaty which he had not thoroughly
-studied. It was hopeless to catch Clemenceau tripping on any matter of
-fact or political engagement. Moreover, as remarked before, his rule in
-politics was based upon the soundest principle in all warfare: Never
-fail to attack in order to defend.
-
-As an orator he was and is destitute of those telling gestures,
-modifications of tone and carefully turned phrases which we associate
-with the highest class of French public speaking. His voice rarely
-rises above the conversational level and, as a rule, he is quiet and
-unemotional in his manner. But the directness of his assaults and the
-dynamitical force of his short periods gain rather than lose on that
-account; while his power of logical, connected argument, marshalling
-with ease such facts and quotations as he needs, has never been
-surpassed. His famous Parliamentary encounter with my friend and
-comrade Jean Jaurès was a remarkable example of his controversial
-ability. My sympathies were, of course, entirely with the eloquent
-and able champion of Socialism, whose power of holding even a hostile
-audience was extraordinary, as was shown in that same National
-Assembly many a time. I was of opinion then, and I believe now, that
-Jaurès had much the stronger case. He spoke then, as he always did,
-with eloquence, fervour and sincerity. As an oratorical display it
-was admirable. But I am bound to admit that, as a mere question of
-immediate political dialectics, the Radical Premier got the better
-of the fray. It is possible, of course, that had Jaurès followed
-Clemenceau instead of having preceded him, that might have made a
-difference. But Jaurès's style, with its poetic elevation and long and
-imposing periods, was not so well suited as that of Clemenceau to a
-personal debate on immediate practical issues before such an audience
-as the French National Assembly.
-
-In private conversation Clemenceau is the most delightful yet
-unartificial talker I ever had the pleasure of listening to. Others
-who possess great gifts in this direction are apt to work up their
-effects so that you can hear, as it were, the clank of the machinery
-as their pyrotechnic monologues appeal to your sense of cleverness
-while they balk your desire for spontaneity. There is none of this
-with Clemenceau. He takes his fair share in any discussion and leaves
-nothing unsaid which, from his point of view, can elucidate or brighten
-up the friendly discussion. Never was any man less of a brilliant bore.
-
-Another quality he possesses, which proved exceedingly useful to him
-at more than one stage of his adventurous career. Clemenceau was,
-and possibly is even to-day, at the age of seventy-seven, the most
-dangerous duellist in France. A left-handed swordsman and a perfect
-pistol-shot, no one who valued the integrity of his carcase was
-disposed to encounter with either rapier or pistol the leader of the
-extreme Left. Even the reactionary fire-eater, Paul de Cassagnac, who
-himself had killed three men, shrank from meeting his quietus from
-Clemenceau. His power of work also is extraordinary. In this he was
-only equalled by Jaurès. Even an English barrister of exceptional
-physique, striving to make his mark or endeavouring to keep the place
-already won, could scarcely surpass the inexhaustible energy and
-endurance of either of these great Frenchmen. It is doubtful whether
-the generation of younger men keep abreast with the pace set by their
-elders in this respect. Both Jaurès and Vaillant complained to me more
-than once that, to use an English expression, the younger deputies did
-not "last over the course," and thus frequently lost in the Committees
-what they had gained in the set debates. Certainly, few of the French
-politicians of to-day, at half Clemenceau's age, would care to attempt
-to do the work which he is doing now, day after day, with all the
-anxiety and responsibility that now rest upon his shoulders.
-
-What perhaps is still more noteworthy, especially from the English
-point of view, Clemenceau has never at any period of his career been a
-well-to-do man. His complete independence of monetary considerations,
-at a time when place-hunting had been brought to a fine art in French
-politics, gave him an influence all the greater by consequence of
-its rarity. Politicians whom he could have easily eclipsed in the
-race for well-paid positions, or the acquisition of wealth, became
-Prime Ministers, and rich people, while Clemenceau remained what he
-had always been, the leader of the most difficult party to control,
-without the means which have usually been considered indispensable for
-such a thankless post. Only once did he offer himself as the candidate
-for a well-paid office--the Presidentship of the Chamber--to which
-his experience and services fully entitled him. He was then beaten by
-one vote. Honourable and dignified as is the chairmanship of such an
-Assembly, it was well for France, in the long run, that the recorder of
-that single vote should have allowed what he believed to be a personal
-grievance to influence his natural inclination to support Clemenceau.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- PHILOSOPHER AND JOURNALIST
-
-
-Rarely has a politician received a heavier blow than this which fell
-upon Clemenceau in 1893. Ordinarily, a man of his intellectual eminence
-and remarkable political faculties has no difficulty, if he loses one
-seat in the National Assembly of any country, in speedily getting
-another. Not so with Clemenceau. His very success as leader of the
-advanced Left and the proof that, though always a comparatively poor
-man, he had remained thoroughly honest amid all the intrigues and
-financial scandals around him told against him. He interfered with
-too many ambitions, was a stumbling-block in the way of too many high
-policies, to be able to command his return for another constituency.
-The same interests and jealousies which had combined against him at
-Draguignan would have attacked him with redoubled fury elsewhere.
-Persistent determination to carry really thorough democratic reforms in
-every department, combined with very high ability, relentless disregard
-of personal claims, complete indifference to mere party considerations
-and perfect honesty are qualities so inconvenient to modern politicians
-of every shade of opinion that the wonder is Clemenceau had held his
-position so long as he did. To have destroyed no fewer than eighteen
-more or less reactionary administrations, while always refusing to form
-a Cabinet himself, was a title to the highest esteem from the mass of
-his countrymen: it was a diabolical record from the point of view of
-the Ministers whom he had displaced and the cliques by whom they had
-been surrounded. Not a French statesman but felt that his reputation
-and his hold upon office were more secure now that Clemenceau's
-masterly combinations and dynamitical oratory were safely excluded
-from the National Assembly. So Clemenceau, at this critical period
-of his life and career, could rely upon no organised political force
-strong enough to encounter and overcome the persistent hostility of his
-enemies.
-
-A weaker man would have felt this exclusion less and have been
-discouraged more. After seventeen years of such valuable work as
-Clemenceau had done, to be, to all appearance, boycotted from the
-Assembly for an indefinite period was a strange experience. I wrote
-him myself a letter of sympathy, and in his reply he expressed his
-special bitterness at the attitude of the Socialists towards him. This
-hostility might have been easily averted without any sacrifice of
-principle on Clemenceau's part. But Clemenceau, defeated and driven out
-of his rightful place in active French politics, did not hesitate for
-a moment as to the course he would pursue. He had left the National
-Assembly as the first Parliamentarian in France: he at once turned
-round and at the age of fifty-two became her first journalist. Nothing
-in his long life of stress and strain is more remarkable than the
-success he then achieved and the vigour with which he devoted himself
-to his new vocation.
-
-It is no easy matter, especially in France, for a publicist and
-journalist to discover a fresh method of bringing his opinions to
-bear upon the public. Yet this is what Clemenceau did. He applied his
-humanist-materialist philosophy to the everyday incidents of French
-life. That philosophy is a strange compound of physical determinism
-and the ethical revolt against universal cruelty involved in the
-unregulated struggle for existence. The fight for life is inevitable.
-So far, throughout historic times it has been a long campaign in
-which the usurping minority have always won. Wholesale butchery and
-cannibalism by conquering tribes have been transformed first into
-slavery, then into serfdom, lastly into the wage-earning system of our
-own time. In each and every case the many have been at the mercy of the
-dominating few. There is little or no effective attempt made to remedy
-the evils arising out of such a state of things. The struggle for
-mere subsistence still goes on below, and those who revolt against it
-or endeavour seriously to ameliorate it by strikes or combinations are
-treated as misdemeanants or criminals. Mining capitalists, industrial
-capitalists, railway capitalists, landowners large and small have the
-law, the judges, the magistrates, the police and all the reactionary
-forces on their side. Hence the grossest injustice and the most
-abominable oppression of the poor.
-
-Therefore the State ought to intervene, not in order to repress the
-aspirations and punish the attempts of the wage-earning class to obtain
-better conditions of life for themselves and their children, but to
-protect this most important portion of the community in every possible
-way: to secure for them shorter hours of labour, thorough education,
-full opportunity for legitimate combination, boards of arbitration to
-avert strikes, fair play at the hands of the courts and the police.
-The State, in fact, is to act as a national conscience and perpetual
-trustee for the poor. Note that the struggle for existence, the fight
-for subsistence must go on--Clemenceau has never contemplated the
-possibility of a human scheme of co-operation by which competition
-would be wholly eliminated--but its harsher features ought to be
-reduced. There is no complete overthrow of mutual destruction, and
-no condition of universal fellowship is in view. Only the mind and
-heart of the community must be changed; men must survey modern society
-from the point of view of humane guidance and prepare the material
-development and economic arrangements which shall by degrees render
-individual injustice and cruelty as unheard-of as now is anthropophagy.
-
-At the back of all this lies a picturesque pessimism and what nowadays
-is frequently spoken of as a philosophy of despair. No sooner has this
-planet, its solar system, its galaxy of suns and worlds reached its
-full development than they all begin to traverse the downward path
-which leads slowly and inevitably to decay and eventual destruction,
-until the entire process unconsciously and inevitably begins over
-again. Infinity oppresses us all: the cosmos with its interminable
-repetitions eludes conception by the human intelligence. Yet we live
-and strive and feel and hope and have our conceptions of justice and
-sympathy and duty which come we know not whence and pass onwards we
-know not whither. Man as a highly organised individual entity becomes
-superior to the mere matter of which his mind is a function, because as
-an individual he can rise up out of himself and criticise and reflect
-upon that which, without any such power of conception, surrounds,
-upholds and then immolates him. "The universe crushes me," wrote
-Pascal, "yet I am superior to the universe, because I know that it is
-crushing me and the universe knows nothing about it at all." Strange
-to find Clemenceau quoting and agreeing with an intelligence so wholly
-different from his own as Pascal's!
-
-Then, fate, necessity, the Nemesis of Monism working on to its foreseen
-but uncontrollable destiny, dominates the cosmos and through the cosmos
-that infinitesimally small but sentient and critical microbe man, who
-creates an individual ethic out of this determinist material evolution.
-Francis Newman, the brother of the famous John Henry the Cardinal,
-said that it is as impossible for man to comprehend matter developing
-and reproducing itself from all time as it is for him to conceive of
-an omnipotent deity superintending the matter he has created in its
-evolution from all time. We are therefore driven back, whether we like
-it or not, upon the ancient and never-ending discussion of free-will
-and predestination in a non-theological form which leaves in the main
-all the psychologic phenomena untouched, including Clemenceau's own
-social morality that impels him to champion the cause of the oppressed.
-Beyond the demand for justice in the abstract and freedom in the
-abstract applied as a test to each special case as it arises, there
-is no guiding theory in Clemenceau's philosophy. The recognition of
-the struggle for existence among human beings, as among plants and
-animals, does not imply any conscious co-ordination of effort, arising
-out of the growth of society, in order to do away with the antagonism
-engendered by life itself. So with all his humanism Clemenceau will
-not accept the theories of scientific Socialism which could give an
-unshakable foundation to his own views of life. That is the weakness
-which runs through all his books and articles. His own individuality is
-so powerful that he simply cannot grasp the possibility of anything but
-individual effort, personal suasion and isolated measures of reform.
-
-Nevertheless, we come upon a passage which, written obviously in
-perfect good faith, would, within its limits, be accepted as a
-fair statement of Socialism from an outsider: "Socialism is social
-beneficence in action, it is the intervention of all on behalf of
-the victim of the murderous vitality of the few. To contend, as the
-economists do, that we ought to oppose social altruism in its efforts
-is to misrepresent and seriously calumniate mankind. To complain that
-collective action will degrade the individual by some limitation of
-liberty is to argue in favour of the liberty of the stronger which
-is called oppressive. Is it not, on the contrary, to strengthen the
-individual by restraining and controlling every man who injures another
-man as does the employer of to-day when left to the bare exigences
-of competition? . . . . Follow the _laissez-faire_ policy for the
-individual, says the anti-social economist, and speedily a whole
-regiment of devotees will rush to the succour of the vanquished. We
-always wait, but see nothing save the terrible condition of humanity
-which ever remains. . . . . Against this anarchy it is man's glory to
-revolt. He claims the right to soften, to control fatality if he cannot
-escape from it. How?"
-
-And then Clemenceau, whom in active life none would accuse of undue
-sentiment, goes off into a series of moral reflections and the need
-for perpetual moral preachments which really lead us nowhither;
-though, some pages further on, he quotes Karl Marx, who speaks of
-the unemployed as the inevitable "army of reserve" due not to human
-immorality but to the necessary functioning of the unregulated
-competitive capitalism of our period. Yet the great French Radical
-shrinks from the organised social collective action and revolution
-needed to lift us out of this anarchy of oppression. He turns to the
-individual himself and his hard lot under the domination of fate. He
-has a justifiable tilt at free-will and personal responsibility. Thus:--
-
-"But what is absurd, contradictory, idiotic is the responsibility
-of the creature before the creator. I say to God, 'If you are not
-satisfied with me, you had only to make me otherwise,' and I defy him
-to answer me." And then, quoting from "Lucian's Dialogues of the Dead,"
-he cites Minos as discussing with a new-comer who is brought before him
-for punishment:
-
-"All that I did in life," says Sostrates, "was it done by me
-voluntarily, or was not my destiny registered beforehand by Fate?"
-
-"Evidently by Fate," answers Minos.
-
-"Punish Fate, then," is the reply.
-
-"Let him go free," says Minos to Mercury, "and see to it that he
-teaches the other dead to question us in like manner."
-
-"Substitute Fate for Jehovah or by the laws of the Universe, and tell
-me," puts in Clemenceau, "when the pot owes his bill to the potter."
-All this and the farewell benediction which the author vouchsafes to
-the human plaything of all these pre-ordered decisions of society do
-not get us much further, even though after so many mischances he may
-live on only to appreciate more thoroughly "the sublime indifference of
-things eternal." That is not very consolatory by way of a materialist
-viaticum. But it is the best Clemenceau can give.
-
-None the less it is easy to comprehend why this sort of philosophy,
-illustrated and punctuated by the keenest criticism and sarcasm on
-the wrongs and injustice of our existing society, produced a great
-effect. The commonest incidents of everyday life were made the text
-for vitriolic sermonising on the shortcomings of statesmen and judges,
-priests and police, industrial capitalists and mine-owners. Here and
-there, also, a description of working-class life is given, so accurate,
-so vivid, so telling that administrators of the easiest conscience were
-led to feel uncomfortable at the kind of social system with which they
-had been hitherto satisfied. With no phase of French life is Clemenceau
-better acquainted than with the habits and customs of the French
-peasantry. Thus we have a description of the peasant tacked on to a
-nice little story of a poor fellow who, strolling along the highway on
-a hot day and feeling thirsty, plucks a few cherries from the branch
-of a cherry-tree which overhangs the road. The small proprietor is
-on the look-out for such petty depredations and at once kills the
-atrocious malefactor who had thus plundered him. The cherry-eater "had
-despoiled him of two-ha'porth of fruit!" It justified prompt execution
-of the thief by the owner. That such small robbery did not at once
-give the latter the power of life and death over the thief is a point
-of view that the peasant can never take. Why? Because of the penal
-servitude for life to which he is condemned by the very conditions of
-his existence, and the greed for property driven into him from birth to
-death. It is the outcome of private ownership: the result of the fatal
-saying, "This is mine."
-
-"The peasant is the man of one idea, of a sole and solitary love.
-Bowed, he knows only the earth. His activity has but one end and
-object: the soil. To acquire it, to own it, that is his life, harsh
-and rapacious. He speaks of _my_ land, _my_ field, _my_ stones, _my_
-thistles. To till, to manure, to sow the land, to mow, to uproot, to
-prime, to cut what comes from the land, that is the eternal object of
-his entire physical or intellectual effort. Amusement for him: not a
-bit of it. He has no other resource than to console himself for the
-disappointment of to-day with the hope of to-morrow. He is at war with
-the seasons, the elements, the sun, rain, hail, wind, frost. He fights
-against the neighbouring intruder, the invading cattle, the birds, the
-caterpillars, the parasites, the thousand-and-one unknown phenomena
-which, without any apparent reason, bring down upon him all sorts of
-unlooked-for ills.
-
-"Then has he risen at dawn for nothing, badly fed, badly clothed,
-sweating in the sun, shivering in the wind and the rain, exhausting his
-energies against things which resist his utmost efforts? Do sowing,
-manuring, labour and the pouring out of life all, too, go for nothing,
-without rest, without leisure, without any thought but this: I toiled
-and suffered yesterday, I shall toil and suffer to-morrow? And all this
-is balanced by no pleasures but drunkenness and lust. No theatres, no
-books, no shows, no enjoyments of any kind. Hard to others, hard to
-himself, everything is hard around him."
-
-Such is the peasant of Western France. Though the peasant of the
-South is of a livelier and happier disposition on the surface, both
-are at bottom the same. And France is still in the main rural France
-as Clemenceau himself impressed upon me many years ago. That is the
-influence which holds in check the advanced proletariat of the towns
-and mining districts. They can see nothing outside private property,
-property, property: yet it is this very unregulated individual
-ownership which forces them to fight out their existence against the
-hardships of nature with inefficient tools, insufficient manure and no
-adequate arrangements for marketing the produce they have for sale.
-High prices and a few advantages gained have somewhat ameliorated the
-lot of the peasant, but it is still a hard, depressing existence which
-cannot be made really human and happy for the great majority under the
-conditions of to-day. The only boon the peasant has is that he is not
-under the direct sway of the capitalist exploiter. What that means in
-the mines Clemenceau had an opportunity of seeing very close, as a
-member of the Commission appointed to examine into the coal-mines of
-Anzin in 1884. He tells of his experience ten years later in one of the
-pits he descended. "Never go down a coal-mine," wrote Lord Chesterfield
-to his son. "You can always say you have been below, and nobody can
-contradict you." Clemenceau did not follow this cynical advice. He
-went down, "and after having waded through water, bent double, for
-hundreds upon hundreds of yards through dripping scales which hang
-from the upper stratum, I crawled on hands and knees to a nice little
-vein _twenty inches thick_. On this seam human beings were at work,
-lying on their side, bringing down coal which fell on their faces and
-replacing it continuously by timber in order not to be crushed by the
-upper surface. You must not neglect this part of the work!" He was
-not allowed to talk with the men themselves, and when they came to
-interview him secretly they implored him not to let the manager or the
-employers know, or they would be discharged at once! The old story of
-miners in every country which even the strongest Trade Unions are as
-yet scarcely able to cope with, though the tyranny in French mines has
-been checked since the time Clemenceau wrote. These and similar cases
-of oppression on the part of the capitalist class caused Clemenceau to
-support Socialists more and more in their demands for limitation of
-the then unrestricted powers of individual employers and "anonymous"
-companies. So, too, individualist as he was, he wrote article after
-article in defence of the right of the men to strike against grievous
-oppression, holding that the combination of the workers was more than
-sufficiently handicapped by the fact that they were bound to imperil
-their own subsistence as well as the maintenance of their wives and
-children by going on strike at all. This argument he applied to all
-strikes in organised industries.
-
-But Clemenceau naturally found himself drawn into bitter antagonism
-to the doctrine of _laissez-faire_ and the law of supply and demand.
-"You say all must bow down to them. I contend all must revolt against
-them." "The individual struggle for existence is only a great
-_laissez-faire_! Far from being liberty, it is the triumph of violence,
-it is barbarism itself. The man who mastered the first slave founded
-a new system . . . so completely that after some ages of this rule a
-physiocrat overlooking it all would have sagely pronounced: Slavery is
-the law of human societies. This with the same amount of truth as he
-says to-day: The law of supply and demand is an immutable ordinance.
-And, for all that, the supreme irony of fate has decreed that the
-first slave-driver was at the same time the first sower of the seed of
-liberty, of justice. For by enslaving men he created a social relation,
-a relation different from that enjoined by the primitive form of the
-struggle for existence: kill, eat, destroy. Henceforth man was bound to
-man. The social body was formed." Man had to discover the law governing
-the new relation, and he found it at last in the first flashes of
-justice and liberty. "What, then, is this your _laissez-faire_, your
-law of supply and demand, but the pure and simple expression of force?
-Right overcomes force: that is the principle of civilisation. Your law
-once formulated, let us set to work against barbarism!"
-
-All that is telling criticism; though to-day it reads a bit antiquated
-in view of the revolt everywhere against both these catch-phrases and
-the anarchist chaos which they connote. But here again Clemenceau,
-with all his acuteness and brilliancy, displays the need for a guiding
-historic and economic theory--the sociologic theory which scientific
-Socialism supplies. It was not justice or liberty which created
-slavery, or destroyed slavery, but economic development and social
-necessity. The cult of abstraction leads to social revolt but not to
-material revolution.
-
-Holding the opinions he did, it was inevitable that Clemenceau should
-put the case of the Anarchists such as Vaillant, Henry, Ravachot.
-They were the victims of a system. They could not rise as a portion
-of a collective attack against the unjust class dominion and economic
-servitude which crushed them and their fellows down into interminable
-toil with no reward for their lifelong sufferings. So they made war
-as individuals for anarchy. _Vive l'Anarchie!_ were the last words of
-Henry. The man was a fanatic. "The crime seems to me odious. I make no
-excuse for it," says Clemenceau, but he objects to the capital penalty.
-"Henry's crime was that of a savage. The deed of society seems to
-me a loathsome vengeance." Clemenceau compares, too, the anarchists
-of dynamite to the would-be assassin Damien, so hideously tortured
-before death. "My motive," said he, "was the misery which exists in
-three-quarters of the kingdom. I acted alone, because I thought alone."
-The anarchist, asked by his mother why he had, become an anarchist,
-answered, "Because I saw the suffering of the great majority of human
-beings." Vaillant, Henry, Caserio and their like are overmastered by
-the same idea as Damien. They kill members of the king caste of our
-society of to-day in order to scare the bourgeoisie into justice. There
-is no arguing with honest fanatics of this type. Whether society is
-justified in guillotining or hanging them is another matter. That their
-method is futile, as all history shows, gives society the right if it
-so chooses to regard it also as criminal.
-
-The above is all argument and criticism put with almost savage vigour.
-But Clemenceau used likewise the lighter touch of French irony. Thus
-a wretched family of father, mother and six children, tramping along
-the high road near Paris, found some coal which had dropped from a
-wagon long since out of sight. They pick up these bits of chance fuel
-as a godsend. They have gleaned after the reapers. Straightway, the
-story of Boaz and Ruth occurs to Clemenceau, of Boaz and his descendant
-of Nazareth, who is the God of Europe to-day. The Hebrew Boaz, the
-landowner of old, gladly leaves the wheat-ears to be gleaned by Ruth
-and marries her into the bargain. The Christian Boaz, the coal-owner of
-our time, gets the males of the distressed family of coal-gleaners six
-days' imprisonment. Such is progress through the centuries! The moral
-of the whole story is brilliantly touched in.
-
-So again in his comment on the catastrophe at the Charity Bazaar. It
-was the rank and religiosity of the persons burnt alive which rendered
-the tragedy so much more terrible than if the crowd thus incinerated
-had only consisted of common people! It was the cream of French piety
-that was there sacrificed. Quite an ecclesiastical and political
-propaganda was developed from their ashes. The spirit of class made
-these accidental victims of gross carelessness martyrs of Christian
-heroism. Yet "if I go to dance at a charity ball, paying twenty francs
-for my ticket, and expire on the spot, I am not on that account a
-hero. . . . These gatherings are not exactly places of torture.
-People laugh, flirt, and amuse themselves, it is an opportunity
-to display fine dresses, and the charity sale has supplemented the
-Opéra Comique for marriage-provoking interviews superintended by good
-grandmothers. . . . Here is class distinction in action. Observe these
-aristocratic young gentlemen beating with their canes and kicking their
-frightened womenkind in their cowardly attempt to get out of danger.
-Then see the servants rushing in to save them! Look also at the workmen
-by chance on the spot risking their lives with true heroism, the
-plumber Piquet, who saved twenty people and, though much burnt himself,
-went back to his work-shop without a word." The contrast is striking.
-It is not drawn by a Socialist.
-
-Then the criticism on the German fête in commemoration of the victory
-of Sedan. "William II is obliged to keep his people in training, to
-militarise them unceasingly, body and soul. . . . In spite of the
-handsome protests of most of the Socialist leaders, we may be sure that
-it is in very truth the soul of Germany whose innermost exultation
-is manifested in these numberless jubilations which have beflagged
-every village in the Empire. . . . It is the curse of the triumphs of
-brute force to leave room in the soul of the conqueror for nothing but
-a blind faith in settlement by violence." Then follows a prophetic
-summary of what must be the inevitable consequence of this consecration
-of brutal dominion inspired by the hateful instincts of barbarism,
-which together prepare to use in Central Europe the most efficient
-means of murder at the disposal of scientific civilisation. The ethics
-of the nation are being deliberately corrupted for the realisation of
-the Imperial policy!
-
-Thus Clemenceau, like others of us who knew the old Germany well, and
-had watched its sad hypnotisation by the spirit of ruthless militarism,
-foresaw what was coming more than twenty-five years ago. And thus
-anticipating and reflecting, he chanced to see on one of the monuments
-of Paris illumined by the sun, "The German Empire falls." It was dated
-1805! "Short years pass. What remains of these follies? If law and
-right outraged, reason flouted, wisdom contemned must blight our hopes,
-as your warlike demonstrations too clearly prognosticate, then for you,
-men of Germany, the inscription of the Carrousel is patient and bides
-its time.
-
-"And yet two great rival peoples worthy to understand one another could
-nobly make ready a nobler destiny."
-
-There you have the statesman and idealist as well as the clear-sighted
-journalist. Clemenceau saw the storm-cloud ever menacing and ready
-to break upon France. He warned his countrymen of their danger, bade
-them prepare to meet it, but hoped continuously that his forecasts
-might prove wholly erroneous. Jaurès unfortunately, with all his vast
-ability, was too idealist and far too credulous. Hence his great
-influence was thrown against the due preparation of his own country; he
-did his utmost to support the anti-navy men even in Great Britain, and
-only began to recognise how completely mistaken he had been just before
-he was assassinated by the modern Ravaillac of religionist reaction. To
-anticipate fraternity in a world of conflict is to help the aggressor
-and to court disaster. This Clemenceau the Radical knew: to this the
-French Socialists shut their minds.
-
-It was natural that the Vendéen by birth, the Parisian by adoption,
-should feel himself drawn rather to the ideals of the French capital,
-which in matters of intelligence and art is also the capital of Europe,
-rather than to the narrow spirit of the Breton countryside which he has
-so vigorously sketched. In his writings as in his political activities
-this preference, this admiration find forcible expression. From the
-days of Julian the great Pagan Emperor down to the French Revolution
-and thence onwards, Clemenceau briefly traces the development of the
-City by the Seine, the French Renaissance and the University of Paris,
-by the influence of the writings of Montaigne--"this city in right of
-which I am a Frenchman"--and Rabelais: this meeting-place of Europe,
-this Central Commune of the planet proposed by Clootz, the Prussian
-idealist, becomes in the words of the same foreign enthusiast "a
-magnificent Assembly of the peoples of the West." We may forgive the
-French statesman his unbounded enthusiasm for the Paris where he has
-spent the whole of his active life. "One phrase alone, 'The Rights of
-Man,' has uplifted all heads. Lafayette brings back from America the
-victory that France sent thither and straightway the great battle is
-joined between Paris of the French Revolution and the coalition of
-things of the past." "True, we have measured
-
- _A la hauteur des bonds la profondeur des chutes_,
-
-"but at least we have striven, and we abate not a jot of our generous
-ambitions. Thus decrees the tradition of Paris . . . that Paris which now
-as ever holds in her hands the key to supreme victory."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- CLEMENCEAU AS A WRITER
-
-
-M. Clemenceau had a ready pen as well as a very bitter one, and he did
-not confine himself to articles on politics and sociology. Besides _La
-Mêlée Sociale_, of which I have given some account in the previous
-chapter, he published the following books in order within eight years:
-_Le Grand Pan_, a volume of descriptive essays; _Les Plus Forts_, a
-novel; _Au Fil des Jours_, and _Les Embuscades de la Vie_, which were,
-in the main, collections of sketches and tales. At the same time he
-did a great deal of ordinary journalism, including his articles on the
-Dreyfus case, which make in themselves four good-sized volumes.
-
-_Le Grand Pan_ followed close upon _La Mêlée Sociale_, and came as
-a delightful surprise to M. Clemenceau's readers, a piece of pure
-literature. In this book he no longer writes as a citizen of Paris, a
-man of the boulevards and pavements, but as one country-born and bred,
-knowing the hills and the sea. Although he describes his own Vendéen
-scenery with loving familiarity, making the "_Marais_," the "_Bocage_"
-and the "_Plaine_" live before us, he does not cling to them with the
-monotonous affection of some French writers, who are, as it were, dyed
-in their own local colour. Without elaboration, without the detailed
-building-up of a scene which is the careful habit of some others, he
-conveys in two or three lines the _feeling_ of a countryside and that
-elusive but immutable thing, the character of a landscape. This belongs
-really to the poet's art, and gives, I cannot tell why, a deeper
-impression, a far more lasting pleasure than all the abundance and
-detail of prose. Clemenceau's neighbour, and almost fellow-countryman,
-Renan, had this gift. All the grey waters of the rocky Armorican shore
-seem to sweep through the first lines of his essay on the Celtic
-Spirit; and the influence of Renan is marked in _Le Grand Pan_. The
-first article, which gives the book its title, sets the reader's fancy
-sailing among the Greek Isles, steered by poetry and tradition, in
-the light of the golden and the silver age. Clemenceau, like Heine,
-mourns for the overthrow of the Greek gods in the welter of quarrelling
-priesthoods and fierce Asian ugliness that flooded the Mediterranean
-world. "Pan, Pan is dead!" But in the Renaissance--"the tumultuous
-pageant of Art hurrying to meet the classic gods reborn"--he welcomes
-the magnificent restoration of the ancient and eternal Powers. And
-he claims for the nineteenth century the honour of beholding another
-re-birth of the gods of Nature in the development of science, and the
-labour that has brought some of the secrets of earth within our ken.
-
-But science, as we know, has revealed the horrors as well as the
-wonders of earth. It troubles us; man has shed rivers of needless
-blood, but we shrink from recognising Nature as she is, "red in
-tooth and claw." It did not trouble the ancient Greeks; their
-gods, developing from the rough deities of place or tribe into the
-embodiments of the natural forces of matter or of mind, were outside
-human ethic, although they were cast in human form. They might take the
-shape of mortals, but only Euripides and a few other hypersensitive
-moralists thought of blaming the gods when, as often happened, they
-fell below the standards of human conduct. But we are creatures of
-another era; and man, criticising and even condemning the Powers that
-rule his little day, has, for good or ill, reached out to a level that
-is above the gods, whose plaything he still remains.
-
-And there is another change. Man--_some_ men, that is to say--have
-taken the animals into their protection and fellowship: and M.
-Clemenceau is truly one of these. Not only those charming, kindly
-essays, _La Main et la Patte_ and _Les Parents Pauvres_, in _Le Grand
-Pan_, but the history of the two pigeons in the _Embuscades de la Vie_,
-and a hundred little touches and incidents throughout Clemenceau's
-books show him to be a man of most generous sympathies, looking at
-animal life from a far higher and finer point of view than the majority
-of his countrymen.
-
-There is much else in _Le Grand Pan_ that it would be pleasant to dwell
-upon: a delicate classic spirit, a certain ironic grace, humour and
-mockery, but everywhere and above all keen indignation at needless
-human suffering and a sympathy which is poles apart from sentiment, for
-human pain. M. Clemenceau might well be called "a soldier of pity,"
-as, in one of the Near Eastern languages, the members of his first
-profession, the doctors, are termed. But I must pass on. _Le Grand Pan_
-is, as it deserves to be, the best known of M. Clemenceau's books,
-and no one who has overlooked it can form a complete idea of this
-remarkable man.
-
-It is said that anyone who has the power of setting down his
-impressions on paper can write at least one good novel, if he
-tries, for he will draw with varying degrees of truth or malice
-the individuals he has met, liked, or suffered from, and the main
-circumstances of his life. What a Homeric novel M. Clemenceau might
-have written if he had followed these lines! But _Les Plus Forts_ is
-unfortunately no such overflow of personal impressions and memories;
-it is merely what used to be called "a novel with a purpose." That is
-to say, it is one of the many works of fiction which not only record
-the adventures of certain imaginary yet typical characters, but also
-contain severe criticism of contemporary social conditions and life.
-Such novels were much more common in England during the nineteenth
-century than in France. In English fiction the sequence is unbroken
-from _Sandford and Merton_ to the earlier works of Mrs. Humphry Ward's
-venerable pen. But in 1898 there were still not many French novels
-concerned with the serious discussion of social conditions, and M.
-Clemenceau's early work stands out among these for sincerity and
-simplicity of intent. However, in spite of the excellent irony of some
-passages--notably the description of the Vicomtesse de Fourchamps'
-career--_Les Plus Forts_ is to modern readers a trifle tedious and a
-little naive. It is of the same calibre as Mr. Shaw's two first novels,
-but less eccentric and not so amusing. M. Clemenceau himself would
-probably write upon it "_Péché de jeunesse_," and pass on. Yet it
-deserves more attention than that; for _Les Plus Forts_ unconsciously
-reveals the central weakness of its author's criticism of modern life.
-The situation is a good one, although the actors are not so much
-characters as types.
-
-Henri de Puymaufray, a ruined French gentleman, who has lost the
-world and found a kind of Radicalism, and Dominique Harlé, a rich
-paper manufacturer, live side by side in the country as friendly
-enemies or, rather, close but inimical friends. Their views of life
-are as the poles asunder, but for the purposes of the story they
-must be constantly meeting in conversational intimacy; and they have
-each an almost superhuman power of expressing themselves and their
-attitude towards the world they live in. The chief link between them
-is Harlé's supposed daughter and only child, Claude, whose real father
-is Puymaufray. Both these elderly gentlemen are deeply concerned
-about Claude's future; each wishing, as parents and guardians often
-do, to make the child's career the completion of their own ambitions
-and hopes. Here Harlé has the advantage; he knows what he wants, that
-is, money and power, and he means his daughter to have plenty of
-both. He is the ordinary capitalist, with a strain of politician and
-Cabinet-maker, who ends by founding a popular journal that outdoes
-Harmsworth in expressing the "Lowest Common Factor of the Mind."
-Society, the Church, and a particularly offensive form of charity all
-serve him to increase his own power and the stability of his class. All
-is for the best in the best of bourgeois worlds. Such is the theory
-of life which he puts before his supposed daughter, together with a
-_prétendant_ who will carry out his aims. Unhappily, Puymaufray has
-nothing positive to set against this very solid and prosperous creed.
-He and Deschars, the young traveller whom he wishes to give Claude
-for a husband, can only talk pages of Radicalism in which the words
-"pity" and "love" would recur even more frequently if M. Clemenceau's
-fine sense of fitness did not prevail. What do they really want Claude
-to do? The best they can offer her appears to be a life of retired and
-gentle philanthropy, inspired by a dim sense of human brotherhood,
-which might, under very favourable circumstances, deepen into a sort of
-Socialist mood.
-
-But "mere emotional Socialism cuts no ice." This has often been said,
-and means that a vague fraternal purpose and a perception of the deep
-injustice of our present social system, even when sharpened with the
-most destructive satire, will never change this world for the better,
-unless they lead up to some theory of construction that is based on
-economic facts. Pity and brotherhood may move individuals to acts of
-benevolence, but they cannot alone recast the fabric of society, or
-even bring about fundamental collective reforms. Besides, when young
-people are asked to give up certain definite things, such as money,
-pleasure and power, they must see something more than mere renouncement
-ahead. They must be shown the fiery vision of an immortal city whose
-foundations they may hope to build. Clemenceau's own knowledge of human
-nature works against his two heroes, and he says:
-
-"Deschars was the child of his time. He had gone about the world as
-a disinterested beholder, and he returned from voyaging without any
-keen desire for noble action. . . . Perhaps, if he had been living and
-working for some great human object, Deschars would have carried Claude
-away by the very authority of his purpose, without a word. . . ."
-
-And Madame de Fourchamps observes:
-
-"It is very lucky for the poor that there are rich people to give them
-bread."
-
-To which Claude replies:
-
-"My father's factory provides these workmen with a livelihood; where
-would they be without him?"
-
-Then, instead of a few plain words on labour-value, Puymaufray can only
-reply:
-
-"Well, they give him something in exchange, don't they?"
-
-The old capitalist fallacies here uttered in their crudest form
-cannot be refuted by mere injunctions to pity and goodwill; and even
-the magnificent words Liberty, Equality, Fraternity are no adequate
-reply. To the successful profiteer and all who acquiesce in his
-domination they mean: Liberty of Enterprise, Equality of Opportunity,
-and Fraternity among Exploiters. Facts and the march of events alone
-can persuade Dominique Harlé and his like to use their ingenuity in
-serving their fellow-creatures, and not in profiting by them. And only
-collective action, guided by some knowledge of the direction in which
-our civilisation is tending, can hasten the march of events.
-
-It is remarkable how greatly the "novel with a purpose" has developed
-during the last twenty years in England and, to a less extent, in
-France. The characters are creatures of their conditions; and it
-is these conditions, not the characters, that do the talking. Some
-novels to-day are such careful and withal highly interesting guides
-to the sociology of England towards the end of the black Industrial
-Age that we cannot wonder if their authors take themselves too
-seriously as politicians and reformers. Yet these works show, after
-all, the same defect as _Les Plus Forts_, they have no constructive
-theory of life to set against the very well-defined, solid, and still
-apparently effective system which they criticise. All their most ironic
-descriptions, their most penetrating satire are negative, and, in the
-end, the utterances of men "wandering between two worlds, one dead, one
-powerless to be born."
-
-_Au Fil des Jours_ is an interesting collection of pieces in which the
-author has not made up his mind whether he will write short stories or
-articles upon social conditions. There is no harm in that; some people
-may even say that M. Clemenceau has produced a new variety of readable
-matter; but, curiously enough, the substance of the story is often
-so telling that one quarrels with the writer for not having put it
-into the best shape. Take one of the pieces in _Au Fil des Jours_--_La
-Roulotte_. Briefly, a weary old gipsy drives in a covered donkey-cart
-into a country hamlet, and stops by the riverside, where all the
-gossips are washing. He is received with hostile and watchful silence,
-because gipsies are always the scapegoats in a peasant district, and
-anything and everything that may be lost, stolen or strayed--even if
-it turns up again--is always laid to their account. In the night he
-dies, unnoticed; and, after some further time has passed, the villagers
-inspect his cart. Finding him there, dead, with a very small grandson
-living, they fetch the local constable and the mayor. The arm of
-the Law begins to function, the child is sent to the workhouse, the
-moribund donkey is "taken care of" by one of the villagers, and the
-dilapidated old cart, which only contained a few rags, is left by the
-riverside.
-
-But the French peasant knows how to turn every little thing to profit:
-nothing is useless in his eyes. Gradually handy fragments of the
-donkey-cart begin to disappear. Bits of the iron fittings vanish, the
-tilt-props go, a shaft follows, one wheel after another slips away and
-is no more seen. In fact, the donkey-cart, as such, disappears from
-mortal sight. Then, one fine day, a gipsy-woman comes swinging along
-the road, where she had followed the traces of the donkey-cart, and
-asks for news of her old father and her little boy. The authorities of
-the village tell her of the old gipsy's death and burial: they do not
-require her to pay for his obsequies only because they see it would
-be no use. She goes to fetch the child from the workhouse, and then
-asks for the donkey and cart. The former, they tell her, died in the
-hands of the villager who "took care of him" (and sold his skin for a
-fair sum). She accepts this loss with resignation; but the cart, as
-she says, cannot have died: where is her father's "_roulotte_"?--Ah,
-well, nobody in the village knows anything about _that_! It _was_ here,
-no doubt, since the old gipsy died in it--but since then----The Law,
-once more represented by mayor and constables, can only shrug its
-shoulders in the finest French manner and disclaim all responsibility
-for a vagabond's goods. But the gipsy-woman persists: she begins even
-to clamour for her rights. "_Rights, indeed!_" The village, hitherto
-indifferent, becomes hostile; and the old cry that meets the gipsy
-everywhere is raised, for someone on the edge of the crowd calls
-out, "Thief!" It is a mere expression of disapproval, not a direct
-accusation, but the whole village takes it up joyfully: "Thief! Thief!"
-So the gipsy-woman, who, as it chanced, has stolen nothing, is hounded
-out of the commune with sticks and stones and objurgations by those who
-had themselves appropriated her old donkey-cart piecemeal. "A bit of
-rusty iron whizzed past her as she crossed the bridge. It may once have
-served as her donkey's shoe."
-
-Such is the tale: a sample of many in _Au Fil des Jours_. Irony and
-realism are not wanting, nor yet the grimly picturesque, but the
-reader is left thinking: "What a little gem this would be if it were
-told by Maupassant, or some other master of the _conte_!" Certainly
-M. Clemenceau has something else to do than tell _contes_! But his
-literary material is so fine that it is his own fault if we expect
-the very best of him. As it is, he does not take the trouble to cut
-the story out clearly from the matrix of thought and memories which
-enfolded it in his own mind. The effect on the reader is, one might
-say, a little vague and murmurous, like some tale half-heard in a crowd.
-
-It is a strange thing that the countryside, Nature, the pure and
-never-failing spring of inspiration for poetry and human delight,
-should turn so different a countenance towards those who live with her,
-year out and year in, winning sustenance for us all from her broad
-and often ungenial breast. Our Mother Earth is an iron taskmaster to
-the tillers of the soil grinding out their youth and strength, bowing
-their eyes to their labour, so that all her beauty passes them by
-unseen. Either Nature keeps her charms jealously for the untroubled
-mind and the leisured eye, or else all the beauty that we see in her is
-borrowed, a glamour lent by some immaterial force--not ours, perhaps,
-but certainly not her own. Be this as it may, in the _Embuscades de la
-Vie_ M. Clemenceau beholds and describes the careless, endless, natural
-beauty amid which the peasant-lives that he sketches for us are set;
-but these themselves are often as ugly as bare stone, and the men and
-women are hard and close-fisted with one another mainly because the
-earth is so grudging to them. These stories are the most clear-cut of
-all Clemenceau's essays in fiction. They are not exactly _contes_,
-either: they are the discoveries, one might say, of Clemenceau in
-his ancestral character as the descendant of a line of doctors and
-landowners who worked for generations among the small bourgeois and the
-tillers of the soil. How he knows them! and--if French fiction is to
-be believed--how unchangeable they are! Since the bourgeois gained his
-freedom in the great Revolution by using the arm of the sans-culotte,
-what a grip he has kept upon his possession! and how much dearer to him
-his property is than anything else in the world! Clemenceau does but
-take up the theme of Balzac and others when he describes provincial
-France and its twin gods, money and the land--money which compels
-loveless marriages, envy, fawning, bitterness, perpetual small cheating
-or endless insect-like toil; and the land, in whose service men work
-themselves and their kindred to the bone, and grudge a pittance to old
-age.
-
-The bourgeoisie and their customs vary with their nationality, but
-peasant life is much the same all over Europe. Clemenceau found similar
-traits of life and character in Galicia to those of La Vendée; and
-others will tell us that from Ireland to Russia, from the Baltic to
-the Black Sea, the peasant and the small farmer conduct their lives
-upon the same lines: hard work, dependence upon the seasons, family
-authority, tribal feuds, and a meticulous social system of comment and
-convention, under which the individual finds himself far less free than
-in the unhampered, unnoticed life of the towns.
-
-Yet many of the "ambushes of life" are to be found in the cities; and
-about a third of these tales are laid in the towns and among the
-well-to-do middle class. M. Clemenceau's satire plays freely upon
-the "marriage of convention," by which two families agree, after a
-certain amount of haggling and mutual sharp practice, to bind two young
-strangers together in the closest of relationship, for time, and also,
-we are told, for eternity, in the interest of property alone. Still,
-human nature adapts itself to anything, and even such marriages have
-their compensations, as our author lightly and ironically points out.
-Being a genuine sociologist, he does not handle these tales of the
-bourgeoisie and their vagaries within what is, after all, an artificial
-and exclusive form of existence, as seriously as he does the great
-plain outlines of peasant life.
-
-Whether he writes of town or country, of _Fleur de Froment_ and _Six
-Sous_, or of a _ménage à trois_; whether he calls up a Greek courtesan
-to theorise about her profession, or describes a long-standing bitter,
-and motiveless peasant feud, his style is always fluent and charming,
-vivid with irony, and graceful with poetic thought. Yet the defect as
-well as the merit of M. Clemenceau's fiction and essay-writing is just
-this admirable, unvarying ease and fluency. One feels that he writes
-with perfect unconsciousness, as the thoughts come into his head.
-And, after a while, the ungrateful reader is inclined to ask for some
-kind of selection in the feast before him, where all is good, very
-good, even, but nothing is _excellent_. Like a far greater writer,
-Clemenceau--on paper at least--"has no peaks in him." His literature
-was an admirable "by-product" of his almost limitless capacities; his
-actions and not his writings are the achievements of his life.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- CLEMENCEAU AND THE DREYFUS AFFAIR
-
-
-In December, 1894, Captain Dreyfus, a member of the General Staff, was
-found guilty of treason by a Court Martial. The Court was unanimous.
-He was condemned to be sent to the Ile du Diable, there to expiate
-his offence by the prolonged torture of imprisonment and solitary
-confinement, in a tropical climate. It was a terrible punishment. But
-the offence of betraying France to Germany, committed by an officer
-entrusted with the military secrets of the Republic, was a terrible one
-too. It seemed so incredible, especially as Captain Dreyfus was a man
-of considerable means, that up to the last moment the gravest doubt
-as to the possibility of his having committed such a crime prevailed.
-When, however, the Court declared against him as one man, and without
-the slightest hesitation, there could no longer be any question of the
-correctness of the decision. For the trial had lasted four whole days,
-and Dreyfus had been defended by one of the ablest advocates at the
-Paris Bar. "What need have we of further witness?"
-
-That was the universal feeling. Nearly a quarter of a century before,
-Marshal Bazaine had betrayed France to her mortal enemy, and had
-escaped the penalty which was his due. Common soldiers were frequently
-condemned to death and executed for impulsive actions against their
-superiors. High time an example should be made of a man of higher
-rank. Dreyfus was lucky not to be shot out of hand. That an Alsatian,
-a rich man, a soldier sworn to defend his country, an officer employed
-in a confidential post, should thus sell his nation to Germany was
-frightful. The thing was more than infamous. No punishment could be
-too bad for him. Permanent solitary confinement under a blazing sun is
-worse than immediate death. All the better. His fate will encourage the
-others.
-
-And Captain Dreyfus was a Jew. That made the matter worse. Powerful as
-they are in politics and finance, Jews are not popular in France. By
-Catholics and sworn anti-Semites they are believed to be capable of
-anything. Even by men of open mind they are regarded with distrust as
-citizens of no country, a set of Asiatic marauders encamped for the
-time being in the West, whose God is a queer compound of Jahveh, Moloch
-and Mammon. There was thus the bitterest race and religious prejudice
-eager to confirm the judgment of the Court Martial. The case was
-decided. Dreyfus was sent off to the Island of the Devil.
-
-Clemenceau shared the general opinion. He accepted the statement of
-the president of the Court Martial that "there are interests superior
-to all personal interests." And these were the interests which forbade
-that the court martial should be held in public, or that the secret
-evidence of treason should be disclosed. Given the honour, good
-faith, capacity and freedom from prejudice of the judges, this was a
-reasonable contention on the part of the chief officer of the Court.
-But there was that to come out, in this very Dreyfus case, which should
-throw grave doubt upon the advisability of any sittings behind closed
-doors of any court that deals with matters into which professional,
-personal or political considerations may be imported. Secrecy is
-invariably harmful to democracy and injurious to fair play.
-
-Three years later Clemenceau began to understand what lay behind this
-veil of obscurity which he then allowed to be thrown over the whole of
-the Dreyfus proceedings. He took upon himself the full burden of his
-own mistake. When he had distinguished his fine career by the vigorous
-and sustained effort in favour of justice to the victim, he reprinted
-at full length his articles denouncing the man about whom he had been
-misled. "I cannot claim," he writes, "credit for having from the first
-instinctively felt the iniquity. I believed Dreyfus to be guilty, and
-I said so in scathing terms. It seemed to me impossible that officers
-should lightly inflict such a sentence on one of themselves. I imagined
-there had been some desperate imprudence. I considered the punishment
-terrible, but I excused it on the ground of devotion to patriotism."
-Nothing was farther from Clemenceau's thoughts, even at the close of
-1897, than that Dreyfus should after all be not guilty. He laughed
-at Bernard Lazare when he said so. Meeting M. Ranc by accident, this
-politician and journalist confirmed the opinion of Lazare and declared
-that Dreyfus was innocent. Again Clemenceau smiled incredulously,
-and was recommended to go at once and see M. Scheurer-Kestner,
-Vice-President of the Senate, the famous Alsatian whose high qualities
-he many years afterwards proclaimed in a funeral oration.
-
-The editor of _l'Aurore_ called upon that courageous and indefatigable
-champion of Dreyfus; and comparison of the handwriting of Esterhazy,
-the chief witness against the captain, with that of the _bordereau_
-attributed to Dreyfus and decisive of his guilt, convinced Clemenceau,
-not that Dreyfus was innocent, but that the judgment had been quite
-irregular. Therefore he resolved to begin a campaign for a revision
-of the case. He did not share Scheurer-Kestner's view as to the
-enormous difficulty and danger of such an undertaking. Trouble and
-misrepresentation he anticipated. Bitter opposition from the members
-of the court and of the General Staff--Yes. Virulent misrepresentation
-due to priestly hatred--Yes. Unceasing malignity of anti-Semites--Yes.
-Strong political objection to any reopening of a "_chose jugée_," on
-public grounds--Yes. But, in spite of all, the truth in modern France
-would easily and triumphantly prevail! "Events showed me how very far
-out I was in my calculations."
-
-As on more than one occasion in his stormy life, therefore, Clemenceau
-underrated the strength of the enemy. He had to contend against a
-combination of some of the strongest interests and passions that
-can affect human life and sentiment. There had been from the very
-commencement a bitter feeling among some of the most powerful sections
-of French society against the Republic. As was shown in the rise
-of Boulanger, Clemenceau, by exposing the drawbacks of successive
-Republican Governments, had done much to strengthen this feeling
-among its opponents and to weaken the loyalty of its supporters.
-There was, in fact, nothing in the Republic itself to be enthusiastic
-about. It was essentially a bourgeois Republic, living on in a welter
-of bourgeois scandals, unbalanced by any great policy at home, any
-great military successes abroad, or any great personalities at the
-head of affairs. The glories of France were dimmed: the financiers of
-France--especially the Jew financiers--were more influential than ever.
-All this helped the party of reaction.
-
-Religion, too, had come in to fortify finance and build up the
-anti-Semite group. The Catholics, to whom Jews and Free-Masons are
-the red flags of the political and social bull ring, had not very
-long before challenged the former to deadly combat in that Field of
-the Cloth of Gold on which, to use the phrase of one of their less
-enlightened competitors, they "do seem a sort of inspired." It is
-possible that had the Catholic Union Générale listened to the advice
-of their ablest and coolest brain, who was, be it said, neither a
-Frenchman nor a Catholic, the great financial combination of the
-Church, with all its sanctified funds of the faithful behind it, might
-have won. Even as it was, it drove a Rothschild to commit suicide,
-which was regarded as a great feat at the time.
-
-But M. Bontoux was too ambitious, he did not possess the real financial
-faculty, his first successes turned such head as he possessed. The
-Jews, therefore, were able to work their will upon the whole of his
-projects and groups, and the devout Catholic investors of Paris, Vienna
-and other places had the intolerable mortification of seeing their
-savings swept into the coffers of the infidel. This had happened some
-years before the Dreyfus case. But losers have long memories, and here
-was a sore monetary grievance superadded to the previous religious
-hatred of the Hebrew.
-
-Dreyfus was a Jew. Nay, more, he came of financial Jews who had had
-their pickings out of the collapse of the Union Générale as well as out
-of the guano and other concessions malignantly obtained in the Catholic
-Republic of Peru. Monstrous that a man of that race and name should
-be an officer in the French Army at all! Still more outrageous that
-he should be placed by his ability and family influence in a position
-of military importance, and entrusted with serious military secrets!
-Something must be done.
-
-Now the persons forming the most powerful coterie in the higher circles
-of the French Army at this time were not only men who had been educated
-at the famous military academy of St. Cyr and imbued with an _esprit
-de corps_ cultivated from their school-days upwards, but they were
-officers who believed heartily, if not in the religion, at any rate in
-the beneficent secular persuasion of the Catholic Church. They were,
-as was clearly shown, greatly influenced by the Jesuits, who saw the
-enormous advantage of keeping in close touch with the chiefs of the
-army.
-
-Then there were the monarchists and Buonapartists, male and female, of
-every light and shade, who were eagerly on the look-out for any stroke
-that might discredit the new studious but scientific and unbelieving
-class of officers, whom the exigencies of modern warfare were making
-more and more essential to military efficiency. Their interest was to
-keep as far as possible the main higher organisation and patronage of
-the army and the General Staff a close borough and out of the hands of
-these new men.
-
-All this formed a formidable phalanx of organised enmity against any
-officer who might not suit the prejudices or, at a critical moment,
-might be dangerous to the plans of people who, differ as they might in
-other matters, were at one in disliking capable soldiers who were not
-of their particular set. And here was Dreyfus, who embodied in his own
-person all their most cherished hatreds, who could be made the means of
-striking a blow at all similar intruders upon their preserve, in such
-wise as greatly to injure all their enemies at once. Unfortunately for
-him, Dreyfus was at the same time an able officer--so much the more
-dangerous, therefore--and personally not an agreeable man. Not even
-their best friends would deny to clever Jews the virtue of arrogance.
-Dreyfus was arrogant. He was not a grateful person to his superiors or
-to his equals. They all wanted to get rid of him on their own account,
-and their friends outside were ready enough to embitter them against
-him because he was a Jew.
-
-This is not to say that there was an elaborate plot afoot among all
-who were brought in contact with Dreyfus, or that, when the charge
-against him was formulated, there was a deliberate intention, on the
-part of the members of the Court Martial, to find him guilty, no matter
-what happened. But it is now quite certain that, from the first, the
-idea that he was a spy was agreeable to his fellow-officers in the
-Ministry of War; and, being satisfied as to his responsibility for the
-crime that they wished to believe him guilty of, they did not stick
-at trifles, in the matter of procedure and testimony, which might
-relieve their consciences and justify their judgment. Knowing, then,
-the powerful combination which would oppose to the death any revision
-of Dreyfus's trial, Scheurer-Kestner, resolute and self-sacrificing as
-he was, might well take a less sanguine view than Clemenceau of the
-probabilities of certain victory as soon as the truth was made known.
-
-But when once he began to doubt whether Dreyfus had had fair play,
-Clemenceau immediately showed those qualities of personal and
-political courage, persistence, disregard of popularity, and power
-of concentrating all his forces upon the immediate matter in hand,
-indifferent to the numbers and strength of his opponents, which had
-gained him so high a place in the estimation of all democrats and
-lovers of fair play long before. "If there are manifest probabilities
-of error, the case must be revised." That was his view. But the
-National Army and the National Religion, as bitter opponents of justice
-put it, were one and indivisible on this matter. Militarism and
-Jesuitism together, backed by the high society of reaction and a large
-section of the bourgeoisie, constituted a stalwart array in favour of
-the perpetuation of injustice. There was literally scarce a crime of
-which this combination was not capable rather than admit that by any
-possibility a Court Martial on a Jew captain could go wrong.
-
-The Minister of War, General Billot, the Prime Ministers Méline and
-Brisson, generals of high standing such as Mercier, Boisdeffre, Gonse,
-Zurlinden and others, officers of lower rank and persons connected
-with them, were gradually mixed up with and defended such a series
-of attempted murders, ordered suicides, wholesale forgeries, defence
-and decoration of exposed spies, perjury, misrepresentation and false
-imprisonment that the marvel is how France survived such a tornado of
-turpitude. Clemenceau little knew what it would all lead to when, by no
-means claiming that Dreyfus was innocent, he and Scheurer-Kestner and
-Zola and Jaurès, and all honest Radicals and Socialists, demanded that,
-even if Dreyfus were guilty, he could not have been _legally_ condemned
-on false evidence and forged documents: the latter never having been
-communicated to his counsel. It was on this ground that Clemenceau
-demanded a revision of the trial.
-
-But quite early in the fray the defenders of the Court Martial became
-desperate in their determination that the matter should never be
-thoroughly investigated. The honour of the army was at stake. Colonel
-Picquart, a man of the highest credit and capacity, comes to the
-conclusion in the course of his official inspection of documents
-at headquarters that the incriminating paper on which Dreyfus was
-condemned, but which he was never allowed to see, was not in his
-handwriting at all, but in that of Major Esterhazy, an officer disliked
-and distrusted by all fellow-officers with whom he had served.
-Picquart, in fact, suspected that Esterhazy was a Prussian spy and
-that he forged the _bordereau_ which convinced the Court Martial of
-Dreyfus's guilt. But before this, in 1894 when the story leaked out
-that an officer having relations with the General Staff was suspected
-of treachery, it was not Dreyfus whose name was first mentioned. His
-old comrades said with one accord, "It must be Esterhazy: we thought
-so." Esterhazy, however, soon made himself necessary to the army chiefs
-and their Catholics. If his character was blasted publicly, down
-these gentry would come, and with them the whole of the proceedings
-against Dreyfus. They therefore suggested to Picquart that he should
-simply hold his tongue. "_You_ are not at l'Ile du Diable," they said.
-But Picquart would persist, so they sent him off to Tunis. However,
-thanks to Scheurer-Kestner and others, the truth began to come out,
-and Picquart still refused to be silenced. So instead of dealing with
-Esterhazy, they arrested his accuser and gave the Major a certificate
-of the very highest character.
-
-As it began, so it went on. Clemenceau's daily articles and attacks
-drove the militarists, the Catholics, the anti-Semites, and the
-reactionaries generally, into a fury. Colonel Henry, Colonel Paty du
-Clam, the Jesuit Father du Lac, the editors and contributors of the
-_Figaro_, the _Echo de Paris_ (the special organ of the Staff), the
-_Gaulois_ were in a permanent conspiracy with the generals named above,
-and the General Staff itself, to prevent the truth from being known. It
-was all of no use. Picquart under lock and key was more effective than
-Picquart at large. Slowly but surely men of open mind became convinced
-that, little as they wished to believe it, something was wrong. But
-these were always the minority. Few could grasp the fact that an
-innocent man was being put in chains on the Ile du Diable, virtually
-because there was an agitation in favour of his re-trial in Paris.
-
-Then came Zola's terrible letter in the _Aurore_, which Clemenceau had
-suggested, and gave up his daily article in order to give place to.
-He also supplied the title "_J'Accuse_." Zola summed up the whole
-evidence relentlessly against the General Staff and its tools and
-forgers, Esterhazy, Henry, Paty du Clam and the rest of them.
-
-Such an indictment, formulated by a novelist who was universally
-recognised as one of the leading men of letters in Europe, quite
-outside of the political arena, would have attracted attention at
-any time. In the midst of a period when all feelings and minds were
-wrought up to the highest point of tension, it came as a direct and
-heavy blow at the whole of the military party. It is difficult to
-realise to-day the sensation produced. It had all the effect of a
-combined attack of horse, foot and artillery for which preparation
-had been made long before by a successful bombardment. There was no
-effective answer possible in words. This the military cliques and
-their friends at once saw and acted upon. They abandoned discussion
-and forced Zola and _l'Aurore_ into court on a charge of treason and
-libel. The action stirred all Europe and riveted attention throughout
-the civilised world. This was due not merely to Zola's great reputation
-and popularity, to the political position held by Clemenceau, to the
-enthralling interest of the Dreyfus affair itself, to the excitement of
-the life-and-death struggle between freedom and reaction, but to the
-fact that behind all this lay the never-dying hostility of Germany to
-France.
-
-All this was too much for the criminal champions of "the honour of
-the Army." _L'Aurore_ and Zola must be prosecuted. They were. And
-Clemenceau conducted his own defence. It was a crucial case, and the
-famous advocate Labori had previously done his best for Zola, pointing
-out that the whole drama turned on the prisoner then suffering at the
-Ile du Diable: perhaps the most infamous criminal, perhaps a martyr,
-the victim of human fallibility. He had shown, however, that "all the
-powers for Justice are combined _against_ Justice," and had called for
-the revision of a great case.
-
-"After the jury have adjudicated, public opinion and France herself
-will judge you," said Clemenceau himself. "You have been told that a
-document was privately communicated to the Court. Do you understand
-what that means? It means that a man is tried, is condemned, is covered
-with ignominy, his own name, that of his wife, of his children, of his
-father, of all his connections eternally blasted, on the faith of a
-document he had never been shown. Gentlemen, who among you would not
-revolt at the very idea of being condemned under such conditions? Who
-among you would not adjure us to demand justice for you if, brought
-before a tribunal, after a mockery of investigation, after a purely
-formal discussion, the judges, meeting out of your presence, decided
-on your honour and your life, condemning you, without appeal, on a
-document of whose very existence you were kept in ignorance? Who among
-you would quietly submit to such a decision? If this has been done, I
-tell you your one duty above all others is that such a case should be
-re-tried."
-
-That was the main point, as Clemenceau saw even more clearly than
-M. Labori. No man, guilty or innocent, could be justly condemned
-and sentenced on the strength of a written document the purport and
-even the existence of which had been deliberately concealed from the
-prisoner and his counsel. It scarcely needed further argument, not
-even the direct proof which was forthcoming that Colonel Sandherr,
-the president of the Court Martial, had a bitter and unreasoning
-prejudice against Jews. If the validity of the document had been beyond
-all possibility of question; if witnesses whose good faith had been
-unquestionable had seen Dreyfus write it with their own eyes: even
-then the trial was legally vitiated by the fact that it had not been
-shown to the accused. But if the document was forged----? All the other
-points, serious as some of them were, counted little by the side of
-this.
-
-That, therefore, Clemenceau dealt with most persistently. That,
-therefore, the General Staff, with its coterie of Jesuits, anti-Semites
-and spies, was determined to cover up. The generals who bore witness in
-the case against Zola and _l'Aurore_ showed by their threats and their
-admissions they knew that it was they themselves and the members of
-the secret Court Martial who were really on their trial at the bar of
-public opinion.
-
-It was in this sense that Clemenceau closed his memorable defence.
-He declared against the forger of the _bordereau_, the Prussian spy,
-Esterhazy, who was sheltered and honoured by the chiefs of the French
-Army. "Yes, it is we," he cried, amid derisive shouts and howls in
-court, "it is we who are the defenders of the army, when we call upon
-you to drive Esterhazy out of it. The conscious or unconscious enemies
-of the army are those who propose to cashier Picquart and retain
-Esterhazy. Gentlemen of the jury, a general has come here to talk to
-you about your children. Tell me now which of them would like to find
-himself in Esterhazy's battalion? Tell me, would you hand over your
-sons to this officer to lead against the enemy? The very question is
-enough. Who does not know the answer before it is given?
-
-"Gentlemen of the jury, I have done. We have passed through terrible
-experiences in this century. We have known glory and disaster in every
-form, we are even at this moment face to face with the unknown. Fears
-and hopes encompass us around. Grasp the opportunity as we ourselves
-have grasped it. Be masters of your own destinies. A people sitting in
-judgment on itself is a noble thing. A stirring scene also is a people
-deciding on its own future. Your task, gentlemen of the jury, is to
-pronounce a verdict less upon us than upon yourselves. We are appearing
-before you. You will appear before history."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- THE DREYFUS AFFAIR (II)
-
-
-This trial of Zola and _l'Aurore_ was the greatest crisis in the long
-succession of crises which centred themselves round Dreyfus. The more
-serious the evidence against the conduct of the Court Martial and the
-honour of the army, the more truculent became the attitude of the
-militarists, Catholics, anti-Semites and their following. Passion
-swept away every vestige of judgment or reason. There was no pretence
-of fair play to the defendants. Inside the Court, which was packed
-to overflowing, inarticulate roars came from the audience when any
-telling argument or conclusive piece of testimony was put in on the
-side of truth and justice. Outside, an infuriated mob of reactionists
-demanded the lives of the accused. The smell of blood was in the air.
-The likelihood of organised massacre grew more obvious every day.
-Clemenceau told me himself--and he does not know what fear is--that if
-Zola had been acquitted, instead of being condemned, the Dreyfusards
-present would have been slaughtered in court.
-
-How determined the whole unscrupulous and desperate clique were to
-carry their defence of injustice to the last ditch was displayed when
-M. Brisson, the President of the Republic, himself a man credited with
-austere probity and cool courage, was forced by them to authorise
-proceedings against Colonel Picquart, because he had offered the
-highest personage in France to help him to discover the truth. Picquart
-was therefore to be victimised still further: likewise for the honour
-of the army! He was duly incarcerated and degraded. France herself was
-being found guilty and cashiered by the persecution of this high-minded
-and courageous colonel. Esterhazy runs away when his treachery and
-forgeries are finally exposed. Clemenceau and the Dreyfusards are
-willing that he should have a safe-conduct back again, if his coming
-will help to manifest the truth. A very different attitude towards
-a culprit convicted, not by a secret Court Martial, but by his own
-public actions and admissions. Yet General Gonse and the General Staff
-were ready at first to aid and support Colonel Picquart in exposing
-Major Esterhazy, as only a German spy, in constant communication and
-collusion with Colonel Schwartzkopfen, acting on behalf of the German
-Army and the German Government. Esterhazy was no direct agent of the
-French Staff! When, however, it was discovered that Colonel Picquart's
-investigations went far to clear Captain Dreyfus altogether, and proved
-that he had at any rate been condemned on a forged document, _then_
-Picquart himself was to be treated as a criminal, unless he suppressed
-the truth at once, and held his tongue for ever.
-
-And so this extraordinary case was now being tried in the open street
-before the public of France and of the world--for every civilised
-nation followed the changes and chances of Dreyfus's martyrdom--and so
-day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year,
-Clemenceau, Scheurer-Kestner, Jaurès and the Socialists fought on for
-a re-trial. The highest Court of judicature in France, worthy of its
-history, accorded the right of appeal. A sense of doubt was beginning
-to creep through the community. Thereupon, the Generals, their Church,
-their Press, their Mob, _their_ Army, began afresh a very devil dance
-of organised forgery, calumny, perjury, vituperation, attempted murder
-and concomitant infamies.
-
-Looking back at that period of desperate antagonism, it seems strange
-that open conflict should have been averted. It was no fault of the
-General Staff and its myrmidons that it did not break out. That such a
-result of their campaign of injustice and provocation would have been
-welcomed by many of the chiefs of the French Army is beyond question.
-At more than one juncture the outlook was so threatening that two, if
-not three, pretenders to the throne of France were in the country at
-the same time. Things did not take the turn they expected, and they
-went off again. All this was known, of course, to Clemenceau, who was
-also well aware that a great deal more lay behind the Dreyfus affair
-than the guilt or innocence of Dreyfus. Nor did the fact by any means
-escape him that those semi-occult ecclesiastical influences which had
-been against him all his life, not for personal reasons, but because
-he was a Radical, a free-thinker and a champion of free speech, a free
-press, secular and gratuitous education, and separation of Church and
-State--that those hidden powers were at work behind the General Staff
-in the Dreyfus case in the hope of gaining ground on a side issue which
-they were losing steadily on the main field of battle.
-
-This it was which made the collision between the two opposing forces so
-critical an event for France. This, too, accounted for the desperation
-of the losing party.
-
-The Jesuits of the Dreyfus affair had none of the diabolical far-seeing
-coolness of the type represented by the Père Rodin in Eugène Sue's
-_Wandering Jew_. They were infuriated fanatics whose unreasoning
-anxiety to torture and burn their heretic opponents was reflected in
-the blundering mendacity and undisguised hatred of their tools of the
-military Staff. Hence, in the long run, they delivered themselves into
-the hands of the Frenchmen of the future--Zola, Jaurès, Picquart and
-Clemenceau. Clemenceau's daily articles, which constituted the most
-formidable barrage on behalf of Dreyfus, make up five closely printed
-volumes. They are full of life and fire; but they are full also of
-crushing argument enforced with irony and sarcasm and illustrated by
-telling references to recent history. Abuse and misrepresentation could
-not permanently hold their own in a discussion thus conducted. Forgery
-and perjury when brought home to the real criminals necessarily made
-their case worse. Nothing is more surprising than the lack of dexterity
-and acumen on the part of the reactionary forces. They forgot that a
-bludgeon is a poor weapon against a rapier in the hand of an expert.
-
-Thus it came about that after a long contest, whose interest, even for
-outsiders, was maintained throughout by tragical incidents such as the
-suicide of Colonel Henry--the forger for _esprit de corps_ as Esterhazy
-was the forger for money and power--the attempted poisoning of Picquart
-and the attack upon Labori, a re-trial was forced from the Government
-of the day. The names of the chief opponents are already forgotten,
-such minor actors and apologists of injustice, forgers and spies on the
-"right side" were never remembered. Who now cares whether the _petit
-bleu_ was written by Schwartzkopfen or not? Who can recall what Major
-Lauth did or bore witness to? The trail of the serpent is over them
-all. That is what the world bears in mind to-day. The broad features
-of the drama are recorded on the cinema film of history. The faces and
-characters of the villains of the piece are already blotted out. Only
-the heroes of the conflict remain. And of these heroes Clemenceau might
-fairly claim to be the chief. The re-trial at Rennes was, when all is
-said, mainly his work.
-
-What a re-trial it was! The Court was still a Court Martial. The
-president of the court, Colonel Jouaust, was still a violently
-prejudiced officer. The judges behind him were all inspired by that
-fatal _esprit de corps_ which accepts and acts upon the Jesuit motto
-that the end justifies the means, where the interests of a particular
-set of men are concerned. In fact, the combination in favour of
-military injustice remained what it had been throughout: a body
-resolved that, come what might, the victim of the forged document and
-other criminal acts should not be formally acquitted, even if monstrous
-illegality at the first trial forced a revision.
-
-Nearly five years had now elapsed from the date of Dreyfus's original
-condemnation, when, released from his imprisonment, he stood at the
-Bar after that long period of physical and moral torture. Clemenceau
-is not a man of sentiment: he had long doubted whether Dreyfus was
-really innocent: even the outrageous proceedings at the first Court
-Martial had failed to convince him that there might not be something
-behind the forged _bordereau_, concealed from the prisoner, which
-could in a degree justify his judges: not until the close of the case
-against Zola and _l'Aurore_ was his mind made up that, "consciously
-or unconsciously," a terrible crime had been committed. But now, with
-Dreyfus himself present, with all the old witnesses contradicting, more
-directly than ever, one another's testimony, yet allowed incredible
-licence of exposition and explanation by the Court; with the evidence
-of General Gonse, General Mercier, Roget, Cinquet, Gribelin, Lauth and
-Junck cut to ribands by the questions of Dreyfus's advocates; with
-Colonel Picquart brought up short by Colonel Jouaust, who had allowed
-all sorts of long-winded and irreconcilable accounts to be given
-by his favourites subject to no interruption--with all this almost
-inconceivable unfairness going on all day and every day through the
-Rennes Court Martial, Clemenceau seems to have been really affected,
-not only by the injustice done, but by the personal sufferings which
-the prisoner on trial had undergone and was undergoing.
-
-Colonel Jouaust's interruption of Colonel Picquart's closely knit but
-passionless statement by the exclamation "_Encore!_" was destined
-to become famous. It summed up in one word the whole tone of the
-prosecuting judges on the Bench. Yet as the case proceeded and the
-criticisms of Clemenceau and his coadjutors became still more scathing
-than they had been before, it was difficult to see how even a suborned
-court could avoid a verdict of acquittal. But this Court dared not
-be just. There was too much at stake. The whole of the chiefs of the
-army had taken sides against the prisoner. They were there to secure
-condemnation of Dreyfus again at all costs. The Court, headed by
-Colonel Jouaust, was forced to do the same. It was the "Honour of the
-Army" backed by Esterhazy, Henry and Sandherr against the character of
-one miserable Jew. There could be no hesitation under such conditions.
-Dreyfus was found "Guilty, with extenuating circumstances."
-Extenuating circumstances in the dealings of a spy and a traitor who,
-not being in any pressing pecuniary need whatever, had deliberately
-and infamously sold France to the enemy! Not one of the five judges
-who rendered this verdict could really have believed Dreyfus to be
-guilty. France was more dishonoured by this decision than if the Court
-had definitely declared against the whole weight of the evidence that
-Dreyfus was a traitor.
-
-Dreyfus was thereafter "pardoned" and released. That special plot of
-the anti-Republican clerico-military syndicate of Father du Lac, to
-use Clemenceau's phraseology, had after all miscarried. As the result
-of incredible efforts Dreyfus was at last a free man. The world could
-judge of the character of his accusers and of his champions. It did
-judge, and that verdict has never been revised. A gross injustice had
-been partly remedied but could never be fully obliterated. That Dreyfus
-was innocent the world at large had no doubt.
-
-Yet, strange to say, there are still men, who certainly had no feeling
-against Dreyfus but quite the contrary, who were not convinced. I have
-heard this view expressed from several quarters, but the opinions of
-two personal friends of the most different character and career made a
-considerable impression upon me at the time. The first was my friend,
-the late George Henty, well known as a special correspondent and author
-of exceedingly successful books for boys. Henty was a thorough-going
-Tory, but he had no doubt that Dreyfus was a terribly ill-used man and
-the victim of a foul plot--until he went over to France to watch the
-re-trial by court martial at Rennes. He returned in quite a different
-frame of mind. He knew I was entirely favourable to Dreyfus, as he
-himself had been when he crossed the Channel. Meeting him by accident,
-I asked him his opinion: "All I can tell you, Hyndman, is that I
-watched the man carefully throughout and he made a very bad impression
-upon me indeed. The longer I looked at him the worse I felt about him.
-I don't deny for a moment that his first trial was abominably conducted
-and that he was entitled to fair play. I daresay I may be all wrong,
-the weight of the evidence might have overborne me as a juryman. But,
-as it was, I felt that if I myself had been one of the jury I should
-have given a verdict against him. The man looked and spoke like a spy,
-and if he isn't a spy," Henty went on in his impulsive way, "I'll
-be damned if he oughtn't to be one." That, of course, is simply the
-statement of an impressionable Englishman, who, however, understood
-what was going on.
-
-The other anti-Dreyfusard was a very different personality. It was the
-famous German Social-Democrat Wilhelm Liebknecht. I knew him well.
-A man of a cooler temper or a more judicial mind I never met. As I
-have mentioned elsewhere, he and Jaurès, the great French Socialist
-leader and orator, were staying with me together in Queen Anne's
-Gate, just after the Rennes Court Martial. Jaurès had done immense
-service in the Dreyfus matter, second only to that of Clemenceau. He
-had studied the evidence thoroughly on both sides. Like Clemenceau,
-he had been forced to the conclusion that such methods of defence
-would never have been used, unless they had been necessary to cover
-up the unjust condemnation of an innocent man, who was known to his
-judges to _be_ innocent shortly after he had been shipped off to his
-place of punishment. Jaurès's articles in _La Petite République_ had
-helped Dreyfus greatly in one way, though in another they told against
-him, as the Socialists themselves were unfairly charged with being
-anti-patriots and even in German pay. There seemed no possibility
-that he could be mistaken. Liebknecht was just as strong on the other
-side. He was confident that Dreyfus was a traitor. One of his main
-contentions rested on the statement that there existed an honourable
-understanding, never broken under any circumstances, between civilised
-Governments that, should a man be wrongfully accused of being a spy and
-be brought to trial for that offence, the foreign Government which he
-was supposed to be serving should notify the other Government concerned
-that it had got hold of the wrong man. Now the German Government
-had never done this in any way, at any period of the Dreyfus affair.
-Of this Liebknecht affirmed he was absolutely certain. Statements as
-to Dreyfus's innocence had been made by German military officers;
-but the German Government itself, which knew everything, had never
-moved. Therefore, urged Liebknecht, Dreyfus was a spy. But the German
-Socialist leader gave his own view too. "Have either of you," he asked
-Jaurès and myself, "read carefully through the verbatim report of the
-re-trial at Rennes?" I admitted I had not. Jaurès said he had. "Well,"
-Liebknecht went on, "I was where I was in a position to read the whole
-of the pleading and the evidence day by day and word by word. For I was
-in prison the whole of the time, and the study of the verbatim report
-was my daily avocation. I am as certain as I can be of anything of the
-kind that Dreyfus had disclosed secrets to our Government. He may have
-done so in order to secure more important information in return. That
-is possible. But communicate French secrets to Germany, in my opinion,
-he unquestionably did."
-
-We debated the matter fully several times. Nothing Jaurès or I could
-say shook Liebknecht's conviction. Nor was it shaken to the day of
-his death. I have heard since, on good authority, that more than one
-of those who had risked much for Dreyfus never spoke to him again
-after the Rennes re-trial. That may easily have arisen from personal
-causes, for Dreyfus was not an agreeable man. But I have no ground for
-believing that Clemenceau ever saw reason to waver in his opinion in
-the slightest degree.
-
-I recall this now, when the lapse of years has calmed down all
-excitement and many of the chief actors are dead, to show how, apart
-from the mass of sheer prejudice and unscrupulous rascality which
-had to be faced and overcome, there was also an element of honest
-intellectual doubt among the anti-Dreyfusards. The presence of this
-element in the background made Clemenceau's task more difficult than it
-would otherwise have been. Even at the present time there may be found
-capable observers who lived through the whole conflict, certainly
-not sympathetic to militarism, Catholicism or anti-Semitism, who are
-still ready to argue that Dreyfus may have been ill-used but that he
-deserved the fate to which he was originally condemned! This, however,
-may be said with perfect truth, that the victory of his opponents over
-Clemenceau, Jaurès, Zola and all they represented would have been a
-disaster to France, whatever view may be taken of Dreyfus himself.
-
-In 1906 the first report of the Committee appointed to examine into the
-whole of the Dreyfus case was presented. It exonerated Dreyfus from all
-blame, declared him to have been the victim of a conspiracy based upon
-perjury and forgery. This report secured the complete annulment of the
-condemnation at Rennes and restored him to his position in the army,
-after years of martyrdom.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- AS ADMINISTRATOR
-
-
-At this time Clemenceau, owing to his apparently resolute determination
-not to take office, no matter how many Ministries he might successfully
-bring to naught, had got into a backwater. He had become permanently
-Senator for the Department of the Var in 1902, a startling, almost
-incomprehensible move when his continued furious opposition to that
-body is remembered. However, having thus made unto himself friends of
-the mammon of unrighteousness, he found their "eternal habitations" a
-not unpleasing dwelling-place. His position as publicist and journalist
-was assured and nothing could shake it; his criticisms by speech and
-pen were as telling and vigorous as ever. But at sixty-five years of
-age he was still a free-lance, a force which all parties were obliged
-to consider but with which no Ministry could come to terms. It was a
-strange position. So his countrymen thought. Those who most admired
-his ability and his career saw no outlet for his marvellous energy
-that would be permanently beneficial to the country in a constructive
-sense. Perhaps no politician of any nation ever so persistently refused
-to "range himself" as did Clemenceau for thirty-five years of stormy
-public life. He revelled in opposition: he rejoiced in overthrow. He
-was on the side of the people, but he would not help them to realise
-their aspirations in practical life. He was a political philosopher
-compact of incompatibilities. As an individualist he was a stalwart
-champion of individual freedom: as a man of affairs he advocated the
-use of State power to limit the anarchic domination of personal power.
-
-There was no understanding such a man. He would remain a brilliant
-Frenchman of whom all were proud until the end, when he would be buried
-with public honours as the champion Ishmaelite of his age. "When
-I saw he doubted about everything, I decided that I needed nobody
-to keep me ignorant," wrote Voltaire. Much the same idea prevailed
-about Clemenceau. He was the universal sceptic: the man whose sole
-intellectual enjoyment was to point out the limitless incapacity of
-others with epigrammatic zeal. I myself, who had watched him closely,
-was afraid that he would allow all opportunities for displaying his
-really great faculties in a ministerial capacity to slip by and leave
-to his friends only the mournful task of writing his epitaph: "Here
-lies Clemenceau the destroyer who could have been a creator."
-
-But this was all nonsense. "_Ce jeune homme_"--Clemenceau will die
-young--"_d'un si beau passé_" had also before him _un bel avenir_.
-Nothing is certain with Clemenceau but the unforeseen. At the very
-time when people had made up their minds that he was a back number, he
-had a brand-new volume of his adventures ready for the press. After a
-few conversations with M. Rouvier and then with M. Sarrien, he became
-Minister of the Interior in the latter's Cabinet. He took office for
-the first time on March 12th, 1906, at a very stirring epoch.
-
-It is difficult to exaggerate the impression produced by this step
-on the part of M. Clemenceau. His accession to M. Sarrien's Cabinet
-eclipsed in interest every other political event. Here was the great
-political leader and organiser of opposition, the Radical of Radicals,
-the man who had declined the challenge alike of friends and of enemies
-to take office, time after time, at last seated in a ministerial chair.
-All his past rose up around him. The destroyer of opportunism: the Guy
-Earl of Warwick of ministries: the universal critic; the immolator
-of Jules Perry and many another statesman; the one Frenchman who had
-maintained the ideals of the French Revolution against all comers--this
-terrible champion of democracy _à outrance_ now placed himself in the
-official hierarchy, whence he had so often ousted others. His victims
-of yesterday could be his critics of to-day. How would this terrible
-upsetter of Cabinets act as a Minister himself? That was what all the
-world waited with impatience to see. They had not days, but only hours
-to wait.
-
-That was the time when, M. Delcassé having been forced to resign
-from the Foreign Office, almost, it may be said, at the dictation of
-Germany, the Morocco affair was still in a very dangerous condition,
-threatening the peace of France and of Europe. But even the critical
-negotiations at Algeciras were for the moment overshadowed by a
-terrific colliery disaster in the Courrières-Lens district, causing
-the death of more miners than had ever been killed before by a similar
-catastrophe. This horrible incident occurred but a few days before
-Clemenceau became Minister of the Interior, and it fell within the
-immediate sphere of his official duties.
-
-The mines where the accident occurred had long been regarded as very
-dangerous, fire-damp being known to pervade them from time to time,
-and the miners throughout the coal regions had long held that the
-owners had never taken proper precautions to ensure the safety of the
-men. They went down the pits day after day, not only to work on very
-difficult and narrow seams, but at the hourly risk of their lives.
-Owing to the great social and political influence of the mine-owners
-it was practically impossible to get anything done, and the general
-treatment of the men employed was worse than is usual even in those
-districts in our own and other countries where coal magnates are
-masters. The pitmen under such conditions were less cared for and more
-harshly treated than animals, probably because they were less costly
-and could be more easily replaced.
-
-Three days before the main explosion there had been an outburst of
-fire-damp at a small adjacent mine, whose workings were in direct
-communication with the larger pits. This alone ought to have been taken
-as a serious warning to the engineers in control. But markets were
-good, coal was in great demand, the "hands" were there to take risks.
-So this minor difficulty was dealt with in a cheap and convenient
-way, and the extraction of coal went on upon a large scale from the
-imperilled shafts as it did before. Meanwhile the dangerous gases were
-all the time oozing in from the smaller pit to the larger ones. For
-three days this went steadily on, and nothing whatever was done, either
-in the way of taking further precautions where the original danger
-began, or of testing the character of the air in the bigger mines to
-which the other pit had access.
-
-On Saturday, March 10th, no fewer than 1,800 men went down the shafts
-into the mines. A full account of what actually took place could never
-be given. All that was learned from the survivors was that the miners
-working with bare lights in these dangerous pits suddenly encountered
-an influx of fire-damp. Explosion after explosion took place. The
-unfortunate men below, threatened at once with suffocation or being
-burned alive, rushed in headlong disorder for the cages which would
-lift them to the surface. Horrible scenes inevitably took place. Those
-in front were pressed on by those behind, who, as one of them expressed
-it, were breathing burning air. For the majority there was and there
-could be no hope. Out of the 1,800 miners who went down in the morning,
-more than 1,150 were either stifled by the gas or burnt alive. The
-heroism displayed by the pitmen themselves, in their partially
-successful endeavours to rescue their entombed comrades, was the only
-bright feature in the whole of this frightful disaster. Some of these
-fine fellows went down to what seemed certain death, and others worked
-at excavation until almost dead themselves in their efforts to save a
-few from the general fate. No wonder that the feeling throughout the
-neighbourhood was desperately bitter.
-
-The war, sad to say, has much modified our general conception of
-the value of human life, even when unnecessarily thrown away. But
-sacrifices for a great cause on the battlefield or on the ocean,
-however serious, are made as a rule for high ideals. They differ widely
-from the loss of life deliberately occasioned by capitalist neglect or
-greed. Thus a mining accident on a large scale, or a conflagration
-in a peaceful city, produces a stronger impression on the public mind
-than the loss of ten or twenty times the number of soldiers or sailors
-in a world-wide struggle. Among the widows and children and relations
-and comrades of the victims on the spot the exasperation against the
-employers was still greater. Class hatred and personal hatred were
-excited to a very high pitch.
-
-This was the more natural for two reasons. First, the company on whose
-property the immolation of so many pitmen had occurred, and to whose
-mismanagement and cold-blooded indifference the avoidable explosions
-were due, had made enormous, almost incredible profits. From dividends
-of fifty per cent. in 1863 their returns had risen to profits of 1,000
-per cent. in 1905. Yet they could not spare the comparatively small sum
-necessary to safeguard the lives of the men who obtained this wealth
-for the shareholders. Secondly, the Germans, who rendered assistance
-in the attempts to rescue the Frenchmen still in the workings below,
-openly proclaimed that it was quite impossible--as indeed was the
-truth--that such an accident on such a scale should have occurred in
-Germany. That the Empire in Germany should be far more careful of
-the lives and limbs of the miners than the Republic in France, and
-that huge profits should have been made still huger by the refusal of
-the French coal-owners to adopt the ordinary precautions enforced by
-law on the other side of the frontier--these considerations, driven
-home by the results of the great catastrophe, rendered the situation
-exceedingly perilous from every point of view. A strike for increased
-wages seemed a very poor outcome of the horrors inflicted upon the
-actual producers of the coal under such conditions.
-
-Clemenceau was perhaps the best man in the country to deal with the
-miners at such a juncture. A Socialist of mining experience would
-possibly have taken more decidedly the side of the men, but he would
-not have been able to carry with him to the same extent the support of
-the Chambers. And Clemenceau had gone very far already on collectivist
-lines. Not many years before, in an article on "The Right to Strike,"
-he had put the case of the men very strongly indeed. In a vehement
-protest against the theory of supply and demand, as applied to the
-human beings compelled to sell labour power as a commodity, and the
-political economy of the profiteers based upon subsistence wages
-for the workers--all being for the best in the best of possible
-worlds--Clemenceau set forth how the system worked in practice:--
-
-"The State _gives_ to some sleek, well-set-up bourgeois immense
-coal-fields below ground. These fine fellows turn to men less well
-dressed than themselves, but who are men all the same, men with the
-same wants, the same feelings, the same capacity for enjoyment and
-suffering, and say: 'We will grant you subsistence; sink us some pits
-in the earth; go below and bring us up coal, which we will sell at a
-good price.'
-
-"Agreed. The pits are sunk, the coal comes out of the earth.
-
-"But, observe, those comfortable bourgeois for their outlay of _five
-hundred francs_ (£20) have now a bit of paper which is worth _forty
-thousand francs_ (£1,600).
-
-"The miners, who watch what is going on, think this a good deal, and,
-as they have got nothing by way of profit, they protest and ask for a
-share.
-
-"'That, my friend, is impossible. The price of coal has fallen this
-year, the price of man must come down in proportion. All I could do for
-you is to reduce your wages. You object to that. All right; down the
-shaft you go: don't let us talk about it any more.'
-
-"But the men won't go down.
-
-"'You don't make money this year. All right. But when you made huge
-profits, did you give us even the crumbs from your banquet?'
-
-"'I wasn't a shareholder then; it was my father.'
-
-"'_My_ father, like myself, was a miner. He died of consumption, his
-lungs choked with coal-dust. Now it is my turn to cough and spit black.
-And my wife, looking at her babes, asks herself whether I shall live
-long enough for them to be old enough, before my death, to go down into
-the mine which will kill them in turn. If I crack up too soon, misery,
-ruin, beggary, wholesale wretchedness for wife and children.'
-
-"They don't come to terms. The strike begins.
-
-"Economists argue, to begin with, that the State has no right to
-interfere in the relations between miners and mine-owners. The
-mine-owner is at home on his own property. Certain securities for life
-and limb may be demanded, nothing more. But no sooner does a strike
-begin than the State, which five minutes ago had no right to interfere,
-is called upon to bring in horse, foot and artillery on the side of the
-coal-owners. Then the miners have no rights left, and the judges decide
-against them on shameless pretexts and condemn them to prison, when
-they cannot bear false witness in support of the police and military."
-
-Such were Clemenceau's views on the right to strike and the grievances
-of the men, before he accepted the post of Minister of the Interior and
-began to deal with the troublous state of things at Courrières-Lens,
-where the terrible accident had occurred and a strike had been entered
-upon, while the entire district was in a state of mind bordering upon
-anarchist revolt.
-
-The first step he took was as bold and as remarkable an act as any
-in the whole of his adventurous life. He went down at once to Lens
-himself. Arrived there, he walked straight off, without any escort
-whatever, to meet and confer with the committee of the miners
-themselves. Courageous and honourable as this was, it failed at first
-to impress the strike committee. This was natural enough. They were
-lamenting the wholesale butchery of their comrades and were incensed
-against the employers who, with hundreds upon hundreds of dead pitmen
-below, would not deal fairly with the survivors. Clemenceau therefore
-met with a very cool reception. But he was nothing daunted, and began
-to address them. Gradually, he convinced the committee that he meant
-fairly by the men, and that he had not come down, alone and unarmed as
-he was, with any intention of suppressing the strike, but, so far as
-he could, to see that they had the fairest of fair play, according to
-their rights under the law.
-
-Thereupon, the committee agreed that Clemenceau should go with them
-to speak to a mass meeting of the miners. It was a doubtful venture,
-but Clemenceau went. In the course of his speech he reassured the men
-upon the attitude of the Government as represented by himself. He
-told them plainly: "You are entitled to strike. You will be protected
-by the law in doing all which the law permits. Your rights are equal
-to the rights of President or Ministers. But the rights of others
-must not be attacked. The mines must not be destroyed. For the first
-time, you will see no soldiers in the street during the strike. True,
-soldiers have been placed in the mines, but solely to protect them,
-not in any way to injure you. On the other hand, you must not resort
-to violence yourselves. The strike can be carried on peacefully and
-without interference. Respect the mines upon which you depend for your
-livelihood."
-
-This was quite plain, and Clemenceau adhered to his own programme as
-he had formulated it. But the difficulty was apparent from the first,
-and it is a difficulty which must always recur when a great strike
-is organised. If the State claims the right to intervene, in order
-to protect the laws and liberties of those who wish to work for the
-employers, in spite of the strike and the decisions of the strikers,
-antagonism to such action is practically certain beforehand. For,
-in this case, as the strikers say, the State is using the forces of
-the military and the police in order to protect "blacklegs" who, by
-offering their labour to the employers at such a time of acute class
-war, act in the interests of the coal-owners and against the mass of
-the workers. Socialists argue that the strikers are sound in their
-contention, and that by assuring to non-strikers the right to work the
-Government practically nullifies the right to strike. When, therefore,
-in this typical Courrières case, the strikers as a whole remained out,
-notwithstanding certain insufficient offers by the coal-owners, and a
-minority of non-strikers claimed the help of the law, with support
-of the State army, to weaken by their surrender the position of the
-majority of their fellow-workers in the same industry, then the ethics
-of the dispute between sections of the miners could not be so easily
-determined as M. Clemenceau from his individualist training assumed.
-
-If the employers were in the wrong, as it appears they were, then to
-call out the military to protect those miners who showed themselves
-ready to make immediate terms with injustice was, however good the
-intention, to take sides against the main body of the men. So it
-seemed to these latter. When, therefore, the soldiers defended the
-non-strikers, the strikers assailed the military, who had not attacked
-them. Clemenceau accordingly decided that the strikers had broken the
-law, as undoubtedly they had, by stoning and injuring the servants of
-the State, who were upholding the law as it stood. The truth is that,
-so long as these antagonistic sections exist among the working class,
-and persist in fighting one another, it is practically impossible for
-the State not to intervene in order to keep the peace. There may be
-no sympathy with blacklegs, but the Minister of the Interior could
-scarcely be blamed for protecting them against an infuriated mob, which
-would probably have killed them, or for insisting upon the release of
-those whom the strikers had seized. That the temper of the crowd had
-become highly dangerous was apparent a little later, when the Socialist
-Mayor was knocked down as he was trying to calm them.
-
-All this rendered M. Clemenceau's second and third visits to the scene
-of class warfare far more stormy than the first. Owing to the horror
-and hatred created by the avoidable holocaust in the Courrières mines,
-and the further discovery that engineers appointed by the State had
-played into the hands of the employers, the situation got worse from
-day to day. The strike itself was not only an effort to get more wages,
-but a declaration of hostility to the mine-owners, and those of the
-miners' own class who showed any tenderness towards them, or were ready
-to take work under them. Their own leaders and representatives had
-no longer any influence with the men or control over them. M. Basly,
-the deputy who acted throughout for the miners, had as little power
-over the strikers as anybody else. The whole movement was taking an
-anarchist turn. Also, agents were at work among them both from the
-reactionary and the revolutionary side whose main object, for very
-different reasons, was to foster disturbance and influence passion.
-Foreign emissaries likewise were said to be at work.
-
-Clemenceau's task was therefore an exceedingly hard one. He had ever
-in mind the old eighteenth-century watchword which, from his point of
-view, is the foundation of the French Republic--Liberty, Equality and
-Fraternity. And the greatest of these is liberty! He throughout forgot,
-or overlooked, that, even according to his own pronouncements, liberty
-in any real sense is impossible for the weaker--the majority who own no
-property--against the stronger--"Les Plus Forts," the minority who own
-all the property. This triune fetish Clemenceau, with all his keenness
-of criticism, might be said to worship: yet to worship in a more or
-less reasonable way. He could not shut his eyes to the truth that, for
-men and women whose livelihood was at the mercy of capitalists, there
-could be no real liberty, dominated as the workers were by their daily
-compulsion to obtain the wherewithal for the necessaries of life. The
-only way by which even partial justice could be secured, under the
-system of payment of wages, was combination among the wage-earners.
-Hence he recognises the liberty to strike. But he was equally
-determined, as he puts it, to defend the liberty of those who would not
-strike. It was logical: it was in harmony with the law; but it was a
-virtual help to the employers none the less.
-
-On the occasion of his second visit he enforced his view in his usual
-emphatic way. Three miners who would not join the strike were being
-paraded through the town by the strikers with an insulting placard hung
-around their necks: "_Nous sommes des poires cuites; des faux frères._"
-Clemenceau insisted that they should be released, and succeeded in
-freeing them. The very fact, however, that it was possible for the
-strikers to act in this way, without protest, showed how small was the
-minority and how strong the feeling against these claimants of the
-liberty of taking the other side. Clemenceau likewise acted with vigour
-against all who were guilty of any violence. But the strikes still
-spread.
-
-Speaking at Lyons on May 3rd, he explained the difficulties of the
-situation:--"My position is between the political demagogues of the
-Church, the clericals and the reactionaries on one side, who tried
-hard to hound on the troops I was forced to call in to fire upon
-the strikers, who greatly provoked them. This the ecclesiastics and
-restorationists did with the hope of fomenting a revolt against the
-Republic--a revolt supported by certain military chiefs, inspired by
-the clericals and their shameless lack of discipline." The Separation
-of Church and State was being decided while all this was going on.
-"Their object was to bring about a massacre in the interest of the
-Catholic Church and the monarchy. This plot was frustrated. Butchery
-was avoided.
-
-"On the other side, I am accused by the revolutionary Socialists of
-indulging in brutal military oppression because I suppress anarchist
-rioting. This though no striker was killed or wounded. I acted for
-tranquillity, while the monarchists fostered disturbances. They wanted
-a Government of the Republic which should rely for support solely
-on the Right. The anarchists helped the monarchists, who had agents
-throughout the perturbed districts, by denouncing the Republic and
-excusing mob violence. Yet how stood the case? Was it I who organised
-a campaign of panic? Was it I who was responsible for the original
-explosion and strike? Was it I who brought about the state of things
-which resulted in general disturbance and might have tended towards
-another _coup d'état_? Nothing of the sort. I was suddenly called upon
-to deal with unexpected troubles. I acted for the maintenance of the
-Republic, and kept the peace under the law."
-
-By taking office at the time when he did it was at once apparent
-that Clemenceau had brought himself into the full whirlpool of strike
-difficulties which then arose. He was called upon to solve in everyday
-life, as a man committed to a policy of justice to the workers,
-problems which, at critical moments, are almost insoluble under the
-capitalist system of wage-earning and production for profit. Has any
-section of the community the right to hold up the life of a nation
-or a great city in order to secure advantages for itself? At first
-sight the answer would undoubtedly be "No." But if the conditions of
-existence for those who act in this way are admittedly such as ought
-not to continue in any civilised country, it is not possible to reply
-so confidently in the negative. Neither can the "No" be repeated with
-certainty when employers, or the State itself, are guilty of a direct
-breach of faith towards the workers, unless, by ceasing to carry
-out their duties, they actually imperil the welfare of the entire
-collectivity of which they form a part. In short, all depends upon the
-circumstances, which have to be considered most carefully in each case.
-It fell to Clemenceau's lot to decide in what might almost be taken as
-the test incident--the strike of the electrical engineers and workers
-of Paris.
-
-There seems to be something in M. Clemenceau's horoscope which has
-decreed that his career shall be diversified and rendered interesting
-by a series of dramatic events. This strike of the electricians of
-Paris was certainly one of them.
-
-Scene: Cabinet of the Minister of the Interior. The Minister, M.
-Clemenceau, at work at his desk and dictating to his secretary.
-Everything going on quite nicely. No sign of more than ordinary
-pressure. Electric light functioning as usual for the benefit of the
-Radical leader as well as for Parisians of every degree. Hey presto!
-Darkness falls upon the bureau of the Minister. Very provoking. What
-is the matter? Corridors and other bureaux suffering the like eclipse.
-Evidently something wrong at the main. Candles obtained, lamps got out
-from dusty cupboards, oil hunted up. Ancient forms of illumination
-applied. Darkness thus made visible. Telephones set going. All Paris
-obscured. A city of two or three millions of inhabitants suddenly
-deprived of light. What has happened? The entire electrical service
-disorganised until to-morrow by the sudden and unexpected strike of the
-whole of the skilled men in the electrical supply department. Lovers
-of darkness because their deeds are evil likely to have a good time.
-Business arrested, fathers and mothers of families perturbed. Dangers
-of every sort threatened. Apaches and other cut-throats preparing for
-action in the to them providential enactment of endless gloom.
-
-Such is the baleful news borne over the telephone wires to the much
-troubled Minister of the Interior, with his wax tapers and old-world
-lamps glimmering around him. How preserve his Paris, his _ville
-lumière_, from the depredations of the miscreants engendered by the
-social system of the day, when light fails to disclose their approach?
-How protect the savings of the conscientious bourgeois and the diamonds
-of the high-placed _horizontale_ from removal and conveyance under
-cover of the night? To surrender to the strikers is to admit their
-right as a few to blackmail the many. It is to sanctify the action of
-the despoiling minority above by giving way to the organised minority
-below. Immediate decision is essential. Night is upon us, when no man
-can work, save the man who communises movable property to his own use.
-Light is a necessary of security for property, nay, even for life. The
-State must come in to fulfil the functions which the Creator neglected
-to provide for when He divided the night from the day. The sapper is
-the man to supplement the deficiencies of Providence and to mitigate
-the social revolution by electrical engineers. _Rien n'est sacré pour
-un sapeur!_ No sooner thought of but acted upon. M. Clemenceau, as
-Minister of the Interior and trustee for the well-being of the citizens
-of Paris, calls upon the State engineers under military control to
-light up Paris afresh. The thing is done. Paris sees more clearly and
-breathes more freely. Society itself has the right to live.
-
-But stay a moment: here is M. Jaurès. He has a word to say. What are
-you doing, M. Clemenceau? You are outraging all your own principles.
-You are interfering with that very right to strike which you yourself
-have declared to be sacred. You are using the military discipline of
-the comrades of the men out on strike against the electrical companies,
-to render their protest nugatory, by employing the sappers against
-them. You have, in fact, called out the powers of the State to crush
-the workers in a particular industry. If you were true to yourself,
-you would convert the electrical supply of Paris now in the hands of
-greedy monopolists into a public service, and give the strikers every
-satisfaction. That is the only real solution of social anarchy.
-
-To him Clemenceau: "But this was not merely a strike or a limited
-liability class war against employers. It was a bitter fight between
-two irreconcilable antagonists against inoffensive passers-by. The
-people of Paris, for whom I am concerned, had nothing to do with the
-matter. I myself knew nothing about the decision to strike till my own
-work was rendered impossible by the sudden infliction of darkness upon
-me by these resuscitated Joshuas. Not only was the general security
-threatened, as I have declared, but the lives of your own clients,
-Jaurès, were threatened by immersion in a flood below ground. The
-inundation of the Metropolitan (the Underground Railway) had already
-begun. The workers of Paris who used that means of communication in
-order to return to their work would most certainty have been drowned
-owing to the suspension of electrical pumps and lifts, had not the
-sappers and the firemen, both of them sets of public functionaries,
-rushed at once to the rescue. Were the workmen of Paris engaged in
-other departments to be allowed to perish, with the State standing
-by, wringing its hands in hopeless ineptitude, while the electrical
-engineers got the better of their masters in a dispute about wages?
-This was a practical question which I had to decide at once. I decided
-in favour of the inoffensive people of Paris and against the electrical
-engineers on strike."
-
-Taking a wide view of the whole question, I hold Jaurès's opinion
-to be the right one. But Clemenceau had to deal with an immediate
-practical difficulty of a very serious kind indeed. The lights went
-out at six o'clock. Night was coming on. No time could be lost in
-negotiating with the engineers. Still less was nightfall the period
-when a public service could be instituted in hot haste. The matter
-was settled in that form and for that occasion. But none the less
-the real point at issue was not thus easily disposed of. Clemenceau
-was right in preventing Paris from being left all night in darkness.
-Jaurès was right in claiming that the State should have a more definite
-and consistent policy than that of dealing with differences between
-wage-earners and employers by such hand-to-mouth methods.
-
-It was just at this point that, notwithstanding all adverse criticisms
-in regard to the instability of Ministries, and the scenes of apparent
-disorder which sometimes arise, the French National Assembly displayed
-its immense superiority to the Parliaments of other countries when
-serious matters of principle were involved. The desire to get to the
-bottom of a really dangerous question, to hear the arguments on both
-sides taken, as far as possible, out of the narrow limits of personal
-or party politics, puts the French Assembly on a very high level.
-From the point of view of economic development France is far behind
-Great Britain, America and Germany. The great factory industry and the
-legislation growing out of it are not nearly so far advanced. But, in
-the wish and endeavour to investigate the principles upon which the
-future regulation of society must proceed, France gives the lead.
-
-This openness of mind and anxiety to let both views have fair play
-have grown under the Republic in a wonderful way. Where else in the
-world would men of all parties and all sections allow the two chief
-orators of the Left--Jaurès, the Socialist leader of the opposition,
-Clemenceau, the Individualist Minister--to debate out at length,
-in two long sittings, the issues between genuine Socialism and
-that nondescript reformist Collectivism which goes by the name of
-Socialistic Radicalism: the latter really meaning, to Socialists,
-capitalism palliated by State bureaucracy.
-
-This was indeed a great oratorical duel, and those who contend that
-oratory has lost its significance and virtue in modern times would
-have to admit that they were wrong, not only in this particular case,
-but in regard to other speeches delivered by the two chief disputants
-afterwards. The debate itself was a contrast between styles just as it
-was a conflict of principles. Jaurès was an orator of great power and
-wonderful capacity for stirring the emotions. His voice, his face, his
-gestures, his method of argument and fusing of forcible contentions
-into one compact whole made so great an impression that he could
-capture a large audience with the same ease, even on subjects remote
-from the immediate matter of his address--as once he held the Assembly
-entranced by a long digression on music in the course of a fine speech
-on the tendencies of the time.
-
-If it might be urged that he occasionally used too many words to
-express his meaning, this was easily forgiven by his countrymen, on
-account of his admirable turn of phrase and his understanding use of
-the modulations of the French language. However prejudiced his hearers
-might be against him (and his personal appearance was not such as to
-disarm an opponent), they had only to listen to Jaurès for ten minutes
-to feel interested in what he had to say. From this to admiration and
-excitement was no long step. Short, stout and somewhat cumbrous in
-figure, wearing trousers nearly halfway up his calves, with a broad,
-humorous, rather coarse face, his eyes full of expression and not
-wanting in fun, troubled with a curious twitching on the right cheek
-which affected his eye with a sort of wink, Jaurès was certainly not
-the personality anyone would have fixed upon as the greatest master
-of idealist and economic Socialist oratory in France, and perhaps
-in Europe. But his sincerity, his eloquence soon overcame these
-drawbacks on the platform and in the tribune, just as his bonhomie
-and good-fellowship did in private life. He had been a Professor
-of Literature in the University of Toulouse, and was a man of wide
-cultivation. But his learning never made him pedantic, nor did his
-great success turn his head. Gifted with extraordinary vitality, his
-powers of work were quite phenomenal. To say that he "toiled like
-a galley-slave," for the cause to which he devoted himself, was no
-exaggeration. Yet he was always fresh, always in good spirits, always
-ready to contribute wit and vivacity to any company in which he found
-himself. Add to this much practical good sense in the conduct of his
-party and the affairs of the world, and all must admit that in Jaurès
-the Socialist party of France had a worthy chief and Clemenceau a
-worthy antagonist. The galleries, like the Assembly itself, were always
-crowded when either orator was expected to address the House.
-
-Jaurès dealt with the development of society from the chaos of
-conflicting classes and mutual antagonisms to the co-ordination of
-common effort for the common good. This can and should be a peaceful
-social evolution. Property for all means a universal share, not only in
-politics, but in the production and the distribution of wealth. This
-could not be obtained under the conditions of to-day, where those who
-possessed no property but the labour in their bodies were at the mercy
-of the classes who possessed all else; where only by strikes in which
-the State took the side of the employers could the wage-earners obtain
-an infinitesimal portion of their rights. By collectivism, leading up
-to Socialism and general co-operation, every individual would have a
-direct interest in and be benefited by the general social increase of
-wealth, due to the growing powers of man to produce what is useful and
-beneficial to all.
-
-Socialism substitutes order for anarchy, joint action of every member
-of society for the mutual antagonism which is now the rule. Legal
-expropriation with compensation will gradually put the community
-in control of its own resources. Our task is to convince the small
-proprietor and the small bourgeoisie that they will benefit by the
-coming transformation. Incessant social reform on Socialist lines would
-lead to the realisation of Socialist ideals in a practical shape. Such
-strikes as that at Courrières, followed by the military intervention
-of the State, at M. Clemenceau's direction, and repression of the
-strikers, displayed the injustice of the existing system and proclaimed
-the necessity for accepting the higher view of social duty by which all
-would benefit and none would suffer.
-
-The speech thus briefly summarised was delivered at two sittings of the
-Chamber, and was listened to with profound attention by those present,
-the great majority of whom were directly opposed to Socialist views. No
-higher tribute could have been paid.
-
-Clemenceau rose to reply to the Socialist leader a few days later.
-Twenty years had passed over his head since I last described his
-personal appearance, his vigorous individuality and his incisive,
-clear-cut, witty conversation and oratory. Time had affected him
-little. He was still the same energetic and determined but ordinarily
-cool political fighter that he had shown himself in the eighties of
-the last century. His head was now bald, and his moustache grey, but
-his eyes looked out from under the heavy white eyebrows with all the
-old fire, and the alertness of his frame was apparent in his every
-movement. Though many years older than his Socialist challenger, there
-was nothing to choose between them in regard to physical and mental
-vigour. Jaurès had been eloquent and persuasive; he brought in the
-ideals and the strategy of the future to illuminate the sad truths
-of the present. He relied upon the history of the past and the hopes
-of humanity ahead to constitute a policy of preparation for coming
-generations of Frenchmen, while applying the principles he advocated,
-as far as possible, to the events of the day. Clemenceau confined his
-answer, which also extended over two sittings of the Chamber, to the
-matters immediately in hand and the criticisms on his method of dealing
-with them. This sense of practicality, not devoid of sympathy with the
-disinherited classes of our day, gave the Minister of the Interior a
-great advantage and precisely suited his style. The interval between
-the two speeches also told in favour of Clemenceau. The ring of
-Jaurès's fine sentences had died down in the meantime. His glorious
-aspirations were discounted hour by hour by the continuance of the
-conflict, whose existence he himself could not but admit, which formed,
-in fact, part of his case, and in a way strengthened his indictment.
-Yet this had to be dealt with all the same.
-
-Clemenceau began his oration with a glowing tribute to Jaurès's passion
-for social justice. But his magnificent eloquence has eliminated the
-whole of the bad side of life. He rises to the empyrean, whence he
-surveys creation through a roseate atmosphere which is raised far above
-plain facts. "For myself, I am compelled to remain in the valley where
-all the events which Jaurès leaves out of his picture are actually
-taking place. That accounts for the difference in our perspective.
-I am accused of attacking the workers and of doing worse than other
-Governments. I have never attacked the workers, I have never done
-them wrong. The duty of the Government is to maintain tranquillity.
-This I have done without injury to the toilers, though I had to face
-85,000 strikers in the Pas de Calais and 115,000 in Paris--the largest
-number ever known on strike at the same time in France. I went down to
-Courrières to ensure liberty. We have all of us here to go through our
-education in Liberty. Education is not a matter of words, but of deeds.
-Those deeds form part of the education. The working classes become
-worthy of taking over the responsibility of Government for themselves
-when their own deeds are in accordance with the law. If speeches alone
-could teach administration, the Sermon on the Mount would have dictated
-practical politics for centuries.
-
-"In these disturbances my orders, issued through the highest police
-authorities, were precise. Maintain, I said, Liberty to strike, liberty
-to work. Soldiers to be called in only in case of actual violence.
-But the miners themselves infringed the liberties of others. They
-indulged in the anarchical wrecking of houses belonging to men of
-their own class. I have here photographs of the destruction wrought.
-Were Monsieur Jaurès Minister of the Interior--misfortune comes so
-suddenly--he himself would send down troops to stop wholesale pillage.
-Yet, if he did, he would in turn be denounced, by the anarchist heads
-of the General Confederation of Labour, as the enemy of the class
-whose cause he now champions. I challenge M. Jaurès to say what he
-would do under such circumstances as I have had to face"--the orator
-pauses and waits. There is dead silence. No answer. "By not replying,
-you have replied. There have, I repeat, been no dead or wounded among
-the working class. On May 1st, when general disorders were openly
-threatened, I took precautions against organised outbreak. No trouble
-arose."
-
-The Republic, he continued, was a rule of freedom for the individual,
-so far as it could be secured under existing conditions. Those
-conditions and the law itself might work injustice, but it was then
-the duty of the State, and the Minister who had to translate its
-functions into action, to mitigate such harshness by protecting the
-weaker side. Soldiers had been sent down to Courrières not to attack
-the strikers--no attack had been made upon them--but to prevent the
-strikers themselves from destroying the mines and inflicting illegal
-punishments upon those of their class who did not agree with them. When
-this was done, the strikers molested the soldiers, who never fired a
-shot. The lieutenant in command was assailed, though his sabre remained
-all the time in its sheath. The right of men to work on terms they
-themselves are willing to accept could not be contested as the law now
-stood. "But, says M. Jaurès, by assuring non-strikers the right to
-work, I myself am violating the right to strike, which I have declared
-to be the inalienable privilege of the wage-earners. But then, I ask,
-what are the non-strikers to do? They also have wives and children
-who demand to be fed. What law justifies me in preventing them from
-working? Republicanism means the right of the individual to combine
-with others to resist oppression and obtain advantages. This freedom
-is admitted. It does not include the freedom to oppress others, still
-less to assault servants of the State, who are acting in order to
-safeguard the law as it stands. When the Socialists of M. Jaurès's
-school begin to deal with facts, and not with ideals at present all in
-the air, what sort of programme do they formulate?
-
-"Here we have it. An eight-hours working day for all trades. The
-right of State Employees to form Trade Unions and to strike.
-Proportional Representation. A progressive Income Tax, and so on. A
-nice little programme, but a bourgeois programme all the same. No
-idealism, no Socialism there! M. Jaurès, however, claims the immediate
-Nationalisation and Socialisation of all departments of industry,
-including the land. But such unification of society is in reality the
-Catholicisation of Society. There is a definite programme of Radical
-Reforms, nevertheless, constituting an advance towards a Socialist
-policy. They are formulated by the bourgeoisie, but Socialists threaten
-to vote against the Budget, which is necessary in order to carry out
-some of their own proposals. Take Old Age Pensions. These need money.
-The Socialists refuse the required funds. Yet Socialists are for the
-Republic. So far we cordially agree. So far I, of necessity, work
-with them. But if they at the same time denounce Republicans as the
-enemies of the workers and secure a majority of votes in that sense,
-then that is to vote for the defeat of the Republic. If Socialists
-would work with the Radicals, in order to attain the ends they have in
-common, none would be more glad than I. But if such common action is
-impossible, then let each work on in their own way."
-
-It was said at the time that at the close of the debate, when
-Clemenceau was leaving the Assembly, he remarked to Jaurès, "After all,
-Jaurès, you are not the good God." To which Jaurès replied: "And you
-are not even the Devil."
-
-I have dealt with this famous controversy at some length, without
-attempting to give the speeches in full, because, although the
-discussion led to no decision at the moment, it certainly brought
-before the public of France and even the public opinion of Europe
-the direct theoretical and practical difference between Socialism and
-well-meaning Radicalism, in an intelligible manner, as nothing else
-would. The effect upon French politics within the next few months, in
-spite of further desperate outbreaks in 1907, was also remarkable.
-Jaurès's speech did much to consolidate the Socialist Party as a
-unified section of the Chamber; and Clemenceau himself was so far
-influenced by it and by the trend of events that, as will be seen,
-it affected his policy as Prime Minister in the formation of his own
-Cabinet shortly afterwards. Looking at the matter from the Socialist
-point of view, therefore, Jaurès was building better than his opponents
-in the Chamber knew, and Socialists had no reason to regret the
-apparent victory of his formidable antagonist at the time. In fact, as
-Bernard Shaw said in regard to a very different debate under widely
-different circumstances in London more than thirty years before: "The
-Socialist was playing at longer bowls than you know."
-
-It is this power of detachment, this recognition that theory and
-sentiment play a great part in the moulding of public character and
-public opinion, even in the practical affairs of everyday life, that
-renders France--independent, idealist, revolutionist, conservative
-and thrifty France--so essential a factor in the discussion of the
-world-problems of to-day. France alone among the nations rises above
-the smoke of class warfare; and though her own social and economic
-conditions are not themselves ready for the definite solution of social
-problems, she indicates the route which may be most safely followed
-by countries more economically advanced. Both Jaurès and Clemenceau,
-therefore, rendered good service to mankind when they used their utmost
-efforts to place before the peoples and the students of all nations
-the views of the Socialist, with his outlook on the future, and the
-Radical, with his policy of the present based on the traditions of
-the past. Jaurès, in the prime of his manhood and the fullness of
-his fame, was torn from the useful and noble work which lay well
-within his power and his intelligence by the murderous revolver of a
-reactionary assassin: a loss indeed to his party, his country, and the
-world at large! His antagonist, Clemenceau, still works on as nearly
-an octogenarian, with all the vigour and energy of his fiery youth,
-on behalf of that France, who, to-day, as for many a long year past,
-has been the mistress and the goddess of the materialist democrat and
-Radical champion of the people.
-
-On October 23rd, after six months of service as Minister of the
-Interior, Clemenceau was called back from Carlsbad, whither he went
-every year before the war to conjure attacks of gout (which might at
-least, in all reason, have spared a lifelong teetotaller), in order
-to form a Cabinet of his own in place of M. Sarrien. That Cabinet was
-remarkable from many points of view. Comments upon its constitution
-and significance may be reserved for a wider survey. Suffice it to say
-here that Clemenceau himself, in addition to holding the Presidency of
-the Council as Prime Minister, remained Minister of the Interior, thus
-declaring his intention not to shirk any of the responsibility he had
-taken upon himself or the animosity he had incurred in his dealings
-with strikes and other social questions.
-
-France was passing through a very difficult period. Whatever view a
-thoroughgoing Socialist may take as to the need for a wider general
-policy than that adopted by Clemenceau, it is not easy to see how, the
-French people being unprepared to accept a purely Labour or Socialist
-Government, the Republic could have been peacefully maintained, but
-for the cool determination of the Radical Republican at the head
-of affairs. Scarcely a day passed without some fresh economic and
-social conflicts that called for prompt action. These, however, arose
-in provinces and cities and under conditions where the antagonism
-between wage-earners and employers, between capital and labour, in
-the ordinary way offered no exceptional features for the statesman.
-But in the spring and summer of 1907 a more complicated and dangerous
-uprising, which developed into little short of an attempt at an
-Anarchist-communist, anti-Republican revolution, broke out in the South
-of France among the wine-growers.
-
-The peasants of the districts round Narbonne and Montpellier, together
-with many of the inhabitants of those towns, who were themselves
-dependent upon the wine industry, made, in fact, a desperate local
-attack upon the existing Government of France. Disaffection had
-been growing for a long time and was due to a series of economic
-and agricultural troubles among the wine-growers, which successive
-Ministries had not understood, far less attempted to cope with. It had
-its direct origin in a natural cause. This cause was the appearance in
-the Bordeaux country of the deadly enemy of all _vignerons_, large and
-small--the much-dreaded phylloxera. The vineyards of the Gironde were
-devastated and the famous clarets shipped from Bordeaux ceased to be
-the product of Bordeaux grapes. Thereupon the inferior vintages of the
-Midi came into abnormal demand. But the wine-producers of the West were
-not wholly defeated, even while the phylloxera continued his ravages
-and no method of checking the mischief had been discovered. There are
-ways and means of meeting even such a calamity.
-
-"Would your lordship like madeira served with that course?" said a
-butler to a well-known bishop who was giving a dinner, in days long
-before the war, to a number of his clergy. "Madeira!" was the reply, in
-great surprise. "Why, I have not a single bottle in my cellar." "Oh,
-yes, my lord, you have. _Monseigneur oublie peut-être que je suis de
-Cette._" Madeira, so the story goes, was duly served. But Cette is not
-the only town in France where the art of blending and refining wine
-for foreign and even home palates has been brought to a high pitch. At
-any rate, during the phylloxera period, Australian, Algerian, Spanish
-and other wines, which previously had been regarded contemptuously by
-foreign and French consumers of claret, were, it was alleged, imported
-at Bordeaux in great quantity and came out again with the old familiar
-Bordeaux labels and duly impressed corks.
-
-Thus adulteration, which John Bright declared was a legitimate form
-of competition, made its appearance in a widely different industry
-from his own, to the detriment, even thus early in the struggle, of
-the legitimate growers of more acid but more genuine beverages in the
-South. Adulteration became a war-cry among the peasants, who felt
-themselves defrauded. Republicans of great commercial reputation and
-high standing in finance were accused, rightly or wrongly, of being
-deeply and profitably concerned in this nefarious traffic. That was
-all bad enough. But, at last, a remedy for the vineyard plague was
-discovered and widely used, with the aid of the Government, partly by
-chemical applications to the vines, partly by bringing in new stocks
-from without. Then followed exceptionally good vintages in the Bordeaux
-country, while the adulteration, falsification, manipulation of other
-wines with sugar and the like continued. Hence an abnormal glut of wine
-of every degree, with a corresponding fall in price.
-
-The peasants, whose views of the admirable law of supply and demand
-were very crude, only discovered that the more wine they produced the
-less money could they get for it! To produce for the consumer, at a
-loss to themselves, at once struck them as an unfair dispensation in
-the order of the market, since it affected the sales of their wines.
-Obviously, they said, the Government was to blame. How could they pay
-taxes when wine was fetching a derisory price? Why should they borrow
-to pay taxes when wine was fetching a derisory price? Let Government
-take short order with the adulterators and big producers out there in
-the West, who were preventing the hard-working toilers on the soil in
-the South from disposing of their sole saleable product at a profit.
-A Republic which couldn't protect the backbone of the nation, the
-Southern wine-growers, to wit, was of no use to them. And the people
-of the South, as M. Clemenceau knows very well, for he is Senator for
-the Var, are a vivacious and an excitable folk. But their vivacity
-and excitement had already been worked up to a high pitch by gradual
-exasperation before M. Clemenceau himself took office. It was his hard
-fate to meet the full fury of the storm as Premier of France.
-
-No trifling storm it was. The whole countryside, in the late spring and
-summer, was aflame. Commune after commune, district after district,
-took part in the agitation. Peasants and _prolétaires_ made common
-cause against the authorities. Taxes should not be paid. Tax-gatherers
-should appear at their peril. The Government was an unjust Government,
-and should be defied. And it was so. Meetings were held in every town
-and village. Capable representatives and leaders, of whom a M. Albert
-was the chief, were chosen by the men themselves. Attempts to confer
-with the people as a whole resulted in failure. The old story was told
-again. The reactionaries of the Right took the side of the people, and
-shouted against "adulteration," because they were victims of a chaotic
-economic system, because also they objected to the use of troops, who
-belonged to and were paid by the whole people, in order to maintain
-that system in full vigour. What was to be done? Things got worse
-and worse. The Minister of the Interior felt obliged to call out the
-troops in order to prevent downright ruin being wrought in Narbonne,
-Montpellier and St. Béziers. There were killed and wounded on both
-sides. Hence a serious ministerial crisis was threatened which, as
-matters stood, could scarcely fail to tell in favour of reaction and
-against the only Republic then possible.
-
-The facts were beyond dispute. In consequence of the causes and results
-summarised, the temper of the people became unmanageable. There were
-terrible riots of a wholly anarchist character. The doors of public
-buildings were soaked with kerosene and then set on fire. At Narbonne,
-Montpellier and St. Béziers attacks were made on peaceful citizens
-at dead of night by uncontrolled mobs of armed men recruited from
-the worst members of the population. Soldiers on the spot refused to
-fire in reply to revolver shots aimed at them. The provocations to
-the troops, who were brought in solely to maintain order, were almost
-intolerable, but they were borne with heroic calm. At first they fired
-in the air. Then they fired in earnest, and there were killed and
-wounded on both sides. Hence there was the greatest excitement in the
-Chamber and unrest throughout Paris, where the wildest rumours were
-spread.
-
-Everything pointed to a serious political upset when Clemenceau rose to
-give an account of the circumstances and to defend the action of the
-Government. This is, in brief, what he said: "I did my best to avoid
-sending troops, and directed that they should not be used except in
-case of absolute necessity. But can a Government allow a wine-growers'
-committee to forbid the villagers to pay taxes? Can it quietly permit
-tax-collectors to be molested when they arrive in the communes? Can
-it look on with indifference while 300 mayors of communes declare
-a general strike and hold up the entire business of the community?
-Everywhere the committees of the wine-growers took upon themselves
-to give their orders in place of the constituted authority, and were
-obeyed. Soldiers who mutinied against their officers were applauded
-and a large sum was raised for their compensation. No Government could
-stand that. Citizens were bound to pay their taxes. No Minister can
-deny that. I could have resigned. I do not want office. But I felt it
-my duty to remain when the troops were attacked."
-
-After this speech the ministerial crisis ended. The difficulties on
-the spot slowly calmed down, owing largely to the good sense and
-loyalty to the Republic of M. Albert and other leaders of the men. But
-the Socialists have never forgiven M. Clemenceau for calling in the
-military at Courrières and Narbonne, and particularly for the bloodshed
-at the latter town. This has been a great misfortune for both sides,
-the rather that both could plead justification for the course they
-took. The Socialists contended that the troubles arose in the North
-and in the South from causes whose development the Government ought to
-have watched and whose results it should have foreseen. The State ought
-to have made ready, and introduced adequate legislation to encounter
-and overcome these troubles by peaceful methods, which all governments
-have, or ought to have, at their command. Clemenceau could and did
-answer that he was in no wise to be held responsible personally for
-outbreaks which had arisen from circumstances over which he had no
-control, and that all he had to do was to prevent any mistakes that
-had been made from leading to violent action that must harm innocent
-persons and injure the Republic. The split between Radicals and
-Socialists remains unbridged to this day.
-
-Yet in the Senate on more than one occasion in 1906 Clemenceau,
-interrupting a speaker, declared: "I claim to be a Socialist!" And
-again, "When I accepted the offer to form a Government I conceived
-the idea of governing in a Socialist sense. Years ago I offered to
-co-operate with M. Jules Guesde to carry Socialist measures on which
-we mutually agreed." This has never been denied. It ought to have been
-possible to come to terms on palliative measures at least.
-
-For the strike difficulties did not end in 1906 and 1907, nor did
-Clemenceau change his policy in dealing with them. Non-strikers were
-always to be protected against strikers: anything in the shape of
-violence on the part of strikers, no matter how great the provocation,
-was to be repressed by the forces of the State. Also civil servants,
-being the servants of the State, were not to be allowed to combine
-in trade unions against the State as employer. Still less could
-Clemenceau allow them the right to strike against the State. They then
-became, as he expressed it, "rebellious bureaucrats," allied with
-those who would like to destroy "_la Patrie_." To them the amnesty
-granted to the rebellious wine-growers and rural anarchists of the
-South must be denied. Civil servants in revolt and the bigots of
-anti-militarism--Hervé was at this time an ardent peace-at-any-price
-man and fanatical anti-militarist--were guilty of a crime against their
-country; and with such criminals the Government was engaged in battle.
-
-Once more an actual strike close to Paris gave point to all these
-declarations, and put Clemenceau and his Government again at variance
-with the Socialists by the acute difference of principle which was
-then accentuated in practice. This was at Vigneux, when there was a
-strike of the workers in the sand-pits. Clemenceau, who was still
-Minister of the Interior as well as Prime Minister, used the gendarmes
-to protect the non-strikers or blacklegs still working in the pits. As
-a result, there was open conflict between the two sides. Two of the men
-on strike were killed, and several of the gendarmes were injured. This
-aroused great indignation against the Government among the organised
-workers. They felt that the right to strike became illusory, if, at
-any moment, the Ministry could turn the scale against the strikers, no
-matter how great their grievances or how just their claims might be, by
-bringing in the State to uphold the minority of the men in standing by
-the masters.
-
-In practice, as has often been found in England, such intervention on
-behalf of the blacklegs means that the strike may be broken in the
-interest of the capitalists. The deputies of the places where the
-strikes took place interviewed Clemenceau on the matter. It is clear
-that the antagonism went very deep. In answer to a bitter attack
-Clemenceau again defended his action in the Chamber. The question was
-one not of mere opinion, but of justice. "When the workers are in
-the wrong they must be told the truth about it. The Government will
-never approve of anarchy." ("You are anarchy enthroned yourself,"
-cried Jaurès.) "My programme is Social Reform under the law against
-grievances, and Social Order under the law against the revolutionists."
-Finally, the National Assembly passed a vote of confidence in
-Clemenceau as against the Socialists. That, of course, was to be
-expected.
-
-I have given a fairly detailed account of these affrays--they were no
-less--between Clemenceau and the Socialists because they are of great
-importance, not only as explaining the vehement hostility which has
-since existed between them, but because the points at issue affect
-every civilised country to a greater or less degree. Capital and
-labour, capitalists and wage-earners, are at variance everywhere. Their
-antagonism can no more be averted or bridged over than could the class
-struggle between land and slave-owners and their chattel slaves, or
-the nobles and their serfs. Only the slow process of social evolution
-leading up to revolution can solve the problem. Meanwhile, combination
-on the one side is met by combination on the other. Outside political
-action, which is ineffective until the workers themselves understand
-how to use it, there is no weapon for the wage-earners or wage-slaves
-but the strike. They suffer, even when they win, far more than the
-capitalists or employers, who are only deprived of the right to make
-profits out of their hands, while those same hands are undergoing the
-pangs of hunger and every sort of privation, not only for themselves
-but for their wives and children.
-
-Arbitration, when the social conditions have reached the stage where
-this is feasible, may postpone the crucial battle and smooth over the
-matter temporarily; but it can do no more than that. A step towards
-this arbitration was made under M. Millerand's measure declaring
-strikes illegal unless decreed by a majority of the employees upon
-a referendum, and the enactment of an arbitration clause. But when
-strikes actually take place and the men's blood is up, then comes the
-real tug-of-war.
-
-Should the State--obviously the capitalist State to-day--interfere to
-keep order and maintain the right to work for non-strikers, or should
-it refrain from interference altogether? When Jaurès and the Socialists
-were challenged to say what they would do under the circumstances,
-they failed to answer, as already recorded. This put them in a weak
-position. An opposition must have a policy which it would be prepared
-to act upon if it took office. Socialism, however desirable, could
-not be realised all at once. But it was open to Clemenceau, as to any
-other Minister entrusted with full powers by the State, _to bring at
-least as much pressure to bear upon the capitalists and employers
-as upon the strikers_, and to insist that they should yield to the
-demands of the men and continue to work the mines, out of which, by the
-purchase of the labour-power of the pitmen, they had derived such huge
-profits. This course was not adopted by the Minister of the Interior,
-nor does it seem to have been demanded by Jaurès. The troubles in the
-wine districts arose from different economic causes, and had to be
-dealt with in a different way. But the truth is that, in periods of
-transition, no Government can go right. It was Clemenceau's lot to have
-to govern at such a period of transition.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- STRENGTH AND WEAKNESS OF CLEMENCEAU
-
-
-Strikes and anarchist troubles, however, formidable as they were in the
-North and in the South, were by no means the only serious difficulties
-which Clemenceau had to cope with, first as Minister of the Interior
-and then as Premier. The danger from Germany, as he well knew, was
-ever present. Anxious as France was to avoid misunderstandings which
-might easily lead to war, eager as the Radical leader might be to
-enlarge upon the folly and wickedness of strife between two contiguous
-civilised peoples, who could do so much for one another, it was always
-possible for the German Government to put the Republic in such a
-position that the alternative of humiliation or hostilities must be
-faced. Less than a year before Clemenceau accepted office, the German
-Kaiser himself had taken a most provocative step in Morocco, the object
-of which can now be clearly seen. Germany had no real interests in
-Morocco worthy of the name. Several years later the German Minister of
-Foreign Affairs pooh-poohed the idea that Germany, distant from Morocco
-as she was, with only 200 Germans in the country, and not more than
-£200,000 worth of yearly commerce, all told, with the inhabitants,
-could be concerned about political matters in that Mohammedan kingdom.
-
-With France the case was very different. Algeria was adjacent to the
-territories of the Sultan of Morocco, and, if the wild tribes on the
-frontier were stirred up against the infidel, the most important French
-colony was threatened with serious disturbance. It was all-important
-for France, therefore, that there should be a government at Fez strong
-enough and enlightened enough to keep peace on the border. Clemenceau,
-who had always been so stern an opponent of colonial adventures, and
-had overthrown several Cabinets which he considered were prone to
-encourage harmful exploits, had himself spoken out very plainly about
-Morocco. Long before capitalist interests were involved on any large
-scale the French ownership of Algeria necessitated a definite Moroccan
-policy. This again brought with it the obligation of constant pressure
-upon the Sultan to induce him to consider French interests. These
-interests could be harmonised with those of Spain and Great Britain,
-and were so settled by special agreements in April, 1904, just a year
-before the German Emperor's _coup de théâtre_ startled the world.
-France's special interests in Morocco were thus recognised all round,
-and Germany, far from raising any objection, expressly disclaimed any
-desire to interfere, so long as "the open door" was left for German
-goods. But the general antagonism between France and Germany was a
-matter of common knowledge.
-
-It was natural, therefore, that the Sultan of Morocco, alarmed lest
-French attempts to introduce "order" and "good government" into his
-realm might end, as it had always done elsewhere, by destroying his
-independence, should appeal to the Kaiser, who had proclaimed his
-sympathy for the Moslem, to help him against the less sympathetic
-infidel. For a long time these appeals fell upon deaf ears. Even when
-the Kaiser visited Gibraltar, after an interview with the King of
-Spain, he refused pressing invitations to cross the Straits and meet
-envoys of the Moroccan potentate at Tangier. This was in March, 1904.
-But in March, 1905, when everything looked peaceful, the Kaiser went to
-Tangier in the _Hohenzollern_, landed with an imposing suite, met the
-uncle of the Sultan, who came as a special envoy to the German Emperor,
-and addressed him in the following terms:--
-
-"I am to-day paying my visit to the Sultan in his quality of
-independent sovereign. I hope that under the sovereignty of the Sultan
-a free Morocco will remain open to the peaceful competition of all
-nations, without monopoly and without annexation, on the footing of
-absolute equality. The object of my visit to Tangier is to make known
-that I have decided to do all in my power to effectually safeguard
-the interests of Germany in Morocco. Since I consider the Sultan an
-absolutely free sovereign, it is with him that I desire to come to an
-understanding on suitable measures for safeguarding these interests. As
-to the reforms that the Sultan intends to make, it seems to me that he
-must proceed with much caution, having regard to the religious feelings
-of the population, so that public order may not be disturbed."
-
-Such was the declaration of the German Emperor. What gave special
-point to his address was the fact that at that very moment a French
-delegation was at the capital, Fez, in order to obtain necessary
-reforms from the Sultan, and was meeting week after week the most
-obstinate resistance from him and his Government. It was obviously open
-support of the Sultan in his refusal to accept French representations,
-and a declaration of hostility to France on the part of the Kaiser.
-Nothing more arrogant or offensive can well be imagined. France, from
-the Socialist point of view, was wrong in her attempt to instruct the
-Sultan how to deal with a state of things which undoubtedly threatened
-the peace of Algeria, but the Kaiser's intervention after such a
-fashion was wholly unwarrantable, and threatened the peace of the world.
-
-What was the meaning of this extraordinary display of Imperial
-diplomacy and Prussian direct action? There were statesmen--Sir Charles
-Dilke was one--who believed that the German Emperor was really devoted
-to peace, and that no war could take place in Europe so long as he
-lived. There was a general feeling in England to the same effect,
-largely engineered by Lord Haldane and others of like nature, whose
-spiritual or political home was in Germany. But all can see now that
-this was an illusion. The only difference between the Kaiser and the
-most aggressive and bloodthirsty Junker or pan-German was as to the
-time and season when the tremendous Central European and partially
-Mohammedan combination that he had formed should commence the attack.
-William II wished to wait until the road had been so completely
-prepared for the aggressive advance that victory on every side would
-be practically certain. The Junker party, with which the Crown Prince
-identified himself, were in a hurry, and the Emperor could only keep
-them in good humour by these periodical outbursts which enabled him to
-pose as the dictator of Europe.
-
-All through, the Kaiser's real ambition was that which he occasionally
-disclosed in a well-known drawing-room in Berlin. He would not die
-happy unless he had ridden at the head of the Teutonic armies as the
-Charlemagne of modern Europe. But this megalomania was only indulged
-in with his intimates. Elsewhere he stood forth as the rival of his
-uncle as the Prince of Peace. According to him, therefore, it was M.
-Delcassé who forced him to act in this peremptory way at Tangier; and
-efforts were made to convince all the Governments in Europe that the
-French Minister of Foreign Affairs had tried to boycott Germany out
-of Morocco. France, rather than take up the challenge, got rid of M.
-Delcassé. Thus the Emperor displayed his power for the appeasement of
-his Junkers, established a permanent source of difficulty on the flank
-of France, and gave the Mohammedan world to understand once more that
-Germany, not England, was the champion of Islam.
-
-Meanwhile, German political, financial and commercial influence of
-every kind was making astounding advances, not only in France itself,
-but also in every country that might at the critical moment be able
-to help either France or Russia; while German armaments, military and
-naval, and German alliances for war were being worked up to the point
-which, if carried on for ten, or perhaps even for five years more,
-would have rendered the German power almost, if not quite, irresistible
-by any combination that could have been made in time against it. The
-Kaiser, in short, was playing a successful game of world-peace in
-order to make sure of playing at the right moment a successful game
-of world-war. Desperate as the conflict has been, it may have been
-fortunate for mankind that the Junkers, his son and the General Staff
-forced the Emperor's hand.
-
-When, consequently, Clemenceau took the lead in French affairs, he
-soon found that the sacrifice of M. Delcassé, the friend of Edward
-VII, to the pretended German injury had been made in vain. There was
-no intention whatever, either then or later, of coming to a really
-permanent settlement of outstanding grievances against France, although
-the position in Morocco was eventually used to gain great advantages in
-other parts of Africa. Germany was, in fact, a permanent menace to the
-peace of Europe and the world; but those who said so, and adduced plain
-facts to justify their contentions, were unfortunately denounced both
-by capitalists and Socialists in every country as fomenters of war.
-This insidious propaganda, which tended to the advantage of Germany in
-every respect, was already going on in 1906, when M. Clemenceau joined
-M. Sarrien's Cabinet, and when he formed a Cabinet of his own. This was
-publicly recognised.
-
-This is what M. Clemenceau said at Hyères, after some furious attacks
-had been made upon France in the German official newspapers; no German
-newspapers being allowed to print comments on foreign affairs without
-the consent of the Foreign Office: "No peace is possible without
-force. When I took office I myself was persuaded that all European
-nations were of one mind in wishing for peace. But almost immediately,
-without any provocation whatever from us, a storm of calumny and
-misrepresentation broke out upon us, and we were compelled to ask
-ourselves, 'Are we prepared?'"
-
-On October 23rd of the same year, M. Sarrien resigned, and M.
-Clemenceau formed his Cabinet. It comprised, among others, Messrs.
-Pichon (Foreign Affairs), Caillaux (Finance), Colonel Picquart (War),
-Briand (Justice and Education), Viviani (Labour), and Donmergue
-(Commerce). A more peaceful Cabinet could hardly be. M. Pichon, who
-took the place from which M. Delcassé had been forced to resign
-because he too strongly opposed German influence in Morocco and
-refused a European Conference on the subject as wholly unnecessary,
-was an old friend and co-worker with Clemenceau on _La Justice_, and
-had gone into diplomacy at Clemenceau's suggestion. He had since held
-positions in the East and in Tunis, and he and Clemenceau were believed
-to be entirely at one in abjuring all adventurous colonial policy. M.
-Caillaux, at the head of the Department of Finance--people are apt to
-forget that M. Caillaux, now in gaol under serious accusation, was
-thus trusted by Clemenceau--was certainly not opposed to Germany, but
-even at that time was favourable to a close understanding with that
-power. Colonel Picquart, who now received his reward for having, though
-personally an anti-Semite, destroyed all his own professional prospects
-in his zeal to obtain justice for the Jew Dreyfus, was certainly as
-pacific a War Minister as could have been appointed. But what was more
-significant still, M. Briand, himself a Socialist, and the hero of the
-great inquiry into the separation of Church and State which had now
-become inevitable, was placed in a position to carry that important
-measure to its final vote and settlement; and M. Viviani, likewise a
-Socialist, became head of the new department, the Ministry of Labour.
-When I saw these two men, Briand, whom I remembered well as a vehement
-anarchist, and Viviani, who was a vigorous Socialist speaker and
-writer, in the Cabinet of which Clemenceau was the chief, I could not
-but recall the conversation I had with the French Premier sixteen years
-before.
-
-Seated comfortably in his delightful library, surrounded by splendid
-Japanese works of art, of which at that time he was an ardent
-collector, M. Clemenceau had spoken very freely indeed. Of course, he
-knew quite well that I was no mere interviewer for Press purposes,
-and, indeed, I have always made it a rule to keep such conversations,
-except perhaps for permitted indiscretions here and there, entirely
-to myself. There is no need for me to enlarge upon his quick and
-almost abrupt delivery, his apt remarks and illustrations, his bright,
-clever, vigorous face and gestures. I put it to him that Socialism was
-the basis of the coming political party in France and that, vehement
-individualist as he might be himself, it was impossible for him to
-resist permanently the current of the time, or to remain merely a
-supremely powerful critic and organiser of overthrow. Sooner or later
-he must succumb to the inevitable and take his seat as President of
-Council, and to do this with any hope of success or usefulness he would
-have to rely in an increasing degree upon Socialist and semi-Socialist
-support.
-
-To this Clemenceau answered that he was quite contented with his
-existing position; that he had no wish to enter upon office with its
-responsibilities and corrupting influence; while, as to Socialism, that
-could never make way in France in his day.
-
-"Looking only at the towns," he said, "you may think otherwise, though
-even there I consider the progress of Socialism is overrated. But the
-towns do not govern France. The overwhelming majority of French voters
-are country voters. France means rural France, and the peasantry of
-France will never be Socialists. Nobody can know them better than my
-family and I know them. Landed proprietors ourselves--my father's
-passion for buying land to pay him three per cent. with borrowed money
-for which he had to pay four per cent. would have finally ruined him,
-but that our wholesome French law permits gentle interference in such
-a case--we have ever lived with and among the peasantry. We have
-been doctors from generation to generation, and have doctored them
-gratuitously, as I did myself, both in country and in town. I have seen
-them very close, in birth and in death, in sickness and in health,
-in betrothal and in marriage, in poverty and in well-being, and all
-the time their one idea is property; to possess, to own, to provide
-a good portion for the daughter, to secure a good and well _dot_-ed
-wife for the son. Always _property_, ownership, possession, work,
-thrift, acquisition, individual gain. Socialism can never take root
-in such a soil as this. North or south, it is just the same. Preach
-nationalisation of the land in a French village, and you would barely
-escape with your life, if the peasants understood what you meant. Come
-with me for a few weeks' trip through rural France, and you will soon
-understand the hopelessness of Socialism here. It will encounter a
-personal fanaticism stronger than its own. Your Socialists are men of
-the town; they do not understand the men and women of the country."
-
-Now the same M. Clemenceau, after a long struggle side by side with
-the Socialist Party, first in the Dreyfus case and then in the
-anti-Clericalist and Separation of Church and State movement, finds
-that events have moved so fast, in a comparatively short space of time,
-that he is practically compelled to take two active Socialists into his
-own Cabinet. This, too, in spite of the fact that his action in calling
-in the troops at Courrières and insisting upon liberty for non-strikers
-or black-legs had turned the Socialist Party, as a party, definitely
-against him. No more significant proof of the advance of Socialist
-influence could well have been given. That it was entirely on the side
-of peace and a good understanding with Germany cannot be disputed.
-
-But this did not make the Morocco affair itself any less complicated
-or threatening. Notwithstanding the Conference which Germany succeeded
-in having convoked at Algeciras, and the settlement arrived at in
-April, 1906, after a sitting of more than three months, the condition
-of Morocco itself had not improved. The fact that the Conference gave
-France the preference in the scheme of reforms proposed and in the
-political management of Morocco, against the efforts of Germany and
-Austria, suited neither the Sultan nor the Kaiser. Troubles arose
-of a serious character. The French considered themselves forced to
-intervene. The old antagonism broke out afresh. So much so that the
-French Premier spoke with more than his usual frankness in an interview
-with a German newspaper in November:--
-
-"The Germans have one great fault. They show us extreme courtesy to-day
-and marked rudeness the day after. Before this Morocco affair, feeling
-in France had much improved. Many of us thought an understanding with
-Germany very desirable, and I freely admit your Emperor did a good deal
-to engender this feeling. Then, although we had dismissed Delcassé,
-the German press attacked us. It went so far as to declare that you
-were to extort from us the milliards of francs necessary to finance an
-Anglo-German war. . . . I do not want to have any war, and if we desire
-no war we necessarily wish to be on good terms with our neighbours.
-If, also, our relations are unsatisfactory, we are anxious to improve
-them. Such is my frame of mind. Moreover, if I have a chance of doing
-so, I shall be glad to act on these lines. Of course it is imperatively
-necessary for us to be always strong and ready for all eventualities.
-That, however, does not mean that we want war: quite the contrary. To
-wish for war would mean that we were mad. We could not possibly carry
-on a war policy. If we did, Parliament would soon turn us out, as it
-did Delcassé."
-
-Nothing could be clearer than that. And what made the pronouncement
-more important even than the strong but sober language used was the
-fact that, after as before the Conference of Algeciras, there was
-really a great disposition among certain sections in France to come
-to terms with Germany, rather than to strengthen the understanding
-with England. The expression of this opinion could be frequently heard
-among the people. It was fostered, even in the face of the German press
-campaign against the Clemenceau Administration, by powerful financial
-interests and by Clerical reactionary elements which were at this time
-less hostile to Germany than to England.
-
-Throughout, however, Clemenceau stood for the _Entente_ with the
-latter power as the only sound policy for his country. In this respect
-he was at one with the old statement of Gambetta that a breach of
-the alliance with England would be fatal to France. For Clemenceau,
-therefore, who had more than once in his career suffered so severely
-for his friendship for England, to state that an understanding with
-Germany had been seriously contemplated was a striking testimony to
-the immediate tendency of the time at that juncture. Whether the whole
-of this fitful friendliness on the side of Germany was simulated
-in order to foster that remarkable policy of steady infiltration of
-German interests, German management, and German goods into France,
-with far other than peaceful aims, is a question which can be much
-more confidently answered now than at the period when this peaceful
-offensive was going on. Enough to say that the Clemenceau Ministry was
-not, at first, at all averse from a permanent arrangement for peace
-with Germany, so long as English animosity was not aroused.
-
-It must be admitted, nevertheless, that French policy in Morocco was,
-in the long run, quite contrary to the views on colonial affairs which
-Clemenceau had so strongly expressed and acted upon hitherto. Whatever
-excuse may be made on account of the proximity of Morocco to Algeria,
-and the necessity for France to protect her own countrymen and secure
-peace on the border, the truth remains that the French Republic was
-allowed by her statesmen to drift into what was virtually a national
-and capitalist domination of that independent country, backed up by a
-powerful French army. Clemenceau in his defence of these aggressions
-recites those familiar apologies for that sort of patriotism which
-consists in love of another people's country and the determination to
-seize it, which we Englishmen have become so accustomed to in our own
-case. If we didn't take it, somebody else would. If we leave matters as
-they are, endless disturbances will occur and will spread to our own
-territory. A protectorate must be established.
-
-But a protectorate must have a powerful armed force behind it, or there
-can be no real protection. National capital is being invested under
-our peaceful penetration for the benefit of the protected people.
-The rights of investors must be safe-guarded. Our countrymen--in
-this instance Frenchmen--have been molested and even murdered by the
-barbarous folk whom we have been called upon to civilise. Such outrages
-cannot be permitted to go unpunished. Towns bombarded. Villages burnt.
-Peace re-established. More troops. "Security of life and property"
-ensured by a much larger army and the foundation of civilised
-Courts. Protection develops insensibly into possession. The familiar
-progression of grab is, in short, complete.
-
-That is pretty much what went on with Morocco, whose entire
-independence as a sovereign State had only just been internationally
-acknowledged. What is more, it went on under M. Clemenceau's own
-Government, consisting of the same peaceful politicians enumerated
-above. No doubt the action of Germany against France and French
-interests, on the one side, and the support by England of France and
-French interests, on the other, hastened the acceptance of the "white
-man's burden" which her capitalists and financiers were so eager to
-undertake; if only to upset the schemes of the Brothers Mannesmann
-in the troublous Mohammedan Sultanate. But it is strange to find
-Clemenceau in this galley. For, unjustifiable as were the proceedings
-of Germany at the beginning and all through, it is now obvious that
-France, by her own policy, put arguments into the mouth of the
-peace-at-any-price and pro-German advocates; that also she played the
-game of the Kaiser and his unscrupulous agent Dr. Rosen. This worthy
-had been in the employment of Prince Radolin, who thus described him:
-"He is a Levantine Jew whose sole capacity is intriguing to increase
-his own importance." It was disgraceful of Germany to make use of such
-a man to stir up Morocco against France. But it was certainly most
-unwise, as well as contrary to international comity, for France to put
-herself in the wrong by an aggressive policy in that State. Especially
-was this the case when such a terrible menace still overhung her
-Eastern frontier, and, as events proved, not a man could be spared for
-adventures in Morocco or elsewhere.
-
-The war between rival Sultans and the attack upon the French settlers
-at Casablanca could not justify such a complete change of front.
-Jaurès, in fact, was in the right when he denounced the advance of
-General Amadé with a strong French army as a filibustering expedition,
-dangerous in itself and provocative towards Germany. But Clemenceau
-supported his Foreign Minister, Pichon, in the occupation of
-Casablanca, which had been heavily bombarded beforehand, and, on
-February 25th, declared that France did not intend to evacuate Morocco,
-neither did she mean to conquer that country. He had, he averred, no
-secrets, and, as in the matter of the anarchist rising in the South,
-said he was ready to resign. This was evidence of impatience, which was
-harmful at such a critical period in French home and foreign affairs.
-It looked as if Clemenceau had been so accustomed to turn out French
-Governments that he could not discriminate even in favour of his own!
-But the Chamber gave him a strong vote of confidence, and he remained
-at his post.
-
-There were two important developments in foreign affairs going on
-during this year, 1908, of which the difficulties in Morocco, serious
-as they were, constituted only a side issue. The one was open and
-above-board: the other was known only to those who kept very closely in
-touch with German politics.
-
-The first was the rapid improvement in the relations between France
-and Great Britain, for which Clemenceau himself and King Edward VII
-were chiefly responsible. We are now so accustomed to regard the
-_Entente_ as part and parcel of English foreign policy that it is not
-easy to understand how bitter the feeling was against Great Britain
-which led important Frenchmen to take the view of an agreement with
-Germany spoken of above. English domination in Egypt, to the practical
-exclusion of French influence and control even over the Suez Canal;
-English conventions with Japan, checking, as was thought, that
-legitimate French expansion in Asia by which M. Jules Ferry had hoped
-to counterbalance the defeats of 1870-71; English settlement of the
-irritating Newfoundland Fisheries question; English truculence and
-unfairness in the infamous Boer War; English antagonism to Russia,
-France's trusted ally and heavy debtor--all these things stood in the
-way of any cordial understanding. It may well be that only Clemenceau's
-strong personal influence, supported by his nominee President
-Fallières, prevented steps being taken which would have been fatal to
-the revival of genuine good feeling between the Western Powers. The
-following passage in the _Encyclopædia Britannica_ does no more than
-justice to Clemenceau's services in this direction:
-
-"M. Clemenceau, who only late in life came into office and attained
-it when a better understanding with England was progressing, had been
-throughout his long career, of all public men in all political groups,
-the most consistent friend of England. His presence at the head of
-affairs was a guarantee of amicable Anglo-French relations, so far as
-they could be protected by statesmanship." This tribute in a permanent
-work of reference is thoroughly well deserved.
-
-Happily, too, his efforts had been earnestly supported long before,
-and even quietly during, the Boer War, by Edward VII, as Prince
-of Wales and as King. But this very connection between the French
-Radical statesman and the English monarch was the subject of most
-virulent attacks. It was, in fact, made the groundwork of an elaborate
-accusation of treachery against Clemenceau, who was represented as
-the mere tool of Edward VII in promoting the permanent effacement
-of France. The King was an English Machiavelli, constantly plotting
-to recover for the British Empire, at the expense of France, that
-world-wide prestige which the miserable Boer War and the rise of
-German power on land and sea, in trade and in finance, had seriously
-jeopardised. A book by the well-known M. Flourens, written at this
-time to uphold that thesis, went through no fewer than five editions.
-Here is the pleasing picture of the late King presented for the
-contemplation of the Parisian populace by this virulent penman:
-
-"Edouard VII montait sur le trône à l'age où, si l'on consulte les
-statistiques, 75% des rois sont déjà descendus dans la tombe. Il
-sortait d'une longue oisiveté pour entrer dans la vie active a l'époque
-où, dans toutes les carrières et fonctions publiques, les hommes font
-valoir leurs droits à la retraite.
-
-"S'il y avait un conseil de revision pour les rois, comme il y en a un
-pour les conscrits, il eût été déclaré impropre au service.
-
-"L'obésité déformait son corps, alourdissait sa marche, semblait,
-sous le développement des tissus adipeux, paralyser toute activité
-physique, toute force intellectuelle. Sa figure, contractée par la
-douleur, trahissait, par moment, les souffrances qu'une volonté de fer
-s'efforcait de maîtriser, pour dissimuler aux yeux de ses sujets la
-maladie qui, à cet instant même, menaçait sa vie.
-
-"A voir sa corpulence maladive, on ne pouvait s'empêcher de se rappeler
-les paroles que Shakespeare met dans la bouche d'un de ses ancêtres, à
-l'adresse du fameux Falstaff, le compagnon dissolu des égarements de sa
-jeunesse: 'Songe à travailler, a diminuer ton ventre et a grossir ton
-mérite--quitte ta vie dissolue! Regarde la tombe, elle ouvre, pour toi,
-une bouche trois fois plus large que pour les autres hommes!'
-
-"De tous côtés, les lanceurs de prédictions, depuis le fameux archange
-Gabriel jusqu'à la non moins fameuse Mme. de Thèbes, s'accordaient pour
-entourer son avènement des plus sinistres prévisions, pour annoncer
-sa fin prochaine et l'imminence d'une nouvelle vacance du trône
-d'Angleterre.
-
-"Symptôme plus grave! Les oracles de la science n'étaient pas moins
-menaçants que les prophéties des devins. Deux fois, les pompes de son
-couronnement durent être décommandées, deux fois les fêtes ajournées
-et les lampions éteints. Les hôtes princiers, convoqués a grands frais
-de tous les points du globe, pour participer à ces réjouissances,
-attendirent, dans l'angoisse, l'annonce d'une cérémonie plus lugubre.
-
-"La volonté d'Edouard VII triumpha de toutes ces résistances. Il
-déclara avec une indomptable énergie que, coûte que coûte, il était
-décidé a ne pas descendre dans la tombe avant d'avoir posé sur sa tête,
-avec tout l'éclat, avec toute la solennité traditionnels, aux yeux
-des représentants émerveillés de tout son vaste empire, aux yeux de
-l'Univers jaloux, la couronne de ses Pères, sa double couronne de Roi
-et d'Empereur, que les mains avides de la mort semblaient vouloir lui
-disputer."
-
-His account of Edward VII reads curiously to-day, the more so when we
-recall the fact that M. Emile Flourens was at one time French Minister
-of Foreign Affairs, and that, at the moment when the book first
-appeared, the King was frequently in Paris, and on good terms with
-Republicans of all sections.
-
-After pointing out how scrupulously he had as Prince of Wales
-suppressed his political opinions, during his mother's lifetime, even
-when his power, had he exerted it, might have been advantageous to his
-country, the French critic gives him full credit for having made the
-best of his life in many ways. He had travelled all over the world,
-had studied humanity and society in all shapes, had "warmed both hands
-before the fire of life" in every quarter of the globe. But, though
-his features as a private personage were familiar to everybody, he
-remained a sphinx, mysterious and unfathomable, even to his friends, in
-public affairs. He was well known to Parisians everywhere, and was as
-popular in working-class centres as in the most aristocratic _salons_.
-Paris was, in fact, the only city where he was at his ease and at home,
-where, in fact, he was himself. By far the most sympathetic Briton to
-Parisians who ever was in Paris, he exercised a real influence over
-all classes. They were kept carefully informed as to his tastes, his
-manners, his intimates, his vices and his debts, and were the more
-friendly to him on account of them. The warmest partisans of his
-accession, however, were his creditors, who were mortally afraid that
-his habits would not give him the opportunity for discharging his
-liabilities out of his mother's accumulations.
-
-The description of the position of the British Empire at the close of
-the Boer War was less flattering even than the personal sketch of its
-King and Emperor. "At this moment the astounded peoples had felt the
-Britannic colossus totter on its foundation, this colossus with feet
-of clay which weighs down too credulous nations by its bluff, by its
-arrogance, by rapine, by insatiable rapacity, which already grips the
-entire globe like a gigantic cuttle-fish and sucks its marrow through
-the numberless tentacles of its commerce, until the day when it shall
-subjugate the whole planet to its domination--always provided that it
-does not encounter on its way another still more powerful octopus of
-destruction which will attack and destroy it."
-
-Needless to say that this challenger of the British supremacy was the
-rising power of Germany. As an Englishman I admit the infamy of the
-Boer War, and recognise that our rule in India and Ireland has been
-anything but what it ought to have been. M. Clemenceau knew all that as
-well as we British anti-Imperialists do. But even in 1907-8 much had
-happened since 1900. Democracy was slowly making way in Great Britain
-likewise, and freedom for others would surely follow emancipation
-for herself. It was not to be expected that all Frenchmen should see
-or understand this. A nation which has under its flag a fourth of
-the population and more than a seventh of the habitable surface of
-the world can scarcely expect that another colonial country, whose
-colonies the British have largely appropriated, in the East and in
-the West, will admit the "manifest destiny" of the Union Jack to wave
-of undisputed right over still more territory. There was a good deal
-to be said, and a good deal was said, about British greed and British
-unscrupulousness: nor could the truth of many of the imputations be
-honestly denied.
-
-It called, therefore, for all Edward VII's extraordinary knowledge
-of Paris, his bonhomie, shrewd common sense, and uncanny power of
-"creating an atmosphere" to overcome the prejudice thus created against
-himself as a master of intrigue, and Clemenceau as his willing tool.
-Matters went so far that at one moment the King's reception in his
-favourite capital seemed likely to be hostile, and might have been so,
-but for the admirable conduct of the high-minded, conservative patriot,
-M. Déroulède. But, luckily for France, Great Britain and the world
-at large, these difficulties had been overcome; and almost the only
-good feature in the trouble with Morocco was the vigorous diplomatic
-help France received from England--a good feature because it helped to
-wipe away the bitter memories of the past from the minds of the French
-people. The extremely cordial reception of President Fallières and M.
-Clemenceau in London, and the King's own exceptional courtesy at all
-times to M. Delcassé, whom the French public regarded as the victim of
-German dictatorial demands, tended in the same direction. All the world
-could see that Clemenceau's Administration had so far strengthened the
-Anglo-French _Entente_ as to have brought it almost to the point of an
-alliance: nor thereafter was the Triple Entente with Russia, as opposed
-to the Triple Alliance, very far off.
-
-At this same time, however, matters were going so fast in Germany
-towards an open breach that the only wonder is that the truth of
-the situation was not disclosed, and that Germany, quite ready, and
-determined to be more ready, for war at any moment, was allowed to
-continue her policy of pretended peace.
-
-England and, to a large extent, France still believed in the pacific
-intentions of the Fatherland. Yet a meeting was held in Berlin of the
-heads of all the departments directly or indirectly connected with
-war, at which the Kaiser delivered a speech which could only mean one
-thing: that Germany and her Allies would enter upon war so soon as
-the opportunity presented itself, and the preparations, including the
-completion of the Kiel Canal (or perhaps before that great work had
-been accomplished), gave promise of a short and decisive campaign.
-Rumours of this address reached those who were kept informed as to
-what was being contemplated by the Kaiser, his Militarist Junker
-_entourage_ and the Federal Council. Unfortunately, when the statement
-was challenged, a strong denial was issued, and the pacifists and
-pro-Germans, honest and dishonest, laughed at the whole story as a
-baseless scare.
-
-How far it was baseless could be learnt from deeds that spoke much
-louder than words. Even thus early great accumulations of munitions of
-war were being made at Cologne, and the military sidings and railway
-equipments, which could only serve for warlike and not commercial
-purposes, were being completed. Six years before the war, all the work
-necessary for an aggressive descent on the West and for the passage
-through Belgium had been done.
-
-Europe was comfortably seated over a powder magazine. M. Clemenceau
-might well discuss in London, when he came over to Sir Henry
-Campbell-Bannerman's funeral, as Premier of France, how many hundred
-thousand men, fully equipped for war, England could land within a
-fortnight in North-Eastern France, should a sudden and unprovoked
-attack be made. But he got no satisfactory answer.
-
-It is evident, therefore, that what with strikes, anarchist outbreaks,
-the troubles in Morocco, the menacing attitude of Germany--who,
-as Clemenceau put it, said, "Choose between England and us"--and
-the attempts to form an enduring compact with England, Clemenceau
-as President of Council, with all his energy, determination and
-versatility, had enough on his hands to occupy all his thoughts. But
-this did not exhaust the catalogue of his labours during his term of
-premiership.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- END OF CLEMENCEAU'S MINISTRY
-
-
-It is easy to be tolerant of the Catholic Church and Catholics in
-a Protestant country; though even in Great Britain, and of course
-only too sadly in the North of Ireland, there are times when the
-bitterness inherited from the past makes itself felt, on slight
-provocation, in the present. At such times of sectarian outburst we
-get some idea ourselves of what religious hatred really means, and
-can form a conception of the truly fraternal eagerness to immolate
-the erring brethren, nominally of the same Christian creed, which
-animated the true believers of different shades of faith, whether
-Orthodox or Arian, Catholic or Huguenot, in days gone by. Those who
-chance to remember what Catholicism was in Italy, the Papal States,
-or Naples, two generations ago--the Church then claiming for itself
-rights of jurisdiction and sanctuary, outside the common law--those
-who understand what has gone on in Spain quite recently, can also
-appreciate the feeling of Frenchmen who, within the memory of their
-fellow-citizens still living, and even themselves in some degree under
-the Empire, had suffered from Clerical interference and repression,
-when the chance of getting rid of State ecclesiasticism was presented
-to them at the beginning of the twentieth century. The Church had
-entirely lost touch with the temper of the time. Though it may have
-been impossible for the Vatican to accept the brilliant suggestion that
-the great men of science should all be canonised and the discoverers
-of our day should receive the red hat, as secular Cardinals, there was
-no apparent reason why a form of supernaturalism which had lived
-into and out of two forms of human slavery, and was passing through a
-third, should have been unable to adapt itself in some degree to modern
-thought. A creed which, in its most successful period, had conveniently
-absorbed ancestor-worship as part of its theological propaganda in
-China, need not, one would have thought, have found it indispensably
-necessary to the salvation of its votaries to cleave to all the old
-heresies, inculcated in days when criticism of the incomprehensible and
-unbelievable involved the unpleasant possibility of being tortured to
-death, or burnt alive.
-
-Nor certainly could its worst enemy have predicted that the
-infallibility of the Pope would be invented and thrust upon the
-faithful, as a doctrine whose acceptance was essential to their
-spiritual welfare, in a period when it was being proved every day
-and in all departments of human knowledge that what was universally
-believed to be a certainty yesterday is discounted as a fallacy
-to-morrow. Nothing in all the long controversy about the Separation
-of Church and State in France produced a greater or more permanent
-effect upon intelligent Frenchmen than this preposterous claim of
-Papal infallibility. Explain it away, whittle down its significance by
-any amount of Jesuitical sophistry, and still this declaration that
-a mere man could never be mistaken, because he was the Vicegerent
-of God, shook the whole framework of Catholic domination, so far as
-any participation of the State in the matter was concerned. And the
-career and character of many of the Pope's predecessors rendered the
-dogma more utterly preposterous to all who had even a smattering of
-the history of the Vatican than might otherwise have been the case.
-That John XXIII should have been infallible threw a strange light upon
-Catholic morality in its highest grades. Yet if Pius infallible, why
-not John?
-
-What, however, had more practical effect in turning the scale of public
-opinion against the Papacy, its nominees and believers as servants and
-paid employees of the State, was the fact that in all the practical
-affairs of French life the Catholic Church, as represented by its
-ecclesiastical hierarchy, had taken the wrong side. Theoretical or
-theological difficulties would never have upset the regard of the
-French people for the National Church. But, time after time, the
-Clerical party ranged itself with the reactionists, throwing over all
-its wisest counsellors, whose devotion to the Church had never been
-questioned, when they advised standing by the cause of the people, and
-relied solely upon the judgment of bigoted Jesuits. Zola, whom these
-creatures hated, showed in his "Germinal," thoroughgoing materialist
-as he was, what a noble part a priest of the Church could play, when
-the young ecclesiastic stands between the strikers who form part of his
-flock and the soldiers who are about to fire upon them. Individuals
-might thus rise up to and above the level of their creed, but the
-Church in France, as a whole, was represented by men of God who were
-a good deal worse than men of Belial. Nor was this all. They pursued
-a policy of relentless obscurantism. Their object was not to develop
-education but to stunt its growth: not to teach the truth but to foster
-lies. So manifest was the determination to take no high view of their
-duties that such a man as the venerable Dr. Leplay, a Catholic of
-Catholics whose religious convictions did not prevent him from becoming
-a master of the theories of Marx, lamented that his Church was proving
-itself wholly incompetent to cope with or to stem what, as a Christian,
-he recognised was the rising tide of infidelity.
-
-Of this infidelity, the free-thinker and champion of secularism,
-Clemenceau, was a type and a prominent example. He saw the Church
-as a pernicious influence. His feeling towards it was even more
-vehement than that of Voltaire or Gambetta. "_Écrasez l'infâme!_" "_Le
-cléricalisme voilà l'ennemi!_" If thought was to be free, if Frenchmen
-were to be emancipated from superstition and intolerance, the power of
-the Catholic Church must be weakened and, if possible, destroyed. For
-him, in this matter, compromise was impossible. His begettings, his
-surroundings, his education, his profession, his political life all
-made him relentless on this point. Behind the Duc de Broglie, behind
-the persecutor of Dreyfus, behind the pretender Boulanger, behind
-reaction in all its forms hid the sinister figure of the unscrupulous
-power, working _perinde ac cadaver_ against all that was noblest in
-France, against all that was highest in the ideals of the Republic. And
-if Clemenceau knew well that under all circumstances and at every turn
-of events the Catholic Church was the enemy of France and of himself,
-the Church had no doubt at all that Clemenceau was its most formidable
-foe in French political life.
-
-Long before and after his defeat in the Var, in 1893, the Catholics
-never hesitated to join with their enemies, if only this combination
-would help them to overthrow Clemenceau. Whatever differences the
-French Premier might have with the Socialists on strikes and social
-affairs generally, on the matter of the separation of Church and
-State they were heartily at one. In fact, Clemenceau was even more
-uncompromising than they. The whole texture of his thought revolted
-against showing any consideration for a Church which, from his point
-of view, had been for centuries the chief and most formidable enemy of
-progress in France and the most capable organiser of attacks upon all
-democratic and Republican ideals.
-
-The greatest names in French history are the names of those whom the
-Catholic Church has persecuted or martyred. Its leaders would resort to
-the same tactics now, and have only failed to do so because the power
-has slipped from their hands as the truths of science and the wider
-conceptions of human destiny have permeated the minds of the masses.
-There was no likelihood that, as Prime Minister, Clemenceau, the
-free-thinker and materialist, would be inclined to modify his opinions
-in favour of what might be regarded as statesmanlike concessions
-to the Right on ecclesiastical matters. The danger lay in the other
-direction. It was one of the remarkable incidents, in connection with
-his first tenure of the Presidency of the Council, that the final
-settlement of this important question of the relations of Church
-and State should come when he himself was at the head of the French
-Government.
-
-When M. Briand's measure for the complete laicisation of the Church so
-far as the State was concerned was introduced into the Chamber, he
-pointed out in his report that the proposal for complete separation
-was not dictated by hatred or political prejudice, nor did it involve
-anything at all approaching to the change in the relations of property
-when, at the time of the French Revolution, the Church owned one-third
-of the total wealth of France. This Act was the assertion of definite
-principles which were necessary in order to secure for the State full
-mastery in its own country. Freedom of worship for all. No State
-payment to ministers of any creed. Equitable management of Church
-property taken over by the towns and Communes.
-
-The Bill, after considerable debate in the National Assembly, was
-passed by a large majority. In the Senate M. Clemenceau denounced
-the settlement as too favourable to the clergy. His criticism was
-as mordant as usual. But he neither proposed an amendment nor voted
-against the Bill, which passed the Senate without even the alteration
-of a word, by a greater proportional majority than it did in the Lower
-House.
-
-This, it might have been thought, would have been the end of the
-matter for Clemenceau. He had done his full share towards putting
-the Catholic Church out of action, and might have been contented, as
-Premier, with any further settlement that M. Briand, the member of his
-own Cabinet responsible for this important measure, and M. Jaurès, the
-powerful leader of the Socialist Party, might come to in regard to
-the properties of the Church, about which there had been much bitter
-feeling. But Clemenceau has the defects of his qualities. The Pope
-had refused to permit his clergy to avail themselves of the excellent
-terms French Republicans, Radicals and Socialists had been ready to
-accord to them. He had issued two Encyclicals which could certainly be
-read as intended to stir up trouble in the Republic--which, in fact,
-had brought about some disorder. When, therefore, everything seemed
-arranged on this prickly question of valuations and appropriations,
-Clemenceau could not resist the temptation to show the unsatisfactory
-nature of the entire business to him. It was one of those moments of
-impulse when "the Tiger" could not refrain from giving free play to
-his propensities, at the expense of his own kith and kin, failing the
-presence of his enemies to maul. It was thought that the Ministry must
-come down; for both M. Briand and M. Jaurès took this outburst amiss.
-But a conversation in the lobby brought the great irreconcilable very
-sensibly to a compromise, and Clemenceau failed to give the Catholics
-the malicious enjoyment they anticipated. It was a strange ebullition
-which exhibited the perennial youth of this statesman of the unexpected.
-
-In other directions than social affairs and Morocco, where he
-unfortunately relied upon the Right more than upon the Left in the
-Assembly for the support of his Administration, Clemenceau proved that
-his claim to act as the advocate of reform as well as the upholder of
-order was no pretence.
-
-Whatever may have been its alleged deficiencies in some respects,
-Clemenceau's first Ministry was by far the most Radical Government
-that had held office under the Republic. And the boldness and decision
-which he and his Cabinet displayed in dealing with what they regarded
-as Anarchist action--it is fair, perhaps, to recall that Briand himself
-had first achieved fame as an Anarchist--on the part of the workers,
-they also put in force, when high-placed officers, with a powerful
-political backing, tried to impose their will upon the State. Thus the
-navy, as has too often happened in French annals, had been allowed to
-drift into a condition which was actually dangerous, in view of what
-was going on in the German dockyards, and the probable combination
-of the Austrian and Italian fleets, with German help, in the
-Mediterranean. At the same time, admirals were in the habit of acting
-pretty much as they saw fit in regard to the fleets and vessels under
-their control. Consequently, important men-of-war had been wrecked
-time after time, and more than one serious accident had occurred. In
-almost every case also, so powerful was the _esprit de corps_, in the
-wrong sense, that the officers in command at the time were exonerated
-from blame. There was, therefore, a strong public opinion in favour of
-something being done to improve both the fleet itself and the spirit
-which animated its commanders. Admiral Germinat, a popular officer
-with, as appears, a genuine loyalty to his profession and a desire to
-remedy its defects, thought proper to write a very strong letter to
-a local service newspaper, making a fierce attack upon the general
-management of the navy, without having given any notice of his views
-either to the Minister of Marine or the Prime Minister.
-
-Thereupon, M. Clemenceau at once put him on the retired list.
-Immediately a great hubbub arose. The very same people who had approved
-of Clemenceau's policy, in regard to those whom they called anarchist
-workmen, were now in full cry after the President of Council, for
-daring to deal thus drastically with a man who, however his good
-intentions may have been and however distinguished his career, was
-beyond all question an anarchist admiral. The matter became a question
-of the day. It was brought up in the Senate amid all sorts of threats
-to the stability of the Government. M. Clemenceau, as usual, took up
-the challenge boldly himself. His speech was so crushing that the whole
-indictment against the Ministry collapsed. The evidence of indiscipline
-on the Admiral's part, not only on this occasion but on several others,
-and the declaration that Admiral Germinat would not be excluded from
-the navy, when he had purged his offence and when his services would be
-advantageous to the country, settled the matter and strengthened the
-Ministry.
-
-By acquiring the Chemin de Fer de l'Ouest and combining it with other
-Government railways, the Ministry made the first important step towards
-nationalisation of railways. Clemenceau defended this measure on
-grounds that would be, and were, accepted by Socialists; but events
-have shown in this particular case that a good deal more is needed than
-the establishment of another department of State bureaucracy to render
-the railways a national property really beneficial to the community.
-As carried out in practice, the acquisition of the Chemin de Fer de
-l'Ouest has rather set back than advanced the general policy of railway
-nationalisation in France.
-
-A more important measure was that introduced by M. Caillaux and,
-amazing to say, passed through the Assembly, for a graduated
-income-tax. How this majority was obtained has always been one of
-the puzzles of that period. There is no country in the world where a
-tax upon incomes is more unpopular than in France, and from that day
-to this, in spite of the desperate need for funds which has arisen,
-this tax has never yet become law. But it was a genuine financial
-reform and creditable to the Government. The Socialists supported it,
-though in itself it is only a palliative measure of justice in purely
-bourgeois finance. From this period dates the close alliance between
-the Socialists as revolutionaries and M. Caillaux as the adventurous
-financier and director of the Société Générale, which later produced
-such strange results in French politics, and intensified Socialist
-hatred for M. Clemenceau. But at this time M. Caillaux, with the full
-concurrence and support of the Prime Minister, was attacking all the
-bourgeois interests in their tenderest place. The wonder is that such
-a policy did not involve the immediate fall of the Ministry. Quite
-possibly, had Clemenceau remained in office, it might have become a
-permanent feature in French finance. Boldness and boldness and boldness
-again is sometimes as successful in politics as it is in oratory.
-Although, therefore, to attack pecuniary "interests" of a large section
-of the nation is a far more hazardous enterprise than to denounce
-eminent persons or to overthrow Ministries, this move might then have
-been successful if well followed up.
-
-On March 8th, in this year 1909, Clemenceau unveiled a statue to
-the Radical Minister Floquet, with whom he had worked for many
-years. The revolutionary Socialists announced their intention of
-demonstrating against him on this occasion. They objected to him and
-his administration on account of the expedition to Morocco--in which
-Clemenceau had certainly run counter to all his previous policy on
-colonial affairs--on account of cosmopolitan finance, Russian loans
-and the shooting down of workmen on strike. It was the last that
-occasioned the bitterest feeling against him, and this was really not
-surprising.
-
-Clemenceau had made the workers' liberty to strike in combination
-secure, but he did not use the power of the State against the
-employers, who, in the mines especially, could on his own showing be
-considered only as profiteering trustees under the State. Also, he
-refused to all Government servants the right to combine or to strike.
-This disinclination to take the capitalists by the throat, while using
-the official power to restrain the workers, had a great deal more to do
-with the menacing attitude of the Socialists than Morocco or finance.
-However, there was no disturbance. Clemenceau took advantage of the
-occasion to deliver a speech which was in effect a powerful defence
-of the idealist Republicanism of the eighteenth century against the
-revolutionary Socialism of the twentieth.
-
-The French Revolution is deified by nearly all advanced Frenchmen.
-Its glorification is as much the theme of Jaurès and Vaillant as of
-Gambetta and Clemenceau. Bourgeois revolution as it turned out to be,
-owing to economic causes which neither individualists nor collectivists
-could control, orators of the Revolution overlook facts and cleave to
-ideals. Thus Clemenceau told his audience that the French Revolution
-was a prodigious tragedy, which seemed to have been the work of
-demi-gods, of huge Titans who had risen up from far below to wreak
-Promethean vengeance on the Olympians of every grade. The French
-Revolution was the inevitable culmination of the deadly struggle
-between the growing forces of liberty and the worn-out forces of
-autocracy without an autocrat. Yet, said he, the Revolution itself was
-made by men and women inspired with the noblest ideals, but educated,
-in their own despite, by the Church to methods of domination, condemned
-also by the desperate resistance of immeasurable powers to prompt and
-pitiless action followed by corresponding deeds of brutal reaction.
-The people who had just shed torrents of blood for the freedom of the
-world passed, without audible protest, from Robespierre to Napoleon.
-Yet the Revolution is all of a piece. The Republic moves steadily on
-as one indissoluble, vivifying force. Compare the France of the panic
-of 1875 with the France of to-day. Her position is the result of
-understandings and alliances and friendships based on the authority
-of her armed force. France has resumed her position in Europe, in
-spite of a few weak and mean-spirited Frenchmen, whose opposition only
-strengthened the patriotic enthusiasm of the nation at large. The
-history of the Republican Party had been one long consecration of the
-watchwords of the French Revolution. Liberty of the Press. Liberty
-of public meeting. Liberty of association. Liberty of trade unions.
-Liberty of minds by public schools. Liberty of thought and religion.
-Liberty of secular instruction. Liberty of State and worship. Laws had
-been passed for relief of the sick. A day of rest had been prescribed
-for all. Workmen's compensation for injury had been made imperative.
-The Income Tax had been passed by the Assembly. "The Revolution is in
-effect one and indivisible, and, with unbroken persistence, the work of
-the Republic goes on." A fine record! So argued Clemenceau.
-
-Notwithstanding all the mistakes which Socialists so bitterly resented,
-this was a great victory for the Republicans and for the Administration
-of which Clemenceau was the head. Not the least important claim to
-national recognition of good service done was the establishment of
-the Ministry of Labour, over which Viviani, the well-known Socialist,
-presided. The pressure of events, as well as the pressure of the
-Socialists themselves, might well have pushed the Radical-Socialist
-Premier farther along the Socialist path.
-
-Unfortunately for the Prime Minister, and, from more than one point
-of view, for the nation, M. Clemenceau had another of those strange
-fits of impatience and irascibility which he had exhibited more than
-once before. The political antagonism between M. Clemenceau and
-M. Delcassé was of long standing, and was intensified by personal
-bitterness. During his tenure of the office of Minister for Foreign
-Affairs, a position which he had held for seven years, in successive
-Administrations of widely different character, M. Delcassé had been
-subjected to vehement attacks by the leader of the Radical Left. His
-policy in relation to Morocco had been specially obnoxious to M.
-Clemenceau. That policy M. Clemenceau had most severely criticised
-at the time when M. Delcassé was stoutly resisting that extension
-of German influence in Morocco which led to the Foreign Minister's
-downfall and the Conference of Algeciras, that M. Delcassé had refused
-to accept. The relations between the two statesmen could scarcely have
-been worse; but hitherto the Radical leader had carried all before him.
-
-Now came a dramatic climax to the long struggle. A debate arose in
-the French Assembly on the condition of the navy. It was admittedly
-not what it ought to have been. M. Picard, the Minister of Marine,
-made a conciliatory reply to interpellations on the subject of
-promised immediate reforms and even complete reconstitution. But this
-was not enough for M. Delcassé. The Assembly was not hostile to M.
-Clemenceau, and certainly had no desire to oust his Administration;
-yet M. Delcassé's direct attack upon the Premier brought the whole
-debate down to the level of a personal question. Nevertheless, what he
-said was quite legitimate criticism. M. Clemenceau had been a member
-of the Commission of Inquiry on the Navy, and could not get rid of
-his responsibility for the present state of things. The great critic
-of everybody and everything was open to exposure himself. He who had
-enjoyed twenty-five years of running amuck at the whole political
-world was now being called to account in person as an administrator.
-So far M. Delcassé. Clemenceau retorted that M. Delcassé had himself
-been on the Naval Commission of 1904. He was full of great policies
-here, there and everywhere. What had they resulted in? The humiliation
-of France and the Conference of Algeciras. Clemenceau was evidently
-much incensed. The fact that he had been obliged, as he thought, by
-Germany's action, to follow M. Delcassé's Moroccan tactics rendered
-the position exceptionally awkward. It raised the whole question of
-M. Delcassé's foreign policy. This gave him a great advantage when
-it came to direct political warfare. For M. Delcassé was considered,
-even by those who opposed him, as the victim of German hatred, since
-he had refused to surrender to German threats and was sacrificed
-simply because France dared not face a war. So when he recounted his
-agreement with Spain, his agreement with Italy, his agreement--"too
-long delayed"--with England, his mediation in the Spanish-American War
-and his Treaties of Arbitration, the Assembly went with him. Then, too,
-his assaults upon Clemenceau raised the fighting spirit on Delcassé's
-side. The feeling was: "This time Clemenceau is getting as good as he
-brings." The Prime Minister has not done his duty either as President
-of the Inquiry or as President of Council. "I say to him as he said to
-Jules Ferry: 'Get out. We won't discuss with you the great interests of
-this nation.'"
-
-Very good sword-play. But had Clemenceau kept cool, as he certainly
-would have done on the duel ground, there might have been no harm
-done. However, he burst out into furious denunciation, exasperated by
-the ringing cheers which greeted his opponent's conclusion. It was M.
-Delcassé's fault that France had to go to Algeciras. M. Delcassé would
-have carried things with a high hand. "But the army was not ready,
-the navy was not ready. I have not humiliated France: M. Delcassé
-has humiliated her." A purely personal note, disclosing facts that
-were the more bitter to the Assembly inasmuch that they were true. It
-was indecent--that was the sensation that ran round the House--for
-a Premier thus to expose the weakness of his country on a personal
-issue, no matter what provocation he may have received. The hostile
-vote, therefore, was given against Clemenceau himself, not against his
-Government, and he promptly resigned.
-
-Had he desired to bring about his own overthrow he would have acted
-precisely as he did; and some thought that this was his intention.
-It was an unworthy conclusion to a Premiership which, whatever its
-shortcomings, had done extremely good work for the Republic, and to
-a Government which had lasted longer than any French Administration
-since the downfall of the Empire. The character and leadership of the
-Ministry under M. Briand, which succeeded Clemenceau's Cabinet, proved
-that only by his own fault had he ensured his official downfall.
-
-As usual, he turned round at once to other work, and accepted an
-engagement to speak throughout South America, publishing a pleasant
-record of his experiences in an agreeably written book. The Prime
-Minister of yesterday was the genial lecturer the day after.
-
- NOTE.--It was said at the time that M. Briand's intrigues in the
- lobbies were the real cause of Clemenceau's defeat and resignation.
- Lately this has been confirmed to me on good authority. At any rate,
- M. Briand benefited. It was he who succeeded his chief.
-
- H. M. H.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- CLEMENCEAU AND GERMANY
-
-
-Clemenceau flung himself out of office in an unreasonable fit of
-temper. A man of his time of life, at sixty-eight years of age, with
-his record behind him, had no right to have any personal temper
-at all, when the destinies of his country had been placed in his
-hands. Probably he would admit this himself to-day. But, during his
-exceptionally strenuous period of office, he had, as we have seen, more
-than once shown an impulsiveness and even an irritability that were not
-consonant with his general disposition. Throughout, there appeared to
-be an inclination on his part to take opposition and criticism too much
-to heart. As if, in fact, the great Radical overthrower of opportunism
-was annoyed at being compelled, as all administrations must be, to
-adopt to some extent a policy of opportunism himself. His outburst
-against all compromise with the Church was one instance of this.
-His uncalled-for resignation on account of M. Delcassé's attack was
-another. This might well have been the end of his official experiences.
-Certainly no one would have ventured to predict that eight years later
-would come the crowning achievement of his remarkable career. His own
-remark on leaving office was not calculated to encourage his personal
-adherents or to give his country confidence in his leadership. "I came
-in with an umbrella, I go out with a stick," was all very well as the
-epigram of a journalist: it was too flippant a remark for a serious
-statesman such as Clemenceau had shown himself to be. But the time was
-not far off when all his main policy, as man of affairs, politician,
-and as publicist would be overwhelmingly justified. As we have seen,
-Clemenceau was all his life strongly opposed to colonial expansion.
-His action with regard to Morocco, apparently so contrary to this,
-arose from an even stronger motive, his desire to build up French
-defence against Germany on every side.
-
-But his general distrust of colonisation by conquest in Egypt, China,
-Madagascar, and elsewhere had been based upon France's need for using
-all her strength and all her resources to build up the power of the
-French Republic within the limits of France. This is true of all
-nations at a period when the power of man over nature is increasing
-so rapidly in every department: perhaps, properly understood, in
-agriculture most of all, when science is capably applied to production
-on the land. That is to say, that even in countries such as England,
-where the cry of over-population is so frequently raised, and where the
-cult of colonisation and emigration has been exalted to the position of
-a fetish, it would be far better to devote attention to the creation
-of wealth at home than to the development of waste lands, however
-fertile, abroad. Concentration of population, given adequate regulation
-of employment in the interests of the whole people, and attention to
-the requirements of space, air and health, is not only devoid of danger
-but is an element in national prosperity--"nothing being more plain
-than that men in proper labour and employment are capable of earning
-more than a living," as John Bellers wrote more than two hundred years
-ago; and "a nation wherein are eight millions of people is more than
-twice as rich as the same scope of land wherein are but four," as Petty
-wisely stated, about the same date.
-
-If this was so obviously true at the end of the seventeenth century, it
-is tenfold, not to say a hundredfold, more certain in the twentieth,
-having regard to the marvellous discoveries and inventions since made
-and still but partially applied in every direction. But France is the
-land where such considerations are most decisive in dealing with the
-basis of national polity. France has enormous advantages in regard
-to soil, climate, the industrious habits and skill of her people,
-and the consequent monopoly on the world market of whole branches
-of commerce, where taste and luxury have to be gratified. Moreover,
-she possesses a source of income unparalleled in Europe and scarcely
-worth noting elsewhere, except in the case of Italy. I calculate that
-France receives, one year with another, from visitors who come thither,
-merely to see and to spend, an amount, by way of profit, of not less
-than seventy millions sterling. This large sum alone, if used for
-enhancing the productiveness of the French soil and French industry
-generally, would immensely benefit the people in every respect. French
-thrift, again, had piled up out of the products of industry immense
-pecuniary accumulations. There could have been no better investment of
-these funds possible than the improvement of the defences of France
-against invasion, the completion of her railway and canal system,
-the development of her mines, so greatly coveted by her aggressive
-neighbour, the concentration of her military and naval forces at home,
-instead of scattering any portion of them abroad, the expenditure
-upon thorough education and scientific agricultural and industrial
-experiments. All this even Imperialist Frenchmen can see now.
-
-So with regard to Russia. The alliance of the French Republic with the
-Empire of Russia gave France, apparently, a better position in Europe,
-the pusillanimous and short-sighted English statesmen having rejected
-an alliance which was afterwards forced upon Great Britain when wholly
-unprepared for war. Here also Clemenceau's views were justified by
-the event. The close connection between a democratic Republic and an
-autocratic Empire put France in an unenviable moral position before
-the world. More materially serious than this ill-fated combination,
-ethically, was the necessity imposed upon the French of lending
-continually to Russia, until the total amount of the Russian loans held
-in France amounted to many hundreds of millions sterling.
-
-Such huge sums, again, would have been far more advantageously spent
-at home than in building strategical and other railways, and financing
-gold and other mines, in the vast Muscovite Empire. Financiers gained
-largely by these loans. But the peasants and small bourgeoisie
-of France were unknowingly dependent for their interest upon a
-poverty-stricken agricultural population, which could not possibly
-continue to pay the large sum due yearly on this amount to their
-Western creditors without utter ruin. Thus unsound finance followed
-hard on the heels of more than doubtful policy, and France was the
-weaker and the poorer for both.
-
-This was all the more fatal to real French interests, inasmuch that,
-at the same time, the home population of the Republic was slowly
-decreasing, while the population of her threatening rival, Germany,
-was steadily growing, and the wealth of the German Empire, both
-agricultural and mineral, was likewise rapidly expanding with every
-decade. Consequently, the position of France was becoming more and
-more precarious, and the relative strength on the two sides of the
-frontier less and less favourable to the Republic. It must be admitted,
-under such circumstances, that those who favoured a Russian alliance,
-in spite of all its manifest drawbacks, had a great deal to say for
-themselves. But that Great Britain should have failed to see that
-the declension of French power was a peril to herself, long before
-the _Entente_ was brought about by Edward VII, and that a pacific
-understanding alone was not sufficient to ensure the maintenance of
-peace, is a truly marvellous instance of the blindness of British
-statesmanship! Only the phenomenal good luck that has so far attended
-the United Kingdom hindered our governing classes from landing this
-country, as well as the French, in overwhelming disaster. How narrow
-the escape was is not yet fully understood.
-
-Clemenceau was at all times in favour of an Anglo-French offensive and
-defensive alliance, and he clung to this policy in the face of the most
-serious discouragement from abroad and, as has been seen, at the cost
-of vitriolic misrepresentation and hatred at home. It was in vain,
-however, that for many years he preached this political doctrine. Even
-when the relations between the two countries were greatly improved, the
-very proper Liberal and Radical and Labour dislike in England of the
-entanglement with Czarist Russia rendered the close combination which
-seemed so essential to all who, like Clemenceau himself, knew what was
-really going on in Germany, exceedingly difficult to bring about.
-
-The terrific war has thrown into high relief facts always discernible
-except by those who would not see. Here Clemenceau's own bitter
-experience of the war of 1870-71, and his yearly visits to Austria,
-enabled him to form a clearer conception of the real policy of Germany
-and the ruthless brutality which underlies modern Teutonic culture
-than any of his contemporaries. It is no longer doubted that the
-Franco-German war was welcomed by Prince Bismarck, and made inevitable
-by him, in order to crush France and ensure German military supremacy
-in Europe. Bismarck himself made no secret of the manner in which he
-had deceived Benedetti at Ems by a forged telegram; and the refusal of
-the Germans to make a reasonable peace with France immediately after
-Sedan was conclusive evidence of what was really intended. During the
-campaign, also, the Germans resorted to the same hideous methods of
-warfare on land, on a smaller scale, which have horrified the entire
-civilised world, on land and on sea, during the great war which
-commenced forty-four years later.
-
-All this Clemenceau himself saw. While, therefore, in his speeches
-and writings, he never shut out the possibility that the people of
-Germany, rising superior to their militarist rulers, might come to
-terms for permanent peace with the people of France, he at the same
-time cherished no illusions whatever as to the policy of those military
-rulers, and the small probability that German Social-Democracy would be
-able to thwart the designs of the German aggressionists. Unfortunately,
-in France, as in Great Britain, a considerable section of all classes,
-but especially of the working class, represented by Labour Unions and
-Socialists, would not believe that at the end of the nineteenth and
-beginning of the twentieth century any great civilised power could
-be harbouring such designs as those attributed to Germany. Vaillant,
-for example, who, like Clemenceau, had seen the horrors inflicted upon
-France in the war of 1870, was vehement on that side. So enamoured was
-he of peace that he never lost a chance of assuring Germany that under
-no circumstances would the French Republic go to war. He advocated a
-general strike, in all countries affected, should a rupture of peace be
-threatened; entirely regardless of the fact that the Social-Democrats
-themselves had declared that such a strike was absolutely impossible in
-Germany itself.
-
-The same with Jaurès. Not only did this great Socialist believe that
-peace might be maintained by concessions to Germany; but, although
-in favour of "the Armed Nation" for France herself, for the purpose
-of defending her against a German invasion, he actually came over to
-London and addressed a great meeting, called by anarchist-pacifists who
-were all strongly in favour of the reduction of the British fleet. That
-fleet which, as Bebel himself put it, was the only counterbalance in
-Europe for Germany herself against Prussian militarism and Junkerdom,
-Jaurès spoke of with regret as a provocation to war! Germany could, in
-fact, always rely in all countries upon a large number of perfectly
-honest pro-Germans, and a lesser proportion who had purely financial
-considerations in view, to oppose any policy which was directed
-against the spread of German domination. This was the mania of
-anarchist-pacifism and anti-patriotism which Clemenceau, both in and
-out of office, did his utmost to expose and resist. Honesty of purpose
-could be no excuse whatever for fatuity of action.
-
-Clemenceau, therefore, from the moment when he gave up the Premiership,
-lost no chance of inculcating the need for vigorous preparation. France
-must be ready to meet a German assault by land and by sea. When the
-time came she was not ready on either element, and without the help in
-finance, in munitions, in clothing, and by arms, on land and on the
-ocean, at once given by England--whom Clemenceau always upheld as the
-friend of the Republic--France would have been overrun and crushed,
-before she could possibly have obtained aid from elsewhere. In spite of
-the Franco-German agreement of 1909, the danger of such an attack in
-1911 was very great: so much so that war was then commonly expected,
-and was only averted because Germany thought she would be in a more
-commanding position to carry out her predetermined policy three or
-four years later. The Franco-German Convention relating to Morocco, of
-November 4th, 1911, after the Agadir difficulty, was no better than a
-pretence. It was not intended, in good faith, to ensure a permanent
-peace, so far as Germany was concerned. This Clemenceau felt sure of,
-though the treaty was by no means unfavourable to France. He was ready
-to make all sacrifices, however mortifying, provided only a genuine
-treaty of peace and understanding between the two peoples could be
-secured. But this must not be done blindly. It must be an integral part
-of a serious national policy.
-
-Therefore, speaking in the Senate on the 12th February, 1912, in
-opposition to the treaty with Germany about Morocco, he went on: "We
-shall make every effort to give fresh proofs of our goodwill--we have
-given enough and to spare already during the past forty years--in order
-that the consequences of this treaty may fructify under conditions
-worthy of the dignity of the two peoples; but we must know what the
-other party to the treaty is about, what are his intentions, what he
-thinks, says, proposes to do, and what signs of goodwill _he_ likewise
-has vouchsafed. That is the question we must have the courage to ask
-ourselves. This question I deal with at my own risk and peril, without
-being concerned as to what I have to say, because I have at heart no
-bad feeling, no hatred, to use the right word, towards the German
-people. I want no provocation; firmly resolved as I am to do nothing
-to sacrifice a vestige, however trifling, of our capacity to win if
-attacked, I am equally convinced that peace is not only desirable
-but necessary for the development of French ideas in the domain of
-civilisation. . . . The German people won two great victories which
-changed the equilibrium of Europe, in 1866 and in 1870. . . . _We
-then knew, we had the actual proof in our hands, that, if the enemy
-had occupied Paris, the capital of France would have been reduced
-to ashes._ Prince Bismarck, in reply to the expostulations of Jules
-Favre, declared that the German troops must enter at one of the gates,
-'because I do not wish, when I get home, that a man who has lost a
-leg or an arm should be able to say to his comrades, pointing to me:
-That fellow you see there is the man who prevented me from entering
-Paris.' When Jules Favre said that the German Army had glory enough
-without that, M. Bismarck retorted, 'Glory! we don't use that word.'
-The German, so far as I can judge of him, is above all the worshipper
-of force, and rarely misses an opportunity of saying so; but where he
-differs from the Latin is that his first thought is to make use of this
-force. As the vast economic development of the Empire is a perpetual
-temptation in this respect, he wants the French to understand that
-behind every German trader there stands an army of five millions of
-men. That is at the bottom of the whole thing." Moreover, he continued,
-having pocketed a fine indemnity last time, Germany is greedy for a
-much bigger one now. "Even quite lately the German Press has never
-wearied of proclaiming that France shall pay out of her milliards
-the cost of building the new German fleet. That is the frame of mind
-of Germany, that is the truth which clearly appears in your treaty:
-Germany thinks first and foremost of using to advantage her glory and
-her force.
-
-"But this is not all. She has conquered her unity by force, by iron,
-by blood; she has so fervently yearned for this unity--nothing more
-natural--that now she wants to apply it; she wishes to spread her
-surplus population over the world. She finds herself compelled,
-therefore, by a fatality from which she cannot escape, to exercise
-pressure upon her neighbours which will compel them to give her the
-economic outlets she needs. . . . There is always land for an owner who
-wishes to round off his estate. There are always nations to be attacked
-by a warrior-nation which would conquer other peoples. I am not here
-for the purpose of criticising the German people, I am trying to
-describe their state of mind towards us. . . .
-
-"And now what of us, the French people? The people of France are
-a people of idealism, of criticism, of indiscipline, of wars, of
-revolutions. Our character is ill adapted for continuous action;
-doubtless the French people have magnificent impulses, but, as the poet
-says, their height has ever been measured by the depth of their fall."
-
-After a survey of "the terrible year" and its results, the orator
-recounts what difficult work it was that Frenchmen had to carry out
-after the collapse. It was not only that they had to change their
-Government, but this Government must be taught how to govern itself.
-
-"That has created a hard situation for us. We are absorbed in this
-great task. We hope to bring it to a successful conclusion. The
-intervention of public opinion to-day in its own affairs, calmly,
-soberly, without a word of braggadocio, that is one of the best signs
-that France has yet given.
-
-"The work we have done must be judged not by what we see but by the
-ideas, the spirit that we have breathed into the heart of all French
-citizens."
-
-After giving conclusive proof that in 1875, in the Schnäbele affair, as
-well as at Tangier, Morocco and Casablanca, Germany's policy had been
-to wound, weaken and irritate France, Clemenceau wound up as follows:
-
-"In all good faith we desire peace, we are eager for peace because we
-need it in order to build up our country. But if war is forced upon
-us we shall be there! The difficulty between Germany and ourselves
-is this: Germany believes the logical consequence of her victory is
-domination. We do not believe that the logical consequence of our
-defeat is vassalage. We are peaceful but we are not subjugated. We do
-not countersign the decree of abdication and downfall issued by our
-neighbours. We come of a great history and we mean to continue to be
-worthy of it. The dead have created the living: the living will remain
-faithful to the dead."
-
-This great speech was prophetic. Clemenceau knew what were the real
-intentions of Germany. It was this fact that made him so bitter
-against all who, honest, patriotic and self-sacrificing as they might
-be, were in favour of weakening France in the hour of her greatest
-danger. His warning against the financiers who were so solicitous that
-foreign policy should be guided by manipulators of loans, interest
-and discounts was also specially appropriate at a time when German
-influence was becoming dominant in many of the banks and pecuniary
-coteries of Paris. Such warnings were also timely in view of the
-strange hallucinations--or worse--which then dominated English
-politicians.
-
-For it was in this same year that Lord Haldane, having reduced the
-English artillery, full of sublime confidence in the rulers of Germany,
-returned from Berlin to tell us through Mr. Asquith and Viscount Grey
-that never were the relations between Germany and England better!
-It was in this same year, too, that Mr. Lloyd George and the whole
-Radical Party were convinced that Great Britain might safely reduce her
-armaments on land and on sea, and the Unionists themselves scarcely
-dared to take up the challenge. It was in this same year, again, that
-nearly all the leaders of the Labour Party convinced themselves that
-the Germans had the best of good feeling towards France and England.
-Having been most artistically and hospitably "put through" in the
-Fatherland, they returned to England brimful of zeal against all who,
-knowing Germany and Germans well for some fifty years, could not take
-the asseverations of the Kaiser, or of his trusted friend Lord Haldane,
-at their face value: a value which this legal nobleman admitted a few
-years later he knew at the time to be illusory, and not in accordance
-with what he then declared to be the truth.
-
-Clemenceau did not condescend to such shameless falsification. Whatever
-mistakes he made, from the Socialist and anti-Imperialist point of
-view, in matters of domestic importance, or concerning Morocco, where
-the danger of France from the other side of the frontier had to be
-considered, whether in office or out of it, he treated his countrymen
-with the utmost frankness.
-
-So time passed on. The preparations of Germany were becoming more
-and more complete. The influence of the pan-German Junkers and their
-flamboyant young Crown Prince was becoming so powerful that the Kaiser
-felt his hand being forced before success in "the great design"
-appeared quite so certain as he would like it to be. The German army
-was largely increased, powerful war-vessels were being added to the
-navy. A policy was being pursued which roused fears of aggression.
-All through 1913 and the first months of 1914 Clemenceau in his new
-paper, _L'Homme Libre_, continued day after day his warnings and his
-injunctions to all Frenchmen. He had no mercy for those who unceasingly
-preached fraternity and disarmament for France when Germany, more
-powerful and increasingly more populous, was arming to the teeth.
-
-"Such fraternity," he said, at the unveiling of Scheurer-Kestner's
-statue, "is of the Cain and Abel kind. Against the armed peace and
-armed fraternity with which Germany is threatening us nothing short
-of the most perfect military education and military organisation can
-be of any avail. All Europe knows, and Germany herself has no doubt
-whatever, that we are solely on the defensive. Her fury for the
-leadership of Europe decrees for her a policy of extermination against
-France. Therefore prepare, prepare, prepare. Here you see 870,000 men
-in the active army of Germany on a peace footing, better trained,
-better equipped, better organised than ours, as opposed to 480,000
-Frenchmen on our side. Doesn't that convince you? And Alsace-Lorraine
-at the mercy of such creatures as Schadt and Förstner? Observe,
-Germany has great projects in all parts of the world. It would be
-childish for us to complain. What is intolerable is her pretension to
-keep Europe in perpetual terror of a general war, instead of general
-international discussion of her claims. Every Frenchman must remember
-that, if Germany's increasing armaments do impel her to war, the loss
-of the conflict would mean for us the subjugation of our race, nay,
-even the termination of our history. Meanwhile, with Alsace-Lorraine
-before me and the statue of Scheurer-Kestner now unveiled, I claim for
-us the right never to forget. To be or not to be, that is for us the
-question of the hour. Gambetta, after Sedan, called upon all Frenchmen
-in their day of deepest depression to rise to the level of their duty.
-He consecrated once again Republicans as the party of patriotic pride.
-France must live. Live we will!"
-
-Unfortunately, one of the chief reasons why France was unready to
-meet the onrush of the modern Huns was that the Socialists were all
-bemused with their own fatuous notion that the German Social-Democracy
-could stop the war. Instead, therefore, of investigating the truth of
-Clemenceau's statements, they merely denounced him as a chauvinist and
-an enemy of the people, and twaddled on about a general strike on both
-sides of the Rhine. As an old Socialist myself, who, as a member of
-the International Socialist Bureau, had discussed the whole question
-at length with Liebknecht, Bebel, Singer, Kautsky and others, I knew
-that, as they themselves explained to me, there was little or no hope
-of anything of the sort being done when war was once declared. I viewed
-this whole propaganda, therefore, with grave alarm, and Bebel himself
-warned the French that the Social-Democrats would march with the rest.
-If an opportunity came something might be done, but----Since then
-the old leaders had died and the new chiefs, as we all see now, were
-Imperialists to a man. Thus Clemenceau's prognostications and warnings
-were only too completely justified. Prince Lichnowsky's revelations
-conclusively prove this, and the German Social-Democrats have been at
-pains to confirm it. On March 11th, 1914, Clemenceau stated precisely
-what they would do.
-
-How anxious, how eager, the French were at the critical moment to avoid
-even the slightest cause of offence is shown by the fact that all their
-troops were withdrawn fully eight miles back along the German frontier,
-a portion of French territory which the Germans made haste to seize.
-Even before this, every effort was made to provoke the French troops
-by petty raids across the frontier, and at last the Germans declared
-that the French had sent aeroplanes to drop bombs on Nuremberg--a
-statement which the Germans themselves now admit to have been a pure
-fabrication. But the facts of the invasion of Belgium and France are
-too well known to call for recital here.
-
-Clemenceau did what might have been expected of him. He appealed to
-all Frenchmen of every shade of opinion to sink all minor differences
-in one solid combination for the defence of the country. Day after
-day, this powerful journalist and orator laboured to encourage
-his countrymen and to denounce unceasingly all who, honestly or
-dishonestly, stood in the way of the vigorous and successful
-prosecution of the war which should free France for ever from yet
-other attempts by Germany to destroy her as an independent nation.
-The memory of the dark days of 1870 was obliterated by the horrors of
-1914 onwards. In good and bad fortune the Radical leader kept the same
-resolute attitude and used the like stirring language. _L'Homme Libre_,
-defaced and then suppressed by the Censor, was succeeded by _L'Homme
-Enchaîné_. Ever the same policy of relentless warfare, against the
-enemy at the front, and the traitors at the rear, was steadily pursued.
-Ministry might come, Ministry might go, but still Clemenceau was at his
-post, save when illness compelled him to quit his work for a short time.
-
-Nor did he waver in his views as to the general strategy to be pursued.
-Without making any pretence to military knowledge, but well advised by
-experts on military affairs, and firmly convinced that whatever success
-Germany might achieve elsewhere she would never be satisfied unless
-France was crushed, he persistently opposed diversion of strength from
-the Western front. _There_ this terrific struggle for world-domination
-would eventually be decided. The civilisation of the West must be
-subdued to German culture, France and England must be brought under
-German control, before the great programme of Eastern expansion for the
-Teutonic Empire could be entered upon with the certainty of success.
-These were the opinions he held as to Germany's real objects.
-
-Therefore, in opposition to the views of important personages in Great
-Britain and in Allied countries, Clemenceau withstood any frittering
-away of force on tempting adventures, away from the main field of
-warfare. This not because he confined himself to the narrow programme
-of freeing France from the invaders, but because the waste of troops
-on wild-cat enterprises weakened the general strength of the Allies at
-the crucial point of the whole struggle. In that decision his judgment
-was at one with the ablest British strategists, and the event has
-shown that he did not underrate the importance of the warfare on the
-Western front. There alone, especially after the collapse of Russia,
-was it possible to deliver a crushing blow at the German power. There
-alone could all the forces of the Allies of the West be effectively
-concentrated for the final blow.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- THE GREAT WAR
-
-
-The events of the great war, from 1914 onwards, are too recent and
-too deeply graven on all our minds to call for lengthy recital or
-criticism. What many, if not most, people believed to be outside the
-limits of calculation occurred. The German armies commenced their
-campaign by outraging the neutrality of Belgium, which, in 1870, even
-Bismarck had respected. In a few days they crashed down the great
-Belgian fortresses, which capable experts had calculated would check
-the Teutonic advance for at least a month, with howitzers specially
-constructed and tested for that purpose; soon they exhausted the
-resources of barbarism in torturing, butchering and shooting down
-unarmed men, women and children whose country they had solemnly sworn
-to safeguard; and they devastated and destroyed homes, beautiful
-buildings, and great libraries, which even a Turcoman horde might
-have spared, and extorted tremendous ransom and blood-money from the
-defenceless inhabitants.
-
-That accomplished, this torrent of ruffianism and infamy poured in upon
-France with almost irresistible fury. The horrors of 1870-71 were far
-outdone. The defeats of Mons, Charleroi and Metz, the impossibility
-that their opponents should resist such overwhelming odds, made the
-Germans believe that for the second time in half a century they would
-force Paris to surrender. Then they were prepared to wreak upon the
-great city, the social capital of Europe, the full vengeance of
-destruction.
-
-It is not easy, even for those who remember what occurred in the
-terrible year of the downfall of the Second Empire, and the prostration
-of the French Republic before the German invaders, to imagine what
-were the feelings of all Frenchmen who went through that period of
-martyrdom for their country when they saw a still worse storm of
-brutality and hatred breaking out upon them--when, too, more rapidly
-than before, Amiens was in danger and Paris seriously threatened.
-Clemenceau, with his devotion to France and almost worship of the city
-where he had spent his whole manhood, was more hardly hit than perhaps
-any of his countrymen. He had experienced the horrors of the former
-invasion; and though, when France was at its lowest, he never despaired
-of the Republic, no ordinary man of seventy-three could possess the
-resource and resilience of a man of thirty.
-
-Yet Clemenceau showed little loss of vigour compared with his former
-self. No Englishman has ever undergone what he underwent at that
-period. Undoubtedly, when the news came to us of the great retreat of
-August, 1914, our heartfelt sympathy went out to our own men. We were
-all likewise full of admiration for our French comrades who still held
-the Franco-British line unbroken. But at least our hearths and homes
-were kept in safety for us--the raids of aircraft excepted--by the
-magnificent courage of our sailors in the North Sea and of our soldiers
-who freely gave their lives to protect us from the enemy. If we would
-fully appreciate what was happening to France and Belgium, in spite
-of all their efforts, we must imagine the county of Durham completely
-occupied by the German hordes, Yorkshire overrun and the chance of
-saving London from the enemy dependent upon the result of a battle to
-be fought in the neighbourhood of Cambridge. It would be well if we
-could display at such a crisis in England the same cool courage that
-the Parisians did; if we had generals at our disposal such as Joffre
-and Foch and Gallieni; and statesmen in reserve such as Clemenceau.
-That was how things looked prior to the first battle of the Marne,
-which checked the early flood of German invasion and removed for the
-time being the necessity for retiring from Amiens and Epernay and
-moving the seat of government from Paris.
-
-During the whole of this trying period Clemenceau never lost heart
-for a moment, nor his head either; and day after day in his journal
-he surveyed the whole situation without fear, devoid of illusion,
-yet confident always that France and her Allies could not be beaten
-to their knees. When things looked worst and Paris was being drained
-of her population by order, in preparation for a siege, and when the
-Government was about to be removed to Bordeaux, this is how Clemenceau
-wrote, recalling the past to cheer his countrymen in the present:
-
-"The seat of government at Bordeaux is a new phase of the war which
-must follow its course: a renewal of the war in the Provinces, as in
-the days of the Gambettas, of the Freycinets. The same struggle against
-the same German invasion, with the capital of France reduced to the
-simple condition of a fortress, with France herself--provincial France,
-as we say--taking in hand her own defence outside the traditional lines
-of political and administrative concentration in which she has lived.
-
-"How men and times have changed! . . . And now after full
-four-and-forty years I find myself again at Bordeaux, before the
-theatre I had not seen since 1871, looking for men who had undergone
-the misery of survival and failing to find them. Who now remembers that
-Jules Simon on his arrival had in his pocket an order for the arrest
-of Gambetta? In the Provinces, as in Paris, foreign war and civil war
-were being carried on. I only recall these terrible memories of past
-dissensions to enhance the value of the magnificent consolation that
-uplifts our hearts at the spectacle of the truly fraternal union of all
-the Frenchmen of to-day. Gambetta maintained the war against invasion
-in the midst of the most cruel attacks of a merciless opposition.
-Compare this with the present attitude of all parties in the presence
-of a Government from which all only demand that every means should be
-used with the maximum of efficiency." Nor does the writer hesitate
-even at this moment of trial to criticise the shortcomings of his
-countrymen. As opposed to the persistent preparations of Germany,
-Frenchmen, he says, have been too careless, too light-hearted, too apt
-to rely upon the inspiration and enthusiasm of the moment to repair
-their neglect, "while an implacable enemy was sharpening his sword
-against us with unwearying zeal." And this had been proved to be the
-truth years before; while so lately as November 22nd, 1913, the French
-Ambassador in Berlin, M. Jules Cambon, had solemnly warned M. Pichon,
-then as now French Minister for Foreign Affairs, "For some time past
-hostility against us is more marked, and the Emperor has ceased to be a
-partisan of peace."
-
-The man who used his pen to tell Frenchmen disagreeable truths in
-this wise and followed them up by giving chapter and verse from the
-French Yellow Book, with the text of the threatening conversations
-of the Emperor and General von Moltke with the King of the Belgians,
-may be granted the credit of entirely disregarding his own political
-interests, at least.
-
-So also when the Anglo-French forces had won the great seven days'
-battle on the Marne, Clemenceau at once uttered a note of warning
-against undue confidence and excessive elation. "Let us be very careful
-not to believe that we can reckon upon an uninterrupted series of
-successes up to the final destruction of the aggressor. The curtain
-falls on the horrible scenes of foreign invasion in Belgium and
-France. A mortal blow has been inflicted upon the invincible Kaiser
-who had never fought a battle. . . . But it would be sheer madness to
-imagine that we have nearly finished with an enemy who will shortly
-obtain fresh forces, vast forces even, from his uninvaded territory.
-A great part of his military resources are still untouched. Automatic
-discipline will soon reassert itself. The struggle will last very long
-yet and be full of unforeseen dangers. The stake is too heavy for the
-German Empire to decide suddenly to give up the game. Remember your
-mistakes of the past, rejoice soberly in your victory of the present,
-make ready now for still heavier trials in the future." Such was the
-counsel of Clemenceau to Frenchmen on September 15th, 1914. Above all,
-"Leave nothing you can help to chance. Our military leaders have just
-victoriously undergone racking anxieties. It is for us to show our
-confidence in them by giving them credit for the patience and firmness
-which they will desperately need."
-
-Similarly in regard to the magnificent series of defensive victories
-at Verdun, of which Clemenceau gives a fine picturesque account.
-After justly glorifying the prowess of the heroic French soldiery,
-whose chances of victory at the commencement of those long weeks
-of unceasing battle seemed small indeed; after bitter sarcasms on
-the miserable Crown Prince with his premature jubilations over his
-supreme carefully stage-managed "triumph"; after a terrible picture
-of masses of the German troops marching through a hurricane to what
-they were assured was certain victory and then their dead bodies
-literally kept erect by the pressure of their dead comrades as a mass
-of corpses--after all this, and his legitimate pride in the hardly won
-victory, Clemenceau goes on to remind his countrymen again that this
-is not the end. "Verdun is the greatest drama of resistance. But all,
-All must at once set to work to make ready for a thorough offensive: a
-complete offensive that needs no interpretation. For this we must have
-_preparation_. For this we must have _science_. For this we must have
-_method_. For this we must have _manœuvres_. Keep those words well in
-mind, for nothing can be worse than to forget them. Never too soon:
-never too late. What would be the cost to us, in our turn, of a _coup
-manqué_?"
-
-That is the tone throughout. But here and there in _L'Homme Enchaîné_
-we find Clemenceau the controversialist in a lighter, but not less
-telling, style. I give an extract from his scathing attack on the
-Danish littérateur, M. Brandès, in the original:--
-
-"Oui, retenez-le, lecteur, la crainte de M. Brandès dans les
-circonstances actuelles est que l'Allemagne puisse être humiliée! Le
-Danemark a été humilié par le _peuple de seigneurs_ qu'est la race
-allemande. La France aussi, je crois, et la Belgique même; peut-être
-Brandès le reconnaitra-t-il. Il n'a pas protesté. Il refuse même de
-s'expliquer a cet égard, alléguant que son silence (assez prolixe)
-est d'or--d'un or qui ne résisterait pas à la pierre de touche. Mais
-sa crainte suprême est que les machinateurs du plus grand attentat
-contre la civilisation, contre l'indépendance des peuples, contre la
-dignité de l'espèce humaine, les auteurs des épouvantables forfaits
-dont saignent encore la Belgique et la France n'éprouvent une
-_humiliation_."[B] Brandès among the neutrals is of the same type as
-Romain Rolland and Bertrand Russell among the belligerents. All their
-sympathies are reserved for the criminals. And there are others, who
-are actually eager to embrace the murderers as their "German friends"!
-
-In quite another style is his tribute to Garibaldi when his son
-Ricciotti--two of whose own sons had fallen fighting for France against
-the Germans--was himself visiting Paris:--
-
-"Garibaldi was one of those magicians who give their commands to the
-peoples. These are the true performers of miracles. For they take no
-account of human powers when the spirit of superhumanity impels them
-to adventures of rash madness which for them prove to be evidence of
-supreme sanity.
-
-"Those who know, or think they know, talk. But words are not life.
-Living humanity instinctively gives its devotion to men who rise up, in
-historic episodes whose law is to us unknown, to accomplish in their
-heroic simplicity precisely those very feats which 'reason' had never
-anticipated. To achieve this miracle calls for the man. It requires
-also the historic moment. The hour struck, and Garibaldi was there.
-But of that hour he himself was to a marvellous degree the mild yet
-imperious expression. Obviously inspired with an idea, he refused to
-see obstacles or to recognise impossibilities. 'I shall go through with
-it,' and through he went. That seems simple enough to-day. How was it
-no one was found to do it before him? He went through with it, handing
-over the crown to royal supplicants, and then hid himself in his island
-to avoid the annoyance of his glory.
-
-"He had given freedom. Let freedom do its work."
-
-During the whole of the struggle, even when the military situation
-looked most desperate for the future of his country, Clemenceau never
-lost confidence. His faith in France and her steadfast ally Great
-Britain never wavered. That was a great service he then rendered to
-France and civilisation. But he did more. At a time when on the other
-side of the Channel, as in Great Britain, in Italy, and in Russia,
-the national spirit was clouded by deep suspicion of enemy influence,
-bribery and corruption in high places, with almost criminal weakness,
-when strength and determination were essential to success, Clemenceau
-did not hesitate to denounce treachery where he believed it to exist.
-Nothing like his courage in this respect has, unfortunately, been
-shown by statesmen in any other of the Allied countries. The fact
-that fomenters of reaction were, for their own ends, engaged on the
-like task of exposing the men who were unworthy of the Republic did
-not deter him, bitterly opposed as he was to the Royalist clique of
-which M. Léon Daudet was the chief spokesman, from demanding thorough
-investigation and the punishment of traitors, if traitors there were,
-in their midst. The time has not yet come to estimate the full value of
-the work he thus did, or the dangers from which, by his frankness, he
-saved the Republic.
-
-But already we can form a judgment of the perils which surrounded
-France in 1917. The feeling of depression and distrust was growing. The
-organisation of the forces of the Allies was inferior to that of the
-enemy. The effect of the collapse of Russia was becoming more serious
-each day. Great Britain, which had rendered France quite invaluable
-aid in all departments, had accepted Mr. Lloyd George's personal
-strategy, which consisted in breaking through to the Rhine frontier by
-way of Jerusalem and Jericho, owing to the apparent hopelessness of a
-favourable decision on the West front. The French Government itself,
-alarmed at the enormous sacrifices France was making in every way,
-discouraged at the progress of the defeatist movement which weakened
-the position of Socialists in the Cabinet, and alarmed at the manner in
-which German agents and German spies, whom they were afraid to arrest,
-pervaded almost every department--the French Government, itself shaken
-daily by attacks from the Right and from the Left, felt incapable of
-dealing with the situation as a whole. There was, for a moment, a
-sensation in Paris not far removed from despair.
-
-At this juncture a cry arose for Clemenceau. For many years he had
-predicted the German attack. For more than a full generation he had
-adjured his fellow-Frenchmen to prepare vigorously for the defence
-of _la Patrie_. That he feared nobody all were well aware. Of his
-patriotism there was no doubt. Then, as more than forty years before,
-he never despaired of the Republic. Old as he was, whatever his defects
-of temper, whatever his shortcomings in other respects, the one man
-for such a crisis was Georges Clemenceau. Office was thus forced upon
-him, and, as he stated, he accepted power strongly against his will.
-At seventy-six, and approaching seventy-seven, not the most ambitious
-politician would be eager to take upon himself the responsibility of
-coping with such difficulties as Clemenceau was called upon to face.
-It was hard enough to undertake as Minister of War the onerous work of
-that exhausting department.
-
-But still more trying was the necessity imposed upon him of dealing
-with the traitors of various degree who had been trading upon the
-lives and sacrifices of the men at the front. Probably no other French
-statesman would have dared to enter upon this dangerous and difficult
-task. The suspected men were highly placed, both politically and
-financially. They were surrounded by influential cliques and coteries,
-in Parliament and in the Press, to whom it was almost a matter of life
-and death to prevent disclosures which would inevitably be made, if the
-various cases were brought into court. It was even doubtful whether he
-would get the support of the Assembly, the Senate, or the Presidents of
-Council who preceded him, if he decided to push things to extremity,
-as, in view of his own criticisms and denunciations, he was bound to
-do. Should such misfortune occur or should the malefactors be indicted
-and acquitted, all that Clemenceau had been saying against them would
-turn to the advantage of the domestic enemy. It was a great risk to run.
-
-There was also another obstacle in the way of Clemenceau's acceptance
-of the Premiership. The relations between himself and M. Poincaré,
-the President of the Republic, had been anything but good. M.
-Clemenceau had energetically championed the claim of M. Pams for the
-Presidency. M. Pams had been, in fact, M. Clemenceau's candidate, as
-MM. Sadi-Carnot, Loubet and Fallières had been before him. This time
-he did not win. The fight was fierce, the personal animosity between
-the parties very keen, and M. Poincaré's victory was asserted to have
-been achieved by intrigue of a doubtful character. The war had called
-a truce to individual rancour, and the _union sacrée_ was supposed
-to inspire all hearts. Still it was by no means certain that trouble
-would not come from that quarter. A President of Council with a hostile
-President of the Republic over against him must find the difficulty of
-the post at such a time immensely increased.
-
-Then there were the Socialists to consider. True, they had taken
-office in the Cabinet of M. Briand, whose policy towards strikers of
-anarchist methods had been even more stern than that of M. Clemenceau.
-But they regarded Clemenceau as an unforgivable enemy. The calling in
-of the military at Courrières, at Narbonne, Montpellier and St. Béziers
-had never been forgotten. Clemenceau for them was the Tiger crossed
-with the Kalmuck. It was far more important, the French Socialists
-apparently thought, to hamper Clemenceau and prevent him from forming
-an administration than it was to beat the German armies and clear
-France of the Boches. Such, at any rate, was the opinion of a minority,
-which afterwards became the majority, of the party. Therefore, even
-Socialists who thoroughly sympathised with Clemenceau in his policy
-towards Germany, and had previously taken part in a Cabinet pledged to
-carry on the war "_jusqu'au bout_," would have nothing to do with a
-Clemenceau Administration. The upshot of these fatuous, anti-patriotic
-and anti-Socialist tactics on their part will be seen later. Yet the
-knowledge that the Socialists as a whole would give him at best a
-lukewarm support, and at worst would vigorously oppose him, was not an
-encouraging factor in the general calculation of what might occur.
-
-Neither could high finance be relied upon. The great bankers, great
-brokers, and great money institutions as a whole, were heartily sick of
-the war. They wanted peace with Germany on almost any terms, if only
-they could get back to business and begin to recoup their losses during
-more than three years of war. Nor, apart from downright treachery of
-which he held positive proof, could the proposed new Premier close his
-eyes to the fact that German influence had so subtly and thoroughly
-pervaded the French money market that many Frenchmen were still looking
-at the economic problems of France through spectacles made and tinted
-in Germany.
-
-There was consequently a combination possible which might drive
-Clemenceau headlong out of office at any moment, if he entered upon his
-second attempt to control French affairs at such a desperately critical
-stage of the war.
-
-But the formidable old Radical leader did not hesitate. Sceptic as he
-might be in all else, one entity he did believe in: the unshakable
-greatness of France: one Frenchman he could rely upon--himself.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- THE ENEMY WITHIN
-
-
-During the whole of the war, as for many years before the Germans
-began their great campaign of aggression, every country with which the
-Fatherland might in any way be concerned was permeated with German
-agents and German spies. Great Britain was one of the nations specially
-favoured in this respect. The ramifications of their systematic
-interpenetration of the social, political, financial, commercial
-and even journalistic departments of our public life have never yet
-been fully exposed; nor, certainly, have the very important personages
-who conducted this sinister propaganda been dealt with. Even when the
-Defence of the Realm Act is ended and the Censorship is abrogated, it
-is doubtful if the full truth will ever be generally known, so powerful
-are the influences directly interested in its suppression.
-
-In the United States of America, where similar work was done upon an
-enormous scale and at vast expense, under circumstances still more
-favourable to success than in this island, the American Government
-acted with a decision and a vigour that are not yet understood. Even
-so, the amount of mischief done was very great, and, for the first two
-years of the war at least, the German efforts were largely successful.
-That a duly accredited Ambassador to a friendly power should have been
-at the head of this vast conspiracy in America, as Count Bernstorff
-unquestionably was, introduces a new and most dangerous precedent into
-the comity of international relations. Italy, in like manner, suffered
-very seriously from German intrigues. The history of the carefully
-organised disaster upon the Isonzo has yet to be written. That it was
-the result of well-arranged collaboration between clerical organisers
-of treachery, inspired by Austria, German agents, with unlimited
-financial backing, who had sympathisers in high place, and honest
-and dishonest fanatics of the pacifist persuasion, does not admit of
-question. Certain it is that in this one case alone German underground
-machinations were responsible for the crushing defeat of an army of
-500,000 men, holding a position where 50,000 good troops could have
-held a million at bay.[C]
-
-But if Great Britain, the United States, and Italy were thus
-honeycombed with secret service agents from Germany, the nation which
-the Kaiser, his Chief of Staff and the Junkers were most anxious to
-crush down beyond the possibility of recovery was still more imperilled
-by astute German infiltration. Up to the crisis of Agadir in 1911,
-French finance was, to an ever increasing extent, manipulated by German
-Jews, who made it their special business to become more Parisian than
-the Parisians themselves. They were consequently regarded with favour
-by people whose patriotism was beyond question. Scarcely a great
-French finance institution but had close relations in some form with
-Germans, whose continuous attention to business and excellent general
-information rendered them valuable coadjutors for the French, who, as
-a rule, are not very exactly informed on foreign matters. Very few saw
-any danger in this. It seemed, indeed, a natural result of the great
-growth of German trade, as well as of the position which Germans had
-acquired as capable managers of the growing French factory industry in
-the North-Eastern provinces.
-
-This latter point is of importance. So long as any industry remains in
-the old form, where individual skill, meticulous attention to detail,
-and close observance of quality are the rule, the French are second
-to none in their methods. But when the next stage is reached, and
-machine production reigns on a very large scale, with its concomitant
-standardisation of output, then the French seem to fail for lack of
-the thorough organising faculty of the German or the American. Hence
-in many directions the highly educated, methodical, progressive
-foreigner from across the frontier had begun to take the place of the
-more conservative Frenchman. This process could be observed in the
-department of motor-cars, where the French, who were undoubtedly the
-pioneers, had begun to fall behind upon the world market in the time
-just anterior to the war. Not only the Americans, but the Germans, and
-even Italy, showed more capacity to gauge the necessities of the coming
-period than France in their output of cars.
-
-But, in addition to this, Frenchmen, the most thrifty people in the
-world, are disinclined to use their savings in the development of their
-own country. In literature, in science, in art, they display great
-faculties of initiative. In the matter of investment they prefer to
-rely upon others. Even the underground railways of their metropolis
-were started by a foreigner: the French investors only coming in to buy
-the debentures of companies which they might just as well have started
-themselves. They complained that the Germans were making vast profits
-out of "their own" iron mines of Lorraine which had been taken from
-France in an undeveloped state in 1871; yet they failed to exploit the
-still richer deposits in Briey, of which the Germans were so envious
-that the desire to possess them was one of the minor causes of the war.
-Similar instances of neglected opportunities could be pointed out in
-many districts.
-
-This indifference of the thrifty French investors to the possibility
-of enriching their own country by the use at home of the money capital
-obtained from their own savings, and the profits derived from visitors,
-astonished lookers-on. Clemenceau denounced the folly of financial wars
-of conquest in semi-civilised countries when France needed her own
-resources for the improvement of her own soil and what underlay it, as
-well as to make adequate preparation for war. But the loans to foreign
-nations and foreign banks were economically as prejudicial to her real
-interests as the injurious colonial policy. That was proved only too
-clearly, even in the field of military preparation when, in August and
-September, 1914, tens of thousands of men, unsupplied with clothing and
-equipment, were to be seen in and around Paris. England had to provide
-them with what they required.
-
-In such a state of affairs, where neglect of consideration as to the
-purposes of loans was the rule, so long as the interest seemed quite
-secure, German banks could and did act with great advantage. They
-borrowed French savings at a low rate and employed them for profitable
-objects, or for their own more complete war preparations on economical
-terms. After the shock of Agadir, when war at one period seemed
-certain, the French called in most of their loans and thenceforward
-were rather more cautious. But, in the meantime, and even afterwards,
-France's savings had been used to strengthen her bitterest enemy.
-And this was the end the Germans kept constantly in view when they
-borrowed. France, in fact, built up German credit against herself, at
-the same time that Germany was able to estimate exactly the economic
-power of her destined victim, and to investigate, without appearing to
-do so, the weak points in French preparation for defence. The German
-banks and their French friends played together the same game, in a
-different way, that the Deutsche Bank and the Dresdner Bank did in
-London and the Banca Commerciale in Italy. The whole formed part of the
-vast economic octopus scheme, in finance and in industry, which went
-hand in hand with the co-ordination of military effort destined for
-attack.
-
-It is easy to discern how all this peaceful financial manipulation
-played into the hands of the German Government and fostered German
-influence in Paris and in France. There was nothing which could be
-reasonably objected to, under the conditions of to-day, if Holland, or
-Belgium, had been the nation concerned. But with Germany it was quite
-different.
-
-Not only was French money being used on German account, but, under
-cover of quite legitimate finance and apparently genuine newspaper
-enterprise, most nefarious schemes were hatched in peace whose full
-utility to the enemy would only be disclosed in war. Taking no account
-even of the actual operations of bribery, which we now know were
-carried on upon a very large scale, everybody who was directly or
-indirectly interested in the various forms of parasitical Franco-German
-finance had personally excellent reasons for pooh-poohing distrust of
-the friendly nation on the other side of the frontier. Thus the most
-pressing warnings addressed to the French Government might be rendered
-almost useless--as, in fact, they were--by influence brought to bear
-from quarters that were pecuniarily above suspicion. An atmosphere
-favourable to German propaganda was created which covered up and
-favoured the sinister plans of men and women who were actually in
-German pay. This went on long before the war, and was continued in
-still more dangerous shape after the war had begun.
-
-Then there were the honest pacifists, who regarded all war, even
-defensive war, as disastrous to the workers. Whether Germany won or
-France won in any conflict, the capitalists and the capitalists alone
-were the real enemy. Two such different men as Edouard Vaillant and
-Gustave Hervé held this opinion; and both at great international
-Socialist congresses declared that every effort should be made to
-prevent France from coming to an actual struggle with Germany, no
-matter what the provocation might be. When, however, they saw what
-the policy of the Kaiser and his Junker militarists really meant they
-changed their minds. So, in the early days of the war, did the majority
-of French Socialists; and several of their principal men, including
-Jules Guesde, the leader of the Marxists, and Albert Thomas, joined M.
-Briand's Cabinet.
-
-But there was always an active section left which in all good faith
-stood to their views that under the capitalist system nothing could
-justify the workers of one country in killing the workers of another.
-They had no interest in their own nation which was worth defending
-in the field. The past of France was for them a record of class
-oppression, the present of France the continuance of chattel slavery in
-disguise, the future of France no better than the permanence of penal
-servitude for life as wage-slaves to the bourgeoisie. German domination
-could be no worse for them than the economic tyranny of their own
-capitalist countrymen.
-
-This form of social fanaticism now exists in every European nation.
-It is as bitter and, given the opportunity, as unscrupulous and cruel
-as any form of religious intolerance that ever exercised control.
-Economic theory entirely obscures history and facts with such men.
-Not even the awful horrors of the German invasion, horrors quite
-unprecedented in modern warfare and systematically practised in
-order to engender terror, and destroy the means of creating wealth,
-could convert Socialists of this school. As a Socialist I understand
-their fanaticism, though I despise their judgment. Capitalism under
-the control of home employers and financiers is bad, but it can be
-controlled by educated workers. Capitalism in victorious alliance with
-foreign Junkerdom would have made France uninhabitable for Frenchmen,
-and would have thrown back democratic Socialism for at least two
-generations throughout Europe.
-
-Nevertheless, this furious minority, in conjunction with Socialists of
-political intrigue, among whom Jean Longuet (son of Charles Longuet
-the member of the Commune and grandson of Karl Marx) was the leader,
-became eventually the majority, owing to the weakness of the heads of
-the patriotic section. This success laid the French Socialist Party
-open to the charge of being not only anti-patriotic but definitely
-pro-German. It led to the retirement of forty-one Deputies from the
-"unified" combination. The violent animosity of the main body to
-Clemenceau at the time when he was forced into office, and the refusal
-of Socialists to accept portfolios in his Cabinet, when the cause of
-the Allies was at its lowest point, from November, 1917, to July,
-1918, looked to outsiders a miserable policy for the party, not to be
-explained by the devotion of its members to MM. Malvy and Caillaux.[D]
-Personal malevolence and political pusillanimity together were the
-imputations made against those who thus declined to serve France in
-her utmost need. Happily for Europe, their strength was not equal to
-their ill-will, and Clemenceau, after his first month of power, was
-able to treat them as a negligible quantity. So they remain to-day.
-A very great opportunity of serving the workers of their country has
-been missed: that the bitterest enemy of France and of freedom has not
-been greatly helped in her war for universal domination is no fault of
-theirs.
-
-During the first three years and more of the war, however, a conspiracy
-was being conducted which, aided unfortunately by much of apathy and
-ineptitude on the part of successive French Governments, and supported
-unintentionally or intentionally by one of the leading statesmen of
-France, went near to wrecking the fortunes of the Republic. That this
-fateful plot failed to achieve the full success which the Germans
-anticipated from it is due to Clemenceau. Sordid monetary sympathy with
-the enemy is difficult to forgive: Socialist fanaticism and Socialist
-intrigues which must tell to the disadvantage of the nation are hard
-to reconcile with common honesty; but downright infamous treachery,
-bribery, corruption, and wholesale attempts to organise defeat put all
-who are guilty of them outside the law. Yet matters had come to such a
-pass that all these various forms of treason to France, to the Allies,
-and to soldiers at the front could be carried on with impunity.
-
-Though the guilty persons were well known and their German plots were
-scarcely concealed, none of the Ministers responsible for the public
-safety dared arrest them. Journals that were obviously published in the
-interest of the enemy were allowed to spread false information as they
-pleased, and to attack all statesmen and politicians who were honestly
-trying to serve France with vitriolic misrepresentation. Day after
-day this went on. Day after day, as the situation without grew more
-precarious, the chiefs of this criminal endeavour to bring France to
-ruin grew bolder in their well-paid treachery. The people of Paris and
-the soldiery in the trenches, whose minds also German agents strove to
-debauch with plausible lies, were becoming hopeless of justice being
-done. Ministry succeeded Ministry and still the traitors were treated
-with consideration by the Minister of the Interior, M. Malvy, and other
-men in high place.
-
-Beyond question the man officially responsible for all this shameful
-laxity, at one of the most trying crises of the whole war, was M.
-Malvy, who enjoyed the whole-souled support of the Socialist Party,
-on account of creditable behaviour towards the workers, altogether
-outside of questions arising from the war. But his conduct in regard
-to traitors and pro-Germans had become so weak as to be capable of the
-worst interpretation.
-
-On July 24th, 1917, Clemenceau declared that he utterly distrusted
-M. Malvy. It was known even thus early that this Minister had shown
-deplorable incapacity in his dealings with men who are known to have
-been actual traitors. He had, in fact, decided not to arrest persons
-enumerated in what was called "List B," that is to say, men and women
-more than suspected of criminal intrigue against France. Had not
-Almereyda himself assured M. Malvy, as Minister of the Interior, that
-he and all other Anarchists and anti-patriotic agitators would really
-desist from their sinister proceedings? This was enough. Without
-taking any steps against them, or even obtaining any security for the
-fulfilment of this promise in the air, M. Malvy left these miscreants
-alone to do what they pleased. So things went on as before; though, as
-has since been proved, several of these active agitators for peace,
-disaffection and surrender were paid agents of the German Government.
-
-When, therefore, a resolution of confidence in M. Ribot's
-Administration was proposed in the Senate, Clemenceau voted for the
-resolution, but made special exception in the case of M. Malvy, in whom
-he declared he had no confidence whatever. Later, Clemenceau boldly
-accused M. Ribot and his whole Administration of being themselves
-all responsible for the existence of the treacherous German Bonnet
-Rouge and Bolo conspiracy. Most unfortunately, notwithstanding the
-universal distrust thus awakened and spreading from Paris throughout
-France, Republican Ministers, who ought to have been the first to move
-to safeguard the interests of France and her Republic, against the
-dangerous plots of men known to be immersed in abominable dealings with
-the enemy, failed altogether in their duty. They left it to avowed
-Royalists and reactionaries to lead the attack upon persons guilty of
-these crimes. What, consequently, ought to have been done at once,
-legally and thoroughly, by men who had received political power by vote
-of the French people, and were trustees for the defence of the country,
-against the foreign enemy from without and the domestic enemy within,
-was left largely to be accomplished by M. Léon Daudet and M. Barrès.
-
-These men made no secret of the fact that they were actuated by motives
-entirely antagonistic to the democratic policy of the Allies and
-hostile to the only form of government possible in France. This did
-not render their indictment less crushing when the facts were fully
-disclosed, but it certainly weakened the force of the attack. What
-is more, it gave a large and, later, apparently the largest section
-of the Socialist Party the excuse, which they were eager to grasp,
-for supporting M. Malvy, and more particularly their friend M. Joseph
-Caillaux, against what they were pleased to denounce as abominable
-detraction.
-
-Newspapers to-day are credited, perhaps, with more political influence
-than they really possess. But it is clear that if nearly the whole
-of the important press of a country can be captured by a particular
-faction, and only such news is allowed to be published as suits the
-convenience of the Government in power, the people at large have no
-means of correcting the false impressions of events thus thrust upon
-them. That is an extreme case, which has, so far, been realised, in
-practice, in only one country. But the German agents who were so
-active in Paris were fully alive to the advantages of such a policy
-of purchase and manipulation of the press for their own ends. They
-made efforts to secure a control of the majority of the shares in some
-of the most influential journals of Paris. How far this process was
-surreptitiously carried will never be known: not far enough, certainly,
-to affect the tone of the organs they were anxious to manipulate.
-
-But enough was done to show the great danger which would have resulted
-to the community, had a newspaper trust been successfully created on
-the scale contemplated, but fortunately never carried out, by the
-infamous Bolo Pasha and his associates. Their own journal, _Le Bonnet
-Rouge_, even when increased during the war from a weekly to a daily
-issue, was not by any means sufficient for their needs, although that
-traitorous sheet alone was able to do a great deal of mischief. But
-their control was extended to the _Journal_, a paper, prior to the
-war, of considerable circulation and influence. Their attempts to
-expand further were in full swing when, thanks to the work of MM. Léon
-Daudet and Barrès in the _Action_ _Française_, and still more to that
-of their bitter opponent Clemenceau in _l'Homme Enchaîné_ and in the
-Senate, the French Government was forced to arrest the proprietors of
-the _Bonnet Rouge_ and put them on their trial as traitors. It was
-known that M. Caillaux and M. Paix-Séailles--the latter connected
-with M. Painlevé's Cabinet and the repository of anti-French
-confidences--had contributed considerable sums to the support of the
-incriminated paper.
-
-When M. Almereyda, one of the most important persons connected with the
-_Bonnet Rouge_ (to whose columns a leading Socialist was a contributor)
-died suddenly in prison, the editor of that journal telegraphed to M.
-Caillaux concerning the lamentable departure of "our friend." As these
-facts were accompanied by other revelations still more compromising,
-public opinion became greatly excited. There could be no doubt that
-the conspiracy was more than a mere anti-patriotic newspaper intrigue
-of financial origin, or an attempt of discredited politicians to
-float themselves back into office on the wave of discouragement and
-defeatism: it was an endeavour, supported throughout by German funds,
-to destroy French confidence in order to ensure French destruction.
-A complete exposure of the whole plot, in which M. Caillaux and Bolo
-Pasha were alleged to be the leading figures, was threatened in
-the course of the _Bonnet Rouge_ trial. Eleven members of the Army
-Committee of the Senate were appointed to consider M. Caillaux's
-connection with M. Almereyda and the _Bonnet Rouge_.
-
-M. Caillaux has been by far the most formidable advocate of a German
-peace from the first. That an ex-Premier of France should take up such
-a position would seem almost incredible, but that Signor Giolitti in
-Italy and Lord Lansdowne in England have pursued the same course in a
-less objectionable way. The political relations between Clemenceau and
-M. Caillaux in the years prior to the war had not been unfriendly. M.
-Caillaux had been Finance Minister in Clemenceau's Cabinet in 1907, and
-they had both worked together for M. Pams against M. Poincaré in the
-contest for the Presidency. But two more different personalities it
-would be difficult to find.
-
-M. Caillaux is a financier of financiers. His whole career has been
-associated with the dexterous manipulation and acquisition of money
-in all its forms. Clemenceau never had anything to do with finance in
-his fife, and wealth is the last thing anybody could accuse him of
-possessing. Clemenceau, though no sentimentalist, makes an exception
-in his view of life where Frenchmen, France and Paris are concerned.
-With Caillaux audacious cynicism in everything is the key-note of
-his character all through. Moreover, the one is very simple in his
-habits, and the other is devoted to ostentation and display. Caillaux's
-cynicism is as remarkable as that of Henry Labouchere, though more
-malignant. When he carried the Income Tax through the Assembly and was
-upbraided for having made himself the champion of such a measure, he
-claimed that, though he had obtained for his measure a majority in the
-Assembly, he had used such arguments as would destroy it in the country.
-
-Whatever may be the truth of that story, it is certain that the
-result has been as predicted. So in the course of the Agadir affair.
-M. Caillaux, as Prime Minister during the whole of the proceedings,
-was reluctant, and perhaps rightly so, to assert the claims of
-France with vigour. He was, in fact, quite lukewarm on behalf of his
-country, the representatives of other nations doing more for France,
-it is said, than she, or her Premier, did for herself. No sooner,
-however, was the business settled than M. Caillaux, the judicious but
-unavowed anti-expansionist, claimed that he had secured Morocco for
-France! However this may be, M. Caillaux has always favoured a close
-political and financial understanding with Germany, as by far the more
-advantageous policy for France, in opposition to a similar _entente_
-with England: a view which, of course, he was quite entitled to take
-and act upon, though its success in practice must have reduced France
-to the position of a mere satellite of the Fatherland. Before the war
-it was possibly a justifiable, though scarcely a far-seeing, policy.
-
-The war itself rather strengthened than weakened his tendency in this
-direction. Having comfortably recovered from the unpleasing effect
-of the murder of M. Calmette of the _Figaro_, for which crime his
-wife was acquitted, he used all his influence, in and out of France,
-to bring about a peace with Germany, which could with difficulty be
-distinguished from complete surrender, as soon as possible. This while
-the German armies were in actual occupation of more than a fifth of his
-devastated country, that fifth being the richest part of France. His
-interviews with Signer Giolitti, a vehement partisan of Germany, and
-certain strange intrigues in Rome and elsewhere, could only be regarded
-as the more suspicious from the fact that he travelled with a passport
-made out in a fictitious name. Altogether M. Caillaux's proceedings at
-home and abroad, in Europe and in South America, gave the impression
-that he was pursuing a policy of his own which was diametrically
-opposed to the welfare of his countrymen.
-
-Some who have watched closely M. Caillaux's career from his youth up
-are of opinion that the man is mad. But there is certainly method
-in his madness. Whatever the defects to which the high priests of
-international financial brotherhood may plead guilty, they never
-admit lunatics into their Teutono-Hebraic Holy of Holies. Access to
-the interior of that sanctuary is reserved for the very elect of the
-artists in pecuniary conveyance. But it is precisely within this
-innermost circle of glorified Mammon that M. Joseph Caillaux is most
-at home and most influential. And these people, so ensconced in their
-golden temple, were the ones most anxious to bring the war to an end no
-matter what became of France. This, as has been well said, was a civil
-war for Jews; but for the Jews of the great international of Mammon
-it was civil war and hari-kari at one and the same time. So there was
-weeping and wail in Frankfurt-am-Main, there was wringing of hands in
-Berlin on the Spree, and the Parisian devotees of the golden calf were
-not less profuse in their lamentations.
-
-As a matter of fact, international finance was, and is, the most
-pacifist of all the Internationals, and M. Joseph Caillaux as director
-of the _Société Générale_, a portion of the great _Banque de Paris et
-Pays Bas_, represented its view perfectly. But that he is not devoid
-of political as well as financial astuteness is apparent from the
-extraordinary success he has achieved in securing close intimacy and
-friendship with the French Socialists. This has assured him the support
-not only of Jean Longuet and his friends, with whom he was specially
-bound up, but also of _L'Humanité_, with Renaudel, Sembat, Thomas and
-others connected with that useful journal. It has, indeed, been very
-difficult to understand the bitter hatred which the Socialists of
-France have manifested towards the thoroughgoing patriot Clemenceau,
-and their persistent championship of pro-Germans such as Caillaux
-and Malvy. But the dry-rot of pro-Germanic pacifism has infected a
-large proportion of the younger school of international Socialists
-in every country. With Socialism, as with commerce and finance, the
-German policy of unscrupulous penetration has been pursued with great
-success. Honest fanatics as well as self-seeking intriguers have fallen
-victims to their wiles. Caillaux was equally fortunate in capturing
-both sections. Even the rougher type of German agents, such as Bolo and
-Duval, were not without their friends in the Socialist camp.
-
-The investigation of his conduct before the Army Committee of the
-Senate was, in effect, an informal trial of M. Caillaux, M. Malvy's
-case having already been remitted by the same body for definite
-adjudication by the High Court. Naturally, M. Caillaux and his friends
-strained every nerve, first to prevent Clemenceau from being forced
-into office by public opinion; and then, when his assumption of
-the Premiership became inevitable, to upset his Ministry while its
-members were scarcely warm in their seats. The French Socialist Party,
-unfortunately, aided M. Caillaux and his friends in their attacks,
-after having declined the Premier's offer of seats in his Cabinet.
-Shortly afterwards Clemenceau himself was summoned to appear as a
-witness before the Committee of the Senate on this serious indictment.
-It is difficult for us to imagine the sensation which this produced.
-Here was M. Caillaux, who had been Prime Minister of France only a
-few short years before, who had previously been Clemenceau's intimate
-colleague, openly charged with the despicable crime of trading France
-away to the enemy.
-
-No wonder a great many thoroughly patriotic Frenchmen could not
-believe, even in the face of the evidence, that a statesman of M.
-Caillaux's ability, with a great future before him after the war, could
-be guilty of such actions as those which were imputed to him. But his
-old colleague who had just taken office was in possession of documents
-which threw an ugly shadow upon all M. Caillaux's recent proceedings.
-As usual Clemenceau went straight to the point. The Government had not
-furnished the members of the Committee with mere surmises or doubts
-cast upon the general conduct of the incriminated person. There were
-printed statements already at their disposal of the gravest character.
-With three notorious persons M. Caillaux had intimate connections.
-One of them, when arrested, had died suspiciously in prison: the two
-others were still under arrest upon most serious charges. If this were
-the case of a common citizen he would have been brought at once before
-a magistrate. The whole country was crying out for the truth in this
-Caillaux case as well as in the Malvy affair.
-
-This happened soon after Clemenceau had accepted office. A month later,
-M. Caillaux being in the meantime protected against arrest by his
-position as deputy, Clemenceau repeated that if all the probabilities
-accumulated against Caillaux had been formulated against any private
-person his fate would have been practically decided already. "The
-Government has undertaken responsibilities. The Chamber must likewise
-shoulder responsibilities. If the Chamber refuses to sanction the
-prosecution of M. Caillaux, the Government will not remain in office."
-
-M. Caillaux's admitted conferences with well-known defeatists in Italy
-were of such a nature that Baron Sonnino, the Italian Minister for
-Foreign Affairs, had himself informed the French Government that he
-was inclined to expel Caillaux forthwith. No doubt he would have done
-so, but for the fact that M. Caillaux had been, and might possibly
-still be again, an important personage in French and European affairs.
-Throughout, Clemenceau promised that the public should have the full
-truth. He kept his word. The delays in bringing M. Caillaux to a
-definite judgment have not been due to him. M. Caillaux's immunity as
-deputy was suspended. He was arrested and imprisoned on January 15th,
-1918. Four days later came the partial disclosure of the documents
-found in his private safe in Florence.
-
-That such papers should ever have been left by a man of M. Caillaux's
-intelligence where they might quite conceivably be attached, and
-that he should have carefully put in writing the names of men whom
-he hoped to use for the purpose of furthering a _coup d'état_, do
-unquestionably support the theory that he is subject to intermittent
-fits of madness. His extraordinary proceedings at Buenos Aires, where,
-according to the United States representative in the Argentine capital,
-he entered into a series of most compromising negotiations with the
-German von Luxburg, were no good evidence of the permanent sanity of
-this successful and experienced man of affairs. But "madness in great
-ones must not unwatched go." His object was avowed in that remote city:
-to make peace with Germany at any price, for the purpose of reviving
-international finance. All these statements coming in succession, and
-accompanied by the formulation of the cases against M. Malvy, Bolo
-Pasha, with Duval and others of the _Bonnet Rouge_ clique, at length
-roused furious public indignation, which the actions of M. Humbert, the
-senator and owner of the _Journal_, the paper that Bolo had in effect
-bought, further inflamed. Who could be regarded as entirely free from
-treacherous designs, when such a crushing indictment as that officially
-formulated against Caillaux could be accepted as correct?--when a
-Minister of the Interior could be publicly charged with criminal
-weakness towards persons more than suspected of high treason of
-the most sordid type?--and when a man of Bolo Pasha's career and
-associations evidently exercised great influence, not to say authority?
-
-The revelations at the trials of the accused persons, and the ugly
-evidence submitted not only made matters look worse for M. Caillaux,
-but roused general amazement that such deadly intrigues should have
-been allowed to go so far under the very eyes of the authorities. The
-career of Bolo Pasha, the direct agent-in-chief of the main conspiracy,
-was well known. The men with whom he was on terms of close intimacy
-were suspected persons, long before any action was taken. The secret
-service department was well aware that he had huge sums of money
-at his disposal that were very, very far in excess of any that he
-could command from his private resources. The origin of his title of
-dishonour from the Khedive could not have escaped notice. Yet he, a
-born Frenchman, all whose begettings and belongings were a matter of
-record, pursued his shameless policy in the interest of Germany with
-apparent certainty of immunity from interference.
-
-It was this very same certainty of immunity that made all but a few
-afraid to speak out. Bolo, in fact, was a privileged person, until
-there was a statesman at the head of affairs who not only did not
-fear to take the heavy responsibility of the arrest and imprisonment
-of M. Caillaux, but was also determined that the proceedings in the
-other cases already commenced should be pushed to their inevitable
-conclusion. "The unseen hand" in France, therefore, was no longer
-unseen. Yet so wide was the reach of the octopus tentacles, directed by
-underground agency, that even to this day not a few innocent, as well
-as guilty, people are in mortal fear lest disclosures may be made which
-will in some or other way implicate them. For the trial of M. Caillaux
-has yet to come.
-
-The two really dramatic episodes in all this gradual exposure of infamy
-were the arrest and imprisonment of M. Caillaux, upon the suspension
-of his privileges as deputy, and the public trial of Bolo Pasha. After
-what had happened since August, 1914, it seemed almost impossible that
-any Minister, however powerful he might be, would venture to go to the
-full extent of what was indispensably necessary with M. Caillaux. A
-man who had been Prime Minister of France, who in that capacity had
-gathered round him groups of politicians whose members looked to him to
-ensure their personal success in the future, was formidably entrenched
-both in the Senate and in the Assembly. To incur the personal enmity
-of such a capable statesman and such a master of intrigue as Joseph
-Caillaux was more than any of the previous Ministries had dared to
-risk. There were too many political reasons against it. Even the most
-honest of the Socialist Ministers themselves seem to have felt that.
-All the time, likewise, an influential portion of the Press vigorously
-supported the ex-Premier. They carried the war into the enemy's camp by
-denouncing his critics either as unscrupulous and lying reactionaries,
-who were endeavouring to ruin a really progressive statesman, as men
-imbued with such lust for slaughter and eagerness for revenge that they
-had lost all grip of the actual situation, or as malignant intriguers
-behind the scenes whose one object was to blacken the character
-of an opponent who stood in the way of their schemes for personal
-aggrandisement.
-
-Furthermore, M. Caillaux, holding the eminent position already referred
-to in the world of finance, had the whole-souled and entire-pocket
-backing of the French and German-Jew international money-lords. These
-magnates of plutocracy, marvellous to relate, found themselves on
-this issue hand in glove with the most active international French
-Socialists. Nobody who was in the least afraid of political cliques,
-of journalistic coteries, of financial syndicates, or of Socialist
-rancour, could put Caillaux under lock and key. And the military
-outlook lent itself to the encouragement of the leading advocate of
-surrender and his acolytes. The word was assiduously passed round that,
-now Russia was out of the fray, a drawn battle was the very best that
-the Entente could hope for.
-
-France was bled white, Great Britain was war-weary and her workers
-were discontented, Italy--think of Caporetto--while, as to the United
-States, America was a long way off, President Wilson was still "too
-proud to fight" in earnest, American troops could never be transported
-in sufficient numbers across the Atlantic, and, to say nothing of
-dangers from submarines, there was not enough shipping afloat to do
-it. All pointed, therefore, to prompt "peace by negotiation," and
-what better man could there be to negotiate such a peace than M.
-Joseph Caillaux? It was because he was the one political personage
-in France who could secure fair terms for his distressful country,
-at this terrible crisis, that he was so persistently attacked by the
-Chauvinists as a pro-German and accused of the most sordid treachery by
-men who envied him his power at the international Council Table!
-
-Such was the situation. So long as M. Caillaux was at large, and able
-to direct the whole of the forces of defeatism, no genuinely patriotic
-Ministry could be successfully formed, or, if formed by some fortuitous
-concurrence of circumstances, could last for three months. Treachery
-breeds treachery as loyalty engenders loyalty. When Clemenceau took
-office, therefore, everything depended upon what he did with Caillaux.
-Paris and all France held their breath as they awaited the event.
-Patriots were doubtful: defeatists were hopeful: soldiers were on the
-look-out for a man.
-
-On January 15th, then, M. Caillaux was arrested and put in prison
-by Clemenceau and his Ministry. All the predictions of upheaval and
-disaster, indulged in by M. Caillaux's friends, were falsified. The
-country breathed more freely. Thenceforward, France knew whom to back.
-But, supposing that M. Caillaux had still been within the precincts of
-Parliament and carrying on his political plots when the terrible news
-came of the disasters of Cambrai and St. Quentin, and when the German
-armies were within cannon-shot of Paris--how then? Those who knew
-best how things stood believe themselves that counsels of despair and
-pusillanimity might have prevailed, to the ruin of the country.
-
-No such fateful issue as that involved in Caillaux's arrest hung upon
-the result of the trial of Bolo Pasha. But Bolo's whole career was a
-tragical farce, to which even Alphonse Daudet could scarcely have done
-full justice. Bolo was a Frenchman of the Midi: a Tartarin with the
-tendencies of a financial Vautrin: a fine specimen of the flamboyant
-and unscrupulous international adventurer. His first experience in the
-domain of extraction was as a dentist in the country of his birth. A
-handsome, blond young man of fine appearance and manners and methods of
-address attractive to women, he soon found that the drawing of teeth
-and other less skilled professions led to the receipt of no emoluments
-worthy of his talents. To take in a well-to-do partner and decamp with
-his wife and the firm's cash-box was more in the way of business.
-
-So satisfactory was this first adventure that he extended his field
-of operations, and several ladies had the advantage of paying for his
-attentions in the shape of all the money of which they chanced to be
-possessed. Somehow or other he found himself in the Champagne country
-during the wine-growers' riots, and continued to have a good time in
-the district while they were going on. But in 1905 the claret region
-proved more lucrative. For in Bordeaux the charm of his disposition
-produced so great an effect upon the widow of a rich merchant of that
-city that she succumbed to his attractions and married him. This
-provided Bolo with the means for setting on foot all sorts of financial
-enterprises in Europe and America. He thus became a promoter of the
-open-hearted and sanguine type, found his way into "society" of the
-kind which opens its arms to such men, had sufficient influence to
-become a chevalier of the Legion of Honour, and by 1914 had lost all
-his wife's money and more into the bargain--was, in fact, in very
-serious financial straits from which he saw no way of extricating
-himself. Certain Egyptian friends he had made, who later obtained for
-him his title of Pasha from the Khedive, were not then in a position to
-help him.
-
-But Bolo without money meant a German agent in search of a job. It
-proved easy to get it. He notified the Germans through the Egyptians
-that he could do good service in France if only he were provided with
-plenty of funds. He was so furnished with hundreds of thousands of
-pounds. _L'Homme Libre_ said of him that he revelled in the prestige
-of having money, to such an extent that he believed that money was
-everything. Rather, perhaps, he had become so accustomed to indulge
-in pleasures and political and financial intrigues of every sort that
-he would run any risk rather than give up the game. So it was that he
-carried on the dangerous policy, if such it could be called, sketched
-above.
-
-About his guilt there could be no doubt. That he had been closely
-connected with people in high places as well as in low, and possessed
-considerable personal magnetism, was clear. All this came out in court,
-where persons of every grade, from Ministers and Senators to Levantine
-rogues and Parisian courtesans, passed in and passed out like figures
-on a cinema film. Bolo, of course, denied every charge, and posed as a
-financier of high degree, but he was condemned to death, and his appeal
-against the sentence was fruitless, though he pretended he could make
-harrowing disclosures. He met his death bravely on April 10th. His fate
-was a heavy blow to other spies and conspirators.
-
-There was an interpellation on the Bolo trial, a month before his
-execution that led to a powerful speech by Clemenceau, in which he
-declared that he was first for liberty, next for war, and finally for
-the sacrifice of everything to secure victory. He then made a vigorous
-appeal to the Socialists to join with the rest of the country in
-supporting his Government in a supreme effort to free France from the
-invader. "It is a great misfortune that my administration should be
-denounced by Renaudel"--then editor of _L'Humanité_--"as a danger to
-the workers. My hands are to the full as hardened by toil as those of
-Renaudel and Albert Thomas, good bourgeois citizens as they are, like
-myself. I have in my pocket a paper in which Renaudel is stigmatised
-as Clemenceau's orderly; nay, adding insult to injury, he is held
-up to public obloquy as _Monsieur_ Renaudel." Then, addressing the
-Socialist group, he declared with vehemence: "We have done you no harm,
-but my methods are not yours. You will not defeat Prussian Junkerdom
-by baa-ing around about peace." The appeal was quite bootless. On a
-division confidence in the Clemenceau Government was voted by 400 to
-75. The Socialists were the 75. The vote was a direct outcome of the
-sordid and gruesome Bolo case.
-
-
- SUMMARY OF EVENTS RELATING TO TREACHERY IN PARIS,
- JULY, 1917, TO JULY, 1918.
-
- _July, 1917._--Clemenceau attacks M. Malvy, then Minister of the
- Interior, for ruinous weakness towards traitors.
-
- Assails the Ribot Ministry as responsible for the propaganda of the
- pro-German journal _Le Bonnet Rouge_.
-
- It was shown later that this newspaper had received State support to
- the extent of £4,000 a year.
-
- _August, 1917._--M. Almereyda (_alias_ Vigo), connected with Bolo
- Pasha, M. Caillaux and the _Bonnet Rouge_, arrested and dies in prison.
-
- M. Malvy "explains" the Almereyda affair.
-
- _September, 1917._--M. Malvy resigns.
-
- _October, 1917._--Debate in Chamber upon M. Léon Daudet's charge of
- treason against Malvy.
-
- Captain Bouchardon begins investigation.
-
- Proprietors of _Bonnet Rouge_ arrested.
-
- _November, 1917._--Revelations by Clemenceau in _l'Homme Enchaîné_,
- which had been going on for a twelvemonth, take effect on public.
-
- _Bonnet Rouge_ trial.
-
- Revelations concerning M. Paix-Séailles's document about French troops
- at Salonika to have been published in _Bonnet Rouge_. Paix-Séailles in
- M. Painlevé's _entourage_.
-
- Clemenceau exposes Caillaux's intrigues with Almereyda, the _Bonnet
- Rouge_, the defeatists in Italy, and comments on the large subsidies
- to the _Bonnet Rouge_ which enabled it to become a daily instead of a
- weekly sheet.
-
- Clemenceau forms Ministry.
-
- _December, 1917._--Clemenceau examined before Committee of Senate on
- Caillaux affair.
-
- Clemenceau declares if Parliament would not sanction prosecution of
- Caillaux his Ministry would resign.
-
- Caillaux's immunity as deputy suspended by vote.
-
- _January, 1918._--Captain Bouchardon's report on Bolo Pasha published.
-
- Traces Bolo's career from 1914, his intrigues with Germany through
- ex-Khedive of Egypt and other Egyptians. Receipt by Bolo of £400,000
- from Deutsche Bank.
-
- Bolo buys shares in _Journal_, and tries to buy shares also in the
- _Figaro_ and the _Temps_.
-
- M. Caillaux arrested.
-
- His private safe brought from Florence containing strange papers
- relating, among other things, to a suggested _coup d'état_.
-
- United States agent at Buenos Aires reveals series of negotiations
- between M. Caillaux and the German representative, Count Luxburg,
- having for object the conclusion of a German peace.
-
- M. Malvy arraigned before the High Court of the Senate.
-
- _February, 1918._--Trial of Bolo begun. Caillaux, Humbert and others
- incriminated.
-
- U.S.A. secret service shows that large sums passed from Count
- Bernstorff, German Ambassador in Washington, to Bolo for the purposes
- of German propaganda.
-
- Bolo found guilty and condemned to be shot on February 16th.
-
- M. Malvy's case before the High Court extended.
-
- _March, 1918._--Bolo appeals.
-
- Bolo case discussed in Chamber. Socialists attack Clemenceau. Vote of
- confidence in Clemenceau's Ministry 400 to 75.
-
- Terrible military disasters at Cambrai and St. Quentin due to heavy
- German attack on positions weakened by withdrawal of British troops.
-
- _April, 1918._--Bolo shot.
-
- Caillaux in gaol.
-
- Malvy trial continued.
-
- _May, 1918._--Caillaux "explains" his connection with _Le Bonnet
- Rouge_.
-
- _June, 1918._--Committee report on M. Malvy's case and fix date of
- trial.
-
- _July, 1918._--M. Malvy found guilty of undue laxity towards traitors
- and condemned to exile from France.
-
- French Socialists infuriated at M. Malvy's expulsion.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- "LA VICTOIRE INTÉGRALE"
-
-
-In the endeavour to give a connected statement of the very dangerous
-German offensive, conducted by their spies and agents in Paris, at the
-most critical period of the whole war, I have been obliged to some
-extent to anticipate events in order to show Clemenceau's share in the
-exposure of this organised treachery. By 1917, as already recorded,
-anti-patriotic and pro-German intrigues in Paris and France had become
-more and more harmful to that "sacred unity" which had been constituted
-to present an unbroken front to the enemy. After the miserable
-breakdown of Russia, largely due to the Bolshevik outbreak fostered
-by German intrigue and subsidised by German money, the position was
-exceedingly dangerous. German troops withdrawn from the Eastern front
-were poured into France and Flanders by hundreds of thousands, and the
-Allied armies were hard put to it to hold their own. At this time,
-when it was all-important to maintain the spirit of the French army,
-the enemy offensive in Paris and throughout France became more and
-more active. What made the situation exceptionally critical was the
-fact that the rank and file of the French soldiery began to feel that,
-however desperately they might fight at the front, they were being
-systematically betrayed in the rear. While, therefore, Clemenceau, in
-his capacity as Senator and President of the Inter-Allied Parliamentary
-Committee, voiced the great and growing discontent of the country with
-the lack of real statesmanship displayed in the conduct of the war, he
-also fulminated against the weakness of the wobbling Ministers who,
-knowing that defeatism and treachery were fermenting all round them,
-took no effective steps to counteract this pernicious propaganda.
-
-The notorious _Bonnet Rouge_ group, however, with M. Joseph Caillaux,
-Bolo Pasha, Almereyda and others in close touch with M. Jean Longuet
-and his pacifist friends of the Socialist Party, were allowed to carry
-on their virulent anti-French campaign in the Press and in other
-directions practically unchecked. It might even have been thought that
-these persons had the sympathy and support of members of the Government.
-
-Thus, when M. Painlevé took office on M. Ribot's resignation in August,
-1917, the outlook was dark all round. The position of the Allied armies
-was by no means satisfactory: the state of affairs in Paris itself was
-not such as to engender confidence: Mr. Lloyd George's headlong speech
-of depreciation on his return from Italy had undone all the good of the
-unanimous resolution passed by the Inter-Allied Parliamentary Committee
-of which Clemenceau was President, declaring that no peace could be
-accepted which did not secure the realisation of national claims and
-the complete triumph of justice all along the line. In short, a fit
-of despondency, almost deepening into despair, had come over Allied
-statesmen. Notwithstanding distrust, however, war-weariness was not
-spreading among the soldiers and sailors. But among the politicians
-it was, and German "peace offensives" were being welcomed in quarters
-which were supposed to be resolute for "_la victoire intégrale_." M.
-Painlevé's administration was scarcely hoisted into the saddle before
-it was ignominiously thrown out again. The instability of successive
-French Ministries was becoming a danger which extended far beyond
-the limits of France. The unification of the Allied command and the
-concentration of effort on the Western front had become imperative.
-The arrest of all those against whom there was serious suspicion of
-treason, no matter how highly they might be placed, was a necessity of
-the moment. Vigorous support for the generals and armies engaged in
-resisting the reinforced enemy was called for from every quarter. So
-the President, M. Poincaré, found himself in a dilemma. But none of
-the leading politicians who had been prominent since the war began was
-prepared to take the responsibility of forming an administration and
-then acting upon the lines which the situation demanded.
-
-It was at this crisis, perhaps the most dangerous that France has had
-to face in all her long history, that the President asked Clemenceau to
-become the Prime Minister. He was then seventy-six years of age and had
-withdrawn from all those conferences and discussions behind the scenes
-which, under ordinary circumstances, invariably precede the acceptance
-of office. The Socialists declared that, no matter what Clemenceau's
-policy might be, they could not serve under him as President of
-Council. Clemenceau could not rely upon support from M. Poincaré, and
-on every ground he was much disinclined to come to the front under
-existing conditions. But his duty to France and its Republic outweighed
-all other considerations, and this old statesman shouldered the burden
-which far younger men declined to take up.
-
-The Socialists went quite wild against him--to the lasting injury, as
-I hold, of their party and their cause--the Radicals and Republicans
-themselves were more than doubtful of the possibility of his success.
-Many politicians and journalists of the Right doubted whether they
-could make common cause with the man who above all other things stood
-for the permanence of Republicanism and was the bitter enemy of
-Clericalism in every shape. Shrewd judges of public opinion stated that
-his Ministry could not last three months.
-
-But courage, frankness and good faith, backed by relentless
-determination, and the genius that blazes up in the day of difficulty,
-go far. The whole French people suddenly called to mind that this
-old Radical of the Bocage of La Vendée, this Parisian of Parisians
-for nearly sixty years, whatever mistakes he may have made in
-opposition or in office, had invariably stood up for the greatness,
-the glory, the dignity of France; that he had voted at Bordeaux for
-the continuance of the war when France lay at the feet of the ruthless
-conqueror and Gambotta was striving to organise his countrymen for
-resistance to the death; that from those dark days of 1871 onwards he
-had always vehemently adjured his countrymen to make ready to resist
-coming invasion; that from August 1914 he had never failed to keep a
-stout heart himself and to do his utmost to encourage his countrymen
-even when the outlook was blackest for the Allies; that he had ever
-been the relentless denouncer of weakness and vacillation, as he
-had also been the unceasing opponent of pacifism, pro-Germanism and
-treachery of every kind; that now, therefore, when _la Patrie_ was in
-desperate danger, when Paris might yet be at the mercy of the enemy,
-of whose hideous ruffianism they had had such bitter experience,
-Georges Clemenceau was the one man to take control of democratic and
-Republican France in the interest of every section of the population.
-These stirring memories of the past rose up behind Clemenceau in the
-present.[E]
-
-Thus it was that the new Prime Minister, coming down from the Senate to
-read his Declaration to the National Assembly, as the French custom is,
-was certain beforehand of a cordial reception from the great majority
-of the Deputies. What might happen afterwards depended upon himself and
-his Ministry: what should occur on this his first appearance in the
-tribune after nearly eight years of absence depended on themselves.
-They took good care that, at the start at least, he should have no
-doubt as to their goodwill. Only the Socialist minority abstained.
-
-The Declaration itself was worthy of the occasion, and it was a
-stirring scene when the veteran of the Radical Party, the Tiger of the
-old days, rose to deliver it to the House, which was crowded on the
-floor and in the galleries with deputies and strangers eager to hear
-what he had to say:--
-
-"Gentlemen, we have taken up the duty of government in order to carry
-on the war with renewed energy and to obtain a better result from our
-concentrated efforts. We are here with but one idea in our minds, the
-war and nothing but the war. The confidence we ask you to give us
-should be the expression of confidence in yourselves. . . . Never has
-France felt more keenly the need for living and growing in the ideal
-of power used on behalf of human rectitude, the resolve to see justice
-done between citizens and peoples able to emancipate themselves. The
-watchword of all our Governments since the war began has been victory
-for the sake of justice. That frank policy we shall uphold. We have
-great soldiers with a great history led by men who have been tested and
-have been inspired to deeds of the highest devotion worthy of their
-ancestral renown. The immortal fatherland of our common humanity,
-overmastering the exultation of victory, will follow, on the lines of
-its destiny, the noble aspiration for peace, through them and through
-us all. Frenchmen impelled by us into the conflict have special claims
-upon us. We owe them everything without reserve. Everything for France:
-everything for the triumph of right. One simple duty is imposed upon
-us, to stand by the soldier, to live, suffer and fight with him, and to
-throw aside everything that is not for our country. The rights on our
-front, the duties in our rear must be merged in one. Every zone must be
-the army zone. If men there are who must cherish the hatreds of bygone
-days, sweep them away.
-
-"All civilised nations are now arrayed in the like battle against
-modern forms of ancient barbarisms. Our Allies and ourselves together
-constitute a solid barrier which shall not be surmounted. Throughout
-the Allied front, at all times and in all places, there is nothing
-but solid brotherhood, the surest basis for the coming world. . . . The
-silent soldiers of the factory, the old peasants working, bent over
-their soil, the vigorous women who toil, the children who help in
-their weakness--these likewise are our _poilus_ who in times to come,
-recalling the great things done, will be able to say with the men in
-the trenches, 'I, too, was there.' . . . Mistakes have been made. Think
-no more about them save only to remedy them.
-
-"But, alas! there have also been crimes, crimes against France which
-demand prompt punishment. We solemnly pledge ourselves, before you and
-before the country, that justice shall be done with the full rigour of
-the law. Personal considerations or political passion shall neither
-divert us from fulfilling this duty nor induce us to go beyond it.
-Too many such crimes have cost us the blood of our soldiers. Weakness
-would mean complicity. There shall be no weakness as there shall be no
-violence. Accused persons shall all be brought before courts-martial.
-The soldier of justice shall make common cause with the soldier in
-the field. No more pacifist plots: no more German intrigues. Neither
-treason nor semi-treason. War, nothing but war. Our country shall not
-be placed between two fires. Our country shall learn that she is really
-defended.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"The day will come when from Paris to the smallest village of France
-storms of cheers will welcome our victorious colours tattered by
-shell-fire and drenched with blood and tears--the glorious memorials
-of our great dead. It is for us to hasten the coming of that day, that
-glorious day, which will fitly take its place beside so many others in
-our history. These are our unshakable resolves, gentlemen: we ask you
-to give them the sanction of your approval."
-
-Such is a free summary of a Ministerial pronouncement that will ever
-be memorable in the annals of France and of mankind. It swept the
-Chamber away as the recital marched on. But organised attacks upon the
-President of the Council at once followed. Now came the supreme test
-of the mental and physical efficiency of this wonderful old man whose
-youth is so amazing. He could read a telling manifesto with vigour
-and effect. Would he be able to reply with equal power to a series of
-interrogations in an atmosphere to which he had been a stranger for so
-many years? Questions, by no means all of them friendly, poured in upon
-Clemenceau from every part of the Chamber. From his attitude towards
-Caillaux and Malvy to his view of the League of Nations and his policy
-in regard to negotiations with the enemy, no point was missed that
-might embarrass or irritate the statesman who had undertaken to stand
-in the gap. He showed immediately that he was fully capable of taking
-his own part. The fervour of the new France was heard in every phrase
-of his crushing reply:
-
-"You do not expect me to talk of personal matters. I am not here for
-that. Still, I have heard enough to understand that the criticisms upon
-me should make me modest. I feel humble for the mistakes I have already
-made and for those which I am likely to make. I do not think I can
-be accused of having sought power. But I am in power. I hope it will
-not be a misfortune for my country. You tell me I have made mistakes.
-Perhaps you do not know the worst of them. I am here because these are
-terrible times when those who through all the struggle have loved their
-country more than they knew see the hopes of the nation centred on
-them. I am here through the pressure of public opinion, and I am almost
-afraid of what it will demand of me, of what it expects of me.
-
-"I have been asked to explain myself in regard to war aims, and as to
-the idea of a League of Nations. I have replied in my declaration, 'We
-must conquer for the sake of justice.' That is clear. We live in a
-time when words have great power, but they have not the power to set
-free. The word 'justice' is as old as mankind. Do you imagine that the
-formula of a League of Nations is going to solve everything?
-
-"There is a committee at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs even now
-preparing a scheme for a League of Nations. Among its members are the
-most authoritative exponents of international law. I undertake that
-immediately their labours are finished I will table the outcome of it
-in this Chamber, if I am still Prime Minister--which does not seem
-likely." (Laughter and cheers.)
-
-"I am not unfavourable to arbitration. It was I who sent M. Léon
-Bourgeois to The Hague, where a series of conventions were agreed upon
-which Germany is now engaged in violating. Many believe that a miracle
-will bring about a League of Nations. I do not myself think that a
-League of Nations will be one of the results of this war. If to-morrow
-you proposed to me that Germany should be included in a League of
-Nations, I should not consent. What guarantees do you offer me?
-Germany's signature? Go and ask the Belgians what they think of that.
-
-"You never weary of saying that the first thing is for Germany herself
-to destroy German militarism, but she is far from destroying it; she
-still holds it fast.
-
-"M. Forgeot wants to make war, but while we are making war he wants
-us to talk about peace. Personally, I believe that when you are doing
-things you should talk as little as possible. Do M. Forgeot's ideas
-come within the range of practical politics? Do people believe that
-the men in the trenches and the women in the factories do not think of
-peace? Our thoughts are theirs. They are fighting to obtain some decent
-security of life; and when you ask me my war aims, I reply that my war
-aim is victory in full." (Loud cheers and Socialist interruption.)
-
-"I understand your aspirations, some of which I share, but do not let
-us make mistakes about war. All these men want peace. But if, while
-they are fighting, the rumour goes round that delegates of one or other
-belligerent country are discussing terms of peace--that yesterday we
-were on the eve of peace, that next day there was a break-off--then
-we are condemned to flounder about in mud and in blood for years
-still. That is the way to disarm and discourage us all. For these
-reasons, I am not in favour of Conferences where citizens of different
-belligerent countries discuss peace which the Governments alone are
-able to decide. I want to make war. This means that for the moment we
-must silence all factious discussion. Is there a man who has been more
-of a party man than I? I see to-day that I have been far too much of a
-party man. My programme is a military and economic programme. We have
-got Allies, to whom we owe loyalty and fidelity, which must override
-every other consideration.
-
-"We have not yet achieved victory. We have come to a cruel phase of
-the war. A time of privation is at hand, a time when our spirit must
-rise to greater heights yet. Do not, then, speak of peace. We all want
-peace, we are making great sacrifices to obtain peace, but we must get
-rid of old animosities and turn solidly against the enemy. Leave all
-other questions alone.
-
-"There is one on which, however, I must touch. Scandals have been
-spoken of. Do you think we can have three years of war without
-Germany trying to keep spies busy in our midst? I complained that our
-look-out was insufficient, and events have too clearly shown that I
-was right. I am told to tell you the truth. You shall have it. But we
-must distinguish between crimes and accusations. As the examination
-proceeds facts will be disclosed which will have their effect. How
-can you expect me to mention names or reveal fragments of truth?
-Certain people have been guilty of indiscretion, want of reflection,
-or weakness. It is not I but the judge who has to decide. You shall
-have the truth. In what form? If there is any revelation of a political
-nature to make there is a political tribunal in this country to make
-it. It shall judge. Just as civil justice must do its work during war
-time, so must political justice." (A voice: "Caillaux!") "I mention no
-name. A journalist has freedom as to what he may say, it is his own
-responsibility; but the head of the Government has a quite different
-task. I am here to put the law in motion if political acts have been
-committed which are subject to a jurisdiction beyond the ordinary
-tribunals.
-
-"Those facts will be brought before the tribunal, but I refuse here to
-accuse any man.
-
-"Justice is our weapon against treason, and where treason is concerned
-there can be no possibility of pardon. In any case, you have got
-a Government which will try to _govern_ in the strict, but high,
-idealistic sense of the word. Where I differ from you, gentlemen of
-the Extreme Left, is when you want to bring abstract conceptions into
-the field of hard facts. That is impossible. We shall try to govern
-honestly and in a Republican spirit. You are not obliged to think we
-shall succeed. But we shall do our best. If we make mistakes, others
-have done so before us, others will do so after us. If at last we see
-before us the long-awaited dawn of victory, I hope--if it is only
-to complete the beauty of the picture--that you will pass a vote of
-censure upon me, and I shall go happy away! I know you will not do
-that; but allow me to point out, as I have a right to tell you, that
-you have almost passed a vote of censure on me already before listening
-to my Ministerial programme. I challenge you to say that we have made
-any attempt to deceive you. If we get painful news, our hearts will
-bleed, but we shall tell that news to you here. We have never given
-anybody the right to suppose that we constitute a peril to any class of
-citizen or a danger to the national defence. If you think the contrary,
-prove it, and I will leave the House. But if you believe that what we
-want above all is the welfare of France, give us your confidence, and
-we will endeavour to be worthy of it."
-
-His deeds have been on a level with his words. Bolo and Duval shot:
-Caillaux in gaol: Malvy exiled by decree of the Senate: the _Bonnet
-Rouge_ gang tried and condemned: the wretched intrigue in Switzerland
-with the poor German tool, Austria exposed and crushed: a new spirit
-breathed into all public affairs: the army reassured by his perpetual
-presence under fire and his unfailing resolve at the War Office that
-the splendid capacity and intrepidity of all ranks at the front shall
-not be sacrificed by treachery or cowardice at the rear: the Higher
-Command brimful of enthusiasm and confidence, due to the appointment of
-the military genius Foch as generalissimo of the United Allied Armies
-and the reinstatement of General Mangin at the head of his _corps
-d'armée_: the Allies, like France herself, convinced that they have at
-last discovered a man. Such was the stirring work that Clemenceau had
-been doing since he took office.
-
-So to-day Clemenceau is still democratic dictator of the French
-Republic as no man has been for more than a century. When the enemy
-was arrayed in overwhelming numbers close to Amiens and within a few
-miles of Calais, when the German War Lords were decreeing the permanent
-subjugation of the territories they occupied in the West and in the
-East, when the long-range guns were bombarding the capital and the
-removal of the seat of government to the provinces was again being
-considered, the great French nation felt more confident of its future
-than at any moment since the victories won around Verdun. To every
-question Clemenceau's answer invariably was, "Je fais la guerre. Je
-fais la guerre. Je fais la guerre."
-
-Those who doubted were convinced: those who were doubtful saw their
-aspirations realised: those who had never wavered cheered for victory
-right ahead.
-
-On June 6th, 1918, the French Socialist group in the Chamber of
-Deputies made another of those attacks upon the National Administration
-which, sad to say, have done so much to discredit the whole Socialist
-Party, and even the Socialist cause, throughout Europe and the world.
-Pacifism and Bolshevism together--that is to say, an unholy combination
-between anti-nationalism and anarchism, have indeed shaken the
-influence of democratic Socialism to its foundations, just at the time
-when a sound, sober and constructive Socialist policy, in harmony with
-the aspirations of the mass of the people in every Allied country,
-might have led mankind peacefully along the road to the new period of
-national and international co-operation. The Socialist Deputies in the
-Chamber held Clemenceau's Ministry, which they had done their very
-utmost to discredit and weaken, directly responsible for the serious
-military reverses recently undergone by the French and Allied armies.
-They insisted, therefore, upon Clemenceau's appearance in the tribune.
-But when they had got him in front of them their great object evidently
-was not to let him speak. There this old statesman stood, exposed to
-interruptions which were in the worst of bad taste. At last he thought
-the opportunity for which his enemies clamoured had come, and began to
-address the Assembly. But no sooner had he opened his mouth than he was
-forced to give way to M. Marcel Cachin. Only then was he enabled to get
-a hearing, and this is a summary of what he said:--
-
-"I regret that, our country being in such great danger, a unanimous
-vote of confidence cannot be accorded to us. But, when all is said,
-the opposition of the Socialists does not in the least enfeeble the
-Government. For four long years our troops have held their own at the
-front with a line which was being steadily worn down. Now a huge body
-of German soldiers fresh from Russia and in good heart come forward to
-assail us. Some retreat was inevitable. From the moment when Russia
-thought that peace could be obtained by the simple expression of wishes
-to that end we all knew that, sooner or later, the enemy would be able
-to release a million of men to fall upon us. That meant that such a
-retirement as we have witnessed must of necessity follow. Our men have
-kept their line unbroken against odds of five to one. They have often
-gone sleepless for three days and even four days in succession. But
-our great soldiers have had great leaders, and our army as a whole has
-proved itself to be greater than even we could expect.
-
-"The duties we have to perform here are, in contrast to their heroism,
-tame and even petty. All we have to do is to keep cool and hold on. The
-Germans are nothing like so clever as they believe themselves to be.
-They have but a single device. They throw their entire weight into one
-general assault, and push their advantage to the utmost. True they
-have forced back our lines of defence. But final success is that alone
-which matters, and that success for us is certain. The Government you
-see before you took office with the firm resolve never to surrender. So
-long as we stand here our country will be defended to the last. Give
-way we never shall.
-
-"Germany has once more staked her all on one great blow, thinking
-to cow us into abandoning the conflict. Her armies have tried this
-desperate game before. They tried it on the Marne, they tried it on the
-Yser, they tried it at Verdun, they tried it elsewhere. But they never
-have succeeded, and they never shall. Our Allies to-day are the leading
-nations of the world. They have one and all pledged themselves to fight
-on till victory is within our grasp. The men who have already fallen
-have not fallen in vain. By their death they have once more made French
-history a great and noble record. It is now for the living to finish
-the glorious work done by the dead."
-
-This great speech raised the overwhelming majority of the Assembly
-to the highest pitch of enthusiasm. Nearly all present felt that the
-destinies of France hung in the balance, and that any vote given which
-might tend to discourage the men at the front at such a time was a
-direct service rendered to the enemy whose bombs were even then falling
-in the heart of Paris. The vote of confidence in Clemenceau and his
-Ministry was carried by 377 votes to 110; and of these 110 more than a
-third were convinced shortly afterwards that the course they had then
-taken in order to preserve the unity of their forces as factionists was
-unworthy of their dignity as men.
-
-Then, too, when the tide turned and the German hordes, after fresh
-glorious battles of the Marne and of the Somme, were in headlong
-retreat, Clemenceau, unelated by victory as he was undiscouraged by
-defeat, repeated again: "Je fais la guerre. Je fais la guerre. Je fais
-la guerre." Not until the German armies were finally vanquished would
-the Republican statesman talk of making peace. On both sides of the
-Atlantic, therefore, as on both sides of the Channel, knowing Great
-Britain and the United States by personal experience and able to gauge
-the cold resolution of the one and the inexhaustible resources and
-determination of the other, speaking and writing English well, he is
-now, as he has been throughout this tremendous war, a tower of strength
-to the forces of democracy and a very present help to all who are
-resolved to break down German militarism for evermore.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
- CONCLUSION
-
-
-"Georges Clemenceau, President of the Council and Minister of War, and
-Marshal Foch, General-in-Chief of the Allied armies, have well deserved
-the gratitude of the country."
-
-That is the Resolution which, by the unanimous vote of the Senate
-of the French Republic, will be placed in a conspicuous position in
-every Town Hall and in the Council Chamber of every commune throughout
-France. The Senators of France are not easily roused to enthusiasm.
-What they thus unanimously voted, in the absence of Clemenceau, amid
-general acclamation, is a fine recognition of his pre-eminent service
-as well as of his indefatigable devotion to duty at the most desperate
-crisis in the long and glorious history of his country. Nothing like
-it has ever been known. The reward is unprecedented: the work done has
-surpassed every record.
-
-It is well that the great statesman should be honoured in advance of
-the great military commander. Marshal Foch has accomplished marvels in
-more than four years of continuous activity, from the first battle of
-the Marne to the signing of the armistice of unconditional surrender.
-All Europe and the civilised world are indebted to him for his masterly
-strategy and successful manœuvres. But France owes most to Clemenceau.
-
-Towards the close of this historic sitting Clemenceau himself entered
-the Senate. He received an astounding welcome. Everyone present rose
-to greet him. Men who but yesterday were his enemies, and are still
-his opponents, rushed forward with the rest to applaud him, to shake
-hands with him, to thank him, to embrace him. The excitement was so
-overwhelming that Clemenceau, for the first time in his life, broke
-down. Tears coursed down his cheeks and for some moments he was unable
-to speak. When he did he, as always, refused to take the credit and
-the glory of the overthrow of the Germans and their confederates to
-himself. In victory in November, as when he was confronting difficulty
-and danger in March and July, his first and his last thoughts were of
-France. The spirit of France, the citizens of France, the soldiers and
-sailors of France: these were they who in comradeship with the Allies
-had achieved the great victory over the last convulsions of savagery.
-He had been more than fully rewarded for all he had done by witnessing
-the expulsion of the foreigner and the liberation of the territory.
-His task had merely been to give full expression to the courage and
-determination of his countrymen.
-
-Clemenceau spoke not only as a French statesman, as the veteran
-upholder of the French Republic, but as one who remembered well the
-horrors and defeats of 1870-71, now followed, forty-eight years later,
-by the horrors and the triumphs of 1918. The Senators who heard him
-and acclaimed him felt that Clemenceau was addressing them as the man
-who had embodied in himself, for all those long years, the soul of the
-France of the Great Revolution, and now at last was able to show what
-he really was.
-
-This moving reception in the Senate had been preceded by an almost
-equally glowing display of enthusiasm in the Chamber of Deputies.
-There too--with the exception of a mere handful of Socialists whose
-extraordinary devotion to Caillaux and Malvy blinds them to the genius
-of their countryman--the whole Assembly rose up to welcome and cheer
-him. Clemenceau, speaking there, also, under strong emotion, after two
-stirring orations from M. Deschanel and M. Pichon, assured the Deputies
-that the armistice which would be granted to Germany could only be on
-the lines of those accorded to Bulgaria, Austria-Hungary and Turkey.
-Marshal Foch would decide the details, which now all the world knows.
-
-But, after having dealt with the armistice implored by Germany,
-Clemenceau went back to the past and said: "When I remember that I
-entered the National Assembly of Bordeaux in 1871, and was--I am the
-last of them--one of the signers of the protests against the annexation
-of Alsace-Lorraine . . . it is impossible for me, now peace is certain
-and our victory assured, to leave the tribune without paying homage to
-those who were the initiators and first workers in the immense task
-which is being completed at this moment.
-
-"I wish to speak of Gambetta" (the whole House rises with prolonged
-cheering) "--of him who, defending the territory under circumstances
-which rendered victory impossible, never despaired. With him and with
-Chanzy I voted for the continuation of the war, and in truth, when I
-think of what has happened in these fifty years, I ask myself whether
-the war has not continued all the time. May our thoughts go back to
-them; and when these terrible iron doors that Germany has closed
-against us shall be opened, let us say to them: 'Pass in first. You
-showed us the way.'"
-
-The French Premier went on to speak of the problems of peace, which
-could only be solved, like the problems of war, by national unity for
-the common cause, "for the Republic which we made in peace, which we
-have upheld in war, the Republic which has saved us during the war." He
-appealed "First for solidarity with the Allies, and then for solidarity
-among the French." This was needful for the maintenance of peace and
-the future of their common humanity. Humanity's great crusade was
-inspired not by the thought of God but of France. "_Ce n'est pas Dieu,
-c'est la France qui le veut._"
-
-The Deputies rose again and again. It would have been strange if they
-had not.
-
-But fine though these speeches were, and impressive as was the Prime
-Minister's adjuration that, since the problems of peace were harder
-than those of war, they must prove their worth in both fields--it
-was Clemenceau's personal influence that gave them their special
-value. Undoubtedly the splendid fighting of the French and British
-and American troops and the admirable skill of their commanders had
-produced that dramatic change from the days of depression from March
-to July to the period of continuous triumph from July to November.
-This Clemenceau never allows us for one moment to forget. But he it
-was who had breathed new life into the whole combination, military
-and civilian, at the front and in the factories. No man of his time
-of life, perhaps no man of any age, ever carried on continuously such
-exhausting toil, physical and mental, as that which this marvellous old
-statesman of seventy-seven undertook and carried though from November
-1917 to November 1918.
-
-His energy and power of work were those of a vigorous young man in
-the height of training. Starting for the front in a motor-car at four
-or five o'clock in the morning at least three times a week, he kept
-in touch with generals, officers and soldiers all along the lines
-to an extent that would have seemed incredible if it had not been
-actually done. Once at the front he walked about under fire as if he
-had come out for the pleasure of risking his life with the _poilus_
-who were fighting for La Patrie. Marshal Foch and Higher Command were
-in constant fear for him. But he knew what he was about. Valuable as
-his own life might be to the country, to court death was a higher duty
-than to take care of himself, if by this seeming indifference he made
-Frenchmen all along the trenches feel that he and they were one. He
-succeeded. Fortune favoured him throughout. Then having discoursed
-with the Marshal and his generals, having saluted and talked with the
-officers, he chatted with the rank and file of the soldiery and rushed
-back to Paris, arriving at the Ministry of War at ten or eleven o'clock
-at night, ready to attend to such pressing business as demanded his
-personal care. And all the time cheerful, alert, confident, showing,
-when things looked dark, as when the great advance began, that the
-Prime Minister of the Republic never for one moment doubted the Germans
-would be hurled back over the frontier and France would again take her
-rightful place in the world.
-
-And that is not all. Clemenceau's influence in the Council Chamber of
-the Allies was and is supreme. The old gaiety of heart remains, but
-the soundness of judgment and determination to accept no compromise
-of principle are more marked than ever. Many dangerous intrigues
-during the past few months, of which the world has heard little, were
-snuffed clean out by Clemenceau's force of character and overwhelming
-personality. The French Prime Minister wanted final victory for France
-and her Allies. Nothing short of this would satisfy him. There was
-no personal loyalty he wished to build up, no political object that
-he desired to attain, no section or party that he felt himself bound
-to propitiate. Therefore the other Ministers of the Allies found
-themselves at the table with a statesman who was something more than an
-individual representative of his nation. He was the human embodiment of
-a cause. What that meant and still means will only be known when the
-dust of conflict has passed from us and the whole truth of Clemenceau's
-policy can be told.
-
-For my part I have done my best as an old and convinced
-Social-Democrat, and on some important points his opponent, to give
-a frank and unbiassed study of Clemenceau's fine career. His very
-mistakes serve only to throw into higher relief his sterling character
-and the genius which has enabled him to command success. Read aright,
-his actions do all hang together, and constitute one complete whole.
-Comprising within himself the brilliant yet thorough capacity of his
-French countrymen, he has risen when close upon eighty to the height of
-the terribly responsible position he was forced to fill.
-
-Therefore his efforts have been crowned with complete victory. Having
-forgotten himself in his work, the man Clemenceau will never be
-forgotten. He will stand out in history as the great statesman of the
-Great War.
-
-And now that he and we have won--our aid, as none knows or
-appreciates better, having been absolutely indispensable to the
-French triumph--Clemenceau feels so deeply that France as a whole
-has shared in the great awakening that, having himself appointed the
-devout Catholic Marshal Foch generalissimo of the Allied armies, he,
-of all men, joined in the _Te Deum_ of Thanksgiving in the Cathedral
-of Lille! The work he has done, the risks he has run, the unshakable
-determination he has displayed, have raised him high above all petty
-considerations of politics, creeds, classes, or conditions. Therefore
-he is the hero of France after her desperate struggle for national
-existence.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
- Adulteration, John Bright on, 194
-
- Albert, 16
-
- Amadé, General, 212
-
- Arago, Etienne, 9, 24, 32, 35
-
- Armistice of 1871, 36
-
- Aumale, Duc d', and Boulanger, 95
-
-
- Bakunin, 50
-
- Barodet, 69, 86, 87
-
- Barrès, M., 265
-
- Basly, M., miners' agent, 180
-
- Bazaine, Marshal, 32, 36, 40
-
- Bebel and Jaurès on the Fleet, 238
-
- ---- and the Social-Democrats, 244
-
- Beesly, Prof., 50
-
- Bellers, John, 234
-
- Benedek, Marshal, 27
-
- Berlin, brutality and greed of, 34
-
- Beslay, 45, 49
-
- Billot, General, 157
-
- Bismarck--the forgery at Ems, 33
-
- Blanc, Louis, 16, 39, 78, 85
-
- Blanqui, 49, 56, 58, 59, 61
-
- "Blessed word," the, 19
-
- Boer War, the, 216, 217
-
- Boisdeffre, General, 157
-
- Bolo Pasha, 273-280
-
- _Bonnet Rouge_, arrest of proprietors, 267
-
- Bordeaux, the Government at, 249
-
- Boulanger, General, 10
-
- Boulanger, General, and Army reforms, 96
-
- ----, as War Minister, 96
-
- ----, candidate for Paris, 101
-
- ----, deprived of his command, 99
-
- ----, downfall, its effect on the influence of Clemenceau, 105
-
- ----, elected for the Nord, 100
-
- ----, enters politics, a candidate for the Nord and the Dordogne, 99
-
- ----, fails to profit by his success, 103
-
- ----, flight and suicide, 104
-
- ----, his duel with M. Floquet, 98
-
- ----, his popularity after the affair Schnäbele, 97
-
- ----, his relations with the Duc d'Aumale, 95
-
- ----, his visits to Paris, 99
-
- ----, posted to the command of army corps at Clermont-Ferrand, 99
-
- ----, returned for Paris by a heavy majority, 103
-
- ----, rides through Paris on his black charger, 102
-
- ----, the pet of the _Salons_ 97
-
- Bourbon, House of, 16
-
- Brandès, M., Clemenceau's attack on, 251
-
- Briand, M., 206
-
- ----, as an anarchist, 225
-
- Bright, John, on adulteration, 194
-
- Brisson, M., 78, 157, 162
-
- British statesmanship, blindness of, 236
-
- Broglie, Duc de, 10, 73, 74, 78, 101
-
- Brousse, Paul, 100
-
- Brown, John, and the American Civil War, 52
-
- Buffet, 72
-
- Butchery of peaceful citizens, 17
-
-
- Caillaux, M., 206
-
- ----, and a German peace, 267-269
-
- ----, and Italian defeatists, 272
-
- ----, and the Income tax, 268
-
- ----, before the Army Committee of the Senate, 270
-
- ----, the financier, and the Income tax, 227
-
- Calmette, M., the murder of, 269
-
- Cambon, Jules, warns M. Pichon in 1913, 250
-
- Camélinat, 45, 49
-
- Canrobert, 17
-
- Carnot, M. Sadi-, 93, 118
-
- ----, President, supports Lesseps 112, 113
-
- Carrousel, the inscription on the, 138, 139
-
- Casablanca, French settlers at, 212
-
- Caserio, the anarchist, 137
-
- Cassagnac, Paul de, 125
-
- Charles X, 20
-
- Chateaubriand, 17
-
- Church and State, conflict between, 220-224
-
- Cipriani, 58
-
- Cinquet, M., 166
-
- Citoyen Egalité, 16
-
- Clemenceau, a Premier, asks England how many hundred thousand men she
-could land in North-Eastern France in case of a sudden war, 219
-
- ---- and Boulanger, 95
-
- ---- and Boulangism, 100
-
- ---- and Morocco, 202
-
- ---- and strikes, 198-201
-
- ---- and the coal miners, 135
-
- ---- and the doctrine of _laissez-faire_ 135
-
- ---- and the _Entente_, 120
-
- ---- and the story of Boaz and Ruth, 137
-
- ---- and the strikers at Carmaux, 120
-
- ---- and the wine-growers' agitation, 195-197
-
- ----'s anti-Czarist policy, 120
-
- ----'s appeal to Frenchmen, 245
-
- ---- as a conversationalist, 124
-
- ---- as a duellist, 125
-
- ---- as an orator, 123, 124
-
- ---- as doctor at Montmartre, 32
-
- ---- as Mayor of Montmartre, 35
-
- ---- as Minister of the Interior, 172
-
- ---- as municipal dictator, 35
-
- ---- as one of M. Floquet's seconds at the duel with Boulanger, 99
-
- ---- as professor of French at Stanford, U.S.A., 29
-
- ---- as Senator for Var, 171
-
- ---- at Nantes as a student, 15
-
- ----'s attitude in the matter of M. Wilson's trading in decorations, 93
-
- ----'s attitude towards the Catholics, 61
-
- ----, author's conversation with, 207
-
- ---- becomes "suspect" and ceases to be Mayor of Montmartre, 42
-
- ----'s betrothal to Mary Plummer, 30
-
- ---- calls up the State engineers and re-lights Paris, 183
-
- ----, charges against him, 119, 120
-
- ----'s contempt for politicians as politicians, 94
-
- ----'s criticism on the German fête of Sedan, 138
-
- ----'s criticism on the catastrophe of the Charity Bazaar, 137
-
- ---- defends himself in the National Assembly, 119
-
- ---- denounces M. Ribot, 265
-
- ----'s disregard of monetary considerations, 125
-
- ----'s distrust of colonisation by conquest, 234
-
- ----, Dreyfus affair, 151-170
-
- ----'s duel with Commandant Poussages, 53
-
- ----, efforts of his enemies to connect him with the Panama scandal, 117
-
- ----, failure to attain Presidentship of Chamber, 126
-
- ----, fight for Draguignan, 122
-
- ----, freedom of speech, 94
-
- ----, French intervention in Egypt, 91
-
- ----, French peasantry, knowledge of, 133
-
- ----, his reception by the miners at Lens, 177
-
- ---- in America, 29
-
- ---- in prison of Mazas, 25
-
- ----'s individualism antipathetic to Socialist view of collective social
-progress, 121
-
- ----'s influence in council chamber of the Allies, 299
-
- ---- introduces measure to establish Municipal Council of Paris, 54
-
- ----'s knowledge of Parisian life, 54
-
- ----, letters to the _Temps_, 29
-
- ----, literary works, 141
-
- ----, love of animals, 142
-
- ----, love of Paris, 139, 140
-
- ---- on French intervention in Egypt, 91
-
- ---- on the "Right to Strike," 174
-
- ----, opponent of Gambetta, 90
-
- ---- opposed to colonial adventure, 88
-
- ---- opposed to colonisation by conquest, 62
-
- ---- opposed to execution of Generals Lecomte and Thomas, 42
-
- ----'s opposition to M. Ferry and his support of M. Sadi-Carnot, 93
-
- ----'s powerful personality, 131
-
- ----'s power of work, 125
-
- ----'s reply to Jaurès, 189
-
- ---- retires from parliamentary life after defeat at Draguignan, 123
-
- ----'s sense of humour, 55
-
- ----'s speech at Hyères, 206
-
- ----'s speech at Lyons on the miners' strike, 181
-
- ----'s speech in favour of amnesty of Communists, 56
-
- ----'s speech in the National Assembly, 43
-
- ----'s statement of Socialism, 131
-
- ---- the Tiger, 81
-
- ----, the universal sceptic, 172
-
- ----, tour of propaganda, 43
-
- ---- turns journalist, 128
-
- ---- turns lecturer, 232
-
- ----'s view of Boulangist agitation, 101
-
- ----'s warning after the battle of the Marne, 250
-
- ----, 1870-71, the war of, 237
-
- Cluseret, 48, 51
-
- Commune, administration of the, 45
-
- ----, establishment of the, 41
-
- "Communist Manifesto," the, 50
-
- Comte, Auguste, 25, 26
-
- Constans, M., said to be the cause of the Boulanger fiasco, 103
-
- "Co-operative Commonwealth," 51
-
- Cottu, M., indictment of, 116
-
- Courbet, 45
-
- Courrières-Lens colliery disaster, the, 173
-
-
- Damiens, the assassin, 136
-
- d'Aumale, Duc, 23
-
- Daudet, M. Léon, 265
-
- Delcassé, M., 173
-
- ---- and Clemenceau, antagonism between, 229-231
-
- ---- and the Kaiser, 205
-
- ----, King Edward's courtesy to, 218
-
- Declaration, Clemenceau's, 284-290
-
- Delescluze, 45, 51, 58
-
- Déroulède, M., saves a situation, 217
-
- Dilke, Sir Charles, 89, 204
-
- Dombrowski, 51
-
- Doumergue, M., 206
-
- Dreyfus, 10
-
- Dufaure, 78, 84
-
-
- Edward VII, King, 213
-
- Eiffel, M., indictment of, 116
-
- Electrical engineers' strike in Paris, 182
-
- _Encyclopædia Britannica_: tribute to M. Clemenceau, 214
-
- Engels, 50
-
- England's opposition to construction of Suez Canal, 106
-
- Esterhazy, Major, 157-162
-
-
- Fallières, M., 213
-
- ---- and M. Clemenceau in London, 218
-
- Favre, Jules, 36
-
- Ferry, Jules, 78, 84, 87, 88, 89, 92, 213
-
- ---- and colonial expansion, 119
-
- Fez, French delegation at, 204
-
- Flahault, 17
-
- Floquet, 78, 115
-
- ----, duel with Gen. Boulanger, 98
-
- Flourens, M., his pen-picture of King Edward, 214-216
-
- Foch, Marshal, 295
-
- Fontane, M., indictment of, 116
-
- Fontenay le Comte, 14
-
- Foreign affairs in 1908, 213
-
- France and England, a better feeling between, 21
-
- ---- and Great Britain, relations between, 213
-
- ----, the wealth of, 234, 235
-
- Francis Joseph, 27
-
- Franco-German agreement of 1909, 239
-
- ---- convention of 1911, 239-241
-
- _Fraser's Magazine_, extract from, 45
-
- French Revolution, 16
-
- Freycinet, M., 84, 96
-
-
- Gallifet, 51
-
- Gambetta, 10, 43, 44, 60, 64-79, 82, 83, 87, 88, 89, 90, 210
-
- Gauthier, M., urges the Government to complete Panama Canal, 114
-
- Germany and Morocco, 202
-
- ----, preparations of, 243
-
- Germinat, Admiral, and the Navy, 226
-
- Gonse, General, 157, 163, 166
-
- Grévy, Albert, 78, 82, 84, 85, 86, 88, 92, 93
-
- Gribelin, M., 166
-
- Guesde, Jules, 261
-
- Guesdists, the, 121
-
-
- Haldane, Lord, 204
-
- ----, "sublime confidence" in Germany, 242
-
- "Harum, David," his motto, 62
-
- Haussmann, Baron, 22
-
- Henry, Colonel, 158, 165
-
- ----, the anarchist, 136, 137
-
- Henty, George, 167
-
- Herz, M. Cornelius, and his part in the Panama scandal, 109, 116, 117, 118
-
- Hugo, Victor, 23
-
- Humbert, M., 272
-
- Hyndman, Hugh, 45
-
-
- Income tax, a graduated, 227
-
- Infiltration, German, and France, 258-260
-
- Interpenetration, German, 257
-
- Ismail Pasha, Khedive, 106
-
- Italian campaign, the, 21
-
- Italian Carbonari, 17
-
-
- Jacques, a liquor dealer, chosen to fight Paris against the General, 102
-
- Jaurès and peace, 238
-
- ----, 124, 125, 139, 157, 163, 164, 168, 169, 170, 183-192, 212
-
- ---- in public affairs, 121
-
- Jouaust, Colonel, 165, 166
-
- Jourde, 45, 49
-
- Judet, M., one of Clemenceau's detractors, 118
-
- Junck, M., 166
-
- Junker party and the Crown Prince, 205
-
- _Justice, La_ 84
-
-
- Kaiser, the, and preparations for the war, 218
-
- ----, and the King of Spain, 203
-
- ----, and the Sultan of Morocco, 203
-
- King Edward and Clemenceau, 214-217
-
-
- Labori, M., 160
-
- Labour, Minstry of, and M. Viviani, 229
-
- Lac, Father du, 158
-
- Langlois, Colonel, 53
-
- Lauth, Major 165, 166
-
- Le Blond, Maurice, 29
-
- Lecomte, General, 41, 42, 53
-
- Lesseps, M. Ferdinand, 106-107
-
- ----, Count Ferdinand de, indictment of, 116
-
- ----, Count de, 115
-
- ----, Count, two estimates of his character, 111, 112
-
- ----, M. C. de, indictment of, 116
-
- Lichnowsky's, Prince, revelations, 244
-
- Liebknecht, Wilhelm, 168, 169
-
- Longuet, 45, 262
-
- Lottery Bill, the Panama, 109
-
- Loubet, President, 118
-
- Louis XVI, 16
-
- ---- XVIII, 20
-
- ---- Philippe, 16, 20
-
-
- MacMahon, Marshal, 10, 36, 69, 72-78, 82, 85
-
- Madeira wine and a story about Cette, 191
-
- Malvy, M., and pro-Germans, 264
-
- Mannesmann, Brothers, 212
-
- Marx, 50, 131
-
- Marxists, the, 121
-
- Méline, M., 157
-
- Mercier, General, 157, 166
-
- Michel, E. B., 45
-
- Mill, John Stuart, a dedication to, 25
-
- Montagnards, insurrection of the, 57
-
- Morny, 17
-
- Morocco affair, the, 173
-
- ----, French policy in, 211
-
- Mouilleron-en-Pareds, 14
-
-
- Napoleon III, 20, 22, 23, 33
-
- ----, chief cause of downfall of, 27
-
- ----, loss of prestige, 32
-
- ----, Louis, 16, 17, 19, 21, 27, 28
-
- ----, the Court of, 21
-
- Naquet, 87
-
- Narbonne and Montpellier, disaffection among the wine-growers, 194
-
- National workshops, 16
-
- Nicholas, Emperor, 21
-
- 1918, June, the Socialists and Clemenceau, 291-293
-
- Noir, Victor, murder of, 32
-
- Norton, M., 118
-
- "Novel with a purpose," the, 146
-
-
- Orleans, House of, 16
-
- Orsini bomb, the, 21
-
-
- Painlevé, M., 282
-
- Panama Canal, a congress of nations called by Lesseps, 107
-
- ---- and financial corruption, 110
-
- ---- and opponents of the Republic, 111
-
- ----, collapse of the company, 113
-
- ----, horrors on the Isthmus, 109
-
- ----, indictment of directors, 116
-
- ---- scandal, accusation of deputies, senators, and academicians, 115
-
- ---- scandal, Presidents Carnot and Loubet's attitude, 111
-
- ---- scandal, the, 10
-
- Paris and the Provinces, 19
-
- Paty du Clam, Colonel, 158
-
- Peace as desired by Socialist leaders, 238
-
- Perovskaia, Sophie, 58
-
- Persigny, 17
-
- Phylloxera ravages in the Bordeaux vineyards, 194
-
- Pichon, M., 206, 213
-
- Picquart, Colonel, 157, 162, 164, 166, 206
-
- Plébiscite, the, 17, 19, 20, 33
-
- Poincaré and Clemenceau, relations between, 255
-
- Population, concentration of, John Bellers on, 234
-
- ----, Petty on the same, _ibid._
-
- Pyat, 43, 44, 51
-
-
- Radolin, Prince, 212
-
- Railways, the nationalisation of, 226
-
- Raspail, 58
-
- Ravachol, the anarchist, 136
-
- Reinach, M. Jacques, and his part in the Panama Scandal, 109
-
- ----, the tragedy of his death, 116, 117, 118
-
- Rémusat, de, 69
-
- Republic of 1848, 16
-
- Retreat, the great, of August 1914, 248
-
- Revolution, the French, Clemenceau on, 228
-
- Ribot, M., denounced by Clemenceau, 265
-
- Rochefort, 23
-
- Roget, M., 166
-
- Rollin, Ledru, 16
-
- Rosen, Dr., 212
-
- Rossel, 51
-
- Rouher, 23
-
- Rousseau, M., reports unfavourably on Panama Canal, 108
-
- Rouvier, M., 115, 172
-
- ----, defends the President in the Wilson affair, 93
-
- ----, refuses to accept Boulanger as War Minister, 98
-
- Russia, campaign against, 21
-
-
- Sarrien, M., 172, 193, 206
-
- Scheurer-Kestner, 157-163
-
- Schnäbele affair, the, Boulanger's part in it, 96, 97
-
- Second Empire, the, 15
-
- Shaw, Bernard, 192
-
- Simon, Jules, 73, 74
-
- Social-Democracy, German, and the war, 244
-
- Socialist demonstration against Clemenceau at unveiling of statue to
-M. Floquet, 227
-
- ---- Party, the, anti-patriotic, 262-3
-
- Sonnino, Baron, and Caillaux, 272
-
- Spüller, 90
-
- Suez Canal, the, 106
-
-
- Thiers, 9, 37, 39, 44, 50, 51, 54, 68, 69
-
- Thomas, Albert, 261
-
- ----, General, 41, 42, 53
-
- Trochu, General, 36
-
- Tunis, the question of, 88
-
-
- "_Utrinque paratus_," 9
-
-
- Vaillant, 45, 125
-
- ---- and Hervé, and the war, 261
-
- ---- and peace, 238
-
- ----, the anarchist, 136, 137
-
- ----, Edouard, the Blanquist, 121
-
- Vendée, La, 13, 14, 15
-
- Venice, the annexation of, 27
-
- Verdun, Clemenceau on the victories at, 251
-
- Vermorel, 43
-
- Victoria, Queen, 34
-
- _Ville Lumière, La_, 24
-
- Viviani, M., 206, 229
-
-
- Waddington, 83, 84
-
- Ward, Mrs. Humphry, 8
-
- Wilson, trading in decorations, 92
-
- Wine, adulteration of, 194
-
- Working Men's Association, the International, 50
-
- Wyse, Buonaparte, sells concession for Panama canal scheme to Lesseps, 108
-
-
- Zola, 157-160
-
- ----, the trial of, 162, 164
-
- Zurlinden, General, 157
-
-
-
-
- WORKS BY GEORGES CLEMENCEAU.
-
-
- _De la Génération des Éléments Anatomiques._ 8vo. Paris: Baillière et
- fils. 1865.
-
- _Notions d'Anatomie et de Physiologie Générale. De la Génération des
- Éléments Anatomiques._ Précédée d'une introduction par M. Charles
- Robin. 8vo. Paris: Germer Baillière. 1867.
-
- J. Stuart Mill: _Auguste Comte et le Positivisme_. 18mo. Paris: Germer
- Baillière. 1868. Alcau. 1893.
-
- _L'Amnistie devant le Parlement._ Discours Chambre des Députés, 16
- Mai, 1876. 18mo. Paris: Imp. Wittersheim. 1876.
-
- _Affaires Egyptiennes._ Discours Chambre des Députés, 19 and 20
- Juillet, 1882. 18mo. Paris: Imp. Wittersheim. 1882.
-
- _Discours prononcé au Cirque Fernando le 25 Mai, 1884._ (Account of
- Clemenceau's stewardship.) 18mo. Paris: Imp. Schiller. 1884.
-
- _Affaire du Tonkin._ Discours Chambre des Députés, 27 Nov., 1884.
- 18mo. Paris: Imp. Schiller. 1884.
-
- _Politique Coloniale._ Discours Chambre des Députés, 30 Juillet, 1884.
- 18mo. Paris: Imp. Schiller. 1885.
-
- _Discours prononcé à Draguignan, 13 Septembre 1885._ 18mo. Paris: Imp.
- Schiller. 1885.
-
- _La Mêlée Sociale._ 18mo. Paris: Charpentier et Fasquelle. 1895.
-
- _Le Grand Pan._ 18mo. Paris: Charpentier et Fasquelle. 1896.
-
- _Les Plus Forts._ Roman contemporain. 18mo. Paris: Fasquelle. 1898.
-
- _Au Pied du Mont Sinai._ 4to. Paris: Floury. 1898.
-
- _L'Iniquité._ Notes sur l'affaire Dreyfus. 18mo. Paris: Stock. 1899.
-
- _Fils des Jours._ Paris: Stock. 1899.
-
- _Le Voile du Bonheur._ Pièce en un acte. 18mo. Paris: Fasquelle. 1901.
-
- _La Honte._ 18mo. Paris: Stock. 1903.
-
- _Aux Embuscades de la Vie._ Dans la foi, dans l'ordre établi, dans
- l'amour. 18mo. Paris: Fasquelle. 1903.
-
- _L'Enseignement dans le Droit Républicain._ Discours au Sénat. 18mo.
- Paris: Fasquelle. 1904.
-
- _Figures de la Vendée._ Paris: Hessèle. 1904.
-
- _La France devant l'Allemagne._ Imp. 8vo. Payot. 1918.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The above is a list of Clemenceau's most important works. His speeches
-in the Chamber of Deputies from 1876 up to 1893, and in the Senate,
-since 1902, will be found in the _Journal Officiel_ and the _Annales
-du Sénat_. There are several studies of Clemenceau and his career: the
-most recent is _Clemenceau_ (8vo, Paris--Charpentier, 1918), of which
-M. Georges Lecomte is the author. But he has been disinclined to have
-any detailed personal biography published. Though he must be well aware
-of the eminent part he has played in the history of his own country
-and of Europe, he has always preferred to speak of himself, and to be
-spoken of, as only one of the people of the France whom he has so well
-served.
-
-
-
-
- FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[A] M. Maurice Le Blond.
-
-[B] "Yes, bear in mind, reader, Monsieur Brandès's fear under existing
-conditions is that Germany may be humiliated! Denmark has been
-humiliated by the people of supermen who constitute the German race.
-France, also, I take it, and even Belgium: perhaps Brandès will admit
-that? He has not protested. He even refuses to explain himself on this
-point, declaring that his silence (prolix enough) is golden--that sort
-of gold which won't stand the touchstone. But his overmastering dread
-is that the organisers of the greatest crime against civilisation,
-against the independence of the peoples, against the dignity of the
-human species, the authors of the appalling atrocities from which
-Belgium and France are still bleeding, may not themselves undergo
-_humiliation_."
-
-[C] I happen to know the configuration of this district well, having
-walked all over it in 1866, after I went up into the Tyrol with
-Garibaldi.
-
-[D] Since the extreme pacifist and anti-nationalist section of
-Socialists captured the French Socialist Party a body of the French
-Socialist Deputies have constituted a group of their own in the
-Assembly. They number in all forty-one and they have a well-edited and
-well-written daily journal, _La France Libre_, which represents their
-views. Among their leading members are the Citizens Varenne, De la
-Porte, Compère Morel, Albert Thomas and others. They are thoroughly
-sound Socialists in all domestic affairs, but they cannot accept the
-views of those who are now led by Jean Longuet and Marcel Cachin on
-questions affecting the independence and welfare of France as a nation.
-Their opinions are, in fact, much the same as those which have been
-so vigorously and successfully championed by the National Socialist
-Party in Great Britain. It seems a pity that none of their party have
-seen their way to accept the positions in the Cabinet offered by M.
-Clemenceau. The results of the General Election in Great Britain may
-give them encouragement to do so.
-
-[E] CLEMENCEAU'S MINISTRY.
-
- CLEMENCEAU, Prime Minister and Minister for War.
- PICHON, Foreign Affairs.
- PAMS, Interior.
- KLOTZ, Finance.
- LEYGUES, Marine }
- CLEMENTEL, Commerce }
- CLAVALLE, Public Works } Members of late Ministry.
- LOUCHEUR, Munitions }
- COLLIARD, Labour }
- BORET, Supplies and Agriculture.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Clemenceau, by H. M. Hyndman
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